Court of Appeal Addresses “Prejudice” Element of Wrongful Foreclosure
If a property owner loses their property through a foreclosure sale initiated by someone who did not validly own the debt, has the property owner automatically…
If a property owner loses their property through a foreclosure sale initiated by someone who did not validly own the debt, has the property owner automatically…
Recently, much judicial ink has been deployed writing opinions addressing borrower challenges to foreclosure based on allegations that the deed of trust was not validly assigned…
In a prior post, Implied Dedication of Private Property to the Public: the Law is Unsettled, we saw that California courts have struggled with the interpretation…
California’s anti-SLAPP statute (Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16) arms a defendant with an early method to challenge a lawsuit known as a “SLAPP” — a…
A recent post, California Supreme Court: Borrowers Have Standing to Allege Wrongful Foreclosure Based on Void Assignment of Note, summarized the February 2016 opinion in Yvanova v.…
Many entities that get sued with any regularity prefer being defendants in federal court, rather than state court. The reasons for this preference are varied, but essentially…
As noted in my prior post, Money and Dirt: Reviewing 2015; Previewing 2016, one of the expected developments for 2016 was the California Supreme Court’s decision…
For the past few years, California appellate courts have been split on the question of whether a borrower has standing to challenge a foreclosure based on…
Unfair competition claims are often seen as “tag-along” claims without a lot of independent value. A recent California Court of Appeal decision (Fourth District, Division Three…
The California Supreme Court has published its much anticipated decision clarifying the scope of anti-deficiency protection under Code of Civil Procedure section 580b for purchase money…