Trust This. | By Joseph E. Seagle, Esq. | News highlights for real estate professionals and entrepreneurs with a side of business leadership advice courtesy of Florida's oldest and largest land trustee. | 👋 Happy Friday! Today is the anniversary of three landmark Supreme Court decisions handed down on this exact date — Lawrence v. Texas (2003), United States v. Windsor (2013), and Obergefell v. Hodges (2015), each written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, each twelve or two years apart to the day. One date, three rulings, one quiet point worth keeping: legal architecture, built carefully, reshapes the country without ever raising its voice. | 🚨 Situation awareness: | The ROAD to Housing Act passed both houses of Congress with large bipartisan support. I’ve updated my earlier article from a few weeks ago with the final points from the passed Act. You can review it here. As of this writing, Trump is saying he will not sign the Act into law, meaning it will be a “pocket veto.” Congress passed the bills in both houses with veto-proof majorities. So this will be a test of whether a lame-duck executive branch still has enough power over the legislative branch to maintain its veto power, or whether legislators with nothing to lose will stick to their original votes. While the temps are up, employment is down in the Sunshine State — the worst it’s been in the past five years. (Bloomberg)
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| | 1 big thing: Wall Street is pulling back from single-family homes | | Institutional investors have quietly shelved more than 6,000 single-family home deals, and in Florida — where Wall Street landlords went heaviest — that retreat is rearranging the board for everyone still in the game. A ResiClub survey found firms in the single-family rental (SFR) and build-to-rent (BTR) space have delayed or killed those deals on policy uncertainty alone, with 80% saying current or proposed rules are "significantly" shaping their investment decisions. | Why this reshapes the Florida board | The pressure is federal and bipartisan. On January 20, President Trump signed an executive order directing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to stop backing purchases by large institutional buyers, with a promised carve-out for build-to-rent. The Senate's 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, once enacted into law, would bar any investor already holding 350 or more single-family homes from buying more. An early version forced build-to-rent developers to sell within seven years; the House stripped that selloff rule, handing BTR a clean exemption. Tampa, Jacksonville, and Orlando rank among the most active institutional rental markets in the country — so when the biggest cash buyers step back, the entry-level competition eases here first. | What to execute and watch | For real estate investors and private lenders — fewer institutional cash offers at the courthouse steps and on the MLS means more room for individual buyers; build-to-rent still has a clean federal lane if you build rather than buy existing stock. For home services businesses — HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing — watch which BTR pipelines keep moving and which stall, because your install backlog tracks their starts. For licensed professionals investing on the side — the threshold math matters before you scale a rental portfolio past a few dozen doors. | Watch for: The bill isn't law yet. The 350-home threshold, the BTR exemption, and the Fannie/Freddie backing rules can all shift in conference. Source: ResiClub, Fast Company, CNN, the White House. |
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| | 2. HUD just stopped chasing emotional support animal complaints | | On May 22, 2026, HUD's Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity permanently rescinded thirteen years of emotional support animal guidance and replaced it with a far narrower enforcement standard. For Florida's landlords, property managers, and the investors who own the buildings, the federal posture on emotional support animals (ESAs) just flipped — but the obligation underneath it did not. | Why it matters | The old guidance (built across 2008, 2013, and a January 2020 notice) told housing providers that untrained ESAs "are not pets," banned pet fees for them, and treated even follow-up questions as a possible fair-housing violation. HUD has now realigned with the Americans with Disabilities Act: its fair-housing office will pursue charges only for animals individually trained to perform a disability-related task. Housing providers are no longer expected by HUD to automatically grant accommodation requests or fee waivers for untrained assistance animals. | The "yes, but" most landlords will miss | HUD walking away from enforcement is not the law disappearing. Two things survive intact. First, the private right of action — a tenant can still sue in federal or state court within two years, with or without HUD. Second, state law is untouched. Florida has its own emotional support animal statute (Fla. Stat. § 760.27), which lets a housing provider request reliable supporting documentation and makes fraudulent ESA paperwork a crime. That statute still governs every Florida rental regardless of what HUD does. | What to execute | For real estate investors and landlords — rebuild your accommodation policy around Florida's § 760.27 framework, not the retired HUD categorical-grant posture, and document every request and your response to it. For property managers — train staff now, and resist the urge to overcorrect into blanket denials, because that reflex is exactly where the private lawsuits live. | Bottom line: Federal enforcement eased; your Florida duties didn't. Structure your policy to the law that still applies. | Source: HUD/FHEO, NAR, Holland & Knight, Duane Morris. |
