More Real Estate Coverage
-
February 25, 2025
Polsinelli Adds Nixon Peabody Real Estate Atty In Chicago
A real estate attorney who has spent his entire, almost two-decade career with Nixon Peabody LLP has joined Polsinelli PC's Chicago real estate team to continue his work advising clients on a range of issues involving real estate transactional matters, the firm announced Monday.
-
February 24, 2025
Groups Fight Lawmakers' Bid To End Nat'l Monument Power
More than 245 conservation, sporting, cultural heritage and tribal groups are urging U.S. Senate and House members to oppose any attempts to repeal existing protections for national parks and monuments, arguing that 18 presidents have used the law to expand the sites across the country.
-
February 24, 2025
Osage Reservation Boundary Case Is Meritless, Court Told
Oklahoma Tax Commission officials are urging a federal district court to dismiss a motion by the Osage Nation that seeks acknowledgment of its reservation's continued existence, arguing that the decades-old case arises out of the tribe's attempt to avoid state taxation of its members.
-
February 24, 2025
4 Firms Advise On Apollo's $1.5B Bridge Investment Buy
Apollo Global Management said Monday it has agreed to buy Bridge Investment Group Holdings Inc., a Salt Lake City, Utah-based real estate investment manager, in a $1.5 billion deal steered by four law firms, as Apollo looks to expand its real estate equity and credit offerings.
-
February 21, 2025
Judge Trims $40M Green Energy Co. Investor Suit
A Tennessee federal judge won't toss a proposed class action claiming that a Chicago green energy outfit and its executives used false promises of extravagant returns to lure investors, but ruled two defendants can escape some of the suit's claims.
-
February 21, 2025
Green, Tribal Orgs Ask To Defend Biden DOI's Coal Decision
Tribal and conservation groups have asked a federal court to let them join Wyoming and Montana's suit against the U.S. Department of the Interior over the Biden administration's 2024 decision ending new coal leasing on public lands in the Powder River Basin.
-
February 21, 2025
Energy Co. Says Osage Shouldn't Rush To Destroy Wind Farm
Enel Green Power North America is urging a federal district court to stay a $4.2 million judgment and order requiring it to remove 84 wind turbines from the Osage Nation's reservation while it appeals to the Tenth Circuit, arguing that the appellate court could find their destruction was unnecessary.
-
February 21, 2025
Lewis Brisbois Launches Corporate Landlord Practice
Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith LLP has announced the launch of a new corporate landlord practice, with two partners from Atlanta and Houston serving as co-chairs.
-
February 20, 2025
Better Process Not Certain As White House Loses NEPA Regs
The White House says it rescinded National Environmental Policy Act regulations in an effort to "expedite and simplify" the federal permitting process, but attorneys say the immediate effect of the move will likely be to confuse agencies and slow down project approvals.
-
February 20, 2025
Wash. Justices Say CARES Act Doesn't Shield Violent Renters
The Washington Supreme Court on Thursday said landlords did not have to give 30 days' notice under the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act before evicting violent tenants, settling a question that had split two lower appellate panels.
-
February 20, 2025
Court Asks Trump's DOJ To Opine On Texas Tribal Land Fight
A Texas federal judge has ordered the U.S. government to say whether it still wants to intervene in a land dispute between the Ysleta Del Sur Pueblo tribe and the city of El Paso now that Donald Trump is president.
-
February 20, 2025
NY Expands Local Power To Give Storm Damage Tax Breaks
New York state expanded municipalities' authority to provide property tax breaks to owners of property damaged by severe storms and other natural disasters by allowing that relief to be granted for small business' property as part of a bill signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul.
-
February 20, 2025
Home Equity Lender Preys On Consumers, Mass. AG Alleges
Home equity investment company Hometap Equity Partners is violating Massachusetts consumer protection laws by offering what amounts to unregulated versions of reverse mortgages to vulnerable consumers, the state's attorney general charged in a lawsuit filed Wednesday in state court.
-
February 20, 2025
Holland & Knight Adds Manatt Real Estate Pro In California
Holland & Knight LLP continues expanding its West Coast team, bringing in a Manatt Phelps & Phillips LLP real estate expert as a partner in its Orange County, California, office.
-
February 19, 2025
Wash. City, Tribe Reach Deal In Emergency Shelter Dispute
The small Washington city of Toppenish and the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation have reached a settlement to end a federal lawsuit over a 24-hour emergency cold weather shelter within reservation boundaries.
-
February 19, 2025
Airlines Can Ask 9th Circ. To Consider Airport Pollution Suit
A Washington judge has cleared Delta Air Lines and Alaska Airlines to ask the Ninth Circuit to weigh in on whether federal regulations governing air travel or jet emissions prevent property owners and residents from suing over alleged flight-path pollution near Seattle's main commercial airport.
-
February 19, 2025
Taylor English Adds Fla. Real Estate Ace From Moffa Sutton
Taylor English Duma LLP announced Wednesday that it is now home to a seasoned real estate agent and attorney in Florida who was previously a partner in the Law Offices of Moffa Sutton & Donnini PA's business law division.
-
February 19, 2025
Ill. Dept. OKs Quantum Computing Building Tax Credit Regs
Illinois individual and corporate taxpayers may claim income tax credits for a portion of wages paid to workers employed in the construction of quantum computing campus facilities, the state Department of Revenue said in adopted regulatory amendments.
-
February 19, 2025
Stearns Weaver Brings On Planning, Development Head In Fla.
Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson PA has a new nonattorney director of planning and development services who has racked up more than two decades of experience in both the public and private sectors in Florida.
