Residential
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December 06, 2023
Nossaman Real Estate Leader Sees Years Of Rate Pressure
Interest rates are not likely to tick back down anytime soon and as more commercial real estate loans come due, that will mean a certain continued amount of stress across various sectors.
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December 05, 2023
Solar Tech Lender Gets OK For Quick Ch. 11 Exit
A Delaware bankruptcy judge Tuesday said she will approve Sunlight Financial Holding's prepackaged Chapter 11 sale plan just over a month after the solar power financing company filed for bankruptcy.
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December 05, 2023
Seattle High-Rise Critics Slam 'Nonsensical' Permit Argument
An attorney for two Seattle groups suing over the city's approval of a downtown waterfront high-rise told Washington state appellate judges on Tuesday that the developer's position was "totally nonsensical," arguing they shouldn't have been required to contest the permitting approval before it was finalized.
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December 05, 2023
Roberts Declines To Freeze Virginia Pipeline Construction
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts declined Tuesday to pause construction of the controversial Mountain Valley Pipeline, allowing work to continue on the natural gas pipeline while Virginia landowners challenge the constitutionality of land seizures related to the project.
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December 05, 2023
SF Aims To Boost Housing Production With New Law
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors on Tuesday passed an ordinance intended to bolster residential construction locally, after California officials laid out an ultimatum requiring the Golden Gate City to take further action on its housing morass or lose state certification.
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December 05, 2023
Objectors Try, Again, To Derail Mich. Tax Foreclosure Deal
Class members opposing a proposed settlement between 43 Michigan counties and homeowners who seek the profits the counties made selling their tax-foreclosed homes are now saying several class representatives have died during the litigation, and questioning if others in the case actually owned the properties in question.
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December 05, 2023
Texas Landlord, AIG Unit Settle Hail Damage Coverage Row
An AIG unit reached a settlement resolving a Texas landlord's claims it wrongfully denied coverage for property damage from a June 2020 hailstorm, ending the plaintiff's bid to recover nearly $318,000 from the insurer.
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December 05, 2023
Mortgage Officers' OT Claims Booted To Arbitration
The arbitration pacts that loan officers signed with a mortgage lender require their overtime dispute to be sent out of court, an Ohio federal judge ruled, turning away the workers' claims that they were wrongly only paid sign-on bonuses and commissions.
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December 05, 2023
NY Gov. Wants Former Prison Turned Into Affordable Housing
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul revealed on Tuesday a proposed mixed-use affordable housing project that will invest more than $90 million in Manhattan's Harlem neighborhood by converting the former Lincoln Correctional Facility into 105 affordable housing units.
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December 05, 2023
Groups Want To Halt Fla. Development Over Species Concerns
Environmental groups have asked a Washington, D.C., federal judge to block two Clean Water Act permits issued by Florida officials for residential and commercial developments, saying these projects underscore that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency should not have granted the state permitting power.
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December 05, 2023
FHLB Chicago Doles Out $33M In Affordable Housing Grants
The Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago has awarded 44 Illinois and Wisconsin housing projects more than $33 million in affordable housing grants that will go toward buying, rehabbing, and building more than 1,900 units, the government-sponsored enterprise and regional bank announced.
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December 05, 2023
Insurer Again Asks For 11th Circ. Rehearing In Appraisal Order
An insurer again said the Eleventh Circuit was wrong to deny appeals jurisdiction in what is the carrier's third court battle aimed at preventing appraisal of 2017 Hurricane Irma damage at a Florida condo, claiming again that the court based its opinion on a flawed prior decision.
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December 05, 2023
Deutsche Bank Must Face Trial In Fair Housing Suit, Orgs. Say
A group of housing associations asked an Illinois federal judge Monday to allow their lawsuit against Deutsche Bank over the alleged neglect of foreclosed homes in minority neighborhoods to proceed to trial, saying evidence establishing the bank's control over the servicing of those properties would give a jury a clear basis to find it violated the Fair Housing Act.
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December 05, 2023
No Building Defect Coverage For Pulte, Insurer Says
Acuity Insurance pushed back against a suit filed in New Mexico federal court by PulteGroup Inc. affiliates seeking coverage for defective construction claims, arguing that it owes nothing to the homebuilder under a policy issued to one of its subcontractors.
