LANDLORD AND TENANT CASE LAW UPDATE
- Developers beware! Harsh lessons from the Supreme Court: Alexander Devine
- Break clauses & reinstatement: Capitol v Global Radio
- “Final and conclusive” service charge certificates – help for landlords: Sara and Hossein v Blacks
- Peaceable re-entry - getting it right and relief Keshwala v Bhalsod
- Proposed review of “outdated landlord and tenant legislation” – what will that mean?
PROPERTY VALUATION POST COVID: MARKET CHANGE AND VALUATION MODELLING
- Comparables and Market Sentiment – a more balanced viewpoint
- High Street Retail - long term assumptions in an uncertain world
- Shopping Centres – a move toward shared risk and shared reward – turnover rents
- MEES and Commercial Property Values
- Valuation models, inputs and risk adjustment
ENFORCEMENT AND REMEDIES: ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH
- Forfeiture
- The recovery of arrears, whether through CRAR or debt claims
- The position of guarantors, former tenants and undertenants
- Rent deposits
- Damages claims and other tenant remedies
- Alternative dispute resolution (including the new RICS independent evaluation service)
DEALING WITH PROPERTY INSOLVENCY IN 2021 - MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU
THE MEES REGULATIONS – WORKED EXAMPLES OF COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ISSUES
- Property acquisitions – due diligence and valuation issues
- Lease drafting – how effective is the Model Commercial Lease on MEES?
- EPC improvements – how Landlords can mitigate cost and risk associated with a poor EPC
- Tenant claims – can a Tenant claim for losses associated with a Landlord’s failure to comply with MEES?
- Dilapidations – would a Landlord’s claim really be wiped out just due to a poor EPC rating?
THE TOP 10 MISCONCEPTIONS HELD ABOUT LANDLORD AND TENANT LAW
- Anything I say in “Without Privilege” correspondence cannot later be held against me or my client
- A demand for rent will always waive the right to forfeit a lease
- Mesne profits, charges for use and occupation and rent are all the same thing
- If the tenancy company is dissolved, the lease automatically comes to an end
- A persistently late paying tenant will not get relief from forfeiture
- A court order for possession brings the tenancy to an end immediately

