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Can operators in occupation without Code rights ask for rights to be imposed?

Arqiva Services Ltd v AP Wireless II (UK) Ltd [2020] UKUT 0195 (LC) concerned a 1997 lease that was contracted out of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. Arqiva remained in occupation when its lease expired in October 2016, while it negotiated for a new contracted-out lease. But no agreement was reached and the Code came into force in December 2017. Did Arqiva have rights under the new Code? And, if not, how could it acquire them?

Transitional provisions in the Electronic Communications Code 2017 state that Part 5 of the Code, which governs renewals by operators with existing Code rights, does not apply to leases with security of tenure that expire after the Code is in force. In such circumstances, Cornerstone Telecommunications Infrastructure Ltd v Ashloch Ltd [2019] UKUT 338 (LC); [2020] EGLR 2, which is subject to appeal, confirms that operators must seek new tenancies under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, which, on termination, can be renewed under the Code. So it was important to establish whether Arqiva became a periodic tenant, protected by the 1954 Act, when its lease expired – or a contractual licensee or tenant at will with no security of tenure at all.

The parties agreed that a tenancy at will came into existence while it negotiated for a new lease: Barclays Wealth Trustees (Jersey) Ltd v Erimus Housing Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 303; [2014] PLSCS 94. But had the negotiations ended? And, if so, had Arqiva become a periodic tenant, with 1954 Act protection, because its rent had been paid and accepted? The tribunal decided that the negotiations had simply paused (while the parties discussed a framework agreement that would apply to all their sites) and that nothing had occurred subsequently to change its status. Consequently, it had remained a tenant at will, with no security of tenure.

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