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An overview of the methods by which a landlord can enforce obligations contained in a lease when the tenant defaults. It covers the limitations imposed by the 1938 Act, the process of seeking relief from forfeiture, and the advantages and disadvantages of forfeiture. The document also discusses other remedies such as distress and specific performance.
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Julian has a practice which encompasses all aspects of property litigation including landlord and tenant (both commercial and residential), contracts of sale, land options, mortgages, restrictive covenants, easements, and adverse possession, together with property-related professional negligence and other tortious claims. Julian is listed in the Legal 500 as a leading junior for commercial litigation and described as ‘knowledgeable and user-friendly’. He regularly gives talks and participates in seminars on property law topics, and related procedural issues.
Introduction
(i) bring together in summary the main methods by which a landlord can seek to enforce obligations contained in a lease in the event that the tenant defaults in performing those obligations during the term of the lease;
(ii) identify some of the considerations that are relevant to determining which remedy or remedies to pursue in a given case.
Option 1 - Bring a money claim
Debt claim
Damages
a. Such a claim won’t usually change anything on the ground. It does not actually get the covenant performed. So if the landlord’s primary concern is the actual act or omission constituting the breach, bringing a claim for damages may afford the landlord little comfort.
b. The measure of damages due on such a claim may be hard to assess and small. Often it will simply be the diminution in the value of the reversion subject to the lease which may be a small amount, particularly if there is still quite a long time left to run on the term of the lease. This is because the valuation assumes the reversion is to be valued subject to the lease and so takes account of the right of the landlord to enforce the covenants in the lease.
c. All the rules in relation to damages claims generally will apply – it is necessary to prove causation, loss, remoteness, and there will be a duty to mitigate^3.
(^1) Jervis v Harris [1996] Ch 195 (^2) For example in the case of mitigation see White and Carter (Councils) Limited v MacGregor [1962] AC
413 (^3) Luminar Leisure v Apostole [2001] 3 EGLR 23
covenantor from the breach, that being the price of a hypothetical release of the covenant, regardless of whether injunctive relief is also sought or is even available. But this will only be appropriate if the case is an “exceptional” one in which such a measure is “a just response” to the breach in question^10. What might constitute such an exceptional case is not easy to say, but an example in a landlord and tenant context might be provided by the breach of an absolute covenant against sub-letting which enabled a tenant to extract a far greater revenue from the land that he was paying to his landlord, by virtue of a new use which the parties did not contemplate at the date of the lease^11.
Option 2 – terminate the lease by forfeiture
a. There is an express proviso for forfeiture contained in the lease (If there is no such express proviso then the landlord will only obtain an option to forfeit the lease for breach of a “condition” contained within it, in other words an obligation on the part of the tenant which, either expressly or by necessary implication, is an obligation upon the performance of which the survival of the lease is made conditional^12. Timely payment of rent will not usually be a condition of the lease in this sense.
b. The landlord must not have waived the right to forfeit for the breach in question. Waiver occurs where the landlord, with knowledge of the breach and before electing to forfeit, does some act which, objectively considered, unequivocally recognises the continued existence of the lease. The classic case of waiver arises where the landlord demands,
(^10) Wrotham Park Estate v Parkside Homes [1974] 1 WLR 798; World Wide Fund for Nature v World
Wrestling Federation [2008] 1 WLR 445 11 I am grateful to Daniel Hochberg for a valuable discussion on this point. (^12) Doe d Lockwood v Clarke (1807) 8 East 185
accepts or sues for rent falling due after the breach of covenant giving rise to the right to forfeit (though there is no waiver in suing for rent which fell due prior to the breach^13 ).
c. Because the test is objective, waiver can occur by accident or unintentionally^14. In one recent case it was held that the right of a tenant to appropriate payment to a particular debt means that, if a landlord accepts payment towards outstanding rent arrear he is bound by the tenant’s appropriation, even if that means the debt is thereby appropriated to a debt arising after the right to forfeit resulting in a waiver^15. If forfeiture is an option a landlord might want to pursue it is essential to make sure that rent accruing due after the right to forfeit has arisen is not demanded or accepted by the landlord. Particularly in a large corporate landlord, this will require immediate and careful management of the different persons or departments at the landlord who are responsible for carrying out the landlord’s various functions under the lease. All too often the person responsible for rent collection on behalf of the landlord is not told soon enough to reject the next payment of rent and a waiver occurs.
d. In cases of non-payment of rent, unless the requirement is expressly excluded by the proviso, the landlord must also have formally demanded the rent.
e. In cases other than non-payment of rent, the landlord must have served a notice under s146 of the Law of Property Act 1925:
i). specifying the breach complained of;
ii) requiring the breach to be remedied if possible; and
iii) requiring compensation if the landlord requires it.
