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E-raamat: Leases: Covenants and Consents

(University of Reading, UK), (Landmark Chambers, UK), (Wilberforce Chambers, UK)
  • Formaat: 432 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: Hart Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509937233
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  • Formaat: 432 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: Hart Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509937233
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This unique book provides practical and legal clarity on all questions concerning landlords consent, such as: What is a valid and effective request for consent? When can a tenant impose its desire for change on a reluctant landlord? What is a reasonable as opposed to an unreasonable refusal of consent? And what are the perils if either side calls it wrong?

Since the last edition of this book in 2008, the law relating to landlords consent, has evolved considerably. The purpose of this new edition is to bring that evolution into the much-loved analysis which have made practitioners say that previous editions have been that rare beast: a book about law that is actually enjoyable to read and which allows the practitioner and student clearly to see the wood for the trees.

Muu info

This new edition covers key cases and developments including; Braganza; No.1 West India Quay (Residential) Ltd; Sequent Nominees Ltd (formerly Rotrust Nominees Ltd).
Preface v
Table of Cases
xiii
Table of Statutes
xxxv
Table of Statutory Instruments
xlvii
Table of European Materials
xlix
PART 1 RESTRICTIONS ON ALIENATION
1 Disposition Rights of Tenants
3(5)
1.1 The basic freedom
3(1)
1.2 Curtailment of the basic freedom: (1) by statute
3(1)
1.3 Curtailment of the basic freedom: (2) by the terms of the lease
4(1)
1.4 Consequences of a disposition in breach of covenant
4(1)
1.5 Absolute, qualified and fully qualified restrictions
5(3)
2 Types of Disposition Commonly Restricted
8(28)
2.1 The wide variety of restrictions
8(1)
2.2 General principles of construction
8(3)
2.3 Restrictions on assignment
11(5)
2.4 Restrictions on sub-letting
16(2)
2.5 Restrictions on parting with possession
18(8)
2.6 Restrictions on sharing possession or occupation
26(2)
2.7 Restrictions on mortgages by sub-demise
28(1)
2.8 Restrictions on charges
29(1)
2.9 Overriding leases
30(1)
2.10 Involuntary assignments
30(1)
2.11 Compulsory purchase
31(1)
2.12 Vesting orders
31(1)
2.13 Taking in execution
31(1)
2.14 Vesting in a trustee in bankruptcy
32(2)
2.15 Vesting in personal representatives on death
34(1)
2.16 Assignments to company liquidators, etc
34(1)
2.17 Trespass and adverse possession
34(2)
3 The Burden of Disposition Covenants
36(11)
3.1 New and old leases
36(1)
3.2 Leases granted before 1 January 1996
36(7)
3.3 Leases granted on or after 1 January 1996
43(4)
4 Fully Qualified Covenants against Disposition
47(23)
4.1 The nature of a fully qualified covenant
47(1)
4.2 The intervention of statute: section 19(1)(a) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927
48(5)
4.3 Variations on the fully qualified covenant
53(10)
4.4 Payments to the landlord
63(7)
5 The Landlord and Tenant Act 1988
70(27)
5.1 The mischief at which the Act is directed
70(3)
5.2 The workings of the Act
73(17)
5.3 The relationship between the action for breach of statutory duty and the action on the covenant
90(4)
5.4 Right to manage (RTM) companies under the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002
94(3)
6A Unreasonable Withholding of Consent -- General Principles
97(22)
6A.1 The landlord can withhold consent or impose conditions in order to protect the benefits it obtains under the lease but not to obtain an uncovenanted advantage
98(10)
6A.2 Subject to (1), the question whether the landlord's conduct was reasonable or unreasonable will be one of fact to be decided by the tribunal of fact
108(2)
6A.3 The landlord's obligation is to show that its conduct is reasonable, not that it is right or justifiable
110(1)
6A.4 The reasons upon which the landlord relies must have affected its mind when withholding consent or imposing conditions upon its consent
111(1)
6A.5 Where the landlord relies upon a good and a bad reason, the good reason must be sufficient and not be vitiated by the bad
112(4)
6A.6 The harm to the landlord must not be disproportionately outweighed by the detriment which would be suffered by the tenant should consent be refused
116(3)
6B Unreasonable Withholding of Consent -- Specific Reasons
119(1)
6B.1 Objections based upon the proposed disponee's user where there is a provision which restricts user
119(58)
6B.2 Objections based upon the proposed disponee's user where there is no provision in the lease which restricts user, or such provision as there is, will be complied with
125(3)
6B.3 Objections based upon harm to other property of the landlord
128(3)
6B.4 Objections based on good estate management
131(6)
6B.5 Objections based upon the financial or business status of an assignee
137(9)
6B.6 Objections based upon the financial or business status of an under-lessee
146(2)
6B.7 Objections based upon the terms of a proposed under-lease
148(3)
6B.8 Objections based on the disponee's legal status
151(8)
6B.9 Objections based on interference with the landlord's development plans
159(3)
6B.10 Objections based on the continuance of the term
162(5)
6B.11 Objections based on the tenant's breach of covenant
167(2)
