Deposit Recovery Services - Florida Real Estate Attorney - Condo and Preconstruction Law

Florida, New York, and Federal Real Estate Law protects individuals in Preconstruction and Condo contracts. Our attorneys may be able to assist you with your Real Estate Deposit Recovery claims and Developer contract rescissions. Email Us info@depositrecoveryservices.com or Please call 954-527-1512(South Florida Area) 1-877-527-1512 (Toll Free outside South Florida)

Thursday, December 6, 2007

The original Deposit Recovery Services - Licensed Florida Real Estate Attorneys

Are you looking for a Florida Real Estate Attorney focused on Preconstruction and/or Condominium Deposit Recovery and Contract Rescission Law?

You have found the original - Deposit Recovery Services. The most talked about and written about name in Condominium and Preconstruction Deposit Recovery and Real Estate Contract rescissions. (please be aware that recently, some non-attorney owned companies, using names similar to ours are soliciting business that we believe should be handled by a Florida Attorney). Regardless of whether you decide to work with us or not, Be sure you are working with a Licensed Florida Attorney, focused on Real Estate Law.

If your asking yourself the options you may have prior to the closing date on your Condo contract or feel that you may have been given false information by either a real estate developer, mortgage broker, or Real Estate. We recommend that you retain a licensed Florida Real Estate Lawyer.

The Attorneys at Deposit Recovery Services are experienced Real Estate Attorneys who have handled Deposit Recovery and Contract cancellations with most major Miami, Broward, and Palm Beach county Real Estate Developement Firms.

Call or email for a FREE consultation. We do not require an upfront fee. If we can not help recover some or all of your condo deposit, we don't get paid.
Be wary of non-attorneys collecting payments upfront to "help" you recovery your down payment or preconstruction deposit.

