Foreclosure sales are a very simple process in Texas. My memory is dim, but I think I actually attended one or two back when they were a very common feature of the Texas economy. By @common” I mean conducted by almost every lawyer in Austin.
By “simple” I mean that the sale is conducted on the courthouse steps on a statutorily prescribed day. A representative of the mortgage holder stands there, announces to the open air that the property identified is being foreclosed on in accordance with the Deed of Trust (the mortgage instrument in Texas), and starts the bidding. Usually the only person listening is a a representative of the mortgage holder, who makes a bid, which is accepted, and the deal is done. Papers are later filed indicating title transfer, and it’s all over but the shouting.
The point is, this all done, by law, outdoors. En plein air, as the French say. So why Ken Paxton forced an opinion out of his office that such sales violated Covid restrictions is a bit of a mystery. Or not, considering Nate Paul at the time was facing foreclosure on two properties for a debt of $11.5 million. Especially since the sale was postponed because of the rushed opinion, but eventually carried out. A point Paxton’s lawyers tried to make in exoneration of his pushing the opinion out of his office like a kidney stone. But all they really proved was the opinion shouldn’t have been issued in the first place.
Even defense lawyers can’t make bricks without straw OR mud.
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