skip navigation
header image

Landlord, Tenant and Property

  • Business Tenancies What is a Business

  • The question as to what sort of organisations can be regarded as businesses came before the courts in a case involving a not-for-profit company which had failed to give the required notices to protect their tenancy under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. ...
  • Compensation for Loss of Light

  • Following a recent case in which a dispute regarding a property owner s right to light was unexpectedly dealt with by the granting of an injunction against a developer, a more recent case has offered guidance on how much compensation might be payable by a...
  • Data Protection Guidance for Landlords

  • The Information Commissioner's best practice guide for landlords - written to to assist them in complying with the Data Protection Act can be downloaded from the Information Commissioner s website . The guide includes a checklist which is intended to assist...
  • Landlord's Repairs and Loss of Trade

  • One of the continuing sources of friction between landlords and tenants is the maintenance of buildings. Normally, the arguments are over inadequate maintenance, but a recent case dealt with problems which arose when a landlord repaired a building occupied...
  • Landlords and the Disability Discrimination Act

  • The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (DDA) which was amended in 2005 has caused concern amongst the owners of let properties for some time because of uncertainty as to the limits of their responsibilities to make the properties they let out ...
  • Late Payment and Material Breach

  • Recent guidance has been given by the High Court on what constitutes a material breach of a contract and the circumstances necessary for late payment to be regarded as serious enough to justify the termination of a contract. The dispute arose...
  • Leases - New Code of Practice

  • A new code of practice for commercial leases has been released following a long consultation exercise involving landlords and other interested parties. The code makes a number of changes to the substance and detail of current practice. These include: ...
  • Mixed Premises Legal Status

  • Living above the shop is quite common in the small business sector and where the premises are rented, the lease will cover both the business and residential parts of the property. However, the statutory basis for repossession is quite different for...
  • Optional Errors

  • People who want to buy a property but do not currently have the means to do so, or who simply want to be guaranteed the opportunity to buy it during a specified period or at some future date, will often undertake an option agreement with the owner. Under such...
  • Options and Pre-emption Rights

  • Prospective purchasers and vendors of land frequently wish to lock in the other party to the deal and the means by which this is done will normally involve the prospective vendor either giving the prospective purchaser an option to purchase the land or...
  • Rent Arrears Protocol

  • Since October 2006, a revised protocol has applied where a social landlord wishes to gain possession of a property occupied by a tenant under a secure tenancy, where possession is sought on the grounds of arrears of rent. It does not apply to claims in...
  • Right to Buy - Can Tenants Buy Their Commercial Property?

  • A recent decision of the House of Lords may have opened the door for thousands of tenants of offices and other properties originally designed to be used as homes to be given the right to buy their properties. The Leasehold Reform Act 1967 gives a...
  • Stamp Duty Land Tax: Beginner's Guide

  • Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is a self-assessed tax. The onus is on the taxpayer to make the necessary land transaction return, calculate the tax and pay it across. This is a fundamental change. The old Stamp Duty regime taxed documents, so it was possible to...
  • What Do You Pay for Work After the Contract Ends?

  • It is very common, especially with building contracts, for work to be needed to be done by contractors after the expiry of the original contract. Recently, a case came to court in which a company that had obtained work under tender for Brunel University...
  • What is a Change of Layout?

  • The courts have recently given additional clarification on just how far a lessee can go in altering the layout of a property without either the landlord s consent or breaching other terms of the lease. The case of Waycourt Ltd. v Viscount Chelsea looked at...
  • When Green is Brown (and Vice Versa)

  • Development in rural areas presents a number of challenges for planning teams and developers alike. Whilst planning policy is clear that previously developed (i.e. brown ) land is to be used for new housing in preference to undeveloped ( green ) land, even...
  • When is an Environmental Impact Assessment Necessary

  • The The Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999 apply to any development likely to have significant effects on the environment by virtue of its size, nature or location. If a Local Authority fails...
 

Latest News

  Landlord and Tenant - Update 
  Premises Defined in Right to Buy Case 
  Buyer Pays Penalty for Missed Deadline 
  Only Real Loss Can be Claimed 
More...




Truro Business Park, Truro, Cornwall TR4 9NH T: 01872 241700
© Follett Stock Solicitors. All rights reserved.

Regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA)




[smaller] Change text size [larger]