Commercial
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May 15, 2024
Colo. Will Extend Property Tax Assessment Rate Cuts
Colorado will extend its current temporary property tax rate reductions into 2024 and will lower tax rates for future years under a bill signed by Democratic Gov. Jared Polis.
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May 15, 2024
Dechert Advises $232M Financing For Harlem Apt. Complex
An Urban American and Brookfield Property joint venture closed on a $232 million mortgage for Harlem's 3333 Broadway apartment complex in a transaction advised by Dechert LLP.
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May 15, 2024
Lender Drops $4M Fraud Suit Against Ga. Golf Course Owner
Lender U.S. Strategic Capital Advisors has moved to voluntarily drop its lawsuit accusing the owner of an Atlanta-area golf course of using a more than $4 million loan to prop up other businesses, shortly after a Georgia federal judge denied successive efforts to wrest control of his assets.
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May 15, 2024
Morgan Stanley Sells 4 Warehouses On US Border For $178M
Morgan Stanley Investment Management said Wednesday that it has sold four industrial properties in El Paso and Laredo, Texas, for a combined $178 million to two unidentified institutional investors.
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May 15, 2024
Holland & Knight Hospitality Leader Sees Mixed-Use Boom
As hotel companies ride a rebound in travel following occupancy lows in 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the hospitality sector is also benefiting from a boom in demand for mixed-use residential and hotel projects, one of Holland & Knight LLP's hospitality leaders told Law360 in a recent interview.
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May 15, 2024
Philly Landlord Settles Paralegal Assault Case For $6M
The landlord of a Philadelphia office tower will pay $6 million to settle a suit claiming that negligent security allowed a man to sneak into the building and sexually assault a paralegal at a small law firm working upstairs, according to the plaintiff's attorneys.
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May 14, 2024
NC State Fights Cancer Patient's Presuit Building Access
North Carolina State University is pressing the state appeals court to find it is insulated from an "unusual" order allowing a former graduate student worker diagnosed with cancer to inspect a campus building that tested high for levels of carcinogens.
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May 14, 2024
CBRE Report Finds Alternative Lenders Replaced Banks In Q1
Commercial broker CBRE has said high interest rates slowed the lending market in the first quarter, with alternative lenders stepping in to fill the gap left by less bank activity.
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May 14, 2024
Data Center Co. Plans $283M Project For Texas City
Data center company Skybox is planning to build a $283 million data center project in Hutto, Texas, that will have a two-story office and a two-story data center shell, according to the company's registration notice with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.
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May 14, 2024
Fed Finds Big Banks Lack Data To Model Climate Risk
A Federal Reserve analysis found that a group of the biggest banks in the U.S. mostly lacked the data to forecast the hypothetical effects of future climate-related disasters, even if such events are likely to drive up loan defaults.
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May 14, 2024
Cos. Ask NY Court To Invalidate 100s Of Pot Licenses
New York state's beleaguered cannabis oversight agency has been hit with another lawsuit, this one seeking to invalidate hundreds of retail licenses that regulators issued to those most directly affected by the enforcement of marijuana prohibition laws.
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May 14, 2024
Property Deals See More Scrutiny As Tip Sparks Forced Sale
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States is likely this year to look at additional real estate deals near government property, experts told Law360 Tuesday, a day after the White House ordered a real property divestment near a Wyoming Air Force base following national security concerns.
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May 14, 2024
Goldman Sachs Secures $7B For Real Estate Credit Investing
Goldman Sachs Alternatives pulled in more than $7 billion in its latest credit-focused fund and related investment vehicles, as the firm goes after financing opportunities in dislocated real estate markets across the world.
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May 14, 2024
Feds Dodge Salt Lake City's Suit Over $1B Gondola Plan
A Utah federal judge on Tuesday dismissed the federal government from a Salt Lake City lawsuit challenging federal approvals of a $1 billion plan to address traffic congestion by building the world's longest gondola.
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May 14, 2024
Tenn. Judge Wants Default Win For Bank But No Atty Fees
A Tennessee magistrate judge recommended partially granting a default judgment win to a bank suing a Florida-based developer accused of defaulting on about $15.3 million in loans, but also suggested denying the bank attorney fees.
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May 14, 2024
Polsinelli Grows With 2 CMBS Experts From Kilpatrick
Polsinelli PC has brought on two shareholders in Florida and North Carolina from Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP, bolstering the firm's real estate finance and financial services offerings, according to a Tuesday announcement.
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May 14, 2024
London-Based Legal Recruiter Opens 1st US Shop In Miami
London-based legal recruiting firm Buchanan Law announced Tuesday that it is opening its first U.S. location and second shop overall in Miami, touting the city's status as a principal hub for the country's East Coast legal industry.
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May 13, 2024
REIT Inks Deal To End Investors' Board Takeover Bid
Presidio Property Trust has agreed to nominate one new director to its board, ending a Zuma Capital Management-led investor group's bid to replace five of the real estate investment trust's six board members, in a deal guided by three law firms.
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May 13, 2024
Petersen Health Receivership Deal Draws US Trustee Concern
Senior living chain Petersen Health Care Monday told a Delaware bankruptcy judge it has struck a deal to resolve the status of a number of its facilities that are in receivership, but the U.S. Trustee's Office said the deal may bend the Bankruptcy Code too far.
