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Personal representatives get green light for a lease extension

The Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 enables qualifying tenants of flats to purchase extended leases at peppercorn rents. And, if a leaseholder who qualifies dies before making an application, the legislation provides that his or her personal representatives can exercise the right to claim an extended lease for a period of up to two years after the grant of probate or letters of administration.

Does this mean that executors or administrators are barred from extending leases if they allow more than two years to elapse before making a claim? At first sight, it would seem so. Section 42(4A) provides that “a notice under this section may not be given by the personal representatives of a tenant later than two years after the grant of probate or letters of administration”.

Taken at face value, this would mean that personal representatives with short unexpired leasehold terms on their hands could find themselves in difficulty. Unless they act quickly, they may have to pay handsomely to extend the lease so that they can sell the deceased’s property or obtain a reasonable price for it. But in Villarosa v Ryan [2018] EWHC 1914 (Ch); [2018] PLSCS 137 the court ruled that it would be wrong to construe section 42(4A) in isolation.

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