What is a secured creditor? So, you’re a secured creditor—what could possibly go wrong? A secured creditor is — at the very basic level — a creditor that has lent…
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Dane Patrick Elected as a Fellow of the Texas Bar Foundation
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Bankruptcy as a Tool
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David Gard joins our transactional team as an associate
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Bankruptcy Digital Series Launches Tomorrow
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October is Cybersecurity Awareness Month: Beware of Bogus Emails and Click Bait
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Langley & Banack recently represented BAT Investments, Inc. in its acquisition of Capital Bank of Texas
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Erica Valladares named to the Texas Diversity Council’s Top Women Lawyers List
The Texas Diversity Council’s Top Women Lawyers list recognizes attorneys and general counsel who received a high degree of peer recognition for leadership excellence and professional expertise; exemplify a noteworthy commitment to fairness, equity, and justice in client representations and professional collaborations; maintain a superior level of integrity and dignity across the full spectrum of legal dealings and responsibilities; and demonstrate commitment to helping other women succeed.
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David Louis has joined the firm as a litigation and medical malpractice defense associate
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Cameron Woo speaks on diversity and overcoming hate at the 2021 Yom Kippur Symposium
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Our final episode of our Energy, Oil & Gas Podcast Series goes live next week and it will focus on the Executive Right with Richard Butler
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Homebuyers Waived their Contractual Rights to Complain about Defects in Home they Purchased
As you probably have read or heard in the news, we currently are in a seller’s residential real estate market. There is often a bidding frenzy over a home as soon as it is listed, and buyers frequently waive provisions in the standard real estate form contract hoping that their bid will be accepted. The case of Hall v. Rogers shows why buyers may want to think twice before getting caught up in this frenzy.