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Occupational rights: time for a rethink?

Mark Pawlowski asks whether it is time to rationalise occupational rights in leasehold law in favour of a simplified scheme of proprietary and non‑proprietary rights in land

It was, of course, Lord Templeman in Street v Mountford [1985] AC 809 who enunciated the three hallmarks of a tenancy: (1) exclusive possession, (2) for a fixed or periodic term, and (3) at a rent. In reality, however, it is the requirement of exclusive possession that is the decisive factor in determining whether an occupier is a tenant unless there are special circumstances (identified in Street) which negate the existence of a tenancy.

The reservation of a rent was held to be not strictly necessary in Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold [1989] Ch 1 and it is apparent that the existence of a term (fixed or periodic) is not conclusive, given that a contractual licence will normally confer on the occupier the right to occupy land for a stated period.

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