Commercial

  • April 10, 2025

    Del. Justices Urged To Revive Gellert Seitz Malpractice Case

    A homebuilder is asking the Delaware Supreme Court to undo Gellert Seitz Busenkell & Brown LLC's win in a legal malpractice case over damages the builder says it suffered due to negligent representation in loan restructuring disputes with a bank.

  • April 10, 2025

    Sidley Snaps Up Cadwalader Real Estate Finance Team

    Sidley Austin LLP recruited a team of real estate finance attorneys from Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP, including the co-head of the firm's real estate financing group and three other partners, Law360 Real Estate Authority has learned.

  • April 10, 2025

    Blackstone Bolsters Warehouse Portfolio In $718M Texas Buy

    Blackstone on Thursday announced it has agreed to buy a 6 million-square-foot portfolio of warehouse buildings in Dallas and Houston from Crow Holdings for $718 million in a bet on logistics during a time of market upheaval.

  • April 09, 2025

    Dechert Leaders Talk Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities

    After a few slow years, activity in the commercial mortgage-backed securities market has roared back to life, as investors, lenders and borrowers get comfortable with the new normal and find ways to get deals done, according to Laura Swihart and Stewart McQueen of Dechert LLP.

  • April 09, 2025

    NJ Will Pay $15M To Settle County's Casino Tax Break Lawsuit

    Atlantic County and the state of New Jersey have reached a $15 million settlement over a dispute related to a property tax break program for casinos that the county argued unconstitutionally shifted the tax burden to its municipalities.

  • April 09, 2025

    FAU Research Park Looks To Bring Innovators To Boca

    South Florida-based real estate private equity firm PEBB Enterprises and Banyan Development have tapped Colliers to handle leasing at a research office park connected to Florida Atlantic University, aiming to attract both startups and established businesses, particularly in technology and other innovative fields, to the recently upgraded facility.

  • April 09, 2025

    Ill. Real Estate Broker Gets 4 Years For $3M Investment Scam

    A Chicago real estate broker has been sentenced to more than four years in prison after pleading guilty last year to allegations he duped clients into investing millions of dollars in properties that did not exist and then used the investors' funds for personal expenses, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.

  • April 09, 2025

    Banks Back Private Credit's Rise. Should Borrowers Care?

    Banks provide back-financing in most real estate private credit deals and often have a say on what happens when a loan goes bad, but attorneys have different opinions about whether borrowers should be tuned into what's going on with their debt behind the scenes.

  • April 09, 2025

    Colliers Says Q1 Atlanta Office Market Trends Toward Balance

    Commercial broker Colliers said construction activity remained at its lowest level since 2011 in the first quarter as the overall vacancy rate rose slightly on a quarterly basis to 24.2% in Atlanta's office market.

  • April 09, 2025

    Mich. City Says Pot Co. Can't Challenge Rivals' Licenses

    A Michigan city is urging a federal court to throw out a suit by a would-be dispensary alleging that the city violated state law and the Constitution when it awarded its cannabis licenses, saying the company does not have a property right to sell substances that are illegal under federal law.

  • April 09, 2025

    Miami Offices See Uptick, Despite Decline In Construction

    The Miami office market got off to a positive start in 2025 after slowing down last year, although construction activity continued to decline in the sector, according to a new report from global real estate advisory firm Avison Young.

  • April 09, 2025

    Trade Policy Prompts Fla. 'Wait-And-See' Effect, CBRE Says

    Commercial broker CBRE said firms in Jacksonville, Florida's industrial market may be taking a "wait-and-see approach" while digesting changes in trade policy, based on Q1 figures showing the market saw its first quarter of negative absorption since 2019.

  • April 09, 2025

    Blackstone Clinches $10.8B European Real Estate Fund

    Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP-advised private equity giant Blackstone on Wednesday announced that it wrapped its latest European real estate fund with €9.8 billion ($10.8 billion) of total capital commitments.

