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Service with a smile

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Service with a smile – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Service with a smile


1
Service with a smile
  • Jon Mowbray
  • Ralph Bankes
  • Andrew Olins
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

2
Service with a smile
3
Service charge provisions, reasonableness and
recovery
  • Ralph Bankes
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

4
Service charge provisions
  • Usual provisions
  • Services
  • Proportion
  • Accounting periods
  • Advance service charge
  • Certification
  • Balancing service charge

5
Service charge provisions
  • Missing provision
  • Construction of provisions
  • Gilje v- Charlgrove Securities 2002 L.T.R. 1
    E.G.L.R. all monies expended by the landlord

6
Service charge provisions
  • Onus on the landlord to show that a reasonable
    tenant would perceive that the lease obliges the
    landlord to make payment sought
  • Must emerge plainly and clearly from words
  • Ambiguity in favour of tenant

7
Reasonableness of service charges
  • No statutory requirement
  • Express terms
  • Test of reasonableness
  • Scottish Mutual Insurance Company v- Jardine
    (1999) EGCS 43 QBD Tech Constr Ct reasonably
    or properly incurred
  • Fluor Daniel Properties Ltd v- Shortlands
    Investment Ltd 2001 EGCS 8 ChD

8
Compliance with service charge machinery
  • Follow procedures in the lease
  • Leonora Investment Co v- Mott Macdonald Limited
    2008 EWHC 136 (QB)
  • Sutton (Hastoe) Housing Association v- Williams
    1988 1 E.G.L.R. 56

9
Right of set off
  • Equitable right
  • No right where lease expressly excludes

10
Remedies against non-paying tenant
  • Withholding services
  • Marceno v- Jacramel Co Ltd (1964) 191 EG 433 CA
  • Dispute resolution
  • Terms of the lease
  • RICS Dispute Resolution Service
  • Courts

11
Distrain and forfeiture
  • Distrain
  • Reserved as rent
  • Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 (CRAR)
  • Forfeiture
  • Reserved as rent or section 146 notice

12
Sinking and reserve funds
  • Andrew Olins
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

13
Sinking funds the benefits for landlords and
tenants
  • RICS Code of Practice Service Charges in
    Commercial Property
  • A replacement fund where the owner builds up a
    fund to pay for repair and replacement of major
    items of plant and equipment

14
Building up the fund - use of the service charge
  • The fund has built up through service charges
    year by year
  • Service charges embrace
  • usual operational costs incurred annually
  • replacement of large items of plant or major
    repairs

15
Major items of plant or major repairs
  • The landlords 2 choices
  • budget and collect the cost of the works in the
    year when the cost is incurred or
  • estimate the likely cost and the future date when
    the work will be undertaken and collect a
    proportion of the cost over the intervening years

16
The benefits of the sinking fund
  • Less than 10 of buildings make use of a sinking
    fund
  • Many landlords do not make use of the entitlement
    to establish a sinking fund
  • Why?

17
Benefits for tenants
  • Certainty of cost
  • Elimination of large peaks and troughs and
  • Where premises are let on short-term leases,
    previous tenants also contribute to the cost of
    major works

18
Benefits for the landlords
  • Certainty of funding and
  • Reduced tenant concerns from one-off high service
    charge costs in any one year

19
Lease clauses - setting the parameters
  • Restrict the purpose for which a sinking fund may
    be used
  • Avoids a broad and unregulated approach
  • Prevents abuse
  • the landlord using the tenants money to improve
    the premises to enable re-letting at a higher rent

20
Lease clauses protecting the monies
  • Often leases do not state how the landlord should
    hold the sinking fund monies
  • If the monies are not held in a separate
    identified bank account in trust for the tenants,
    the money has become the landlords assets
  • If the landlord gets into financial difficulties,
    the monies may be lost to its creditors

21
Potential problems
  • Few leases require a transparent accounting
    process
  • Landlords obligation is limited to issuing a
    certificate
  • Little information disclosed to tenants
  • Difficult for tenants to assess the current state
    of the fund and whether it bears any relationship
    for the purpose for which money has been collected

22
Problems cont.
  • A sinking fund is only an estimate of likely
    future costs of repair
  • Landlords use of CIBSE tables of expected life
    of plant and machinery
  • But old does not (necessarily) means out of
    repair
  • Ultraworth Ltd -v- General Accident Life
    Assurance Corporation plc 2000 LTR 495
  • Excess money has built-up

23
Who owns the excess? When, if at all, should it
be returned to the tenants?
  • In the absence of a clear provision in the lease,
    the landlord should not profit from the services
    for which it seeks reimbursement
  • Universities Superannuation Scheme Limited -v-
    Marks Spencer Plc 1999 04 EG 158

24
RICS Code of Practice
  • Jon Mowbray
  • Real Estate Dispute Resolution

25
RICS Code of Practice
  • Why was the Code introduced?

26
Why was the Code introduced?
  • By setting down best practice, we intend to
    help owners, occupiers and managers and their
    advisers, who create and deliver the deals, a
    simple set of standards that all users of
    commercial property can expect. This code will
    help to ensure that disputes between owners and
    occupiers on service charge matters will become a
    thing of the past
  • Christopher Edwards, Chairman of Pan-Industry
    Steering Group

27
Key objectives
  • Reduction of conflict
  • A budgeted/forecastable part of the occupiers
    overhead
  • Not for profit, not for loss
  • Transparency and communication

28
Key elements
  • Management
  • Communications
  • Transparency
  • Service standards and provision
  • Administration

29
Management
  • Right to challenge expenditure
  • Monitoring of standards
  • Information on plans for property
  • Skilled on-site staff

30
Communications
  • Timely and regular consultation
  • Feedback
  • Variance from budget
  • Substantial works

31
Transparency
  • Cost codes
  • Separate service charge account
  • Credit of interest

32
Service standards
  • Written performance standards
  • Value for money/effective service
  • Does not include owner/specific tenant cost

33
Administration
  • Management fees
  • Apportionment
  • Estimates minimum of one month before period
  • Certified accounts within four months of end of
    period
  • Reasonable period for enquiries

34
Problems with the Code
  • Negligence claims
  • Reasonable skill and care
  • Rules of conduct
  • Interpretation of leases
  • Best practice not taken into account
  • Lease renewal
  • Section 35 of LTA 1954
  • OMay v City of London Real Property (1982)

35
Effectiveness of the Code?
  • Are tenants now being served?

36
How effective is the Code?
  • Loughborough University Service Charge Study
    Update 2007
  • Late budgets
  • Inaccurate budgets
  • Late certificates
  • Management fees predominantly a percentage
  • Limited interest credited

37
Occupier satisfaction index 2008
38
Options for change
  • London Business School report on service charges
    in commercial property 2008
  • Conflict of interest
  • Tenants want flexibility and predictability
  • Adoption of Code limited
  • Legislation not the best option

39
Options for change
40
Any questions?
  • We are at your service!

41
Contact details
  • Ralph Bankes 01895 207986
  • ralph.bankes_at_ibblaw.co.uk
  • Andrew Olins 01895 207976
  • andrew.olins_at_ibblaw.co.uk
  • Jon Mowbray 01895 207988
  • jon.mowbray_at_ibblaw.co.uk
  • www.ibblaw.co.uk

42
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