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You may have been paying rent monthly or quarterly for some years, but your landlord has still not given you a fixed term lease. What can you do to force the landlord’s hand?

Rights under a periodic tenancy

It is likely that you are a periodic tenant and if you have been in occupation of business premises paying rent for more than 12 months, you will have become a protected business tenant with the rights granted by the Landlord & Tenant Act 1954 Part 11. As such the landlord cannot simply terminate your lease by giving you one month’s notice. It would need to serve you with a statutory notice under the 1954 Act giving you not less than 6 nor more than 12 months’ notice and you will then have the right to apply to the court for a new lease on terms to be agreed or decided upon by the court.

Can you require the landlord to grant a new lease?

If the time has come that you need the certainty of a fixed term lease, perhaps in order to grow or sell your business, you will not be able to serve on the landlord a notice under section 26 of the 1954 Act requesting a new lease. The right to do this only applies to tenants whose tenancy was granted for a fixed term certain exceeding one year or for any term and thereafter from year to year. So what should the tenant do?

Negotiate with your landlord

A periodic protected tenant should be in a strong position to negotiate a new lease with the landlord who would be keen to regularise the position. Without a lease, the landlord cannot unilaterally increase the rent, or regulate the use of the premises or prevent the tenant from sharing occupation or assigning its tenancy. It is unlikely that the landlord could easily sell its interest in the property while a protected periodic tenant contiuues in occupation for an indefinite period. With oral tenancy agreements if a dispute arises the court would need to hear evidence and try to resolve the dispute which could be unsatisfactory to both parties and the uncertaintly of a court case could be avoided by agreeing upon lease terms. One way in which the landlord can regularise the position is to serve a written notice under section 25 of the 1954 Act terminating the tenancy and stating whether or not the landlord is willing to grant a new lease and if so on what terms including rent and length of lease. If the landlord opposes the grant of a new lease, then it may only refuse on certain grounds set out in the statute, most commonly refusal on the grounds of persistent rent arrears, being able to demonstrate an intention to occupy the premises for its own use or an intention to redevelop. The landlord must demonstrate the ability to do these things if necessary by producing plans and specifications and the necessary planning permissions. This can make it difficult for a landlord to regain possession. If the tenant is a protected business tenant and the landlord does not have grounds to oppose

Can a periodic business tenant in occupation of premises obtain a lease from their landlord? You are a commercial tenant running a business from premises and you now want your landlord to grant you a written lease for a fixed term.

a new lease, the tenant will be able to obtain a new lease on terms to be agreed or if not agreed as determined by the court. Accordingly the landlord cannot simply impose any terms it wishes and the court will look at the implied terms of the periodic tenancy when considering what At the end of June 2021 there terms should be inserted in the were approximately 1.9million people still on the Furlough new lease. The landlord be agreeable is therefore likely to to grant a lease to scheme. a it periodic tenant especially since cannot increase the rent without The Furlough scheme finally comes first the terminating Act, and the the lease under position will to an end on 30 September 2021 and remain uncertain. whilst there have been several dates Taking legal advice in the past where the scheme was It is best to seek legal before finalising terms advice first in principle pencilled to end, this time it looks like with your the terms landlord to of the new ensure that lease are not it will be definitely ending. onerous and reflect the terms of your existing oral tenancy. Where Given how close we are to this date, there is a dispute with the landlord most furloughed workers should know and the landlord is taking steps terminate the tenancy without to whether they will be made redundant offering terms, it acceptable new lease will be important to seek legal advice as to your rights and how to protect your position.

If you need expert legal advice, please contact Alan Zeffertt by email on aze@anthonygold.co.uk or ask for him or a member of our Commercial Property Team, telephone 020 7940 4000.

by the end of the month or will be returning to work. We are assisting both Employers and individuals with redundancy issues. Many businesses are having to restructure in order to survive and that usually means redundancies. However, if handled badly, redundancies can often cause businesses to spend money they do not have, when they set out with a plan to cut costs, not increase them.

Furlough coming to an end: 30 September

Aneil Balgobin Head of Employment

There are some businesses who have buried their heads in the sand and have not made appropriate fallback plans for when the furlough scheme ends – there’s been 18 months’ worth of state funding propping up some businesses that are not economically viable once the Furlough scheme ends. We are able to offer guidance to both businesses and individuals who may find themselves in such situations.

Our team of expert commercial solicitors will be pleased to advise. Please contact Aneil Balgobin if you would like assistance: E: aneil.balgobin@anthonygold.co.uk T: 020 7940 3950

Anthony Gold Solicitors specialise in many different areas of law

Our solicitors are experts in their fields. We are negotiators and litigators, committed to doing whatever is best for our clients.

Offices in London Bridge, Elephant & Castle and Streatham. T: 020 7940 4060 E: mail@anthonygold.co.uk W: www.anthonygold.co.uk

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