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Practice/Industry Groups:
Real Estate Green Strategies Higher Education
Todd Reutzel is an attorney with Bricker & Eckler practicing in the real estate group with an emphasis on negotiating retail/restaurant, office and industrial commercial lease transactions and negotiating purchase and sale agreements on behalf of both private and public entities.
Representative Experience
Developer's counsel in connection with the negotiation of multiple retail and restaurant leases for the Highlands, a multi-use retail complex in Wheeling, West Virginia
School district counsel on the real estate components of a multi-million dollar land acquisition for the development of new school facilities -- a transaction that involved the acquistion of the original buyer's rights under the land purchase contract, negotiation of lease rights reserved by a private entity, and negotiation of a reciprocal easement agreement with the seller
Counsel for the planned anchor tenant of an office property involving negotiation of a lease agreement for more than 50,000 square feet of office space
Buyer's counsel in connection with the acquisition of a 160 acre site for the development of a new research complex
Seller's counsel in connection with the sale of a seller-financed office/warehouse building
Counsel on behalf of a public entity in the acquisition of numerous real estate interests by way of both direct contract negotiations and the use of eminent domain in conjunction with a complex roadway expansion and realignment project and school construction project
Member of Firm committee developing a Green Office Lease
Education
Liberty University, Lynchburg, Virginia (B.S., summa cum laude, 1998)
University of Tennessee (M.A., 2002)
University of Tennessee (J.D., summa cum laude, 2005); Executive Editor, Tennessee Law Review; Graduate Assistantship Award; 2005 Jerry J. Phillips Law Review Comment Award; 2004-05 Cunningham Excellence in Legal Writing Award; Hunton & Williams Law Review Prize; Law Review Comment published in Soundings (Fall/Winter 2004) and the Tennessee Law Review (Spring 2005)
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