General, Solo, Small Firms, Real Estate Law

General CLE: Property Law for Non-Real Estate Attorneys

Description:

Can I just do a quitclaim deed?

Why you can’t, and other things that the general practitioner should know about real estate law.

In this course the speaker will discuss topics including how to make sure property transfers in a divorce decree, how to properly bring real property into an estate via a will, and how to add a little real estate law into your practice.

 

SAVE MONEY: Use the prepaid CLE credits that come with your TBA Complete Membership and take this course for free. Not a TBA member, join now to start saving.

This was one of the most informative hours I have ever experienced in a CLE session. As a non real estate attorney I realized the extraordinary number of traps and pitfalls that someone could face dabbling in this type of work. This would best be left up to people who are highly experienced. I would say to a young attorney, find a mentor before jumping in to real estate law. For me, the most useful information was bringing real estate into a will with more than one heir. Great CLE!

This was a very good primer/refresher, and the speaker was engaging.

Valuable, basic, and reliable information delivered in an engaging manner.

This was a great refresher on property law! I had forgotten many of these terms and I loved the tips about what to include and not include in wills.

Great info. I am glad that I watched this.

Very informative information presented in a way that held my attention and interest.

Good Presentation on the subject matter. Provided the non-real estate practitioner with sufficient information.

Speakers/Producers


This course is no longer available for purchase.

Course InformationHighlights
  • Flexible to your schedule
  • Viewable on desktop or mobile devices
  • Discount for section members
Course Credits Dual Credits: 0.00
General Credits: 1.00
Total Credits: 1

This program will be filed for Tennessee CLE credit. Please email a request to cle@tnbar.org for Georgia and Mississippi CLE credit.