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May 13, 2024
NJ Justices Hold Contract Supersedes Real Estate Wage Law
The contract a real estate agent signed deeming him an independent contractor is enough to resolve his claims of improper wage deductions, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Monday, saying that a state three-prong test doesn't need to apply.
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May 13, 2024
White House Bars Real Estate Deal Near Air Force Base
President Joe Biden is ordering a recent purchaser of real estate near an Air Force base in Wyoming to sell portions of the property, based on a public tip and a finding from the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States that cryptocurrency mining there presents a national security risk.
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May 13, 2024
Nursing Home Says Buyer's Lease Silence Endangers Future
An Ohio-based nursing home operator claimed Monday that its Pickaway County nursing home is in "imminent danger" because the company's owners are threatening the licensing and management of the nursing home by refusing to acknowledge terminated leases and not making the transition to a new lessee and operator.
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May 13, 2024
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
Dylan Chan Law Firm, Norris McLaughlin and Morgan Lewis are among the law firms that grabbed work on the largest New York City real estate deals to hit public records last week, a slow period that saw only three deeds above the $15 million mark become public.
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May 13, 2024
Colliers Says Outer Boroughs Industrial Leases Jumped In Q1
Industrial leasing in New York City's outer boroughs picked up in the first quarter, with a film studio leasing in central Queens leading the way, according to an analysis from Colliers.
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May 10, 2024
Vegas Hotels, Software Cos. Escape Price-Algorithm Suit
A Nevada federal judge has permanently tossed a proposed class action that accused two software companies and multiple hotel operators of using an algorithm software in a price-fixing scheme for hotel room prices on the Las Vegas Strip.
Expert Analysis
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RICO Ruling Makes US More Attractive Foreign Creditor Forum
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Yegiazaryan v. Smagin, allowing a foreign plaintiff to use the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act to enforce a foreign arbitral award, will make judgment creditors more likely to seek out U.S. courts to remedy efforts to frustrate the enforcement of international arbitration awards, say attorneys at Paul Hastings.
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5 Strategies For Restructuring Underperforming CRE Loans
With commercial real estate industry conditions expected to deteriorate further in the coming months, market participants should consider a number of strategies to help resolve challenged investments, ranging from financial restructurings to project phasing, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
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Ghosting In BigLaw: How To Come Back From Lack Of Feedback
Junior associates can feel powerless when senior colleagues cut off contact instead of providing useful feedback, but young attorneys can get back on track by focusing on practical professional development and reexamining their career priorities, says Rachel Patterson at Orrick.
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Post-Ciminelli Predictions On Right-To-Control Convictions
The recent Second Circuit filings in Binday suggest that the government will fight to preserve its right-to-control convictions in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's Ciminelli decision, and offer clues about key issues that will drive post-Ciminelli litigation, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Steps To Success For Senior Associates
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Adriana Paris at Rissman Barrett discusses the increased responsibilities and opportunities that becoming a senior associate brings and what attorneys in this role should prioritize to flourish in this stressful but rewarding next level in their careers.
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How To Avoid A Zombie Office Building Apocalypse
With national office vacancy rates approaching 20%, policymakers, investors and developers will need to come together in order to prevent this troubling trend from sucking the life out of business districts or contaminating the broader real estate market, say Ryan Sommers and Robyn Minter Smyers at Thompson Hine.
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Legal Profession Must Do More For Lawyers With Disabilities
At the start of Disability Pride month, Rosalyn Richter at Arnold & Porter looks at why lawyers with disabilities are significantly underrepresented in private practice, asserting that law firms and other employers must do more to conquer the implicit bias that deters attorneys from seeking accommodations.
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Appellate Funding Disclosure: No Mandate Is Right Choice
The Advisory Committee on Appellate Rules' recent decision, forgoing a mandatory disclosure rule for litigation funding in federal appeals, is prudent, as third-party funding is only involved in a minuscule number of federal cases, and courts have ample authority to obtain funding information if necessary, says Stewart Ackerly at Statera Capital.
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A Clearer Path To Speedy Guaranty Litigation In NY Courts
Recent cases indicate that New York's Appellate Division, First Department, is shifting its stance regarding when agreements with both monetary and nonmonetary obligations qualify for expedited litigation, and highlight best practices for drafting guarantees and notes, say Joshua Kopelowitz and Bansari Sheth at Fox Rothschild.
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LA's High-Value Real Estate Transfer Tax Should Be Scrapped
Los Angeles’ recently implemented high-value property transfer tax has chilled the real estate market, is failing to meet revenue expectations and raises significant constitutional concerns, making it a flawed piece of legislation that should be invalidated, says attorney Paul Weinberg.
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High Court Ruling Provides New Avenue For Foreign Plaintiffs
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Yegiazaryan v. Smagin offers a new path for foreign plaintiffs attempting to enforce arbitral awards in the U.S., but it also leaves the standard for such attempts under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act unsettled, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Justices' Corruption Ruling May Shift DOJ Bank Fraud Tactics
After the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last month in Ciminelli v. U.S., curtailing a government theory of wire fraud liability, prosecutors may need to reconsider their approach to the bank fraud statute, particularly when it comes to foreign bank enforcement, says Brian Kearney at Ballard Spahr.
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Avoiding Negative Tax Consequences In Loan Modifications
Borrowers who may be caught in the dramatic uptick in nonperforming commercial real estate loans should consider strategies to avoid income and capital gains tax that may be triggered by loan modifications, says Aman Badyal at Glaser Weil.