At the firm, we believe that know-how should be shared, and we quickly set ourselves the ambition of putting all the training materials we provide online.
The work we had to do to achieve this was far from trivial, as we first had to update our media so that they could withstand going online, which would considerably change the way they were laid out, and the way they were viewed: because you don't read an A4 sheet of paper the same way you read a blog.
So, after several weeks of work, we finished our main training course, devoted to the practice of foreclosing on property.
In 'course' format, it is an extremely detailed 140-page document; in 'web' format, it is a publication of around 66,000 words that should keep the reader busy for many hours.
Above all, this publication is accompanied by an easy-to-read, detailed table of contents, so that practitioners and amateurs alike can easily find the answers to their questions.
We do not claim to have all the answers, and errors have certainly crept in here and there. In addition, we have deliberately excluded from the scope of our analysis all aspects of the procedure that are not specific to the seizure of property.
This is why this publication is not entirely suitable for beginners, who could easily jump to unfounded conclusions if they do not have sufficient knowledge of the legal context.
Our blog contains publications aimed at this audience, with a view to popularising our expertise.
In any case, our ambition is to gradually put all our course materials online, ideally at the rate of one publication per quarter. This will eventually enable us to cover the following topics:
- Prize distribution
- Judicial sales
- Defence against seizure of property
- Pre-emption on foreclosure
As they say, stay tuned.