Commercial
-
March 17, 2026
Miss. Expands Energy Project Tax Break To Battery Systems
Mississippi will offer energy storage facilities that use battery energy storage systems a property tax break for energy projects under a bill signed by the governor.
-
March 17, 2026
Australian Trust Anchors $330M For Nuveen Retail Fund
Investment manager Nuveen Real Estate said Tuesday that it has raised $330 million for a fund targeting grocery-anchored neighborhood retail properties with an anchor commitment from three Australian superannuation funds.
-
March 16, 2026
NJ Justices Question Eminent Domain Use In Land Swap
New Jersey high court justices on Monday appeared skeptical that the township of Jackson properly used eminent domain when it combined condemned land with other public property in an exchange for land intended for use as open space.
-
March 16, 2026
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
Harfenist Kraut and Windels Marx are among the law firms that steered the largest New York City real estate deals that became public last week, with trades in Queens and Manhattan leading the way.
-
March 16, 2026
SoHo Building In NYC Hits Ch. 11, Owing $30M
The owner of a mixed-use building in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with more than $30.6 million in liabilities, according to a petition filed in New York bankruptcy court.
-
March 16, 2026
Tenn. Expands Property Tax Assessment Division's Duties
Tennessee expanded the duties of the state comptroller's office's division of property assessments under a bill signed by the governor.
-
March 16, 2026
Peachtree Lends $103M For Miami Convention Center Hotel
Peachtree Group has originated a $103 million bridge loan to finance the redevelopment of a historic hotel site in Miami Beach, the Atlanta-based real estate firm said Monday.
-
March 16, 2026
IRS' Easement Fraud Penalties Require Trial, 5th Circ. Told
The Internal Revenue Service violated the Seventh Amendment by imposing civil fraud penalties without a jury first reviewing them, a partnership told the Fifth Circuit, arguing the penalties' common-law roots allow the entity to invoke constitutional protections in its conservation easement tax deduction dispute.
-
March 16, 2026
Public Storage Inks $10.5B Deal To Create Industry Giant
Public Storage Inc. said on March 16 it has agreed to acquire National Storage Affiliates Trust at an enterprise value of about $10.5 billion, with three law firms advising the REITs as they seek to create one of the largest self-storage platforms in the U.S.
-
March 16, 2026
Senior Housing REIT Janus Living Seeks $703M From IPO
Senior housing-focused real estate investment trust Janus Living said Monday that it is seeking about $700 million in an initial public offering this week, advised by Latham & Watkins LLP and Sidley Austin LLP, that follows a carveout this year.
-
March 13, 2026
GSA Pans Giving 'Unelected Judiciary' Sway Over Property
The federal government's landlord told the federal judiciary it is "ill equipped" to have direct authority to maintain its buildings.
-
March 13, 2026
Walmart Says Pa. Store Didn't Break Grocery Sales Agreement
Walmart wants to throw out a neighboring property owner's claim that a Pittsburgh-area store breached the terms of a nearly 30-year-old easement agreement, arguing a lawsuit's allegation that it had been in violation of an agreement not to compete on grocery sales for years was too vague and too late.
-
March 13, 2026
Nixon Peabody Adds RE Attys To SF, DC Offices
Nixon Peabody LLP has hired two veteran real estate attorneys for counsel roles in its San Francisco and Washington, D.C., locations, the firm announced.
-
March 13, 2026
Chicago Hotel Operator Secures Interim Cash For Ch. 11
The owner of two Chicago hotels can access its senior lender's cash collateral to fund its Chapter 11 case, a Delaware bankruptcy judge said Friday, while a decision on BY Hotel SPE-3 LLC's proposed $1 million debtor-in-possession financing package from an insider was pushed back.
-
March 13, 2026
Esquire's $348M Signature Deal Bolsters Litigation Platform
Esquire Financial Holdings Inc. has agreed to buy the parent company of Signature Bank in a roughly $348.4 million deal that Esquire said will help expand its Chicago-area commercial banking presence and support growth of its litigation banking platform.