Builder unmoved by flighty buyers
Reprinted from The Palm Beach Post

The buyers' remorse crowd keeps growing.
The latest addition: Pre-construction buyers of the luxurious 2700 North Ocean Boulevard condominium being built on Singer Island. Several buyers are making last-minute attempts to undo their million-dollar purchases just as the condo nears completion and closings are on the horizon.
Since the real estate market tanked, many condo buyers have turned to the courts to undo their pre-construction contracts so they do not have to complete their purchases. Often, these lawsuits hinge on a Florida law that allows a buyer to void a purchase contract if a developer make changes a buyer considers "material and adverse."
But there's a twist with 2700 North Ocean, being built by high-profile developer Dan Catalfumo.
In order to win Riviera Beach's blessing for the 27-story, twin-tower project, Catalfumo had to make 100 of 242 units into hotel suites. When 2700 North Ocean sales first started a couple of years ago, some buyers complained they were not being told they were buying a hotel suite. Attorney Brad Eavenson, for instance, backed out of a reservation when he discovered the hotel disclosure buried in Exhibit F of a 61-page document.
"This guy called me up and told me he clearly told the sales agent he was going to live there full time," said Juno Beach attorney Gary Nagle, who specializes in helping buyers undo purchase contracts. Nagle said his client recently realized he was buying a restricted hotel suite. A restricted suite means an owner cannot make the property a primary residence and apply for a homestead exemption. (Condo and Preconstruction Real Estate Attorney for South Florida)
Now this buyer - and six others - want out of their deals, Nagle said.
Nagle plans to file lawsuits this week seeking the cancellation of the purchase contracts and the return of the 20 percent-down deposits.
Easier said than done. Catalfumo is disinclined to let anyone out of the deal.
"Bring it on," Catalfumo said in an interview last week. "I'll see them at closing. They're not getting out."
Catalfumo said he'll let his Greenberg Traurig attorneys worry about the legal stuff. But he added that all proper disclosures were made to buyers, and no changes were made to the condo that would fall under the Florida law.
It's no surprise these issues are being raised just as 2700 North Ocean approaches its January completion. "If the market was better, you wouldn't have any complaints," Catalfumo said.
Catalfumo would not refer to 2700 North Ocean as a condo-hotel. "It's a resort condominium," he said.(protect individuals from powerful real estate developers)
Whatever. Regardless of how the lawsuits turn out, litigation will delay closings. Since units start at around $1 million (and go up to $7 million) we're talking at least $7 million in limbo. And word is a dozen more buyers want out, too.
Catalfumo said he's focused on finishing construction of the project, now 70 percent sold. "The place is gorgeous," he gushed.(condo and preconstruction lawsuit(s) in South Florida)
Some surprises are planned to goose sales, Catalfumo added. Architectural Digest magazine is decorating a unit, and one New Yorker has expressed interest in buying it, he said.
More details are emerging about the big redo planned for the Palm Beach Mall in West Palm Beach. IKEA, the wildly popular Swedish home-furnishings retailer, is negotiating with owner Simon Property Group to open a store at the mall, though IKEA isn't saying so.
Sources familiar with the redo now say IKEA will take up space in a building nearly 300,000 square feet in size.
But what about Macy's? Early plans for the Palm Beach Mall renovation do not include a place for the department store, which now has a location at the mall.
The MIA Macy's is a mystery, for now. No one would comment at Cincinnati-based Macy's or at Simon.(Miami and Fort Lauderdale Deposit Recovery)
We do have more tidbits on the renovation, however. Four other big-box retailers also will be built at the mall, which is being transformed from a dated enclosed property to an open-air center consisting of several separate buildings, according to sources familiar with the changes. The 40-year-old mall is at Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard and Interstate 95.
Also, look for a bookstore, more than 200,000 square feet of retail shops and more than 50,000 in restaurant space. The mall's three other department stores, Dillard's, Sears and J.C. Penney, will remain, sources say.
Perhaps we'll know more about the fate of Macy's when Simon files formal plans with West Palm Beach during the next few months.
The dismantling of Abe Gosman's fortune is nearly complete.
In September, a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge ordered a trustee to pay unsecured creditors $22 million from the sale of Gosman's assets, which were sold as part of the former Palm Beach health care magnate's massive bankruptcy case.
The order represents the main payout to unsecured creditors, said Charles Tatelbaum, an attorney representing JP Morgan Chase Bank, the largest unsecured creditor.
As part of the payout, Chase received $10 million owed on a $36 million loan. That's an unusually high recovery for an unsecured creditor, which usually sees less than 7 percent of a debt owed, said Tatelbaum, an attorney with Adorno & Yoss in Fort Lauderdale.
But unsecured creditors were able to tap Gosman's considerable assets when a U.S. bankruptcy judge ruled Gosman fraudulently gave his wife, Lin, an ownership stake in $66.4 million in assets to avoid losing them in bankruptcy. Gosman's possessions, including high-end furnishings and works of art, were sold at auctions. Can I cancel my Condominium Contract? Will I have to sue the developer? What options do I have prior to Closing? Can I renegotiate my condo or preconstruction contract with the real estate developer? My broker told me he/she would help me flip the unit. I would never have to go to closing.
Gosman's fortune once was estimated at $480 million. But after investing in declining health care sectors, the noted philanthropist and often flashy Palm Beach resident filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2001. Gosman cited more than $230 million in liabilities. His case later was converted to a Chapter 7 liquidation. Gosman could not be reached for comment.
Tatelbaum said the Gosman case was among the most complicated matters he's ever handled. "I feel sorry for him because he's lost everything," Tatelbaum said. "But when you live the fast life, that's what happens." Can I be forced to close? Can I be sued by the developer?

Law Offices of Eric L. Bronfeld, P.A.
PO Box 22506
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33335
954-527-1512(South Florida Area)
1-877-527-1512 (Toll Free outside South Florida)
info@depositrecoveryservices.com
http://www.depositrecoveryservices.com/

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