Crosswords1 min ago
Taking Iver A Lease.
21 Answers
Advice please.
My friend and I are hoping to have a little gift shop which we went to view today. The chap who has the lease at present, sustained an injury which means he can no longer carry on his business which was a fruit and vegetable shop. He carried out about £3k of repairs to the property with permission from the landlord. We saw before and after photos and to be fair, there is a massive improvement. The rent is nice and low and rather than increase that, he is asking for £1,200 as a contribution to the improvements, although this came as a bit of a shock to us! My questions are these.....
1) is that a reasonable request?
2) are we able to taken on his lease without the landlord knowing (he says the ladlord is happy for him to pass onnthe lease to someone else.
3) if we do takeon the lease, should we involve a solicitor?
Thank you.
My friend and I are hoping to have a little gift shop which we went to view today. The chap who has the lease at present, sustained an injury which means he can no longer carry on his business which was a fruit and vegetable shop. He carried out about £3k of repairs to the property with permission from the landlord. We saw before and after photos and to be fair, there is a massive improvement. The rent is nice and low and rather than increase that, he is asking for £1,200 as a contribution to the improvements, although this came as a bit of a shock to us! My questions are these.....
1) is that a reasonable request?
2) are we able to taken on his lease without the landlord knowing (he says the ladlord is happy for him to pass onnthe lease to someone else.
3) if we do takeon the lease, should we involve a solicitor?
Thank you.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's up to the freeholder to reassign the lease (and to determine the rent). If, as your post suggests, you'd be paying rent to the current leaseholder then
(a)the lease would still have to be in his name ; and
(b) he'd then be 'sub-letting'.
Since the vast majority of leases prohibit sub-letting, it sounds like a very dodgy arrangement to me.
(a)the lease would still have to be in his name ; and
(b) he'd then be 'sub-letting'.
Since the vast majority of leases prohibit sub-letting, it sounds like a very dodgy arrangement to me.
I dont think you are taking on the lease TBH
as above - I think you are being sublet to
and you need to find out whether you have security which you can only do by looking at the head lease ( his)
the result is - he mitigates his loss ( or gets some return on his investment )
and you get a place to trade in - from time to time and with no security
deal is OK for landlord and leaseholder and pretty cerappy for you - so is the rent low enough to compensate ?
as above - I think you are being sublet to
and you need to find out whether you have security which you can only do by looking at the head lease ( his)
the result is - he mitigates his loss ( or gets some return on his investment )
and you get a place to trade in - from time to time and with no security
deal is OK for landlord and leaseholder and pretty cerappy for you - so is the rent low enough to compensate ?
Thanks all for your replies. We wouldn't be paying our rent to him, but to the landlord. He has already said he definitely doesn't want to sublet. We'd have to speak to the landlord ourselves I think. If and when we do take over the lease, should we involve a solicitor or is a witness enough? I know I (we) sound very naive about this but neither if us have ANY experience in renting or retail. All a bit of an adventure, but we don't want to trip up on our first venture.
Thank you.
Thank you.
you dont TAKE over the lease
you sign a new lease with the lease holder
I am a landlord - and a new tenant - new lease
the new tenant doesnt take over anything
I have only charged rent - I have never charged a new tenant for past alterations. This is reflected in the rent.
sof if they go on - taking over a lease
and saying £1200 is involved yes I would see a solicitor
you sign a new lease with the lease holder
I am a landlord - and a new tenant - new lease
the new tenant doesnt take over anything
I have only charged rent - I have never charged a new tenant for past alterations. This is reflected in the rent.
sof if they go on - taking over a lease
and saying £1200 is involved yes I would see a solicitor
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