Commercial Investment Real Estate

JUL-AUG 2016

Commercial Investment Real Estate is the magazine of the CCIM Institute, the leading provider of commercial real estate education. CIRE covers market trends, current developments, and business strategies within the commercial real estate field.

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July | August | 2016 CCIM.com Commercial real estate professionals should insist that the lender at least strike the references to affiliates. Failure to do so leaves commercial real estate professionals open to the risk that an action that has no effect on the loan or the lender's security nevertheless puts the loan into default. One-sided Provisions Designed for the lending institutions that buy them, form loan documents tend to be one-sided and can hide some nasty sur- prises in what appear at first glance to be boilerplate provisions. e "Miscellaneous Provisions" of one loan document for one of my clients recently contained this provision: Notice of Lender's Breach. Borrower must notify Lender in writing of any breach of this Agreement or the Related Documents by Lender and any other claim, cause of action or offset against Lender within thirty (30) days after the occurrence of Join CCIM members around the country as they take time to make a difference in their communities. CCIM Chapters and individual CCIM members will take one day in the month of September to volunteer for a local cause in the Fifth Annual Community Caring in Motion. Visit www.CCIM.com/community-caring to get involved. Make the difference. such breach or after the accrual of such claim, cause of action or offset. Borrower waives any claim, cause of action, or offset for which notice is not given in accordance with this para- graph. Lender is entitled to rely on any failure to give such notice. e borrower has only 30 days aer the lender commits a bad act to place the lender on notice, and failure to deliver that notice means the claim is lost. Absent that provision, you would have four years to bring a claim based on the lender's breach of contract. I have yet to see a loan document that similarly limits the lender's right to bring action of its own. ese are just a few of the issues to be wary when dealing with form documents. Jerome Grossman serves as senior counsel at Gresham Savage, a law firm in Southern California. Contact him at Jerome.Grossman@ GreshamSavage.com.

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