Residential

  • April 08, 2026

    NY, RealPage Spar Over Justices' Conversion Therapy Ruling

    The New York Attorney General's Office contested RealPage Inc.'s argument that the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling against a Colorado conversion therapy ban bolsters its First Amendment suit against the state, disputing the company's characterization of the high court's holding.

  • April 08, 2026

    NJ Power Broker, Atty Brother Push To End Developer's Suit

    South Jersey powerbroker George Norcross and his brother, Parker McCay PA shareholder Philip A. Norcross, asked a New Jersey state court this week to toss a civil racketeering suit from a real estate developer, which closely tracked a now-dismissed criminal indictment, arguing the allegations were settled in previous litigation and are time-barred.

  • April 08, 2026

    Real Estate Lawyers On The Move

    Holland & Knight and Dentons are among the law firms that have made recent real estate or construction hires.

  • April 08, 2026

    These Law Firms Led Q1's Top Real Estate, Hospitality Deals

    Clifford Chance, Wachtell and DLA Piper are among more than two dozen law firms that guided the biggest real estate and hospitality mergers announced in the first quarter, with the largest deal exceeding $10 billion.

  • April 08, 2026

    2 Firms Help GTIS, Hovnanian Clinch $200M Homebuilding JV

    GTIS Partners and Hovnanian Enterprises have closed on a $200 million joint venture to build and sell homes of various types across housing communities in five states, adding another deal to their long-running partnership, with counsel from Maynard Nexsen PC and Liechty McGinnis Berryman & Bowen LLP.

  • April 08, 2026

    Ky. Expands Counties' Power To Collect Late Property Taxes

    Kentucky bolstered counties' authority to enforce the collection of delinquent property taxes under a bill signed by the governor.

  • April 08, 2026

    1 Year Later, How Tariffs Have Crept Into Real Estate Contracts

    In the year since President Donald Trump's Rose Garden announcement of sweeping worldwide tariffs last April, real estate and construction lawyers have wrestled with how duties or potential duties fit into clients' deals, and sources recently shared more than half a dozen contract examples from the past year with Law360 Real Estate Authority.

  • April 08, 2026

    Mass. Tax Board Upholds Couple's $4.9M Home Value

    A Massachusetts home on a 144-acre residential property was properly valued at $4.9 million, the state Appellate Tax Board ruled, after the owners failed to provide comparable properties to prove the value should be lowered.

  • April 07, 2026

    $8.7M FCA Whistleblower Attys Award Too High, 9th Circ. Says

    The Ninth Circuit held Monday that a district court's award of $8.7 million in fees and expenses to attorneys representing a whistleblower who claimed Academy Mortgage submitted false insurance claims was too high, saying the case is not "exceptional," and the court didn't justify its lodestar multiplier of 1.75.

  • April 07, 2026

    Ziegler Wraps $102M Bonds Deal For Calif. Senior Housing

    Specialty investment bank Ziegler said it has wrapped up a tax-exempt bonds financing deal worth more than $101.7 million that aims to support a California nonprofit public benefit corporation's upcoming senior housing development.

  • April 07, 2026

    King & Spalding Grows RE, Funds Team With McDermott Atty

    King & Spalding LLP is continuing to expand its real estate bench with the hiring of a New York-based lawyer from McDermott Will & Schulte LLP.

  • April 07, 2026

    Carmel Partners Closes Multifamily Fund With $1.35B Raised

    Carmel Partners managed to raise $1.35 billion for its U.S. multifamily real estate fund, which has been used to buy nine properties, the real estate investment management company announced Tuesday.

  • April 06, 2026

    Public Had Right To Access Fla. Beach, Police Chief Testifies

    A police chief testified in Florida federal court on Monday there was a "strong argument" that the public could use a beach for recreational purposes in a landowner's lawsuit over access rights, telling a judge that he sought legal advice on whether his department can enforce trespassing complaints.

  • April 06, 2026

    Denver Property Managers Sued Over Eviction Fee Collection

    Two property management companies are using eviction proceedings to siphon illegal attorney fees and costs from former tenants according to two proposed class actions filed in Colorado state court Friday.

  • April 06, 2026

    Brownstein Hyatt Adds Ex-Hogan Lovells Atty In Denver

    Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck LLP has brought back a former Hogan Lovells real estate transactions attorney as a shareholder in the firm's Denver office.

  • April 06, 2026

    Knightvest Buys Dallas Tower, Plans Luxury Upgrades

    Multifamily investment firm Knightvest Capital has acquired a 389-unit Uptown Dallas Class A high-rise, and it plans to undertake luxury renovations for the property, the company announced Monday.

  • April 06, 2026

    RealPage Flags Justices' Therapy Ruling In NY Law Challenge

    RealPage Inc. alerted a New York federal court to the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling against Colorado's conversion therapy ban, saying the decision clarifies which standard should be applied in its First Amendment challenge to a state ban on certain rental software.

  • April 06, 2026

    REIT Investor Attys Get Fee Award In $7.1M Settlement

    Attorneys at Rolnick Kramer Sadighi LLP and Woods Rogers Vandeventer Black PLC will receive a fee of nearly $2 million after brokering the $7.1 million settlement of claims that a real estate investment trust's insiders left the company's common stock diluted by "disastrous" stock redemption decisions.

  • April 06, 2026

    NYC Real Estate Week In Review

    Ice Miller and Holland & Knight are among the law firms that assisted with the largest New York City real estate deals that became public last week, with Emerald Group atop the list for the second week in a row.

