Back
Legal

How broad should indemnities in Code agreements be?

The latest case on the scope and effect of the Electronic Communications Code, EE Ltd v Hackney London Borough Council [2021] UKUT 142 (LC); [2021] PLSCS 106, resulted from a dispute about the terms of an interim agreement enabling Code operators to obtain access to the roof of a building in London so that they could determine whether it was a suitable replacement for an existing mast site nearby.

The only dispute between the parties related to the form of indemnity sought by the landowner. The Code operators wanted to limit the indemnity sought so that it extended only to “third-party liabilities costs expenses damages and all other legal professional costs and expenses suffered or incurred by the licensor” arising out of or in connection with the agreement, any breach of the Code operators’ undertakings and the exercise of any rights granted by, or the enforcement of, the agreement. In other words, the indemnity – as amended – would not cover costs, expenses, damages, or losses incurred by the landowner itself.

The landowner relied on a comment made in EE Ltd v Islington LBC [2018] UKUT 361 (LC) concerning the approach to the terms of an agreement imposing interim Code rights, which “should put the full risk of the operation on which the operator wishes to embark on the operator and none of the risk on the site provider”.

Start your free trial today

Your trusted daily source of commercial real estate news and analysis. Register now for unlimited digital access throughout April.

Including:

  • Breaking news, interviews and market updates
  • Expert legal commentary, market trends and case law
  • In-depth reports and expert analysis

Up next…