The library has almost all editions of this CLE dating back to 1991. The most recent five years are available to check out. Please contact the library at 512-463-1722 with any questions or to request this item.
The library has almost all editions of this CLE dating back to 1979. The most recent five years are available to check out. Please contact the library at 512-463-1722 with any questions or to request this item.
This book is a concise presentation of landlord and tenant law. It discusses most of the rules that govern the legal relationship between landlords and tenants.
"This comprehensive Texas real estate book includes the entire Property Code and useful ancillary statutes, annotated with quotations from controlling cases and helpful charts." - from the publisher
This title is from Jones McClure, who also publishes the O'Connor's series. It is formatted very similarly and includes a wide range of available real estate forms. Chapter 2 contains lease forms.
This comprehensive set explains the law and procedure in a given area and then provides drafting guides to prepare the forms. This e-book can only be borrowed by government employees, but librarians may be able to provide a short excerpt to library patrons upon request.
Designed as a practical resource for the real estate attorney, the Texas Real Estate Forms Manual focuses on forms and provides assistance in drafting documents for real estate transactions. It also includes useful commentary to assist attorneys in modifying forms to fit their clients’ legal situations. Chapter 71 covers leases.
This multi-volume set of e-books provides comprehensive coverage of real property law, transactions, and litigation. Along with drafting guides and forms, it includes discussions of the law with citations to statutes, case law, regulations, and court rules.
This work, known as the "Green Book," is a comprehensive guide to HUD's housing programs. It includes detailed information on this complex area of the law as well as memos and unpublished court opinions.
Note The library cannot tell you what the law means for your situation.