Q & A: The Inquiring Mind- Renting Only to People with Paying Jobs, New York Housing Journal

I want to adopt a policy of renting only to people who have paying jobs. Is this considered a violation of any fair housing laws?

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Keeping Window Guard Notices, New York Apartment Law Insider

I know that the city’s lead-based paint law requires me to keep the lead-based paint notices I get back from tenants for 10 years. But what about the window guard notices returned by tenants. Am I legally required to keep those returned window guard notices and, if so, for how long?

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New York State Bar Association Hosts Webcast for 2,000 Attorneys on How to Assist Superstorm Sandy Victims

More than 2,000 people – including attorneys from 28 states and three other countries – participated in a webcast for lawyers seeking to provide legal assistance to victims of Superstorm Sandy.

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Lenders can foreclose on properties, even after losing the note

Prominent real estate attorney Joseph Forte recently wrote about “… the prospect of refinancing nearly $1.8 trillion of existing U.S. commercial real estate debt in the next five years.”

In order to complete this task and to ensure that investors and lenders are willing to lend money to building owners, we must have a judicial system that is going to honor the contracts entered into with borrowers.

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Finding individual tort liability for cooperative and condominium board members, the Appellate Division takes a large scalpel to business judgment rule

Recently, the Appellate Division First Department, in Fletcher v. Dakota, Inc.,1 held that the business judgment rule does not protect individual condo and co-op board members from personal tort liability where a board acting in its corporate capacity has acted in bad faith, but where it is not alleged that defendant board members have committed a tort independent of the tort committed by the board itself.

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Residential landlords offer rent abatements to tenants stranded by Sandy

November 08, 2012 05:30PM By Katherine Clarke In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, several of the city’s largest residential landlords have announced that they are providing comprehensive rent abatements to

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A Guide to Getting and Using Insurance After the Hurricane

The first step to filing an insurance claim is figuring out whether or not you have insurance. The good news is that if you live in an area where your home was likely to be damaged by Hurricane Sandy, there’s a decent chance you do.

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Post-Sandy Legal Advice on Real Estate, Insurance and Property Issues

Because lenders mandate that homeowners in flood zones obtain flood insurance as a prerequisite to lending, most homeowners in flood zones will have flood insurance protection. There are three general types of flood insurance policies: the Dwelling Policy (includes condo unit owners), the General Property Policy and the Residential Condominium Building Association Policy.

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Mortgage Interest Deduction, Once a Sacred Cow, Is Under Scrutiny

Many home buyers deduct their mortgage interest when assessing their tax bill, a perk that has helped bolster the income of millions of families — and the broader housing market.

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Lenders Loosen Up…With Luxury Buyers

By MATTHEW STROZIER Demand for new mortgages is finally revving up—among big spenders, anyway. Home sales using a jumbo mortgage had year-over-year growth of 7.9% through September, compared with 2.7%

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