
When a building problem becomes a business problem for a commercial owner, landlord, or property manager, a “property issue” is never just about bricks and concrete. It is about:
- Tenants demanding rent abatements or threatening to leave
- A build out that is late, defective, or unusable
- A refinance or sale stalled because an inspection uncovered serious defects
- A contractor or subcontractor walking off the job with a move-in date looming
Every day a space cannot be leased or used is lost revenue. Every complaint from a tenant or lender is a reminder that the asset is not doing its job.
What Commercial Property Disputes Look Like in Real Life
Commercial property problems rarely show up as a single neat issue. They tend to involve overlapping disputes, for example:
- Construction defects in commercial buildings: Roof and envelope leaks, water intrusion, structural issues, code violations, failed parking surfaces, HVAC and mechanical problems.
- Contractor and build out disputes: Unfinished tenant improvements, poorly executed build outs, missed deadlines, change order fights, and spaces that are technically “done” but not usable.
- Landlord–tenant conflicts tied to property condition: Claims over habitability or suitability for use, rent offset demands, threats to break leases or litigate over conditions.
- Insurance coverage fights: Carriers denying or limiting coverage for defect claims or property damage, pointing fingers at exclusions, endorsements, and “workmanship” issues.
How Doug Helps Commercial Owners and Landlords
Doug has more than 20 years of experience in complex civil litigation, including construction defect, multiparty disputes, and insurance driven lawsuits. That matters in commercial property disputes because so many outcomes are decided at the intersection of:
Defect and damage | Contracts and leases | Insurance coverage and risk transfer
Support for commercial clients often includes:
- Early case assessment that looks at the whole board: Reviewing leases, construction contracts, inspection reports, and policy language to see not just what went wrong, but who may ultimately pay to fix it.
- Coordinating with contractors, tenants, and carriers: Managing communications in a way that protects relationships where possible, but still asserts rights clearly. Keeping the focus on getting the building functional and cash flowing again.
- Negotiation shaped by insurance realities: Spotting where carriers are likely to push back, how coverage arguments may play out, and how to position claims so they are more likely to be taken seriously.
- Litigation when necessary: Pursuing or defending claims in court when other routes fail, with a strategy that aligns with the clients business goals, not just legal theory.
Doug brings a reputation, noted by colleagues, for resolving cases others saw as unresolvable.
At the same time, he never loses sight of the people behind the properties: each building represents real businesses, employees, and families who need the space to work.
Typical commercial property types include:
What Success Looks Like for Commercial Clients
For commercial owners, landlords, and managers, success is not about “winning” in the abstract. It is about:
- Restoring the property so tenants can use it and rent keeps flowing
- Keeping key tenants in place and avoiding reputational damage
- Unlocking stalled sales or refinances by resolving defect or dispute issues
- Shifting the cost of repair and disruption to the responsible parties where possible
Every decision in a commercial dispute is measured against those realities. Doug’s advice is built around protecting cash flow, preserving relationships where it makes sense, and pushing firmly when it does not.


Quick Guide for Commercial Property Owners & Landlords
If you are not ready to engage counsel yet, a few simple steps can immediately improve your position:
- Document conditions and complaints. Photos, inspection reports, tenant emails, and timelines of when issues appeared and how they evolved.
- Centralize contracts and policies. Store construction contracts, change orders, leases, and insurance policies in one place, so you can quickly see who promised what and where coverage might lie.
- Resist quick, emotional responses. Aggressive emails or informal promises can backfire. Calm, clear, written communication is usually more effective and easier to defend later.
Next Step
If a commercial property problem is putting rent, tenants, or a transaction at risk, the cost of waiting is rarely just time. It is lost revenue, strained relationships, and shrinking options.
To talk through what is happening and what realistic paths forward might look like, complete the contact form. Doug will review the information you provide and respond with a practical assessment so the path forward feels more controlled and less overwhelming.