-
February 18, 2025
Colo. Property Owner Sued For Substandard Conditions
A proposed class of Denver tenants has claimed in Colorado state court that property manager Centerspace LP neglected its apartment building to the point that it became uninhabitable over the previous three years.
-
February 18, 2025
NY Broadens Tax Break Guidelines For Development Projects
New York state broadened guidelines for determining whether some economic development projects may be eligible for property and sales tax exemptions based on the level of a project's on-site child care services under clarifying legislation signed by Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul.
-
February 18, 2025
Jones Day Leads Sherwin-Williams On $1.15B Brazil Paint Buy
Jones Day is guiding Cleveland-based Sherwin-Williams Co. on a new deal to buy the Brazilian architectural paints business of BASF Group, advised by Linklaters and Machado Meyer, for $1.15 billion in cash.
-
February 18, 2025
Cozen O'Connor Adds Father-Daughter Real Estate Duo
Cozen O'Connor is expanding its real estate services in the Philadelphia office by adding a father-daughter duo that includes an attorney with more than two decades of experience who moved his practice after 19 years with Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP.
-
February 18, 2025
Denver Landlord Says Defunct Moye White Owes Nearly $4M
A Denver landlord accused defunct law firm Moye White LLP in Colorado state court of owing almost $4 million after the law firm closed down in 2024.
-
February 13, 2025
NY State Says Nothing New In Seneca Nation's Thruway Suit
The state of New York is asking a federal district court to dismiss a challenge by the Seneca Nation over a portion of thruway that runs through its reservation, arguing that nothing could have possibly changed in the 14-year dispute over the validity of a 1954 easement.
Expert Analysis
-
DOI's Vision For Offshore Wind: Obstacles And Opportunities
The U.S. Department of Interior's recent announcement of its intent to open the U.S. coastline to large-scale offshore wind projects is promising, but wind developers must be ready to confront distinct technical and regulatory challenges in each coastal region, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
Jones Act Compliance Strategies For Offshore Wind Projects
Offshore wind developers can use a number of strategies to get projects done while meeting the challenges of complying with Jones Act requirements for the use of vessels built, owned and operated by U.S. persons, say Jonathan Wilconis and Carl Valenstein at Morgan Lewis.
-
Biden's Infrastructure Funding Comes With Strings Attached
The bipartisan infrastructure funding bill enacted last November creates new jobs and business opportunities, but its changes to domestic preferences and Made in America enforcement also give rise to new compliance hazards for unwary manufacturers and government contractors, say Jeffrey Belkin and Grecia Rivas at Alston & Bird.
-
NIMBYism Is Endangering America's Clean Energy Future
The U.S. has made remarkable strides in recent years toward a cleaner, more sustainable energy future — but further progress is threatened by a not-in-my-backyard cancel culture that seeks to thwart every type of major energy development, says Albert Wynn at Greenberg Traurig.
-
Science-Based Definition Of US Waters Won't Pass In Court
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers recently proposed a science-backed definition of "waters of the United States" for the Clean Water Act, but the U.S. Supreme Court is unlikely to be persuaded that science trumps a constitutional or statutory limit on the EPA's and the Corps' authority, says Jeffrey Porter at Mintz Levin.
-
What Justices' Groundwater Ruling Means For State Disputes
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Mississippi v. Tennessee aids future negotiations over interstate groundwater resources, both by explicitly informing states what the default rule is, and by implicitly giving states authority to trade off water rights across a broader spectrum of water resources, says Robin Craig at USC Gould School of Law.
-
BGC-Cantor Suit Highlights Independent Directorship Issue
The Delaware Chancery Court recently sent breach of fiduciary duties claims to trial in the disputed merger between BGC and a unit of Cantor Fitzgerald, highlighting both the legal benefits of seeking out directors that meet the court's criteria of independence from the controller, and the significant, negative impacts when they are not, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
-
How Dealmakers Can Bridge M&A Differences In US, Europe
As business continues to heat up globally, differing practices and norms in mergers and acquisitions can lead to misunderstandings between U.S. and European dealmakers, but a comparison of documentation structures and processes can help avert these complications, say Piotr Korzynski and Piotr Jaskiewicz at Baker McKenzie.
-
Feds May Need Power To Take State Lands For New Grid
The Biden administration's plan to move the U.S. electricity sector to renewable energy will require extensive new high-voltage transmission infrastructure, but since states have the ability to block construction of power lines, Congress will need to give federal regulators eminent domain authority over state-owned lands to get the job done, say attorneys at V&E.
-
How Canceling The Border Wall Affects Gov't Contractors
President Joe Biden's cancellation of the border wall project has left some federal contractors in the lurch, but including protective flow-down termination clauses in their contracts can guard against subcontractor liability and ensure recovery, says Adrien Pickard at Shapiro Lifschitz.
-
Biden Climate Push Means Fossil Fuel Cos. Must Innovate
The Biden administration's strong focus on climate change puts unprecedented pressure on oil, gas and coal companies to strategically embrace new clean and low-emission technologies, predict and minimize environmental impacts, and prioritize innovation in order to sustain long-term viability, say attorneys at Akin Gump.
-
How Environmental Litigation Can Block Renewable Projects
While renewable energy projects can reduce greenhouse gas emissions, they are not immune from environmental challenges filed by citizens groups, conservation organizations and even competitors — so project developers must plan their environmental and permitting reviews carefully, say Jonathan Brightbill and Madalyn Brown at Winston & Strawn.
-
Gulf Coast Offshore Wind: Opportunities And Challenges
A recent announcement from the U.S. Department of the Interior signals opportunities for clean energy developers on the Gulf of Mexico outer continental shelf, but offshore wind projects in the region will still face many environmental and technical hurdles, say attorneys at Shearman.