More Real Estate Coverage
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November 21, 2024
Ohio City Tax Exemption Isn't Retroactive, Court Affirms
An Ohio property in a reinvestment area is not eligible for a city's tax exemption offered to remodeled homes, as the remodel was completed before the property was included in the reinvestment district, an Ohio appellate court affirmed Thursday.
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November 21, 2024
La. Parishes Can't Change Property Values After Court Rulings
Louisiana parish assessors lack the authority to unilaterally change a property's assessment if they become aware of an error in the assessment after a local board or the state Tax Commission sets the property's value, the state attorney general's office said.
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November 20, 2024
Ohio Mortgage Co. Gets Rival To Change Name In TM Fight
A Michigan mortgage company has agreed to change its name to end a trademark infringement lawsuit brought by a rival business in Ohio that claimed it was fielding complaints from confused customers over allegedly questionable telemarketing practices.
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November 20, 2024
Real Estate Atty Stays Local With Move To Buchanan Ingersoll
A commercial real estate attorney's plan to expand his regional reach has led him to join Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney PC's Philadelphia office after practicing for more than two years at Armstrong Teasdale LLP.
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November 20, 2024
Bill Aimed At Creating Ga.'s First National Park Moves Ahead
The U.S. Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources voted Tuesday to advance a bill that would establish Georgia's first national park, upgrading the ancestral home of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation of Oklahoma from its national monument status while also offering protections for Native American burial mounds.
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November 20, 2024
McCarter Partner, Former Miami Official On AI In Land Use
From planning for mega storms to streamlining zoning approvals, artificial intelligence tools are bringing efficiency and new modeling capabilities to local governments.
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November 19, 2024
Argentina Must Face $54M Sewage Award Suit, Judge Says
Argentina must face Webuild's lawsuit to enforce a more than $54 million arbitral award it won more than a decade ago in a dispute over a water and sewage service concession, after a Washington, D.C., federal judge rejected the country's argument that the Italian construction giant had missed a crucial deadline.
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November 19, 2024
Ga. Panel Says 190-Year-Old Marshland Grant Is Valid
A Georgia appellate court has sided with a company seeking to retain ownership of 1,000 acres of Georgia coastal marshland by using an 1834 document in which the state granted the land to the company's predecessor-in-title.
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November 18, 2024
8th Circ. Set For Arguments In Oil Lease Termination Row
The Eighth Circuit set arguments on Friday for Dec. 18 in an appeal over a North Dakota federal judge's decision to throw out Denver-based Prima Exploration Inc.'s lawsuit alleging the Bureau of Indian Affairs schemed with two rival companies to end its lease on land within the Fort Berthold Reservation.
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November 14, 2024
Biden Admin Backs Controversial Alaskan Land Swap, Road
The Biden administration is backing a federal land swap that will allow a road to be built through Alaska's Izembek National Wildlife Refuge, while conservation groups and tribes say the move will cause major impacts to the area's migratory birds and cut off a food source for Indigenous communities.
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November 12, 2024
Catfished Ex-NBA Player Says Atty Stole Cash, Blew Film Deal
A former NBA player is suing his longtime attorney for legal malpractice in Colorado state court, claiming the attorney stole his money and failed to protect his intellectual property rights while negotiating the terms of a documentary deal about his victimization in an elaborate online catfishing scheme.
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November 08, 2024
Investors Duped By Opportunity Zone Promises, Colo. Says
Colorado's securities commissioner accused a California businessman on Thursday of selling investors on a project ostensibly meant to purchase single-family homes using a federal program for revitalizing economically distressed areas, while instead using company assets as a "personal piggy bank."
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November 08, 2024
Mass. Hay Farm Not Eligible For Ag Tax Break, Court Affirms
A Massachusetts land parcel that is used for growing and harvesting hay is not eligible for a reduced tax assessment as agricultural land because not enough of the parcel is devoted to the haying operation, the state Court of Appeals affirmed Friday.
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November 06, 2024
What Trump's Victory Portends For Commercial Real Estate
President-elect Donald Trump's victory could clear up uncertainty for investors who had been waiting out the election, but the commercial real estate industry may see challenges ahead from some of his proposed "protectionist" policies, attorneys and experts said Wednesday.
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November 06, 2024
Clerk Targeted During Trump Civil Trial Is Elected Judge
A law clerk under New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron who faced death threats after being singled out by now President-elect Donald Trump during his civil fraud trial last year has been elected as a judge.
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November 05, 2024
An Early Look At Trump's Supreme Court Shortlist
With former President Donald Trump projected to win the 2024 presidential election and the Republicans' success in securing the U.S. Senate majority, Trump may now get the chance to appoint two more justices to the U.S. Supreme Court, cementing the court's conservative tilt for decades to come.
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November 05, 2024
Alterra, JP Morgan JV Sells Property Portfolio In $490M Deal
A joint venture between Alterra IOS and institutional investors advised by J.P. Morgan Asset Management on Tuesday announced that it has sold a 51-property portfolio to Peakstone Realty Trust in an off-market transaction valued at $490 million that was built by five law firms.
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November 04, 2024
FERC, NJ Conservation Orgs Battle Over Pipeline Rehearing
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is clashing with a host of conservation groups and the New Jersey Division of the Rate Counsel over whether the D.C. Circuit should reconsider a panel decision that vacated the agency's approval for a natural gas pipeline expansion on the East Coast.
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November 04, 2024
GrayRobinson Adds Trio Of Attys To Tampa Office
GrayRobinson PA announced Monday that it has boosted its local government, education and commercial litigation offerings with three hires for its Tampa office — two new shareholders and a senior associate.
