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Back to Basics: Lease renewals and redevelopment

This article follows a recent case in which the author was instructed in an opposed lease renewal matter, where the landlord took the relatively unusual step of making a summary judgment application in circumstances where the (claimant) tenant had issued proceedings for a new business tenancy and the landlord was opposing the grant of a new lease on redevelopment grounds under section 30(1)(f) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.

The landlord had obtained planning permission for its proposed works and, on its evidence, had plenty of funds to carry out its development. On this basis, the landlord thought that, rather than jump through the time-consuming and expensive hoops associated with taking the matter to a fully contested trial, it would make an application for summary judgment.

By way of a reminder, an application for summary judgment is essentially an application to the court at an early stage in a set of proceedings whereby the party making the application considers, in very simple terms, that the case can be disposed of without a trial, normally in the belief that the other party’s case is hopeless or lacks any real merit. In this instance, the landlord’s position was that, because it had its planning and funds in place, the tenant had no reasonable prospect of succeeding in a claim for a new tenancy, such that the court should find in favour of the landlord at an early stage.

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