Brendan Burgess
Founder
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The case that prompted the comments, involving the Apollo Galery at 51 Dawson St, Dublin, contains a clause referring the “rent previously payable” as the base line, but this may not refer only to the rent payable immediately prior to review, Mr Holohan said.
He said that as a general principle, the bargain between lessor and lessee is one of long-term mutuality, and rent review clauses must be viewed in that light. There is no presumption in favour of constructing a clause so as to make it upwards only. A court will not be easily persuaded to accept an interpretation which will give the lessor a windfall in a time of recession. And the courts will surely never rubber-stamp any interpretation which clearly has the effect of unjustly enriching either party.
In principle, I am against this sort of market interference - especially between commercial concerns.
On what basis?Well as long as the Government know that they have inflicted a further 25% reduction in the values of Commercial Property which are subject to new leases. Lunacy and madness at its best.
Well as long as the Government know that they have inflicted a further 25% reduction in the values of Commercial Property which are subject to new leases. Lunacy and madness at its best.
I would suggest it's worse lunacy to be forcing firms to close because they cannot afford the ludicrous rates that landlords still living in the Celtic Tiger cling to.
Not really sure what planet you are on. Nobody forced any tenants to rent properties at ridiculous rents. Nobody forced them to sign PGs but they did.. Now we all will be in the circumstance soon of the UK muliples taking centre stage in the retailing sector and large multi nationals in the Industrial sector.
A friend of mine is in the process of walking away from a very long standing lease which has a number of years to run solely because the landlord refuses to negotiate the rent downwards
...The only thing keeping the rent at it's current level is the artificial contruct within the contract which prevents an arbitror from reaching a lower level.
I'm afraid I'm going to have to get into a game "he said / she said". I don't know all the details so don't nail me to the wall on this but ..Howitzer
As you explain this, it makes little sense to me. If he has an existing lease, he will still be liable for the rent. He can't just "walk away". If the lease allows him to walk away, then the upward only clause is irrelevant.
Well as long as the Government know that they have inflicted a further 25% reduction in the values of Commercial Property which are subject to new leases. Lunacy and madness at its best.
Well if the business is going to fail then it's going to fail.
So you think it's perfectly reasonable for a landlord to currently put up their rent by 40%, even though they'll put their tenant out of business?
It's called Market Forces. Supply and Demand.
Retail Rents increased as there was such a demand for suitable properties with high footfall, location and suitability.
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