The only breach irremediable as a matter of law is a breach of a covenant against assignment or underletting – all others turn on their facts and so to be safe the wording requiring a breach to be remedied “if it is capable of remedy” should be included in the notice.
f. The notice must then give a reasonable time for compliance. It is a question of fact in all the circumstances what constitutes a reasonable time. Logically it is better to err on the side of giving more time rather than less, though the client will often be eager to keep the period as short as possible.
g. There are a number of exceptions to the application of section 146. In particular in the case of a breach of a condition against bankruptcy s does not apply at all to (a) agricultural land (b) mines (c) a public house (d) a furnished house or (e) a case where objectively the personal qualifications of the tenant are important to the preservation of the value
(^13) In re A Debtor [1995] 1 WLR 1127 (^14) John Lewis Plc v Viscount Chelsea (1993) 67 P&CR 120 (^15) Thomas v Ken Thomas Ltd [2007] L&TR 21
a. forfeiture, especially for a breach other than non-payment of rent, is not necessarily a speedy solution. It still requires time eg to serve s notices and give time for the breach of be remedied, followed by time to resolve proceedings and / or any claim for relief;
b. during the so-called “twilight period” after proceedings have been served the landlord can no longer enforce the covenants in the lease against the tenant^21. If the forfeiture proceedings are contested and / or relief is sought there can be a long period during which it is not known whether the lease has come to an end. During that period the collection of rent and enforcement of covenants in the lease is difficult to achieve;
c. forfeiture is a drastic remedy. Once the landlord has chosen to forfeit he cannot reverse his decision and it would be a rash landlord who took it for granted that his tenant will seek relief. So the landlord he must be prepared for the property to be vacated. In a falling market the landlord will not easily find a new tenant and may wish he had been left with ongoing remedies against a struggling tenant;
d. forfeiture will end the lease as against any surety too, though not until the proceedings are finally determined.^22
a. It is not available where premises are let as a dwelling^24 including mixed use premises^25.
b. It carries a risk of criminal liability. It is an offence to use or threaten violence for the purpose of securing entry to a property if there is someone on the premises opposed to the entry and the person using the violence knows that^26. So it is essential to re-enter out of hours, and even then it is important to exercise caution in carrying out the re-entry to ensure no-one is present on the premises.
(^21) Associated Deliveries v Harrison (1984) 50 P&CR 91 (^22) Ivory Gate v Spetale [1998] 2 EGLR 43 (^23) per Lord Templeman in Billson v Residential Apartments [1992] 1 AC 494 (^24) Protection from Eviction Act 1977, s (^25) Patel v Pirakaraban [2006] 1 WLR 3112 (^26) Criminal Law Act 1977 s
c. If you cannot clearly establish the right to forfeit you may incur liability for unlawful eviction and the other side may be able to persuade a court to grant an injunction letting them back into possession pending determination of an application for relief from forfeiture.
d. And even if these hurdles can be overcome, it is often the case that the landlord gains little or nothing by actual re-entry because of the right to relief. The tenant retains the right to seek relief from forfeiture where the landlord peaceably re-enters. If the tenant applies for relief from forfeiture, then the position pending the relief hearing is in practice little different to that which pertains while proceedings for forfeiture are pending save that there is the important, and by no means necessarily desirable, distinction that the landlord is in actual possession of the premises. He cannot easily market them but he has responsibility for securing them and becomes bailee of the tenant’s chattels.
e. So, unless there is a good chance that the tenant cannot or will not seek relief from forfeiture, peaceable re-entry may well create more problems than it solves.
Option 3 – take direct action to remedy the act or omission
(^27) Hussein v Mehlman [1992] 2 EGLR 87 (^28) after Jervis v Harris [1996] Ch 195 (^29) Jervis v Harris ibid
Option 5 - Distress or CRAR (Commercial Rent Arrears Recovery)
Distress
(^32) Evans v South Ribble BC [1992] QB 757 (^33) Eller v Grovecrest Investments Ltd [1995] QB 272
Remedies not mutually exclusive
(^34) ss74, 75 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (^35) s76 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (^36) s77 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (^37) s78 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (^38) s81 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (^39) Calabar Properties v Seagull Autos [1969] 1 Ch 451