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December 05, 2023
Atlanta, Residents Spar Over Standing In 'Cop City' Row
The city of Atlanta and a group of non-city residents filed opposing briefs with the Eleventh Circuit this week on the issue of standing in a case that hinges on the ability to collect signatures to force a referendum on construction of a $90 million police training center known as "Cop City."
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December 05, 2023
Real Estate Rumors: Prospera Growth, KBS, M&C Saatchi
Prospera Growth Fund has reportedly landed $97.6 million in financing for a Utah student housing property, KBS Growth & Income REIT is said to have sold a Chicago office building for $17 million and M&C Saatchi is said to be leasing 13,000 square feet in New York.
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December 05, 2023
Value-Add Property Investment Loans Struggling, Report Says
Following the pandemic, real estate investors were snapping up apartment properties that needed updates and would offer a handsome return after renovation. Now some of those deals, which used loans with variable interest rates, are creating more headache than opportunity, according to a Tuesday report from real estate data firm Trepp.
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December 05, 2023
How PFAS Could Upend Brownfield Remediation
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's pending designation of PFAS as a hazardous substance under environmental cleanup laws would be a historic move, but it has left brownfield developers and attorneys reeling with questions about how it affects their projects — both in the past and in the future.
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December 04, 2023
Signature Resolution Welcomes RE Pro To Panel Of Neutrals
California-based Signature Resolution added a real estate professional with 30 years of experience to the firm's panel of neutrals, the firm announced Friday.
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December 04, 2023
Calif. Couple's Disability Bias Claims Need Revising, Judge Says
A California federal magistrate partially tossed a California couple's disability discrimination claims on Monday in their eviction suit against a mobile home park owner but will allow them to amend those claims.
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December 04, 2023
Dallas Tower In Ch. 11 Amid Chancery Spat Between Owners
The entity that owns a 12-story office tower in Dallas has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, as firms with stakes in the building accuse each other of wrongdoing in a lawsuit in Delaware's Chancery Court.
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December 04, 2023
Taxpayers Group, Realtors Back Homeowners' High Court Bid
Two right-leaning think tanks and a group representing Michigan real estate agents filed friend-of-the-court briefs at the Michigan Supreme Court last week backing former property owners in their quest to recover profits a county government reaped selling land seized over unpaid tax debt.
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December 04, 2023
Tax Sale Foreclosure Violates Takings Clause, NJ Panel Says
A New Jersey state appeals court said Monday that a landowner should be able to keep his property after nearly losing it in a tax sale foreclosure, citing the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in a takings case earlier this year.
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December 04, 2023
Sperry Van Ness Plans Energy Solutions For Communities
Sperry Van Ness will implement energy and efficiency monitors on some of its Texas and Florida rental properties, aiming to reduce energy costs for tenants and also to avoid costly repairs on major appliances, the real estate developer announced Monday.
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December 04, 2023
Colo. Landlord Firm Looks To Settle Debt Collection Suit
A Colorado law firm accused in a proposed class action of using deceptive form letters to collect debts from tenants facing eviction has agreed to end the suit with a payout to the hundreds of tenants it allegedly misled.

Behind The Push For FHFA To Adopt New Energy Codes
A consortium of almost 80 housing, consumer, health and other advocacy groups is urging the Federal Housing Finance Agency to update to the latest energy codes, hoping the regulator will piggyback on other agencies' decisions to secure a climate win that would impact more than two-thirds of U.S. mortgages.

Hawaiian Investor Wants Liability Ruling In $200M Loan Row
Jay H. Shidler, a Hawaiian real estate investor who guaranteed nearly $200 million in loans for the purchase of three multifamily properties in California and Washington state, asked a California federal judge to rule that a provision of the deal contracts was not breached and that he is not liable for the loans.

Major Ruling Against NAR, Agents Could Boost Proptech
While a recent $1.8 billion verdict slamming the National Association of Realtors and a pair of brokerages for conspiring to boost agent commissions appears likely to disrupt the home sales industry, it could also carve out a bigger role for technology, so often viewed as a disrupter itself.
