Residential
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November 21, 2025
NC Judge Rejects Elevator Safety Deal Over Missing Details
A North Carolina Business Court judge declined to approve a proposed settlement from a group of residential condominium owners who live in Asheville, North Carolina's tallest building, after finding key information was missing.
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November 21, 2025
Firm Wants Lender's Attys To Bear Blame In $16.2M Loan Suit
Willinger Willinger & Bucci PLLC is responsible for any damages suffered by a New York lender that relied on falsified documents to approve a $16.2 million loan to the development arm of a Connecticut housing authority, Pullman & Comley LLC said in seeking to shift the blame away from itself.
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November 21, 2025
Mich. Mortgage Co. Hit With Data Breach Class Actions
A Michigan mortgage lender was hit with several proposed data breach class actions that alleged in Michigan federal court that the lender failed to do enough to protect consumers' personally identifiable information, such as their Social Security numbers, from a June data breach.
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November 21, 2025
PEM Nabs 2 Georgia Resi Properties In $175M Deal
Phoenix-based Professional Equity Management says it has acquired two Georgia multifamily communities in deals guided by Snell & Wilmer, noting that both are located in metro markets that have witnessed steep economic and population growth in recent years.
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November 20, 2025
Subletting Co. Settles NYC's Illegal STR 'Matchmaker' Claims
A subletting company has agreed to resolve claims that it was used as a "'matchmaker'" of sorts for advertising and setting up illegal short-term rentals in New York City, the Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement announced.
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November 20, 2025
'Not Well-Taken': 2nd Bid To Halt CFPB Energy Loan Rule Fails
A Florida federal judge on Thursday smacked down a lender trade group's renewed bid to halt a Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule that will tighten standards on clean-energy home improvement loans, calling the emergency request wasteful and "not well-taken."
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November 20, 2025
NY Plans 2,000 Homes For 46-Acre Queens Project
The New York State Public Authorities Control Board has greenlit a 46.5-acre redevelopment plan that aims to build more than 2,000 new homes on "largely vacant and underutilized" state-owned land in eastern Queens, the governor announced Thursday.
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November 20, 2025
Ohio Senate OKs Inflation-Related Property Tax Increase Caps
Ohio would institute inflation-related caps on certain property tax increases and raise property tax credits for certain homeowners under a package of bills approved by the state Senate.
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November 20, 2025
Husch Blackwell Adds Jackson Walker RE Pro In Texas
Husch Blackwell LLP announced Thursday that it is continuing to expand its national real estate practice with the addition of an attorney in Austin, Texas, who came aboard from Jackson Walker LLP.
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November 20, 2025
Realtors Rule Change Backs Antitrust Suit, Agents Argue
A proposed class of Michigan real estate brokers and agents have asserted that the National Association of Realtors effectively admitted to the litigants' antitrust claim when it revoked its disputed policy, which required membership in the organization to use multiple listing services.
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November 20, 2025
Congressional Dems Revive Bill To Curb Rental Price-Fixing
A group of Democratic lawmakers have reintroduced legislation in Congress to crack down on landlords using algorithms to systematically raise rental prices.
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November 20, 2025
IRS Unveils Interim Rules For Tax Perk For Rural Loan Interest
The IRS released temporary guidance Thursday on a new incentive that would exclude from taxable income 25% of interest from loans secured by a rural or agricultural property, including the definition of an eligible loan and the determination of the property's fair market value.
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November 19, 2025
Senior Living Co. Inks $7.2M Deal To End Wash. AG's Probe
Oregon-based senior living provider Bonaventure will invest $7 million in staffing and upgrades and shell out $200,000 in resident credits to resolve allegations of substandard care at 10 Washington state facilities, under a settlement filed Wednesday.
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November 19, 2025
Would REITs Seize On Semiannual Reporting?
As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission preps a rulemaking to relax quarterly reporting mandates, attorneys say numerous factors — including market adoption and investor and analyst pressure — would ultimately determine whether real estate investment trusts report less frequently.
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November 19, 2025
NJ Jury Awards $1.7M To Housing Authority Whistleblowers
A New Jersey federal jury has awarded $1.7 million to two former and current city of Camden housing authority employees who claimed they were terminated for raising concerns about corruption within the agency, according to a court order entering the judgment.
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November 19, 2025
Greystar Cuts $7M Deal With 9 AGs In Rent Price-Fixing Suit
Greystar Management Services LLC has agreed to pay North Carolina, California and seven other states $7 million to resolve allegations against it in a sprawling antitrust lawsuit alleging major landlords used software company RealPage to fix rent prices, according to documents filed in North Carolina federal court Tuesday.
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November 19, 2025
MVP: Latham's Rachel S.K. Bates
Rachel Bates of Latham & Watkins LLP was the lead real estate counsel guiding Hyatt Hotels Corp. through multiple multibillion-dollar transactions and also worked on one of the year's biggest deals as Bridge Investment Group sold to Apollo Global Management for $1.5 billion, earning her a spot as one of the 2025 Law360 Real Estate MVPs.
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November 19, 2025
Re/Max Enabled DR Property Sales Scheme, Buyers Say
A proposed class of U.S. consumers accused Re/Max in New Jersey federal court of doing nothing to stop a multimillion-dollar scheme that involved franchisee real estate agents selling fake developments in the Dominican Republic.
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November 19, 2025
Ore. Tax Court Lets Property Owner Amend Complaint Again
An Oregon homeowner can file a third amendment to his challenge of his property's valuation for 2022-2023 after the state tax court rejected the man's second amended complaint, the court ruled.
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November 19, 2025
Trump's New Pick For CFPB Director Is OMB Energy Official
President Donald Trump has tapped an energy official at the Office of Management and Budget to become permanent director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a key regulator whose future remains in doubt after months of turmoil and dwindling finances.
