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Landlord’s consent: one bad apple doesn’t spoil the bunch

What is the position if a landlord has good and bad reasons for refusing to allow a tenant to do something that requires its consent, which is not to be unreasonably withheld? Case law suggests that the landlord’s decision will be susceptible to challenge if it is made for a bad reason and any good reasons are merely makeweights, or if the bad taints or vitiates the good.

No 1 West India Quay (Residential) Ltd v East Tower Apartments Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 250; [2018] PLSCS 34 concerned the assignment of long leasehold interests in two high value residential apartments in London. However, the rationale for the decision will apply to commercial leases as well.

The tenant had taken 999-year leases of 42 apartments, which it let out on short-term assured shorthold tenancies. Following a dispute about service charges, the relationship between the parties deteriorated and the tenant decided to sell its apartments. It needed the landlord’s consent before assigning its leases, but such consent was not to be unreasonably withheld.

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