Expert Analysis
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Why NYC Building Owners Shouldn't Ignore Emissions Rule
New rules from the New York City Department of Buildings clarify the previously vague good faith efforts that building owners may make to mitigate penalties for not complying with a major carbon emission law that takes effect in January, and should discourage owners from simply paying the fines instead of decarbonizing, says William McCracken at Moritt Hock.
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What NJ's Green Remediation Guidance Means For Cleanups
Recent guidance from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection promoting greener approaches to restoring contaminated sites demonstrates the state's commitment to sustainability and environmental justice — but could also entail more complexity, higher costs and longer remediation timelines, say J. Michael Showalter and Bradley Rochlen at ArentFox Schiff.
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A New Path Forward For Surplus Land Owners In Calif.
A new California law signed last month enables some religious institutions and nonprofit colleges to build affordable housing on surplus land, and its requirements — which are more manageable than they may appear — will support long-term benefits including good housing and the survival of worthy institutions, says Stephen Wilson at Withers.
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Inside Bank Regulators' Community Lending Law Overhaul
The federal banking agencies' recently finalized changes to the Community Reinvestment Act not only account for the gradual shift to an environment where lending and deposit-taking are primarily conducted online, but also implement other updates such as diversity initiatives and a new series of lending tests, say attorneys at Norton Rose.
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A Bird's Eye View Of NYC's New Parapet Inspection Law
Building owners in New York City should be ready for the city's new parapet inspection requirements going into effect in January, which will likely necessitate additional construction work for countless buildings not previously subject to formal inspections, says Benjamin Fox Tracy at Braverman Greenspun.
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AI Isn't The Wild West, So Prepare Now For Bias Risks
In addition to President Joe Biden's recent historic executive order on safe, secure and trustworthy artificial intelligence, there are existing federal and state laws prohibiting fraud, defamation and even discrimination, so companies considering using or developing AI should take steps to minimize legal and business risks, says civil rights attorney Farhana Khera.
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AI's Baked-In Bias: What To Watch Out For
The federal AI executive order is a direct acknowledgment of the perils of inherent bias in artificial intelligence systems, and highlights the need for legal professionals to thoroughly vet AI systems, including data and sources, algorithms and AI training methods, and more, say Jonathan Hummel and Jonathan Talcott at Ballard Spahr.
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Calif. Ruling May Open Bankruptcy Trustees To Tort Liability
In Martin v. Gladstone, a recent California appellate court decision, the application of tort concepts to bankruptcy trustees could pose a new concern for trustees and federal receivers when controlling and maintaining commercial property, says Jarrett Osborne-Revis at Buchalter.
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5th Circ. Ruling May Beget Fraud Jury Instruction Appeals
The Fifth Circuit’s recent U.S. v. Greenlaw decision, disapproving disjunctive fraudulent-intent jury instructions, will likely spawn appeals in mail, wire and securities fraud cases, but defendants must show that their deception furthered ends other than taking the victim's property, says Charles Fowler at McKool Smith.
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Considerations For Navigating Mixed-Use Developments
As mixed-use developments continue to rise in popularity, developers considering this approach to urban planning must be aware of key considerations ranging from title and zoning laws to proper engagement with stakeholders, says Mehdi Sinaki at Michelman & Robinson.
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1st Tax Easement Convictions Will Likely Embolden DOJ, IRS
After recent convictions in the first criminal tax fraud trial over allegedly abusive syndicated conservation easements, the IRS and U.S. Department of Justice will likely pursue other promoters for similar alleged conspiracies — though one acquittal may help attorneys better evaluate their clients' exposure, say Bill Curtis and Lauren DeSantis-Then at Polsinelli.
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How CRE Loans Would Shift Under New Bank Capital Rules
Attorneys at MoFo discuss how commercial real estate loans would fare under federal banking agencies' proposed changes to how large banks risk-weight loans, particularly how CRE loans are weighed based on the current standardized framework versus the proposed expanded approach.
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Proactive Measures While NY Foreclosure Law Is In Limbo
While questions about the scope and constitutionality of New York's Foreclosure Abuse Prevention Act might not be resolved by courts for years, lenders, borrowers and other interested parties can take action to protect their rights and potentially expedite appellate review, say Allison Schoenthal and Andrew Kim at Goodwin.