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November 18, 2025
Feds Grill NY Gov. Aide's Mom In Pursuit Of FARA Money Trail
Federal prosecutors on Tuesday turned their focus to tracing the proceeds from a purported scheme by a former top New York state government staffer to secretly further the interests of the People's Republic of China, calling the defendant's own mother to the stand over a bank account alleged to have been used to move criminal funds.
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November 18, 2025
CFPB's Gradler Takes Deputy Post Amid Agency Uncertainty
Geof Gradler, a former industry lobbyist who recently joined the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's front office, said that he is taking over as the agency's deputy director, a job that positions him as a potential successor to acting director Russell Vought.
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November 18, 2025
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
Kirkland & Ellis LLP, Goldfarb & Fleece LLP and Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz LLP were among the law firms that handled the largest New York City real estate deals made public last week, which included the sale of a charter school facility in the Bronx, a 105-unit apartment building in Brooklyn, and the longtime Manhattan home of Bill and Camille Cosby.
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November 18, 2025
Trump Admin May Be Overpromising WOTUS Clarity
The Trump administration says its proposal to shrink the Clean Water Act's reach would reduce regulatory burdens and provide clarity to farmers, homebuilders and other businesses, but it could face court challenges and potential reworking by future administrations.
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November 18, 2025
Fla. Condo Says Insurers Handled Storm Claim In Bad Faith
A group of property insurers acted in bad faith by failing to properly, timely and fairly adjust a claim for damage caused by Hurricane Sally in 2020, the owner of a Pensacola condominium complex told a Florida federal court.
Expert Analysis
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Bankruptcy Ruling Shifts Lease Rejection Claim Calculation
A New York federal court’s recent ruling in In re: Cortlandt provides guidance on how to calculate a landlord's damages claim when a bankruptcy debtor rejects a lease, changing from an approach that considers the remaining rent due under the lease to one that considers the remaining time, say Bethany Simmons and Noah Weingarten at Loeb & Loeb.
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Do Not Overstate Fla. Condo Termination Ruling's Impact
A close look at the unique language at issue in Avila v. Biscayne, in which a Florida appellate court deemed a condo termination to be invalid, shows that the case is unlikely to significantly affect other potential terminations, say Barry Lapides and Edward Baker at Berger Singerman.
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Takeaways From FDIC's Spring Supervisory Highlights
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s spring 2024 consumer compliance supervisory report found that relatively few institutions had significant consumer compliance issues last year, but the common thread among those that did were inadequacies or failures in disclosures to consumers, says Matthew Hanaghan at Nutter.
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What Calif. Eviction Ruling Means For Defaulting Borrowers
A California appellate court's recent decision in Homeward Opportunities v. Taptelis found that a defaulting borrower could not delay foreclosure with an improperly served notice of pendency of action, but leaves open a possibility for borrowers to delay eviction proceedings merely by filing lawsuits, say Anne Beehler and Krystal Anderson at Holland & Knight.
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How 3D Printing And Prefab Are Changing Construction
The growing popularity of trends like 3D printing technology and prefabrication in the construction industry have positive ramifications ranging from reducing risks at project sites to streamlining construction schedules, say Josephine Bahn and Jeffery Mullen at Cozen O'Connor.
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Wave Of Final Rules Reflects Race Against CRA Deadline
The flurry of final rules now leaping off the Federal Register press — some of which will affect entire industries and millions of Americans — shows President Joe Biden's determination to protect his regulatory legacy from reversal by the next Congress, given the impending statutory look-back period under the Congressional Review Act, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.
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A Deep Dive Into High Court's Permit Fee Ruling
David Robinson and Daniel Golub at Holland & Knight explore the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling that a local traffic impact fee charged to a California property owner may be a Fifth Amendment taking — and where it leaves localities and real estate developers.
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The Case For Overturning Florida Foreclosure Ruling
A Florida appellate court's recent decision in Desbrunes v. U.S. Bank National Association will potentially put foreclosure cases across the state in jeopardy, and unless it is reconsidered, foreclosing plaintiffs will need to choose between frustrating and uncertain options in the new legal landscape, say Sara Accardi and Paige Knight at Bradley.
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Bracing For The CFPB's War On Mortgage Fees
As the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau homes in on the legality of certain residential mortgage fees, the industry should consult the bureau's steady stream of consumer lending guidance for hints on its priorities, say Nanci Weissgold and Melissa Malpass at Alston & Bird.
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DOJ Consent Orders Chart Road Map For Lending Compliance
Two recent consent orders issued by the U.S. Department of Justice as part of its efforts to fight mortgage lending discrimination highlight issues that pose fair lending compliance risks, and should be carefully studied by banks to avoid enforcement actions, says Memrie Fortenberry at Jones Walker.
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Reverse Veil-Piercing Ruling Will Help Judgment Creditors
A New York federal court’s recent decision in Citibank v. Aralpa Holdings, finding two corporate entities liable for a judgment issued against a Mexican businessman, shows the value of reverse veil piercing as a remedy for judgment creditors to go after sophisticated debtors who squirrel away assets, says Gabe Bluestone at Omni Bridgeway.
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Calif. Housing Overhaul May Increase Pressure On Landlords
Two recently enacted California laws signal new protections and legal benefits for tenants, but also elevate landlords' financial exposure at a time when they are already facing multiple other hardships, says Laya Dogmetchi at Much Shelist.
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New Proposal Signals Sharper Enforcement Focus At CFIUS
Last week's proposed rule aimed at broadening the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States' enforcement authority over foreign investments and increasing penalties for violations signals that CFIUS intends to continue expanding its aggressive monitoring of national security issues, say attorneys at Kirkland.