Residential
-
May 01, 2025
8th Insurer Dismissed In Pulte Coverage Row
Two PulteGroup subsidiaries said Thursday they'll dismiss their property damage coverage claims with prejudice against an insurer over structural issues at a residential development, marking the eighth dismissal of an insurer since the homebuilder first sued a raft of carriers in New Mexico federal court in October 2023.
-
May 01, 2025
Hawaii Tenant's Tainted Water Eviction Claims Survive Ruling
A Hawaii federal judge preserved a tenant's claims that he was effectively evicted from his home when a landlord failed to identify or warn of water contamination caused by leaks in 2021 at a U.S. Navy fuel storage facility on Pearl Harbor.
-
May 01, 2025
Ballard Spahr Adds Real Estate Ace From Hunton In DC
Ballard Spahr hired ex-Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP attorney Jill S. Parks as a partner for the firm's real estate department and its teams for real estate development and transactions and zoning and land use in its District of Columbia office, the firm announced May 1.
-
May 01, 2025
Colo. AG Targets MV Realty's 'Unfair' Homeowner Contracts
The Colorado Attorney General's Office has accused real estate brokerage MV Realty PBC LLC and its Colorado subsidiary of trapping hundreds of local homeowners with "unfair, misleading and deceptive" 40-year brokerage contracts.
-
May 01, 2025
States Urge 1st Circ. To Reinstate Federal Housing Grants
A coalition of states urged the First Circuit to reinstate a ruling that had blocked the Trump administration from cutting $30 million in fair housing grants, saying the federal government failed to consider the impact this decision would have on the groups' operations.
-
May 01, 2025
Real Estate Lawyers On The Move
Winston & Strawn, Honigman and Stephenson Harwood are among the law firms that have made recent real estate or construction hires.
-
April 30, 2025
Multifamily, Lodging Push CMBS Delinquencies Higher In April
Commercial mortgage-backed securities tied to multifamily and lodging drove overall delinquency rates in April back up to heights not seen since early in the COVID-19 pandemic, per an April 30 report from Trepp.
-
April 30, 2025
Ill. Developer Gets 6 Years For Role In Bank Embezzlement
A real estate developer has been sentenced to more than six years in prison following his conviction for participating in a multimillion-dollar embezzlement scheme at a now-shuttered bank, federal prosecutors in Chicago announced Wednesday.
-
April 30, 2025
Ripe For Revitalization, Owners Transform Class B Malls
Class B malls are the subject of renewed focus as owners and developers add residential, hotel, medical, entertainment, and food and dining uses to properties in an effort to reverse sinking vacancy rates at the decades-old assets.
-
April 30, 2025
2 Firms Guide Texas Multifamily Portfolio Buy
Altus Equity Group Inc. said it has partnered up with real estate private equity firm Wellings Capital to acquire a 1,225-unit portfolio of six West Texas apartment communities in a deal guided by Phillips Murrah PC and Beyers Costin Simon.
-
April 30, 2025
Equity Sees Housing Shortage As Shield Against Uncertainty
Equity Residential executives on Wednesday said the rental giant in the first quarter saw record-low levels of resident turnover along with higher year-over-year occupancy, and is expecting a lack of U.S. housing supply to insulate from unfolding economic uncertainty.
-
April 30, 2025
Real Estate Sees Action-Packed First 100 Days Of Trump
The real estate sector — from which President Donald Trump hails — has not been spared an onslaught of significant policy changes as the new administration marks its first 100 days, including tariffs, a federal office slim-down and an effort to curb diverse hiring programs.
-
April 30, 2025
Here's What Real Estate Execs Are Saying About Tariffs
Executives across a wide range of real estate industries recently said President Donald Trump's tariffs would result in cost increases — some providing single-digit expected jumps — and some companies have been stockpiling additional imported supplies ahead of anticipated tariffs.
-
April 30, 2025
Ohio Top Court Backs Challenged Solar Farm Approval
Justices at the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed a regulatory board's approval of a 350-megawatt solar farm that some Licking County neighbors opposed — though one justice said the company developing it should have presented information about its potential negative economic impacts.
-
April 30, 2025
Has Student Housing's Big Moment Just Begun?
A post-pandemic supply crunch and trends in college enrollment have set the student housing industry up for what might be its strongest decade yet, according to Newmark's top deal broker for the sector.