  • April 08, 2025

    Expedia's Cuban Island Bookings Were Illegal, Jurors Told

    A Cuban-American man who says he is the rightful heir to an island off the coast of Cuba that was seized by the Communist government told jurors Tuesday that Expedia illegally trafficked in stolen property by offering reservations for resorts on the island through its website.

  • April 08, 2025

    NY High Court Probes If State Emissions Cap Preempts City's

    New York's highest court questioned Tuesday why the state Legislature did not explicitly state that it meant for a 2019 climate law to preempt a law regulating greenhouse gas emissions that New York City passed earlier that year, amid property owners' challenge to the city law.

  • April 08, 2025

    Univ. Of The Arts Gets Last Ch. 7 Property Sale Approved

    Philadelphia's University of the Arts received the Delaware bankruptcy court's approval Tuesday for its sale of an historic building, the seventh and final real estate sale in the defunct school's Chapter 7 case.

  • April 08, 2025

    Cushman Atty Transitions In-House As Kidder Mathews GC

    Kidder Mathews announced Monday that it has hired Edward Castro, a 30-year corporate attorney with experience in commercial real estate law, as general counsel advising the company and its 19 West Coast offices.

  • April 08, 2025

    House Panel Tallies Office Waste After DOGE, GSA Scrutiny

    Republicans on a U.S. House committee cast the federal government's office footprint as costly, out of date and underused in a Tuesday hearing that came after a federal agency posted and then promptly removed a list of some 440 buildings it described as "non-core" last month.

  • April 08, 2025

    Contractor's Win In Insurance Fraud Suit Upheld By 6th Circ.

    A Sixth Circuit panel affirmed Continental Building Co.'s defeat of a lawsuit that leveled insurance fraud claims at the general contractor, finding a subcontractor failed to trace its losses to Continental's claim that it defaulted on a contract.

  • April 08, 2025

    Mass. Board Upholds Town's Value Of Commerical Property

    An owner of a commercial property in Massachusetts failed to produce comparable sales to substantiate reducing the property's valuation by more than $400,000, the state Appellate Tax Board ruled Tuesday.

  • April 08, 2025

    Design Co. Denied Exit From Hurricane Subrogation Suit

    A design contractor facing a $4 million subrogation action over hurricane damage to commercial HVAC units at an Amazon sorting facility can't rely on notice requirements in Florida's construction defect law, Chapter 558, to argue the plaintiff insurers are statutorily barred from seeking reimbursement, a Florida federal court ruled.

  • April 08, 2025

    Lowndes Adds Fla. Real Estate Attorney From Shutts & Bowen

    The Lowndes law firm announced it had added Jason Williams, a former Shutts & Bowen LLP partner, as an Orlando, Florida-based shareholder in its commercial real estate department.

  • April 08, 2025

    Battery Park City Authority Hires Ex-CBRE Atty As GC

    Former CBRE legal counsel and managing director Elaine Kleinberg has been hired as general counsel for New York state's Battery Park City Authority, the public benefit corporation announced Monday.

  • April 08, 2025

    Olshan Frome Expands Real Estate Group With New Partner

    New York-based Olshan Frome Wolosky LLP has added an experienced real estate partner from Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC, in a move meant to aid in the expansion of the midsize firm's real estate law group.

  • April 08, 2025

    Rhodium Gets OK For $185M Settlement With Landlord

    A Texas bankruptcy judge on Tuesday approved a $185 million asset sale to settle a dispute between Rhodium Encore and its remaining landlord that will allow the bankrupt cryptocurrency miner to wipe out its debt with enough left over to pay shareholders.

Expert Analysis

  • Portland's Gross Receipts Tax Oversteps City's Authority

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    Recent measures by Portland, Oregon, that expand the voter-approved scope of the Clean Energy Surcharge on certain retail sales eviscerate the common meaning of the word "retail" and exceed the city's chartered authority to levy tax, say Nikki Dobay at Greenberg Traurig and Jeff Newgard at Peak Policy.

