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Publications


An expensive lesson - Service charge recovery will depend on certain requirements being fulfiled

Specialist Contributing Editors: Adrian Jack, Timothy Calland, Claire Jackson and Olivier Kalfon Publisher: Sweet & Maxwell Ltd

If you occupy it, you must pay for it - Rent and other liabilities can be payable as administration expenses

Plan ahead to ensure compliance - Rent deposit rules will change in October and landlords should get ready

To all intents and purposes - The 1954 Act regulates many aspects of business tenancies

First assess the diminution in value - Damages for disrepair will depend on the two limbs of section 18(1)

The demise of pure principles - Jeremy Child explains how Davies & ors v Jones & anor might bring clarity to a contested area of property transfer agreements

The tenant's road to freedom - A break notice will operate only if certain conditions have been fulfilled

When repairs become problematic - Dilapidations claims can be costly and need careful consideration

Tenants may not be able to refuse entry - A landlord can enter premises to comply with its repairing obligations

Non-completion can be advantageous - A deposit will not necessarily be returned to a defaulting purchaser

A question of fairness to tenants - The variation of a lease will be subject to the regulations on unfair terms

Let the tenants in on your plans - Consultation procedures ensure that landlords can reclaim costs of work

Other types of security may be required - Overage clauses should be drafted carefully if they are to be enforceable

This new book by Michael James of Enterprise Chambers, has just been published by Oxford University Press.

Several options, but an uncertain result - A tenant in administration means that the landlord may not see its rent

This land is my land - at least for a while (Compulsory purchase orders are open to objections and compensation)

A second bite might be withheld - Extra service charge demands will result only from genuine omissions

Time to dust off an old familiar friend - Disclaimer is back on the scene and it pays to understand what it involves

Residential muddies rent arrears water - Distress and forfeiture by peaceable re-entry are not available in all cases

Getting used to a new requirement - EPC regulations are coming into force and it pays to understand them

"Re Rajapakse - the final chapter"

A commodity well worth fighting for - Rights to light should always be checked before starting a development

Published by LexisNexis Butterworths

Sleep on your rights and you will lose - Possession proceedings must be started without delay or they may fail

Dealing with inconvenient restrictions - Restrictive covenants can sometimes impede the development of land

Not really a sensible approach - A CPR 36 offer is not always the best course of action in lease renewals

Lower deferment rates, no hope value - Enfranchisement claims now follow rules set down in a recent case

Something that is worth taking on - Administrators do not usually pay rent, but this may be open to challenge

In times of uncertainty, caution is key - The law on forfeiture has been thrown into turmoil following a recent case

Its all a question of priorities - Charging orders are a popular remedy but they can be propblematic

An anomalous situation - Adverse possession law is evolving but the effects are unclear

There is light at the end of the tunnel - Redevelopment of property could be hindered by neighbouring rights

How to avoid problems with waiver - Beaches of covenant should be understood properly before any action

Schemes that are well worth knowing - Tenant's deposits can raise different issues for landlords and tenants

How to gain a qualified entry - Access to a neighbour's land can be obtained for preservation works

Procedures that are worth knowing - Claims for double rent or letting value should satisfy precise conditions

The right notice served at the right time - A section 17 notice must be served to preserve a landlord's interest

The rules are not quite the same - The forfriture of mixed-use premises follows a different set of rules

It is best to know where stand - Service charge disputes come in different shapes and forms

When the going gets tough - Mandatory injunctions are a powerful tool to be handled with great care

Parent guarantees - the end of the line? The law on CVA's is in the balance as the courts consider a test care

Access rights are not always enough - Easements can be interpreted in restrictive ways, thus causing problems

Published by The Legal Publisher, Lexxion, Berlin
 

 

 
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