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| | | In this week’s episode of the Trust This podcast, I’m explaining how vital it is to fund your trust the right way and completely. | Listen in or watch on your favorite streaming platform. |
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| | 3. Practice Pointers: QSBS can erase your capital gains — if you hold it right | | Most owners treat the tax bill on a business sale as a fixed cost of winning. Section 1202 of the tax code — qualified small business stock, or QSBS — says it doesn't have to be. Bloomberg reports the strategy has jumped from Silicon Valley cocktail-party trivia to boardroom planning nationwide, and it's already working for Florida C-corps — a food-safety company in Odessa, a drone maker in Jacksonville. | The big picture: Hold stock in a C-corporation that had no more than $75 million in gross assets when you acquired your stake, keep it at least five years, and you can sell — even years later at a far higher value — and pay zero federal tax on up to $15 million or 10x your basis, whichever is greater. The 2025 tax law raised the exclusion by 50% and added a partial benefit for holders who cash out in as few as three years. | What most people don't know: The architecture play is stacking. Because the exclusion cap applies per taxpayer, an owner can gift QSBS shares into multiple non-grantor trusts — say, one for each child — and each trust claims its own cap. A founder might spread shares across four trusts for $60 million tax-free on top of a personal $15 million. Treasury's Kenneth Kies recently warned the IRS is examining "abusive" stacking of near-identical trusts, so the structure has to be real, not cosmetic. | Key takeaways: | C-corp only — QSBS never applies to an S-corp, LLC, or partnership interest as held. $75M gross-assets ceiling — measured when you acquired the stock, not when you sell. Five-year hold — partial benefit now available at three years under the 2025 law. Stacking multiplies the exclusion — but each trust must be funded to avoid gift and estate tax and survive multiple-trust scrutiny.
| Where people go wrong: Learning about QSBS the week before closing. Converting an S-corp to a C-corp without modeling the double-taxation tradeoff first. Setting up cookie-cutter trusts that trip the anti-abuse rules. QSBS is federal tax law, so it reaches every state — but the trusts that stack it are built under state law, and in Florida that's where the planning actually happens. | The bottom line: QSBS rewards the owner who structured the holding years before the exit. The architecture has to exist before you need it. | Go deeper: Read the full long-form article on aspirelegal.com. | Source: Bloomberg, U.S. Treasury, McKinsey. |
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| | 4. Coaching Thoughts: The one thing you can't delegate |  | Edward and Hudson have never once told me what I wanted to hear. Dinner is four minutes late? They say so, loudly, to my face. They are, structurally, the most accountable members of our household, even when resting in a sunny spot on the front porch or watching the bears walk by. |
| The military draws a line most business owners blur. Accountability is where the buck stops — it can't be handed to anyone else. Responsibility is the set of tasks that get a job done, and those can be delegated all day. You can give away the work. You can't give away the ownership of whether the work gets done. | The distinction that runs your org chart | This is the engine of the EOS Accountability Chart. Every seat carries one name. Every function has exactly one person accountable (not responsible) for it — not a committee, not "the team," one human. Jocko Willink and Leif Babin built a whole leadership doctrine on it in Extreme Ownership: when something fails, the accountable leader doesn't distribute the blame, because the accountability was never distributable in the first place. The responsibilities under that seat can spread across five people; the accountability stays put. | Where leaders blur it | They delegate a responsibility and quietly assume that their accountability left with it. It didn't. They put two names on one seat, so when it slips, each waits for the other. I call it, “Hitting the ball to left-center field. No one catches it.” They leave a function with no name on it at all, and call the resulting gap "a process problem."
| What to do about it | Treat the Accountability Chart as the real org chart — the one that says who answers for each outcome, not who reports to whom. Assign Rocks to the accountable seat, not to a department. When a number misses, you should be able to name the one person who owns it before you name the cause. | Bottom Line: You can delegate every task on your plate and still own every result. It's the definition of the seat you're in; not a burden you need to escape. | This Week's Challenge: Pull your Accountability Chart, or just your org chart if that's all you've got. Find every seat with two names, or no name. Put exactly one accountable person on each. Where that's genuinely hard, you've just found the part of your business that's been quietly running itself. |
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