Residential

  • January 16, 2025

    Insurer Must Share In Calif. Property Co. Defense, Court Told

    An insurer for a property management company said another carrier must contribute to the defense of an underlying suit accusing the company of failing to maintain a mobile home park, telling a California federal court that the reasons for the other insurer's denial are either improper or moot.

  • January 16, 2025

    PE Exec Nominated To Lead Fannie, Freddie Regulator

    President-elect Donald Trump said he will nominate Bill Pulte, the CEO of private equity firm Pulte Capital, to lead the agency regulating Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

  • January 16, 2025

    NC Biz Court Bulletin: Judge Bids Adieu, TikTok Wants Out

    The North Carolina Business Court's former chief judge hung up his robes for the last time as the court entered the new year with a ruling that shapes the fate of beset real estate company MV Realty's consumer fraud trial and arguments by TikTok Inc. that its platform being "too engaging" isn't enough for the state to begin an enforcement action.

  • January 16, 2025

    Ill. Bill Seeks Refunds Of Excess Property Tax Revenue

    Illinois local taxing authorities that exceed the previous year's property tax collection would need to disperse the excess to taxpayers under a bill introduced in the state House of Representatives.

  • January 16, 2025

    Condo Association Seeks $3.4M In Water Damage Coverage

    A Washington state condominium association argued that its insurers owe payouts for an estimated $3.4 million in property damage caused by hidden water intrusion, the association told a federal court.

  • January 16, 2025

    Paxton-Tied Developer Pleads Guilty In Bank Fraud Case

    A real estate developer whose ties to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton were central to his 2023 impeachment case pled guilty Wednesday to unrelated charges of making false statements to a mortgage lender.

  • January 16, 2025

    NC Panel Says Civil Parties Can't Reject Jurors Midtrial

    A North Carolina state appeals court ruled as a matter of first impression that a lower court was wrong to let a couple exercise their right to reject a juror in the middle of a trial after the jury had already been impaneled.

  • January 15, 2025

    Suit Looks To Overturn Fla. City's Affordable Housing Denial

    A New York developer has hit Hollywood, Florida, with a state court suit accusing the city of improperly interpreting the state's Live Local Act to block the developer's proposed 17-story beachfront project after falling short in efforts to get the affordable housing law changed.

  • January 15, 2025

    Natural Disasters And Wildfires Reshape CRE Dealmaking

    Natural disasters are already reshaping all aspects of commercial real estate dealmaking, attorneys say, and their importance is expected to grow considerably as a result of the ongoing Los Angeles wildfires.

  • January 15, 2025

    Tenants Want Yardi Rent-Fixing Suits Combined

    Renters have urged a federal court in Washington state to consolidate two other cases with their proposed class action, which claims that multifamily building owners schemed to use a real estate management software company's product to inflate rental prices.

  • January 15, 2025

    NY Gov. Aims To Bar Rent-Fixing Software, As Suits Pile Up

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed a statewide ban on rental price-fixing software in her State of the State Address on Tuesday, zeroing in on algorithmic rent-setting software at the heart of a U.S. Department of Justice antitrust lawsuit.

  • January 15, 2025

    JV Nets $154M Refi For Fla. Senior Housing Portfolio

    A joint venture between opportunistic credit investment firm Monarch Alternative Capital LP and real estate developer and investor Redico refinanced their 817-unit portfolio of six Florida senior housing communities with a $154.5 million mortgage loan originated by Marathon Asset Management, according to an official Wednesday announcement.

  • January 15, 2025

    What Real Estate Attys Should Expect From New SEC

    Real estate lawyers should anticipate a meaningful shift in policy from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission under President-elect Donald Trump's leadership, including a reduced focus on climate risk disclosures, according to speakers at a Practicing Law Institute panel.

  • January 15, 2025

    Cost Concerns Keep Real Estate Atop Florida Policy Agenda

    This year sees new leadership in the Florida Legislature, a change that can shift priorities, but with housing affordability, condominium reforms and property insurance presenting significant challenges even after recent legislative actions, the incoming House speaker and Senate president have indicated that they will pay close attention to these real estate-related issues in 2025.

  • January 15, 2025

    Connecticut Town Accused Of Fumbling Affordable Condo Plan

    The planning and zoning commission in Greenwich, Connecticut, attached conditions to a housing project that threaten the "viability" of the plan, which is meant in part to increase the availability of affordable units in the affluent town, a developer has said in an appeal to the state Superior Court.

  • January 15, 2025

    FCC Warns Convincing Mortgage Lender Scam Afoot

    The Federal Communications Commission is putting the word out about a new scheme aimed at tricking people into thinking their homes will be foreclosed on unless they make emergency payments into an account controlled by the scammers.

  • January 15, 2025

    Texas Development Projects To Watch In 2025

    The Texas development boom is showing no signs of slowing in 2025, with major projects from office campuses to mixed-use and industrial all set to create ripples throughout the state's real estate industry.

  • January 15, 2025

    Real Estate Attys Eye Busy Texas Legislative Session

    With Texas' biennial legislative session underway, the housing and development issues that gummed up 2023 to the tune of multiple special session extensions appear poised to come back fresh in 2025.

  • January 15, 2025

    California Real Estate Policy To Watch In 2025

    Municipal mansion taxes, clunky permitting processes and a recently passed law enacting building and design standards for logistics facilities are among the real estate policies teed up for review in California in 2025.

  • January 15, 2025

    Casino Bids, Zoning Reform To Shape NYC Real Estate In 2025

    The world of New York City real estate is anticipating major changes in 2025, including advancing casino proposals, implementing a major zoning reform and considering a new hotel licensing law.

