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Telecoms: is it a lease or a licence?

COMMENT At the tail end of 2022, in On Tower v Allison (Case ref: LC-2022-000322) the First-tier Tribunal gave a decision on whether a telecoms operator was occupying as a licensee or a secure tenant (the matter having been transferred down by the Upper Tribunal).

Conversely, the operator argued for the position conferring the least amount of security of tenure in a “traditional” sense, preferring to claim it was a licensee that could avail itself of the Code, with the site provider arguing that there was a secure tenancy within the meaning of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. 

The facts

By an agreement dated 30 January 1997, Orange acquired rights to install telecommunications apparatus on freehold land in Kent, within a fenced compound on land rather than buildings. In turn, the rights under the agreement were passed to On Tower, which wanted to rely on a notice served under paragraph 33 of the Code to require the site provider to enter into a new agreement.

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