6B.12 Objections unlawful under the Equality Act 2010
169(1)
6B.13 Objections based upon the refusal of a superior landlord to give a necessary consent
170(1)
6B.14 Conditional consents
171(6)
7 Special Categories of Tenant
177(16)
7.1 Private sector residential tenants: Tenancies subject to the Rent Act 1977
177(2)
7.2 Private sector residential tenants: Assured Tenancies under the Housing Act 1988
179(2)
7.3 Public sector residential tenants: Secure tenancies subject to the Housing Act 1985
181(3)
7.4 Public sector residential tenants: Introductory tenancies under Housing Act 1996
184(1)
7.5 Prevention of Social Housing Fraud Act 2013
185(1)
7.6 Transfer of tenancies on relationship breakdown
185(2)
7.7 Non-residential tenants
187(6)
PART 2 RESTRICTIONS ON ALTERATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS
8 Restrictions on Alterations and Improvements
193(40)
8.1 Restrictions on the tenant's freedom to alter
193(11)
8.2 Impact of statute on the operation of terms
204(14)
8.3 Unreasonable withholding of consent
218(11)
8.4 Estoppel
229(4)
PART 3 RESTRICTIONS ON USE
9 Restrictions on Use
233(24)
9.1 Restrictions on the tenant's freedom to use the premises as it likes
233(7)
9.2 Absolute, qualified and fully qualified covenants
240(5)
9.3 Full qualification and reasonableness
245(4)
9.4 Statutory regulation of terms
249(8)
PART 4 CONTRACTS AND CONSENTS
10 Contracts and Consents
257(16)
10.1 Usual covenants
257(4)
10.2 Lack of consent
261(7)
10.3 Costs
268(1)
10.4 Registered title and consents
269(4)
PART 5 LITIGATION CONSIDERATIONS
11 Landlord and Tenant's Considerations: The Need for Formal Licence (or, `Granting Consent by Accident')
273(6)
12 Tenant's Considerations (1): The Mechanics of Obtaining Consent
279(4)
13 Tenant's Considerations (2): The Commencement and Pursuit of Dispute Resolution Procedures in Relation to a Refusal of Consent under a Fully Qualified Covenant
283(15)
13.1 Legal proceedings in the High Court or County Court
283(12)
13.2 Mediation
295(2)
13.3 Arbitration
297(1)
13.4 Expert determination
297(1)
14 Landlord's Considerations (1): The Response to the Initiation of Dispute Resolution Procedures in Relation to a Refusal of Consent under a Fully Qualified Covenant
298(5)
14.1 Legal proceedings in the High Court or County Court
298(1)
14.2 Commencing proceedings
298(1)
14.3 Limitation
299(1)
14.4 Claim form
299(1)
14.5 Defence
299(1)
14.6 Preliminary issues
300(1)
14.7 Request for information
301(1)
14.8 Disclosure
301(1)
14.9 Summary judgment
301(1)
14.10 Part 36 offers
301(1)
14.11 Witness statements
301(1)
14.12 Expert evidence
302(1)
14.13 Trial
302(1)
14.14 Mediation
302(1)
15 Landlord's Considerations (2): Landlord's Remedies against a Tenant Proceeding without Necessary Consent
303(8)
15.1 Forfeiture
303(3)
15.2 Relief against forfeiture
306(2)
15.3 Injunction
308(2)
15.4 Landlord's claim for damages
310(1)
16 Selection of Precedents
311(28)
16.1 Pre-action correspondence
311(7)
16.1.1 Tenant's request for consent
311(1)
16.1.2 Landlord's response seeking further information
312(1)
16.1.3 Landlord's response refusing consent
313(1)
16.1.4 Landlord's response granting conditional consent
314(1)
16.1.5 Tenant's request for confirmation that landlord will not re-enter by physical re-entry
315(1)
16.1.6 Tenant's Pre-Action Letter
316(2)
16.2 Statements of case in claims under CPR Part 7
318(4)
16.2.1 Tenant's Particulars of Claim for declaration that consent unreasonably withheld and for damages
318(2)
16.2.2 Landlord's Defence to the above
320(2)
16.3 Tenant's Claim under CPR Part 8
322(4)
16.3.1 Claim Form for declaration that tenant has right to effect disposition without landlord's consent because consent unreasonably withheld
322(2)
16.3.2 Witness statement in support of Part 8 Claim
324(2)
16.4 Landlord's remedies
326(13)
16.4.1 Landlord's claim for damages for underletting without consent
326(2)
16.4.2 Landlord's claim for injunction for underletting/assigning without consent
328(1)
16.4.3 Landlord's claim for forfeiture for underletting/assigning without consent
329(2)
16.4.4 Landlord's Particulars of Claim for possession and damages in relation to breach of user covenant
331(3)
16.4.5 Defence and Counterclaim to the above Claim
334(5)
APPENDICES
Appendix 1 Landlord and Tenant Act 1988
339(4)
Appendix 2 Operation of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1988 (see Generally
Chapter 5)
343(1)
Appendix 3 Miscellaneous Statutory Provisions
344(20)
A Law of Property Act 1925, s 84
344(4)
B Landlord and Tenant Act 1927, ss 3 and 19
348(5)
C Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, s 35
353(1)
D Housing Act 1980, ss 81--82
354(2)
E Housing Act 1985, ss 91--95, 97, 98
356(4)
F Housing Act 1988, s 15
360(1)
G Housing Act 1996, s 134
361(1)
H Communications Act 2003, s 134
362(2)
Appendix 4 Case Extracts
364(2)
A The seven propositions of Balcombe LJ in International Drilling Fluids Ltd v Louisville Investments (Uxbridge) Ltd [ 1986] 1 Ch 513 at 519
364(1)
B The three overriding principles of Lord Bingham in Ashworth Frazer Ltd v Gloucester City Council [ 2001] UKHL 59 [ 2001] 1 WLR 2180 at [ 3]
365(1)
Appendix 5 Statutory Regulation of Alteration Terms
366(3)
Index 369
Letitia Crabb is a solicitor and previously Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, University of Reading, United Kingdom. Jonathan Seitler KC is a barrister at Wilberforce Chambers, United Kingdom. Miriam Seitler is a barrister at Landmark Chambers, United Kingdom.