RL Wilson, P.C. Law Firm

REAL ESTATE LAW

The Alamo

R L Wilson, P.C. is skilled in handling real-estate related litigation including disclosure deficiencies and professional breaches. Whether the dispute arises from the sale or acquisition of property, or in the administration of a commercial lease agreement, R L Wilson, P.C. is on the cutting edge of the latest real estate law issues and can provide the counsel and representation necessary to achieve dispute resolution.  In addition, we routinely draft real estate conveyance documents, including deeds, warranty deeds, easements, rights of entry, leases, and restrictive covenants (Declarations of Codes, Covenants & Restrictions).

R L Wilson, P.C. also  maintains extensive experience in Landlord and Tenant Disputes.  This practice area covers a wide range of disputes arising from lease agreements and our cases often involve:

  • Eviction,
  • Security deposit issues
  • Home Owner’s Association litigation
  • Real estate agent/broker liability
  • Drafting and interpretation of restrictive covenants (Declarations of Codes, Covenants and Restrictions or “CCRs”
  • Management of Property Owner’s Associations

As a licensed Texas real estate agent, Mr. Trey Wilson is uniquely aware of the disclosure, recording, documentation, and financing requirements associated with the purchase or acquisition of real property. He is also attuned to the obligations that real estate agents maintain toward their clients, customers and third-parties. To learn more about Mr. Wilson’s real estate practice, visit www.TexasRanchesforSale.com

R L Wilson, P.C. is uniquely prepared to assist in the orderly sale, lease or transfer of real property. When necessary, we are here to litigate those claims arising from real estate transactions, including fraud, failure to disclose, Realtor misconduct/professional negligence, title insurance claims, and boundary/setback/encroachment disputes.

Case Study: Commercial Lease Agreement

R L Wilson, P.C. was retained to defend the owner and operator of a busy Chinese restaurant in an eviction action advanced by the landlord of the commercial strip center where the restaurant was located. Though the landlord alleged a breach of the commercial lease agreement, Mr. Wilson was able to successfully convince the Court (on two occasions) that the tenant’s non-payment of rent was justified based upon the  landlord’s failure to grant flooring and build out allowances and make necessary repairs. In addition, Mr. Wilson asserted that the restaurant’s financial woes were attributable to major road construction on Hwy 281, which construction plans were known in advance by the Landlord but not the tenant. The Landlord’s eviction action was defeated, and his claim for hundreds of thousands of dollars in past and future rent was settled for ten thousand dollars.  The several hundred thousand dollar claim was subsequently settled for pennies on the dollar.

Mr. Wilson’s innovative argument and counter-claim that the landlord fraudulently induced his primarily-Chinese-speaking clients to sign and then breached the Lease Agreement saved his Clients years of litigation and hundreds of thousands of dollars.