  • April 06, 2026

    Severance Boosts Ex-Compass GC's Comp Nearly 10 Times

    The former general counsel of Compass Inc. saw his total compensation jump from about $1 million last year to over $10 million in 2025, according to a securities filing on Friday.

  • April 06, 2026

    Insurer Can't Hide Deal With Security Co. In Shooting Dispute

    A pair of insurers can't keep confidential the amount they received to resolve their coverage claims against a security company, a North Carolina federal court ruled, saying the insurers failed to overcome the public's presumptive right to access court records under the First Amendment and common law.

  • April 06, 2026

    4 Firms Guide Healthcare REIT's Early IPO Steps

    National Healthcare Properties filed Monday for an initial public offering in which the healthcare real estate investment trust preliminarily estimated it could raise $100 million, advised by Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP and two other firms.

  • April 03, 2026

    Real Estate Co. Says Compass Owes More For Agent 'Betrayal'

    A real estate company asked a Florida state court for permission to seek punitive damages against Compass Inc., claiming the brokerage firm is misleading the public regarding its agents' fiduciary duties despite facing the company's lawsuit alleging "betrayal" from a real estate agent's double-dealing in a lucrative property transaction.

  • April 03, 2026

    8th Circ. Affirms Designer Owes Fees For Floor Plan IP Suits

    The Eighth Circuit has upheld an award of $236,000 in attorney fees to a group of real estate agents and a brokerage firm accused of infringing a home designer's patents.

  • April 03, 2026

    GAO Backs FEMA In $69M Housing Unit Delivery Protest

    An Alabama company vying for a Federal Emergency Management Agency award for manufactured housing could not show the agency unreasonably steered a $69 million deal to a Florida company for a faster delivery schedule, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said.

Expert Analysis

  • Adapting Force Majeure To A Predictably Unpredictable World

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    As the climate and political landscapes get more complicated, force majeure provisions will likely be triggered increasingly often, demanding an evolving understanding of when events and their impacts are truly unforeseeable, say attorneys at Nossaman.

  • Impact Of Corporate Transparency Act Ambiguity On Banks

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    Even though banks generally needn't file beneficial ownership information reports, financial institutions must continue to monitor the status of the Corporate Transparency Act and understand its requirements in case the nationwide injunction that was issued against the CTA earlier this month is overturned, say attorneys at Armstrong Teasdale.

  • Strategies For Home Equity Investment Providers In 2025

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    The home equity investment product market is thriving even amid consumer concerns, regulatory scrutiny and conflicting court decisions, setting the stage for a promising but challenging environment for providers in 2025, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.

  • What Interest Rate Cuts Mean For Housing Markets

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    The Federal Reserve's recent reduction of interest rates may provide limited immediate relief for real estate sectors, but offers potential opportunities for commercial real estate investors and construction firms, which now face an environment ripe for new projects, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.

  • California Supreme Court's Year In Review

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    Attorneys at Horvitz & Levy highlight notable decisions on major questions from the California Supreme Court's last term, including voter initiatives, hostile work environment and the economic loss rule.

  • How CFIUS' Updated Framework Affects Global Investors

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    The recent change to the monitoring and enforcement regulations governing the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States will broaden administrative practices around nonnotified transaction investigations, increase the scope of information demands from the committee and accelerate its ability to impose mitigation on parties, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • 'Reverse Redlining' Suit Reveals Language Risks For Lenders

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    The Justice Department's case against consumer finance provider Colony Ridge highlights the government's focus on lending to consumers with limited English proficiency and the risks of generating marketing materials in other languages while conducting actual transactions in English, say attorneys at Goodwin.

  • Hurricane Coverage Ruling Clarifies Appraisal Scope In Fla.

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    In a case involving property insurance for hurricane damage, a Florida federal court recently enforced policy limits despite an appraisal award exceeding those limits, underscoring the boundaries between valuation and coverage — a distinction that provides valuable guidance for insurers handling post-catastrophe claims, says Tiffany Bustamante at Cozen O’Connor.

  • Feds May Have Overstepped In Suit Against Mortgage Lender

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    The U.S. Department of Justice's lawsuit against Rocket Mortgage goes too far in attempting to combat racial bias and appears to fail on the fatal flaw that mortgage lenders should be at arm's length from appraisers, says Drew Ketterer at Ketterer & Ketterer.

  • Foreclosing Lenders Still Floating In Murky Legal Waters In NY

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    The New York foreclosure landscape remains in disarray after the state's highest court last month declined to weigh in on whether legal changes from 2022 that severely curtailed lenders' ability to bring successive foreclosure cases were retroactive, says Brian Rich at Barclay Damon.

  • Philly's Algorithmic Rent Ban Furthers Antitrust Policy Trends

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    A Philadelphia bill banning the use of algorithmic software to set rent prices and manage occupancy rates is indicative of growing scrutiny of this technology, and reflects broader policy trends of adapting traditional antitrust principles to respond to new technology, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.

  • How Property Insurance Coverage Shrank After The Pandemic

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    Insurers litigating property claims are leveraging rulings that provided relief in the COVID-19 context to reverse the former majority rule on physical loss or damage in all contexts, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Why Secured Lenders Must Mind The Gap In UCC Searches

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    If not adequately addressed, the Uniform Commercial Code filing indexing gap can interfere with a lender's expected lien priority, but taking appropriate preclosing actions and properly timing searches can eliminate this risk, says Robert Wonneberger at Barclay Damon.