  • January 15, 2025

    Beacon Roofing Rejects $11B Takeover Offer Lobbed By QXO

    QXO Inc. said Wednesday it has offered to purchase Beacon Roofing Supply Inc. for about $11 billion in cash, prompting Beacon to announce that it rejected the offer because it "significantly undervalues" the company.  

  • January 15, 2025

    Midwest Real Estate Projects To Watch In 2025

    While Chicago developers are eyeing a host of new skyscraper projects, various other Midwest cities are primed to see big changes to their skylines over the coming years.

  • January 14, 2025

    Experts See Long Road To LA Rebuild Despite CEQA Freeze

    With the wildfires continuing in Los Angeles, Mayor Karen Bass and California Gov. Gavin Newsom moved to suspend environmental and other permitting rules in an early step to ease the regulatory burden once rebuilding starts from the disaster, expected to be one of the costliest in U.S. history.

  • January 14, 2025

    Ackman Retracts Sullivan Dig In $1.5B Howard Hughes Offer

    Pershing Square Holdings founder Bill Ackman has leaked a $1.5 billion proposal on social media that calls for merging his hedge fund and real estate developer Howard Hughes Holdings, and appeared to blame Sullivan & Cromwell LLP in a post for the informal release before he walked back that comment.

  • January 14, 2025

    Resort Developer Asks To Wind Up Chinese Co. In Bahamas

    The developer of the Baha Mar resort in the Bahamas filed a petition Tuesday to liquidate a Chinese-owned construction firm that was hit with a $1.6 billion judgment last year by a New York court over its fraud tied to the construction of the resort project.

Expert Analysis

  • Mass. Banking Brief: The Notable Compliance Updates In Q3

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    Among the most significant developments in the financial services space in the third quarter of the year, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court handed down a stunning endorsement of the state's fiduciary duty rule, and banking regulators continued their multiyear crackdown on unregistered entities, say attorneys at Mintz.

  • Insurance Rulings Continue Expansion Of Appraisal's Ambit

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    Two recent Illinois insurance cases allowing property damage appraisers to determine causation — Wysoczan v. Cambridge in federal court and Shelter v. Morrow in state appellate court — perpetuate a judicial trend that will result in a slower, more expensive and cumbersome appraisal process that resembles litigation, says Matthew Fortin at BatesCarey.

  • In The CFPB Playbook: The Bureau In The Courts

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    From defending the constitutionality of its funding and the scope of its rulemaking authority in the courts to releasing more nonbinding guidance, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had a busy summer. Orrick's John Coleman discusses all this and more in the second installment of quarterly bureau activity recaps by former CFPB personnel.

  • Fintech Cos. Should Consider Asset-Based Financing For RE

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    Fintech companies that own or plan to acquire real property may be able to utilize asset-based financings to access more efficient and cost-effective forms of capital beyond traditional venture capital sources, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • What To Consider When Converting Calif. Offices To Housing

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    In light of California legislators' recent efforts to expedite the process for converting offices into residential buildings, developers should evaluate both the societal upsides, and the significant economic and legal hurdles, of such conversions, says Steven Otto at Crosbie Gliner.

  • 9 Consumer Finance Issues To Note From CFPB Report

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    A recent report from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau highlights abusive consumer finance tactics that the agency uncovered during supervisory examinations over the last year — among the most significant issues identified: deceptive practices in automotive loan servicing, and consumer reporting and debt collection compliance failures, say attorneys at Troutman Pepper.

  • Transaction Risks In Residential Mortgage M&A Due Diligence

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    As the residential mortgage market continues to consolidate due to interest rate increases and low housing volume, buyers and sellers should pay attention to a number of compliance considerations ranging from fair lending laws to employee classification, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Ore. Warranty Ruling Complicates Insurance Classification

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    The Oregon Court of Appeals' recent TruNorth v. Department of Consumer and Business Services holding that a service contract — commonly referred to as an extended warranty — covering commercial property is subject to the state's consumer service contract laws raises regulatory questions for contract obligors, sellers and administrators, say attorneys at Locke Lord.

  • FCRA Legislation To Watch For The Remainder Of 2023

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    If enacted, pending federal and state legislation may result in significant changes for the Fair Credit Reporting Act landscape and thus require regulated entities and practitioners to pivot their compliance strategies, say attorneys at Troutman Pepper.

  • Regulators Must Get Creative To Keep Groundwater Flowing

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    Even as populations have boomed in Sun Belt states like Arizona, California and Texas, groundwater levels have diminished due to drought and overuse — so regulators must explore options including pumping limits, groundwater replenishment and wastewater reuse to ensure future supplies for residential and commercial needs, says Jeffrey Davis at Integral Consulting.

  • What Upholding Of Short-Term Rental Law Means For NYC

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    A New York state judge's dismissal of Airbnb's challenge against the Short-Term Rental Registration Law will benefit the city's hospitality industry and exert downward pressure on apartment rents, and potentially provide a model for other local governments around the U.S. to curb short-term apartment rentals, says Alexander Lycoyannis at Holland & Knight.

  • Key Provisions In Florida's New Insurer Accountability Act

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    Florida's recent bipartisan Insurer Accountability Act introduces a range of new obligations for insurance companies and regulatory bodies to strengthen consumer protection, and other states may follow suit should it prove successful at ensuring a reliable insurance market, say Jan Larson and Benjamin Malings at Jenner & Block.

  • Fair Lending Activity: Calm On The Surface, Churning Below

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    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's recently released annual fair lending report to Congress confirms that despite the paucity of public fair lending enforcement actions in 2022, the CFPB and prudential banking agencies are engaged in significant nonpublic oversight, examination and enforcement activities, say attorneys at Cooley.