REGISTRATION & PROTECTION OF LEASES Flashcards
1
Q
FORMALITIES
A
- leases created after the 13th of October are subject to the rules of registration
- TYA is an estate and capable of being legal s1 1 b LPA if over 3 years it will need to be made by deed s52 LPA otherwise only equitable
- except parol lease which is if a lease is under 3 years in length then doesn’t need a deed s54 LPA
2
Q
REGISTRATION
A
- registration turns on the duration of the lease (term)
- if 7+ years the lease is a registrable disposition s27 LRA so needs registering
- if lease is within 3-7 years then could be protected with a notice at the land registry s32/s34 LRA notice will be evident in charges register on OCEs of FSAP
- 7- years then protected as overriding interest under sch3 para1 LRA only if it is a legal lease
3
Q
LEGAL LEASES AS OVERRIDING INTEREST
A
- legal leases are capable of being unregistered interests which override first registration or subsequent disposition sch 1 & 3 LRA
- parol lease is exception that falls in s54 2 LPA and does not need a lease if under s54 2 LPA
It is: - term- 3- years
- immediate possession- if no immediate possession the lease will need to be registered
- best rent which can be reasonably obtained without taking a fine (no upfront premium paid to the landlord)
- for leases 3-7 years a deed is required
4
Q
EQUITABLE LEASES
A
- can occur when there is an error in creating deed or failure to register a registrable lease
- Walsh v Lonsdale 1882 shows equity
- to be equitable must be a valid contract the complies with s2 LP MP 89
- to protect an equitable lease u can give notice on register s32-34 LRA
- if you don’t do this only protection would be an overriding interest sch 3 para 2 and will need to show you are in occupation
5
Q
TERMINATION OF LEASES
A
- end of term
- notice has to be put into terms of lease
- surrender: return of lease to landlord
- merger: tenant buys fee simple so they would merge
- termination by disclaimer: clause implied into every lease which states tenant will not deny the landlord superior title if breach then landlord can forfeit
- forfeiture: landlord can forfeit least if tenant breaches a covenant
- repudiation of breach of contract: based on high court decision this remedy should apply to a lease
- enlargement: s1 53 LPA 300+ years of term and Atleast 200 years can enlarge leasehold into freehold and bring to end
- frustration: frustration of contract applied to leases probably not accepted in modern courts