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November 04, 2024
Ohio Justices Tap 3 To Mull Suspension For Indicted Mayor
The Ohio Supreme Court appointed three retired judges Monday to decide whether East Cleveland Mayor Brandon King should be suspended in light of his felony indictment for allegedly using his position to funnel public funds to his own companies.
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November 01, 2024
USCIS Moves To Toss Regional Centers' EB-5 Guidance Fight
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has urged a D.C. federal judge to toss a lawsuit alleging that it unlawfully changed the minimum investment period for foreign investors seeking green cards, saying it did not create a legislative rule but merely interpreted one.
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November 01, 2024
Treasury Expands Foreign Land Transaction Authority
The U.S. Department of the Treasury announced Friday that it has added 59 new military installations to the list of those over which it has jurisdiction to review any nearby real estate transactions involving foreign citizens.
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October 31, 2024
Judge Suggests Condo Builder's $19M Jury Win Should Stand
A Washington appeals court judge asked Thursday why a $19 million trial verdict in favor of Skanska USA Building Inc. should be overturned, saying determining the facts in the condo project construction dispute that led to the verdict seemed like something for the jury to answer.
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October 31, 2024
The 2024 Law360 Pulse Leaderboard
Check out the Law360 Pulse Leaderboard to see which firms made the list of leaders in all-around excellence this year.
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October 31, 2024
Firms' Hiring Strategies Are Evolving In Fight For Top Spot
Competition for top talent among elite law firms shows no signs of slowing down, even amid economic uncertainty, with financially strong firms deploying aggressive strategies to attract and retain skilled professionals to solidify their market position.
Expert Analysis
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What 5th Circ. Bankruptcy Ruling Means For FERC Authority
The Fifth Circuit’s recent ruling in Gulfport Energy v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission begs the question as to whether FERC regulations sufficiently protect pipelines from the effects of customer bankruptcies, and highlights the conflict between the commission and bankruptcy courts, say Keturah Brown and Emily Mallen at Sidley.
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Justices Could Tighten Fraud Statute In Ex-Cuomo Aide Case
The U.S. Supreme Court has an opportunity to overturn the conviction of an aide to former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in Percoco v. U.S., thereby restraining federal prosecutors' use of the honest services fraud statute and confining its application to cases of true public corruption, says Scott Coffina at Montgomery McCracken.
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A Look At 2 Frameworks For Decarbonizing Heavy Industry
Comparing common themes in two recent international frameworks for decarbonizing heavy industry reveals recent progress toward lowering emissions and highlights the key role the industrial sector will play in decarbonization efforts, say attorneys at Shearman.
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'Waters Of US' Meaning May Get 'Major Questions' Scrutiny
After the U.S. Supreme Court's invocation of the so-called major questions doctrine in its recent decision in West Virginia v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the court is primed to use this concept to restrict federal wetlands protections under the ambiguous term "waters of the United States," says Peter Alpert at Ropes & Gray.
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Cos. Should Engage With EPA On PVC Hazard Designation
A pending petition to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to classify discarded polyvinyl chloride products as hazardous waste could have wide-ranging and unanticipated effects due to the ubiquity of PVC products — so potentially regulated industries should provide information to the EPA on the economic impact of such a move, say attorneys at Kilpatrick.
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Lessons From FERC New England Capacity Market Settlement
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's recent enforcement settlement with Salem Harbor Power Development illustrates the consequences for power market participants if they fail to report accurate information to independent system operators and regional transmission organizations, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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Fed. Circ. Ruling May Curb Gov't Contract Procedural Suits
The Federal Circuit's recent decision in Zafer Construction v. U.S. contains important takeaways for federal contractors and contracting officials on determining whether a request for equitable adjustment is a timely claim for a final decision, and will hopefully avert costly procedural litigation, say Aron Beezley and Sarah Osborne at Bradley.
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How Justices' EPA Ruling Thwarts The Will Of The People
By reversing a long-standing presumption in favor of executive branch interpretations of ambiguous statutes, the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling limiting the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's powers to fight climate change blocks the will of the popular majority that elects the president, exacerbating our political system's dysfunction, says Jonathan Martel at Arnold & Porter.
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High Court's New EPA Ruling And Its Long-Term Implications
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in West Virginia v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will change the legal landscape in a number of ways — including constraining future climate regulations that may be advanced by the Biden administration and states, while providing litigants a powerful new administrative law precedent to challenge all kinds of agency rules, say attorneys at Beveridge & Diamond.
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Capturing Carbon In California: Opportunities And Challenges
California is well situated to play a leading role in carbon capture and sequestration, but there remain barriers to widespread CCS deployment — including policy and regulatory hurdles, and the concerns of potentially affected communities, say Brian Israel and Samuel Pickerill at Arnold & Porter.
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EPA Ruling Signals Arrival Of 'Major Questions Doctrine'
While the specific subject of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in West Virginia v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was how the EPA may regulate greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act, the ruling's lasting legacy will be the elevation of the so-called major questions doctrine, which could constrain federal regulatory authority in many areas, says Allison Wood at McGuireWoods.
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New P3 Authority Means Opportunities For Colo. Agencies
A recently passed Colorado law expanding public-private partnerships changes state-level project finance and infrastructure dramatically, allowing virtually all state agencies to avail themselves of P3 benefits including cost and schedule savings, sharing of risk, and access to innovation and private sector efficiency, say Gregory Johnson and Peter Gould at Squire Patton.
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Texas Infrastructure Act And Renewables Projects: 1 Year In
A year into implementation of Texas' Lone Star Infrastructure Protection Act, Jennifer Pier at Husch Blackwell discusses how renewable energy project developers, owners and investors planning projects in Texas can incorporate LIPA-related provisions into transaction and financing documents.