William Bray to Speak at Construction and Real Property Seminar
Posted February 02, 2007 in Firm News & Events | Back to News Archive
William Bray will speak at an upcoming continuing legal education seminar entitled "Lien on Me: When Developers, Liens and Title Insurance Collide." The seminar, sponsored by the Construction Law and Real Property Sections of the North Carolina Bar Association, will be held at the North Carolina Bar Center in Cary on February 22, 2007, and will later be presented by video replay at locations throughout the state.
Bray will participate in a panel discussion with Charlotte attorneys David Carson and Robert McNeill on their involvement in litigation arising from the Falls at Greyson Ridge development. Bray, Carson and McNeill are described in the program brochure as "attorneys that were in the trenches when a multimillion dollar mixed commercial and residential development project that spanned two counties got off track and resulted in +30 lawsuits as well as complex and novel issues with liens, title insurance and deeds of trust."
During the course of his work on the Falls at Greyson Ridge dispute, Bray represented a number of lien claimants who were initially denied payment for their construction-related services when the project developer, Mountaineer Land Group, was placed in receivership. Among others, Bray represented Tommy Fazio, who was retained by Mountaineer to design a golf course on the property which was nearly completed when problems arose with the project and its financing.
Click here to view the program brochure, or visit the web site of the North Carolina Bar Assocation.
Bray will participate in a panel discussion with Charlotte attorneys David Carson and Robert McNeill on their involvement in litigation arising from the Falls at Greyson Ridge development. Bray, Carson and McNeill are described in the program brochure as "attorneys that were in the trenches when a multimillion dollar mixed commercial and residential development project that spanned two counties got off track and resulted in +30 lawsuits as well as complex and novel issues with liens, title insurance and deeds of trust."
During the course of his work on the Falls at Greyson Ridge dispute, Bray represented a number of lien claimants who were initially denied payment for their construction-related services when the project developer, Mountaineer Land Group, was placed in receivership. Among others, Bray represented Tommy Fazio, who was retained by Mountaineer to design a golf course on the property which was nearly completed when problems arose with the project and its financing.
Click here to view the program brochure, or visit the web site of the North Carolina Bar Assocation.
