From rent control to rent stabilization, hallway stipulations to HPD proceedings… This is not your standard litigation party.
Newly admitted attorneys in New York who practice landlord tenant litigation have a lot of nuances to understand. These courses will cover these and help you know how to handle Pearl better than Will Ferrell ever could:
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: Getting a Case Started: Landlord and tenant cases are often won (or lost) before the case is even filed. This step-by-step course is a must see for any newly admitted attorney handling a NYC landlord tenant action.
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: In the Courtroom: Successfully and strategically prosecute or defend your case through motion practice and trial and employ gamesmanship to obtain desired objectives.
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: Bringing the Case to a Satisfying Conclusion: Understand the routine and specialized clauses of a stipulation of settlement, the intricate details that surround an eviction, how to make a motion for attorney’s fees, the appellate process, and more.
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: Special Issues in Rent Stabilization: This session begins by answering the fundamental question, “How do I know if a tenant is rent stabilized (or not)?” The session then takes viewers through the most common possibilities for evicting a rent stabilized tenant.
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: Special Residential Issues: Many provisions of a residential lease are, essentially, meaningless. This course approaches residential leases in a myth-busting way by combing through a standard residential lease and highlighting all the actual rights a residential tenant has and a residential landlord must respect.
- New York Landlord & Tenant Litigation: Special Commercial Issues: What happens when the local hardware store or gym can’t pay the rent anymore?
- NY Landlord and Tenant Special Issues: Post-Foreclosure Evictions and Loft Evictions: Who knew “Loft Law” in New York had its own special procedures?