Residential
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May 07, 2025
Wells Fargo Forced Short Sales Despite CARES Act, Suit Says
Wells Fargo forced the short sale of a North Carolina woman's home by denying her forbearance on her mortgage as mandated under federal law at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, she alleged in a proposed class action filed in California federal court.
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May 07, 2025
3 Firms Guide $135M Loan Deal For Brooklyn Condo Project
Charney Cos. announced Tuesday that it secured a $135 million construction loan for the development of a 45-story, 182-unit Brooklyn condominium building.
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May 07, 2025
Big Brokers Say Tariff Effects Mostly Missed CRE In Q1
Commercial real estate executives largely shrugged off the effects of trade disputes this spring in reporting first-quarter results, even as they acknowledged more murkiness ahead for the rest of 2025.
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May 07, 2025
MoFo Real Estate Leader Eyes Surge In New Debt Funds
As some banks have pulled back or hit the pause button on commercial real estate lending, nonbank debt funds have been jumping in with full force to fill that lacuna, one of MoFo's real estate leaders told Law360 in a recent interview.
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May 07, 2025
Developer Fights NJ Power Broker's Bid To Nix Civil RICO Suit
A Camden, New Jersey, real estate developer is fighting to keep alive his civil racketeering suit against South Jersey power broker George Norcross, arguing in New Jersey state court the recent dismissal of a related indictment against Norcross "changes nothing" in the civil litigation.
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May 07, 2025
NJ Justices Deem Town Liable For Frivolous Lawsuits
Frivolous litigation by local government officials is not constitutionally protected and carries financial consequences, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Wednesday in a 5-0 decision reining in baseless legal battles.
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May 07, 2025
Contractor Skanska Promotes Two Civil Division GCs
Construction and development firm Skanska has said it promoted two employees to vice president and assistant general counsel, with both advising separate civil engineering divisions.
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May 07, 2025
DLA Piper Adds Morgan Lewis Commercial Real Estate Pro
DLA Piper hired a partner for the firm's real estate practice group, a commercial real estate attorney who joins the firm from Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP.
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May 07, 2025
Conn. Town, State End Feud Over Affordable Housing Credits
The Connecticut town of New Canaan has agreed to drop its suit against the state's Department of Housing, which was accused in state court of wrongfully rejecting the town's bid for affordable housing credits and a development moratorium.
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May 07, 2025
Vornado Signals Residential Foray Into NYC's Penn District
Vornado Realty Trust executives hinted on a first-quarter earnings call at an embrace of residential development in Manhattan's Penn District, where the real estate investment trust owns a 10 million-square-foot portfolio.
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May 06, 2025
HUD Says Suit To Block Fund Cuts Belongs In Claims Court
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development urged a Washington federal judge on Tuesday to reject emergency relief sought by San Francisco, Boston, New York and King County, Washington, to block the Trump administration from slashing millions of dollars of homelessness assistance grants, saying federal court lacks jurisdiction.
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May 06, 2025
PennyMac Wins Quick 9th Circ. Appeal Of Libor-Rate Ruling
A California federal judge on Monday allowed PennyMac entities to pursue their quick appeal in a proposed class action alleging they illegally imposed a lower fixed interest rate instead of a variable rate on preferred-stock dividends, asking the Ninth Circuit to clarify whether the Libor Act bars such fixed rates.
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May 06, 2025
DR Horton Sued In Del. Over Property Deal Conflict Claims
Stockholders of residential land developer Forestar Group Inc. sued national homebuilding giant and Forestar controller D.R. Horton derivatively late Monday for hundreds of millions in potential damages tied to billions' worth of allegedly conflicted, below-market sales to Horton of Forestar-prepared lots.
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May 06, 2025
Fair Housing Org. Fights Landlord's Counterattack In Bias Suit
An Ohio fair housing organization urged a federal court to toss a landlord's counterclaims in the group's disability bias suit, arguing that the counterclaims "are a transparent attempt" to avoid complying with federal law.
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May 06, 2025
Irish Developer To Settle With Ex Amid $942M Conn. Ch. 7
The Chapter 7 trustee overseeing the $942 million estate of Irish real estate developer Sean Dunne will settle claims of more than €3.6 million ($4 million) from a woman who alleges to be Dunne's first wife, the parties told a Connecticut bankruptcy judge Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
Tax Court Erred In Slashing $23M Easement, 11th Circ. Told
A partnership told the Eleventh Circuit that the U.S. Tax Court erred in substantially reducing its claim to a $23 million conservation easement tax deduction, arguing the decision was tainted by error-riddled criteria used by the IRS to value the property.
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May 06, 2025
Atty's Derisive Comments Warrant New Trial, NJ Panel Says
A New Jersey appellate panel on Monday said that an attorney's comments during her opening and closing arguments in a trial over a real estate transaction gone wrong went way too far, vacating a jury's $420,000 verdict in favor of her clients.
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May 05, 2025
NC AG Vies To Force MV Realty CEO To Cooperate With Probe
North Carolina Attorney General Jeff Jackson urged a state court to force Antony Mitchell, the CEO of real estate brokerage MV Realty, to cooperate with his office's investigative demand order relating to a home-selling agreement offered by another one of Mitchell's companies, the state's Department of Justice announced Monday.
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May 05, 2025
Ex-NY Gov. Aide Can't Ax Foreign Agent Charges
A Brooklyn federal judge said Monday that a former aide to New York Gov. Kathy Hochul can't ditch charges of money laundering and acting as an unregistered agent of the Chinese government, saying prosecutors sufficiently alleged she knowingly used her position to advance that nation's interests.
