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Bill

Bill

LC 3501

Generally revise property laws

2025 Regular Session

LC 3501 aims to broadly revise property laws, but no text is public and the draft died in process, so no enacted changes or specifics are available.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 3501

Summary of LC 3501: Generally revise property laws

Overview

  • Bill Number: LC 3501
  • Title: Generally revise property laws
  • Subject: Property
  • Classification: Bill
  • Introduced: December 14, 2024
  • Status: Draft Died in Process (as of May 27, 2025)

LC 3501 is described in the record as aiming to broadly revise property laws. No enacted text or section-by-section provisions are provided in the available information.

Purpose and Scope

  • The bill’s general aim appears to be a comprehensive modernization or consolidation of existing property statutes. However, the specific objectives, definitions, or reform areas (e.g., conveyancing, landlord–tenant rules, property registration, liens, eminent domain, or tax-related provisions) have not been disclosed in the provided materials.
  • Because the actual draft text is not available here, the precise changes, new standards, or repeals cannot be itemized.

Key Provisions (Details Not Publicly Available)

  • No substantive provisions, sections, or amendments are publicly listed for LC 3501 in the provided record.
  • If the text becomes available, a detailed, section-by-section summary would identify:
    • Revisions to definitions of real property and related terms
    • Changes to transaction procedures (conveyances, closings, recording)
    • Updates to landlord–tenant rights and responsibilities
    • Modifications to liens, mortgages, foreclosures, and remedies
    • Transitional rules and effective dates

Note: At present, only the bill’s broad purpose is known; specific provisions remain unspecified.

Affected Parties and Impacts

  • Potentially affected: Property owners, tenants, landlords, real estate professionals, title and recording offices, lenders, and local governments.
  • Potential impacts: If enacted, the reforms could affect compliance obligations, filing/recording processes, definitions used in property transactions, and transitional rules for adopting new standards. The exact cost, timeline for implementation, and distribution of impacts would depend on the final text.

Procedural History and Timeline

  • Introduced: December 14, 2024 (Drafter Assigned)
  • Status updates:
    • January 8, 2025: Draft On Hold
    • May 27, 2025: Draft Died in Process
  • Current status: Died in Process, meaning the bill did not advance to enactment. No further action is recorded in this dataset.

Next Steps for Readers

  • If you need details on LC 3501, monitor the legislative website or contact the drafting office for the full bill text and any fiscal or legal analyses.
  • If reintroduced, a new version (with a different LC number or revised text) may reemerge, potentially with amended scope or provisions.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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