The Real Estate Investing Club

Legal Landmines: One Lawsuit Could End Your Real Estate Career

Gabe Petersen Season 1 Episode 605

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PROTECT YOUR REAL ESTATE EMPIRE WITH PROPER LEGAL STRUCTURE 🏢⚖️

Getting sued in real estate isn't a matter of if, it's when! In this critical episode, I sit down with Nick McGrew from Polymath Legal, a securities attorney who specializes in real estate syndications and also invests in multifamily himself. Nick reveals the insider secrets that could save you from devastating lawsuits and regulatory nightmares as you scale your portfolio through syndications.

UNDERSTANDING THE BIGGEST LEGAL THREAT TO YOUR SYNDICATION 💼

Nick drops a bombshell early in our conversation about the number one reason real estate syndicators get sued by their investors. It's not property damage or tenant issues, it's disclosure failures! When deals go sideways and investors lose money, they immediately start looking for someone to blame. Nick explains how operators who fail to properly disclose risks in their Private Placement Memorandum become easy targets for litigation. The solution? His PPM documents are designed to scare away investors who can't handle the risk, which might sound counterintuitive but actually protects both parties in the long run.

THE SYNDICATION SETUP PROCESS DEMYSTIFIED 🔐

For investors ready to make the leap from solo deals to raising capital, Nick walks through the entire syndication setup process. He explains why you're selling a security when taking passive capital and the critical difference between 506B and 506C exemptions under Regulation D. The 506C route allows unlimited advertising to accredited investors only, while 506B permits up to 35 non-accredited investors but requires pre-existing relationships and no general solicitation. Understanding which exemption fits your investor network and capital raise goals is absolutely crucial before you start taking checks!

VERIFICATION REQUIREMENTS AND LIABILITY PROTECTION 📋

One of the most valuable insights Nick shares involves accredited investor verification for 506C offerings. Self-certification isn't enough under SEC rules! The operator must either personally verify financial documents or use a third-party verification service. Nick strongly recommends the third-party route because it significantly reduces your liability exposure. If the verification company makes an error, you've still taken reasonable steps to verify status, which is the SEC standard. This simple decision could save you from regulatory penalties down the road.

THE DISCLOSURE PHILOSOPHY THAT PREVENTS LAWSUITS ⚠️

Nick's approach to PPM creation is fascinating and counterintuitive. He actively asks his clients "what keeps you up at night?" about their deals, then ensures those exact fears are disclosed in the offering documents. Whether it's dependence on major employers in a market, global warming impacts, or even pandemic risks, everything goes in the disclosure section. His philosophy is that documents should inform investors so thoroughly that risk-averse people self-select out of the deal. Better to lose a potential investor upfront than face a lawsuit later when an undisclosed risk materializes!

SHOULD YOU ACCEPT NON-ACCREDITED INVESTOR CAPITAL? 🤔

We have an interesting debate about whether operators should even accept non-accredited investor money. While Nick explains the legal framework that permits it under 506B, I push back on the wisdom of taking capital from people who don't have significant wealth cushions. The minimum investment amounts that make sense for operators (typically fifty thousand dollars or more) represent

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