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May 05, 2025
Ky. Property Owner Sues Liberty Mutual For Arson Coverage
The owner of an apartment building in the Louisville, Kentucky, metro area accused a Liberty Mutual unit of denying property coverage in bad faith for a May 2023 arson incident that rendered the building a total loss, telling a federal court Monday the insurer wrongly invoked a raft of exclusions.
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May 05, 2025
Single-Family Housing Co. Sees Q1 Market 'Resilience'
Invitation Homes saw "solid" first quarter results that showcased "the resilience of the single-family rental market and the strength of our operating platform," the CEO of the single-family homes company said in an earnings call.
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May 05, 2025
5 Firms Pilot Pershing Square's $900M Howard Hughes Deal
Hedge fund Pershing Square will grow its ownership stake in Howard Hughes Holdings and expand the company's business lines beyond real estate development in a $900 million deal put together by five law firms, the companies said Monday.
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May 05, 2025
8-Atty Shumaker Community Association Team Joins Becker
Becker & Poliakoff PC announced Monday an eight-person team of community association law attorneys joined the firm's Tampa, Florida, office from Shumaker Loop & Kendrick LLP.
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May 05, 2025
Insurer Knowingly Skimped On Storm Probe, Texas Court Told
A Houston-area developer's insurer deliberately refrained from a proper investigation after a May 2024 storm and thus came up short on covering losses, the developer told a Texas federal court Monday.
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May 05, 2025
2 Firms Guide $166M Loan For Brooklyn Parcels
Scale Lending LLC, the lending affiliate of Slate Property Group, provided a $166 million construction loan to a business connected to Goose Property Management for three Brooklyn properties in a deal guided by Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP and Sheppe LLP, Sheppard Mullin told Law360 on Monday.
Expert Analysis
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The Basics Of Being A Knowledge Management Attorney
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Michael Lehet at Ogletree Deakins discusses the role of knowledge management attorneys at law firms, the common tasks they perform and practical tips for lawyers who may be considering becoming one.
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Negotiating Material Escalation In Construction Contracts
As material price escalation clauses have remained popular in construction contracts despite an easing of recent supply chain issues, attorneys representing owners should understand key considerations for negotiating such clauses, and strategies to mitigate potential exploitation by contractors, says H. Arthur Black II at Brooks Pierce.
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Key Drivers Behind Widespread Adoption Of NAV Financing
While net asset value-based lending has existed for years, NAV lending has only started to move into the mainstream recently — likely due to difficult market conditions faced by sponsors including persistent inflation, high interest rates and a lack of exit opportunities, say Matthew Kerfoot and Jinyoung Joo at Proskauer.
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Beware Unique Compliance Risks In Home Equity Lending
As borrowers increasingly look to junior-lien mortgages and home equity lines of credit instead of first-lien mortgages, regulators will pay increased attention in turn and lenders will have to watch for a number of legal and regulatory pitfalls as they rush to meet this newfound demand, say attorneys at Orrick.
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4 Business-Building Strategies For Introvert Attorneys
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Introverted lawyers can build client bases to rival their extroverted peers’ by adapting time-tested strategies for business development that can work for any personality — such as claiming a niche, networking for maximum impact, drawing on existing contacts and more, says Ronald Levine at Herrick Feinstein.
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New AI Lending Tech Could Exacerbate Old Bias Risks
As credit and mortgage lending businesses increasingly utilize artificial intelligence technology to help make decisions, they must be aware of the legal risks that may arise under familiar anti-discrimination laws, say Kali Bracey and Grace Wallack at Jenner & Block.
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AI Road Ahead Is Promising For Cautious Fintechs
Financial institutions should understand the conceptions and misconceptions about artificial intelligence likely to influence regulators, and proactively study potential adverse impacts and establish use case strategies and other guardrails for deploying AI, say attorneys at Jones Day.
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Why All Eyes Are On Florida's Affordable Housing Reform
Florida's Live Local Act, which took effect last month, promotes much-needed affordable housing developments with a mix of zoning preemption provisions and tax benefits that may attract interest from developers across the nation, say attorneys at Nelson Mullins.
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What Came Of Texas Legislature's Long-Promised Tax Relief
Following promises of historic tax relief made possible by a record budget surplus, the Texas legislative session as a whole was one in which taxpayers that are large businesses could have done somewhat better, but the new legislation is clearly still a positive, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
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Looking Behind The Curtain Of Residential Transition Loans
As residential transition loans and securitizations of such loans grow increasingly popular, real estate stakeholders should take care to understand both the unique features and potential challenges offered by this novel asset class, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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Hedging Variable Interest Rates In A Volatile Market
Variable rate loans, which were an advantageous borrowing method prior to the recent Federal Reserve rate hikes and subsequent volatility, are now the difference between borrowers remaining current on their obligations and defaulting due to the sharply increasing debt service requirements of their loans, say attorneys at Cassin & Cassin.
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CRA Plays Role In DOJ Fight Against Redlining
The U.S. Department of Justice’s recent consent order with ESSA Bank & Trust is a reminder that although the Community Reinvestment Act lacks a civil enforcement provision, financial institutions' CRA compliance efforts may have ramifications under various anti-discrimination statutes, say Collin Grier and Levi Swank at Goodwin.
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Colo. Eviction Case Could Transform Tenant Rights
The Colorado Supreme Court recently granted certiorari in a case that could open the door for tenants to assert allegations of discrimination and retaliation during eviction proceedings, and dramatically prolong the state's process, says Jacob Hollars at Spencer Fane.