Formalities To Create A Lease
Formalities To Create A Lease
Formalities To Create A Lease
lease
If the term of the lease is over 7 years, the lease must also be registered (LRA 2002,
s 27(2)(b)(i)). This is a compulsory registration requirement. If not done a legal
leasehold estate will not have been created (LRA 2002, s 27 (1)).
If the term of the lease is 7 years or less, the lease does not need to be registered.
Such leases still take effect as legal leases and will be binding on a new freehold
estate owner as an overriding interest (LRA 2002, sch 3 para 1).
The short lease exception
Certain short leases, which fulfil certain conditions, have no formal requirements,
yet they will still exist as legal leases. They need not even be in writing.
LPA 1925, s 54 (2) states that a lease with a term of three years or less need
not be created by deed provided the following three conditions are all met:
1. The lease takes effect in possession (ie the tenant takes the lease
immediately).
2. The lease is granted at 'best rent' (which has been interpreted as meaning
‘market rent’).
3. The lease is not subject to a fine or premium (meaning there is no upfront
payment for the grant of the lease, which you could commonly expect to see
with very long leases).
These short leases, also known as parol leases, whether created by deed or less
formally under s 54(2), do not need to be registered to exist as legal leases
because only leases of over 7 years must be registered.
Short lease exception Example
The types of arrangement which fall within the ambit of this exception are:
Short fixed term leases (those with a maximum term of three years or less.)
Express periodic tenancies (where there is a tenancy agreement.)
Implied periodic tenancies (where an occupier is in possession and paying a rent at
regular intervals.)
Note that periodic tenancies, whether express or implied, will only fall within
the ambit of LPA 1925, s 54(2) if each individual period of the tenancy is for
three years or less, which is likely to be the case.
Short lease exception Examples
Short fixed term leases: A tenant rents a flat for an agreed fixed term of 2 years. This
arrangement does not need to be in writing.
Express periodic tenancies: A tenant rents a flat on a rolling monthly basis paying an
agreed monthly rent. There is a written agreement documenting the agreement. In this
situation, the written agreement does not need to comply with any formalities.
Read alongside: the Land Contracts element in the ‘Nature of Land’ topics
The principle in Walsh v Key case
Lonsdale (1882)
Where there is conflict between the common law and equity, equity will prevail.
Formalities to create a
lease Summary
Landlord
Deed
+
registration
Tenant
Formalities to create a
lease Summary
Landlord
Deed
[lease will be binding
as an overriding
interest]
Tenant
Formalities to create a
lease Summary