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How to Use the Health and Safety Code Receivership Remedy

Red Griswold Concludes Orange County Health & Safety Code Receivership

In January 2014, an Orange County Superior Court Judge concluded one of Mr. Griswold's Health & Safety Code receiverships after Mr. Griswold had successfully rehabilitated the single-family home back into compliance with all applicable building and safety codes. Richardson "Red" Griswold was originally nominated by the Orange County city, and appointed by the Superior Court judge under CA Health & Safety Code section 17980, et seq., in November 2012, to act as the court-appointed receiver over the single family home that had fallen into serious disrepair with multiple and severe health and safety, building, and other municipal code violations.

Griswold Law: 2013 Highlights

Hoarding: A Common Issue in Health & Safety Code Receiverships

As a court-appointed Health & Safety Code Receiver, I deal with property owners engaged in hoarding often. From the curb outside a home, one would never know the complications behind the doors of a hoarder.

Back in the Saddle: New Legal Articles

Time sure does fly. Here at Griswold Law (and in life), things have been quite busy. I was unpleasantly surprised to realize it has been close to a year since the last article. My motivation is renewed and the published articles will follow.

Receiver Richardson "Red" Griswold Concludes another Orange County Health & Safety Receivership

Richardson "Red" Griswold of Griswold Law was nominated by an Orange County city, and appointed by the Superior Court judge under CA Health & Safety Code section 17980, et seq., to act as a receiver over a single family home that had fallen into serious disrepair with multiple and severe health and safety, building, and other municipal code violations.

The California Health & Safety Code Receivership Remedy: Not Just for Residential Properties!

Here on the Griswold Law Blog, we use the terms “Health & Safety Code Receiver” and “Real Property Receiver” quite a bit in our articles about the different types of situations where a court-appointed receiver can provide a remedy for problematic structures (i.e. abandoned properties or slumlord-owned properties). However, receivers can be appointed by the Court to rehab non-residential properties as well. Two example scenarios are explained below:

Health & Safety Code Receivership Remedy: Help for Abandoned Properties

Abandoned properties hardly stay “abandoned” for long. If a property is uninhabited, it’s susceptible to takeover. Vandals, taggers, squatters and transients can move in and out, staying for the night—or for longer. A once-empty house can transform into a house covered in graffiti and trash in a matter of weeks. Vermin could move in as well and spread throughout the neighborhood. Abandoned properties make neighborhoods less safe and drag down property values for the other houses on the block.
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