The residential sale/leaseback/buyback (“RSLB”) transaction is a socially beneficial foreclosure rescue transaction that is being regulated increasingly by the criminal courts to the detriment of the homeowners, investors, and society at large. Because the transaction is being regulated more aggressively with the criminal law, peculiar outcomes arise, which include investors being sentenced, in some cases, to draconian sentences – a trend that will eviscerate the transactions rather than improving them
This Article argues that the changes in Texas law in 1995, 2001 , and 2005 created significant new p...
‘Right to Buy’, a large-scale natural experiment whereby incumbent tenants in public housing could b...
As the housing market continues to recover from the foreclosure crisis, an opportunity arises to exa...
The residential sale/leaseback/buyback transaction is a socially beneficial foreclosure rescue trans...
This Article unveils the logic of these transactions and provides market context, which is often mis...
Foreclosure rescue transactions are viewed widely as scams designed, among other things, to dupe poo...
Foreclosures are at a record high, causing families to be displaced, blighted neighborhoods and the ...
Seller-financing of residential property is booming in the credit crisis. Due in part to tightened l...
A continuous and steady expansion of residential dwelling is desirable from both a sociological and ...
It is common knowledge that mortgage defaults increased steadily from 2006 through 2011. In some sit...
This article examines SB 1178 and its potential to significantly modify the CCP 580b antideficie...
This article discusses the impact of the foreclosure crisis on the housing prospects of American fam...
Foreclosure equity stripping is the classic case of kicking someone who is down. The person perpetra...
Returning home from grocery shopping one evening last spring, a forty-two-year-old architect was kil...
The subprime mortgage crisis was not only an economic disaster but posed challenges to traditional r...
This Article argues that the changes in Texas law in 1995, 2001 , and 2005 created significant new p...
‘Right to Buy’, a large-scale natural experiment whereby incumbent tenants in public housing could b...
As the housing market continues to recover from the foreclosure crisis, an opportunity arises to exa...
The residential sale/leaseback/buyback transaction is a socially beneficial foreclosure rescue trans...
This Article unveils the logic of these transactions and provides market context, which is often mis...
Foreclosure rescue transactions are viewed widely as scams designed, among other things, to dupe poo...
Foreclosures are at a record high, causing families to be displaced, blighted neighborhoods and the ...
Seller-financing of residential property is booming in the credit crisis. Due in part to tightened l...
A continuous and steady expansion of residential dwelling is desirable from both a sociological and ...
It is common knowledge that mortgage defaults increased steadily from 2006 through 2011. In some sit...
This article examines SB 1178 and its potential to significantly modify the CCP 580b antideficie...
This article discusses the impact of the foreclosure crisis on the housing prospects of American fam...
Foreclosure equity stripping is the classic case of kicking someone who is down. The person perpetra...
Returning home from grocery shopping one evening last spring, a forty-two-year-old architect was kil...
The subprime mortgage crisis was not only an economic disaster but posed challenges to traditional r...
This Article argues that the changes in Texas law in 1995, 2001 , and 2005 created significant new p...
‘Right to Buy’, a large-scale natural experiment whereby incumbent tenants in public housing could b...
As the housing market continues to recover from the foreclosure crisis, an opportunity arises to exa...