The New York Court of Appeals’ decision that a shorter 3 year statute of limitations applies to New York Attorney General claims under the Martin Act against developers and others, was changed by a new law just signed by Governor Cuomo. The new law establishes that the statute of limitations is not 3, but 6 years. This will make a difference in going after developers for construction defect and under claims under the Martin Act. Essentially claims that the developer did not deliver what was promised in the publicly filed offering plan. Read more.
About Team Colbert Law
With offices in New York and Connecticut, we are ready to handle your legal needs. We have been representing condo, coop and HOA boards, businesses and individual clients for over twenty five years.
You also might be interested in
The NYC OSE has adopted final rules for Local Law[...]
New York State has clarified that the Housing Stability and[...]
In New York, the legal landscape governing construction defect disputes[...]
Recent Attorney Publications
- Legal Recourse for New Construction Condos: Suing Your Sponsor for Construction Defects November 9, 2024
- Condominium Boards Beware: Lessons on Critical Insurance and Your Historical Record November 1, 2024
- Do Property Managers have to Register as BOI Members of Community Associations to Comply with CTA? October 28, 2024
- Court Deals Blow to Community Associations’ Attempt to Block Corporate Transparency Act October 24, 2024
- NYC Condo Construction Defect Lawsuits: 3 Key New Cases for Boards October 6, 2024