-
April 29, 2025
CFPB Aims To Mediate Colony Ridge 'Reverse Redlining' Suit
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and a Houston-based real estate developer asked a Texas federal judge Tuesday to pause the bureau's reverse redlining suit so they can engage in mediation to resolve the case.
-
April 29, 2025
Condo Assoc., Insurer End Nashville Bombing Coverage Row
Aspen Specialty Insurance Co. and a Nashville condominium association have agreed to end their dispute over coverage for nearly $11 million in damages caused by the 2020 Christmas Day bombing in the city, ending their battle with a joint stipulation of dismissal filed in Tennessee federal court.
-
April 29, 2025
Welltower Reports $6.2B In Q1 Deals, Surpassing 2024 Results
Executives of healthcare real estate investment trust Welltower on Tuesday touted the company's work closing more acquisitions during this year's first quarter than it did in all of 2024, ahead of expected economic uncertainty in the year ahead.
-
April 29, 2025
PMG Lands $413M Construction Loan For Miami Towers
Developer PMG obtained a $413 million construction loan for the developer's luxury, mixed-use One Twenty Brickell Residences project in Miami in a deal guided by PMG's in-house counsel, Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP, Saul Ewing LLP, Bilzin Sumberg Baena Price & Axelrod LLP, Greenberg Trager & Herbst LLP and Milbank LLP, a representative for PMG told Law360 on Tuesday.
-
April 28, 2025
Miami Condo Fire Victims Win Class Certification
A Florida state court judge certified a class of more than 140 Miami residents displaced in a condominium fire in a lawsuit alleging the structure was not safely maintained, ruling that the case will proceed more efficiently and that will also financially benefit the individual plaintiffs.
-
April 28, 2025
Compass Calls Wash. Listing Service Rules Anticompetitive
Compass told a Washington federal court that Northwest Multiple Listing Service and its broker-led board of directors have stifled competition, thwarting a product that allows home sellers to test home sales privately before registering them with the multiple listing service.
-
April 28, 2025
Greystone Lends $41M For Minn. Nursing Homes Buy
Greystone provided a $41 million interest-only, nonrecourse bridge loan for Oxford Capital Group LLC's acquisition of six Minnesota assisted living facilities that have a total of 372 beds, Greystone announced Monday.
-
April 28, 2025
Miami Developer Sues To Find Source Of Smear Campaign
Prominent Miami developer Michael Stern filed suit Friday in Florida state court against a John Doe who he claims is engaging in a coordinated smear campaign, spreading false information about Stern and his development company.
-
April 28, 2025
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
Simpson Thacher and Goulston & Storrs are among the law firms that guided the largest New York City real estate deals to hit public records last week, with a pair of Brooklyn matters topping the list.
-
April 28, 2025
NYC Urges Dismissal Of Suit Over Tenant Broker Fee Ban
New York City defended a law approved last year banning landlords from passing on broker fees to tenants, in an attempt to toss a federal lawsuit from a group of broker interests claiming the policy is preempted by state law and barred on constitutional grounds.
Expert Analysis
-
DOJ's RealPage Notice Signals Focus On Pricing Algorithms
The U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Division recently filed a statement of interest in the Realpage multidistrict litigation to stake out its position that price-fixing algorithms pose a great anti-competitive threat, which suggests that the DOJ and private parties may continue to bring similar actions in the future, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
-
4 Key Types Of Coming FHLBank Reforms To Watch
Though the Federal Housing Finance Agency's recent report on the Federal Home Loan Bank System has received relatively little attention, the regulatory and legislative changes it proposes in four categories herald the start of a significant effort by the agency to reform the system’s structure and operations and overhaul requirements for member banks, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
-
Property Owner Considerations Around Electric Vehicle Bans
In light of a property management company's recent ban on electric vehicles in Canada, it's worth considering how similar bans might fare in Florida and other U.S. states, and the legal ramifications that could potentially arise, say Gerardo Ortega and Gary Kaleita at Lowndes.
-
Trump NY Fraud Trial Shows Civil, Criminal Case Differences
Former President Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial currently unfolding in New York provides a reminder that civil bench trials can be just as damaging, if not more so, than criminal prosecutions, due to several key elements of civil litigation procedure, says retired attorney David Moskowitz.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.