-
March 12, 2026
Data Center Hyperscalers' Capital Spending Surges To $700B
Capital spending on data centers, the facilities' equipment and infrastructure, is likely to balloon to $700 billion this year for the six U.S. hyperscalers Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Corp., Meta Platforms Inc., Alphabet Inc., Oracle Corp. and CoreWeave Inc., according to a Thursday Moody's report.
-
March 12, 2026
Law Firm Office Leasing Signals Push To Compete In Miami
Law firms have doubled down on the Miami legal scene with new or renewed leases in recent months, leading to what attorneys say is better work-life balance and greater collaboration among employees in the competitive South Florida market.
-
March 12, 2026
3 Firms Guide Texas Developer's Liquidation Plan
The board of directors for Texas-based developer Stratus Properties Inc. have decided that the company must liquidate its assets and dissolve in a liquidation plan guided by Jones Walker LLP, Sidley Austin LLP and Morris Nichols Arsht & Tunnell LLP, the company announced.
-
March 12, 2026
Pot Landlord's Suit Against Town Over Revocation Trimmed
A Michigan federal judge dismissed most claims against a Royal Oak Township official and a government contractor in a suit from a cannabis real estate business alleging its licenses were wrongly revoked.
-
March 12, 2026
CMS, Hogan Lovells Lead Savills' $1.1B US RE Lender Buyout
Savills has agreed to acquire Eastdil Secured in a deal that values the real estate investment bank at $1.11 billion as the British property adviser moves to strengthen its position in global capital markets.
-
March 11, 2026
Iran Conflict Reveals Real Estate Risk And Resilience
The Iran conflict's impact on U.S. commercial real estate so far has been limited, but some real estate and construction attorneys in the U.S. and the Middle East are seeing early consequences, including clients invoking force majeure provisions.
-
March 11, 2026
2nd Circ. Spurns DOT Bid To Re-Freeze Hudson Tunnel Funds
The Second Circuit on Wednesday rejected the Trump administration's bid to again freeze federal payments to New York and New Jersey for the ongoing $16 billion rehabilitation of aging commuter train tunnels under the Hudson River.
-
March 11, 2026
Canyon, JP Morgan Lend $156M For Philly Industrial Property
Canyon Partners and J.P. Morgan have provided a $156 million loan to refinance and lease up a two-building industrial complex in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in a deal brokered by CBRE, per a recent announcement.
-
March 11, 2026
Global Real Estate Investment Jumped 8% In 2025
Global real estate investment rose 8.2% in 2025, with multifamily and industrial leading the way, according to a recent report from Colliers.
-
March 11, 2026
Md. Seeks Immediate Halt Of ICE Detention Facility Project
The state of Maryland urged a federal court to issue a 14-day temporary restraining order that would stop the federal government from continuing its plans to convert a warehouse into an immigrant detention facility, arguing that the federal government is disregarding the planned facility's potential environmental harm.
Expert Analysis
-
DOJ Paths To Limit FARA Fallout From Wynn's DC Circ. Win
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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.
-
Criminal Enforcement Considerations For Gov't Contractors
Government contractors increasingly exposed to criminal liability risks should establish programs that enable detection and remediation of employee misconduct, consider voluntary disclosure, and be aware of the potentially disastrous consequences of failing to make a mandatory disclosure where the government concludes it was required, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
-
The Often Overlooked NY Foreclosure Notice Requirements
As multifamily real estate defaults mount, New York foreclosing parties should be aware of pitfalls and perils that can await the litigant who is not prepared to ensure adherence with tenant notice requirements under the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, say Christopher Gorman and John Muldoon at Rosenberg & Estis.
-
A Case Study For Calif. Cities In Water Utility Takeovers
With growing water scarcity and drier weather looming, some local governments in California have sought to acquire investor-owned water utilities by eminent domain — but the 2016 case of Claremont v. Golden State Water is a reminder that such municipalization attempts must meet certain statutory requirements, say attorneys at Nossaman.
-
Lower Courts May Finally Be Getting The Memo After Ciminelli
A year after the U.S. Supreme Court again limited prosecutors' overbroad theories of fraud in Ciminelli v. U.S., early returns suggest that the message has at least partially landed with the lower courts, spotlighting lessons for defense counsel moving forward, says Kenneth Notter at MoloLamken.