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Commercial Real Estate Litigation: When Should You Sue?



Commercial real estate litigation involves disputes over leases, property rights, financing, and development affecting business properties.

A single commercial lease default or foreclosure dispute can produce property losses, business interruption damages, and complex multi-party litigation extending years. Strong commercial real estate finance work integrates contract analysis, dispute strategy, and trial preparation from initial conflict through final resolution.

Question Property Owners AskQuick Answer
What is commercial real estate litigation?Civil lawsuits involving disputes over commercial property contracts, ownership, and rights.
What are common claims?Lease breach, foreclosure defense, title disputes, zoning challenges, and development claims.
Where do these cases proceed?State courts under property law jurisdiction with some federal court exceptions.
What about arbitration?Many commercial leases include arbitration clauses requiring private dispute resolution.
How long do cases take?Most range from one to three years from filing through final judgment.

1. What Are the Main Commercial Lease Dispute Categories?


Rent default disputes address tenant payment failures and landlord remedies under lease provisions. Holdover tenancy disputes arise when tenants remain after lease expiration without renewal authority. Operating expense disputes test charges and reimbursements under common area and pass-through provisions. Maintenance and repair disputes allocate responsibility between landlords and tenants for property conditions.

Use restrictions and exclusivity provisions create disputes when business operations conflict with lease terms. Subletting and assignment disputes address tenant ability to transfer leasehold interests. Force majeure provisions and commercial frustration claims surged following pandemic disruptions. Counsel handling contract dispute work tests every lease provision against actual operating circumstances.



Statute of Frauds and Lease Documentation Requirements


Statute of Frauds requires written documentation for leases exceeding one year in most states. Material lease terms including rent, term, premises, and parties must appear in writing. Memorandum of lease recording protects tenant interests in commercial real estate transactions. Subordination and non-disturbance agreements coordinate tenant and lender interests.

 

Estoppel certificates from tenants confirm lease status during property transactions and financings. Notice provisions establish required communication channels between parties. Default and cure provisions establish opportunities to remedy breaches before termination. Strong contract litigation work documents lease compliance throughout dispute development.



2. How Do Development Projects, Construction Issues, and Property Rights Apply?


Commercial development projects generate disputes across multiple parties and contract types. Construction defects, delays, and payment disputes create overlapping legal claims. Property rights disputes include zoning, easement, and title issues affecting development viability. Planning must address each potential dispute path through coordinated strategy.



What Construction Litigation Issues Affect Commercial Development?


Mechanics lien claims by contractors and subcontractors create priority disputes against property interests. Statutory deadlines for lien filings vary across states from 30 days to one year following work completion. Bond claims under Miller Act and similar state statutes address public construction projects. Stop notice procedures provide additional tools for unpaid contractors in qualifying jurisdictions.

 

Construction defect claims address design and workmanship failures producing property damage. Statute of limitations and statute of repose periods affect available remedies for construction defects. Builder warranty obligations and similar protections supplement common law remedies. Active contract litigation work coordinates construction claims alongside underlying real estate disputes.

 



Zoning Challenges, Easements, and Title Defenses


Zoning disputes arise from variance denials, special permit conditions, and similar regulatory limitations. Variance applications must demonstrate practical difficulties or unnecessary hardship under local standards. Special exception permits address conditional uses meeting specific criteria. Comprehensive plan compliance affects most major development applications.

 

The Supreme Court decisions in Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 535 U.S. 302 (2002), and Murr v. Wisconsin, 582 U.S. 383 (2017), refined regulatory takings analysis. Easement disputes address access, utility, and conservation rights affecting property values. Title insurance claims provide remedies for ownership defects discovered after purchase. Effective administrative case work documents zoning and property positions throughout regulatory proceedings.



3. Financing, Foreclosure, and Real Estate Investment Risks


Commercial real estate financing creates distinct litigation risks for borrowers, lenders, and investors. Foreclosure procedures vary significantly between judicial and non-judicial states. Each lender remedy follows specific procedural requirements affecting available defenses. Defense strategy must address parallel foreclosure and related civil claims.



What Foreclosure Procedures Apply to Commercial Properties?


Judicial foreclosure proceeds through state court actions following specific notice and procedure requirements. Non-judicial foreclosure under power of sale provisions follows simpler administrative procedures in qualifying states. Notice of default begins formal foreclosure timelines in most jurisdictions. Right of redemption periods allow borrowers to cure defaults before final sale.

 

Anti-deficiency statutes in states including California limit lender recovery beyond foreclosure proceeds. Single-action rules require lenders to choose between deficiency claims and foreclosure remedies. Receivership appointments provide interim relief during foreclosure proceedings. Strong debt restructuring work addresses each foreclosure path against actual loan documentation.



Commercial Lease Rejection in Bankruptcy Proceedings


Commercial lease rejection under Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code allows debtors to terminate burdensome leases. Section 365(d)(4) requires assumption or rejection of nonresidential leases within 120 days of bankruptcy filing. Cure of pre-petition defaults supports lease assumption with court approval. Adequate assurance of future performance protects landlords during assumption proceedings.

 

The decision in In re Hitz Restaurant Group, 616 B.R. 374 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 2020), addressed force majeure during pandemic restrictions. Recent retail bankruptcies including major chains have produced substantial commercial lease litigation. Landlord damages calculation under Section 502(b)(6) caps lease rejection claims. Coordinated creditors-rights work integrates bankruptcy strategy with lease negotiation throughout proceedings.



4. How Are Commercial Real Estate Cases Resolved?


Commercial real estate litigation proceeds through state courts, federal courts, and arbitration depending on contract provisions. Each forum follows distinct procedural and substantive rules. Mediation often resolves disputes before trial through structured negotiation. Strategy across forums must protect both immediate property and long-term commercial interests.



What Arbitration and Mediation Options Apply?


American Arbitration Association Construction Industry Rules govern many commercial real estate arbitrations. JAMS Comprehensive Arbitration Rules provide alternative procedural framework for commercial cases. Mediation procedures often precede arbitration as initial dispute resolution layer. Court-annexed mediation programs address commercial real estate disputes in many jurisdictions.

 

Arbitration awards face limited judicial review under Federal Arbitration Act and state law equivalents. Confirmation procedures convert arbitration awards into enforceable court judgments. Vacatur grounds remain narrow under modern arbitration jurisprudence. Active arbitration and mediation work selects appropriate dispute resolution venues based on case dynamics.



Damages, Specific Performance, and Equitable Remedies


Compensatory damages address direct economic losses from contract breaches and property damage. Lost profits and consequential damages require specific proof requirements under most state laws. Liquidated damages provisions in commercial leases face enforceability analysis under reasonableness standards. Punitive damages apply in qualifying cases involving fraud or willful misconduct.

 

Specific performance remedies require sellers to complete property transfers when monetary damages prove inadequate. Injunctive relief stops ongoing violations of lease provisions and related obligations. Lis pendens filing protects buyer interests during pending property litigation. Federal court trial work uses each remedy strategically based on case-specific facts.


07 May, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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