Publication
2025 Annual Litigation Trends Survey
Norton Rose Fulbright has released its 2025 Annual Litigation Trends Survey, analyzing litigation trends across the legal landscape.
United Kingdom | Publication | July 2022
The Economic Crime (Transparency and Enforcement) Act 2022 received Royal Assent on March 15, 2022. Part 1 of the Act (Part 1) makes provision for the registration of overseas entities who already own, or wish to own, land in the UK.
The primary objectives of Part 1 are: “to prevent and combat the use of land in the UK by overseas entities as a means to launder money or invest illicit funds” and “to increase transparency and public trust in overseas entities engaged in land ownership in the UK”. It seeks to achieve this by establishing a new register of the “beneficial owners” of such entities: the register of overseas entities. Companies House, which is responsible for setting up and running the new register, has just announced that it intends to launch the new register on August 1, 2022, although this is not yet confirmed by statutory instrument.
In broad terms:
As to practical considerations:
The Commercial Rent (Coronavirus) Act 2022 (the Act) received Royal Assent on March 24, 2022 and came into force immediately.
The Act aims to tackle the issue of unpaid commercial rent built up by tenants forced to close by measures taken in response to the pandemic.
The Act ring-fences “protected rent debts” and requires parties to work together to agree terms for payment or, if resolution is not possible, to refer the matter to arbitration under a new legally binding arbitration scheme. The “protected rent debts” include traditional rent, service charges, insurance rent, interest and VAT for the period that the tenant was mandated to close its premises or cease trading.
The first arbitral award under the Act was published on July 11, 2022 and has been described as a “landmark pandemic rent arrears arbitration award”.
In Signet Trading Limited (Applicant) and (1) Fprop Offices (Nominee) 4 Limited (2) Fprop Offices (Nominee) 5 Limited (Respondents) the Applicant carried on a retail business in over 350 stores. The business was run from its registered offices which comprised four floors of office space held by the Applicant under a lease from the Respondents.
As a result of the measures taken in response to the pandemic, the Applicant was required to close its retail stores. In consequence, the staff working at the office premises were, apart from a security guard and a member of staff to monitor and scan incoming post, instructed to work from home.
The Applicant contended that, in the circumstances, the office premises were also affected by a “closure requirement” within the meaning of the Act and sought relief under the Act's arbitration scheme from payment of a protected rent debt in relation to those premises amounting to just under £450,000.
The Respondent landlords disputed the claim, contending that the offices were not by definition subject to a “closure requirement”.
The arbitrator agreed with the Respondents, not least because the fact that the Applicant continued to use the office premises, albeit with a much reduced staff, was consistent with the fact that they were not legally required to close. The business carried on by the tenant specifically at the office premises was not subject to a closure requirement and accordingly, there was no protected rent debt, so the arbitration scheme did not apply. The arbitrator was therefore required to dismiss the reference.
Bad news for tenants in a similar position but welcome clarity on the scope of the arbitration scheme.
A key focus of the wide-ranging Building Safety Act 2022 (the Act – see our May Real Estate Focus) is to shield residential leaseholders from costs related to the remediation of unsafe cladding and certain other building defects. The cost protection provisions in the Act have just been supplemented by the Building Safety (Leaseholder Protections) (England) Regulations 2022 which came into force on July 20, 2022.
The protection regime is complicated but in a nutshell:
In a linked development, the Government has published a draft contract for agreement with developers who have signed its Building Safety Pledge, committing them to remediating unsafe buildings in England with which they are associated. Apparently 48 developers have now signed up to the Pledge. The Government aims to finalise the terms of the contract with those developers by August 10, 2022.
Ground rents in most new residential leases are now banned. The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 (the Act) has come into force, with the primary aim of abolishing escalating ground rents in long residential leases.
The Act applies to “regulated leases”, meaning long leases of a single dwelling for a term exceeding 21 years and granted for a premium on or after June 30, 2022. Leases granted pursuant to a contract entered into before then are excluded, although “contract” does not include an option or right of pre-emption.
Landlords of regulated leases must not require their tenants to pay a “prohibited rent”, being any rent that exceeds an annual rent of one peppercorn. “Rent” is defined as “anything in the nature of rent, whatever it is called”.
Certain leases where, according to the Government, ground rents “fulfil a justifiable purpose”, are still permitted. These include:
Retirement homes are not excepted but the Act provides that it will not apply to them until April 1, 2023 at the earliest.
Enforcement is through local weights and measures authorities; district councils may also choose to enforce. Financial penalties are determined by the enforcement authority, subject to a minimum of £500 and a maximum of £30,000. Unlawfully charged rents can also be recovered, with interest.
While the Act is not retrospective, it has been on the radar for some time and has already had an impact on the market, with many landlords reducing ground rents to zero in new leases in the run-up to commencement.
Publication
Norton Rose Fulbright has released its 2025 Annual Litigation Trends Survey, analyzing litigation trends across the legal landscape.
Publication
In late December 2024, the Ontario Court of Appeal clarified the applicable test for leave to appeal from the province’s Divisional Court, which the Court of Appeal had only recently discussed at length earlier that month.
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