  • Proposed Law Would Harm NYC Hospitality Industry

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    A recently proposed New York City Law that would update hotel licensing and staff coverage requirements could give the city commissioner and unions undue control over the city's hospitality industry, and harm smaller hotels that cannot afford full-time employees, says Stuart Saft at Holland & Knight.

  • Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: August Lessons

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    In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy considers certification cases touching on classwide evidence of injury from debt collection practices, defining coupon settlements under the Class Action Fairness Act, proper approaches for evaluating attorney fee awards in class action settlements, and more.

  • Brownfield Questions Surround IRS Tax Credit Bonus

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    Though the IRS has published guidance regarding the Inflation Reduction Act's 10% adder for tax credits generated by renewable energy projects constructed on brownfield sites, considerable guesswork remains as potential implications seem contrary to IRS intentions, say Megan Caldwell and Jon Micah Goeller at Husch Blackwell.

  • DOJ Paths To Limit FARA Fallout From Wynn's DC Circ. Win

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    After the D.C. Circuit’s recent Attorney General v. Wynn ruling, holding that the government cannot compel retroactive registration under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, the U.S. Department of Justice has a few options to limit the decision’s impact on enforcement, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Shipping Containers As Building Elements Require Diligence

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    With the shipping container market projected to double between 2020 and 2028, repurposing containers as storage units, office spaces and housing may become more common, but developers must make sure they comply with requirements that can vary by intended use and location, says Steven Otto at Crosbie Gliner.

  • NY Tax Talk: Triggers For Tax On Software-As-A-Service

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    Recent decisions by New York’s Tax Appeals Tribunal and Division of Tax Appeals, finding that services bundled with prewritten software were tangible property, provide insight into the features and customer interactions that render such products subject to New York sales tax, say Elizabeth Cha and Madison Ball at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • NY Ruling Offers A Foreclosure Road Map For Lenders

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    A New York appellate court recently upheld a summary judgment ruling in favor of a commercial lender's foreclosure in U.S. Bank v. 1226 Evergreen Bapaz, illustrating the proofs lenders will need to prosecute a foreclosure action, especially where the plaintiff is an assignee of the originating lender, say attorneys at Sherman Atlas.

  • Kentucky Tax Talk: Appeals Court Revisits Leases' Tax Effects

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    With better facts and greater emphasis on the Kentucky Constitution, Walgreen Co. may succeed in its latest Kentucky Court of Appeals challenge to a tax assessor's method of valuing leaseholds on real property for purposes of determining ad valorem tax, say Mark Sommer and Elizabeth Ethington at Frost Brown Todd.

  • Utilizing Liability Exemption When Calif. Cities Lease Property

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    With rising costs pushing California municipalities to lease real estate assets instead of purchasing them, municipalities should review the ample case law that supports certain exceptions to California Constitution Section 18(a) requirements, providing that certain long-term lease obligations are not considered to be liabilities, says Steven Otto at Crosbie Gliner.

  • How NJ Worker Status Ruling Benefits Real Estate Industry

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    In Kennedy v. Weichert, the New Jersey Supreme Court recently said a real estate agent’s employment contract would supersede the usual ABC test analysis to determine his classification as an independent contractor, preserving operational flexibility for the industry — and potentially others, say Jason Finkelstein and Dalila Haden at Cole Schotz.

  • A Checklist For Lenders Preparing For CRE Loan Defaults

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    Considering the recent interest rate environment, lenders should brush up on the proper steps that they should take when preparing to respond to a borrower's default on a commercial real estate loan, and borrowers should understand what lenders will be reviewing, says attorney Norma Williams.

  • 7th Circ Joins Trend Of No CGL Coverage For Structural Flaws

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    The Seventh Circuit, which recently held potential structural instability did not count as property damage under a construction company's commercial general liability policy, joins a growing consensus that faulty work does not implicate coverage without tangible and present damage to the project, say Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty, and Elan Kandel and James Talbert at Bailey Cavalieri.