Louisiana Real Estate Purchase, Sale, Lease, and Title Disputes
Real estate contract disputes can involve failed closings, purchase agreements, leases, deposits, title objections, misrepresentations, inspection issues, financing problems, occupancy disputes, possession issues, bond-for-deed arrangements, seller disclosures, buyer defaults, landlord-tenant conflicts, commercial lease issues, and disputes over who has the right to own, use, occupy, sell, or transfer property. David W. Nance Law Firm LLC assists clients in Louisiana real estate purchase, sale, lease, and title disputes by reviewing the governing documents, evaluating claims and defenses, communicating with opposing parties, title companies, lenders, and other stakeholders, and pursuing negotiation or litigation when necessary.
1
Document-Focused Real Estate Review
Real estate disputes usually depend on documents. Purchase agreements, leases, counteroffers, addenda, inspection reports, title commitments, closing documents, disclosures, financing communications, bond-for-deed documents, notices, emails, text messages, and public records may all determine the parties’ rights. David W. Nance Law Firm LLC reviews the documents closely to identify the operative agreement, the alleged breach, available remedies, deadlines, notice issues, and practical leverage.
2
Title, Closing, and Financing Awareness
A real estate dispute often involves more than buyer and seller. Title companies, lenders, agents, contractors, tenants, lien claimants, and public records may all affect whether the property can close, be financed, be occupied, or be transferred. The firm helps clients evaluate title concerns, closing obstacles, financing-related issues, lien or privilege problems, and the documentation needed to move the matter toward resolution or litigation.
3
Strategic Handling of Possession and Use Issues
Some real estate disputes involve immediate practical problems: who may occupy the property, who may collect rent, who must make repairs, who controls access, whether a lease is valid, whether a party is in default, or whether possession should be restored or restrained. The firm assists clients in evaluating possession, occupancy, lease enforcement, eviction-adjacent issues, property access, and emergency relief when the facts justify prompt action.
4
Litigation and Negotiation Experience
When real estate contract disputes cannot be resolved informally, they may require claims for breach of contract, specific performance, rescission, damages, declaratory judgment, injunction, title-related relief, fraud, unfair trade practices, eviction-related relief, or defense against improper claims. David W. Nance Law Firm LLC combines real estate, contract, and litigation experience to help clients protect property interests, preserve evidence, evaluate risks, and pursue practical remedies in Louisiana real estate disputes.

