Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Commercial Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Commercial Law

New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part Iii, Gerald Lebovits May 2014

New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part Iii, Gerald Lebovits

Hon. Gerald Lebovits

No abstract provided.


New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part Ii, Gerald Lebovits Feb 2014

New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part Ii, Gerald Lebovits

Hon. Gerald Lebovits

No abstract provided.


New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part I, Gerald Lebovits Jan 2014

New York State Commercial Landlord-Tenant Law And Procedure: A Primer—Part I, Gerald Lebovits

Hon. Gerald Lebovits

No abstract provided.


Muddying The Waterfall: How Ambiguous Liability Statutes Distort Creditor Priority In Condominium Foreclosures, Andrea Boyack, William E. Foster Dec 2013

Muddying The Waterfall: How Ambiguous Liability Statutes Distort Creditor Priority In Condominium Foreclosures, Andrea Boyack, William E. Foster

William E Foster

Intentionally or not, every state’s law regarding lien priority and post-foreclosure liability allocates risk between mortgage lenders and privately governed “common interest communities” (CICs), such as condominiums. When lenders secure their interests with mortgages on property within a CIC, the mortgages may compete against the CIC’s interests for primacy in the lien hierarchy. Modern state regimes typically delineate the respective rights of mortgagees and CIC associations according to lien-priority statutes. Older condominium-enabling statutes, however, do not address CIC lien priority directly and speak only to continuing joint and several liability for subsequent purchasers. These older and more ambiguous statutes do …