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Generative AI: A global guide to key IP considerations
Artificial intelligence (AI) raises many intellectual property (IP) issues.
United Kingdom | Publication | 十月 2023
It is (reasonably) common knowledge that the Upper Tribunal has power under section 84 Law of Property Act 1925 to discharge or modify a restriction on the use of, or building on, freehold land provided one of the grounds in that section is made out. It is perhaps less well known that this jurisdiction also extends to restrictions in leases, once 25 years of a lease term of over 40 years have expired.
Examples of the latter jurisdiction being exercised are rare. However, in Shaviram Normandy Ltd v Basingstoke and Deane BC [2019] UKUT 256 (LC), a tenant under a lease of a dilapidated office building, who had been refused consent from its landlord to convert the building into flats, made a successful application under section 84, with the Tribunal directing that the user clause in the lease be modified by the addition of the words “or as a residential building comprising 114 flats”.
The tenant was less successful in Great Jackson Estates Limited v Manchester City Council [2023] UKUT 189 (LC). A long lease of two redundant warehouses contained a series of covenants preventing redevelopment without the consent of the local council as landlord. The tenant sought consent to demolish the warehouses and replace them with two residential tower blocks. The request was contained in a letter before action threatening that, in the absence of a positive response, proceedings for the discharge of the restriction under section 84 would be commenced.
The landlord was willing to consent to the redevelopment but only on terms which the tenant considered unacceptable. It therefore applied to the Tribunal for the modification or discharge of the offending restrictions on three grounds. The tenant argued that:
As the tenant failed on each ground, the Tribunal was not required to exercise its discretion as to whether or not to discharge or modify. Interestingly, however, it commented that, had it been required to do so, “the Tribunal should be ..slow to interfere with a local authority which seeks to use its private rights as landlord to promote its strategic development plan and to ensure that a desired development takes place. We would also be reluctant to use the Tribunal’s discretionary power in a manner which would be liable to disrupt continuing negotiations between a local authority and a commercial developer, both of whom are well able to protect their own interests”.
Tenants occupying premises for the purpose of their business are entitled to a new lease on the termination of their existing lease unless the latter is “contracted out” of the security of tenure regime contained in the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.
Disagreements between landlords and tenants on the right to renew are all too common, as evidenced by the wealth of caselaw on the topic. Gill (as Trustee of the Gillcrest UK Pension Scheme) v Lees News Limited [2023] EWCA Civ 1178 is a case in point.
The grounds on which a landlord may oppose a tenant’s application for a new tenancy are set out in section 30(1) of the 1954 Act. The landlord in this case argued that the tenant “ought not to be granted a new tenancy” on three of the statutory grounds:
(a) The tenant’s failure to comply with its obligations in the lease to repair and maintain the premises. The premises were found by the lower court to be in substantial disrepair on the date that the landlord served its counter-notice opposing renewal, but this had been remedied by the date of the hearing.
(b) The tenant’s persistent delay in paying rent. The lower court concluded that the delay in payment of rent was minor and would not recur.
(c) Other substantial breaches of the tenant’s obligations under the tenancy or for any other reason connected with the tenant’s use or management of the premises. Again, the lower court found that there were other breaches of covenant but they too were minor.
The lower court concluded that the landlord had not established that the tenant “ought not to be granted a new tenancy”, ordering that one be granted.
The landlord appealed. The two specific issues before the Court of Appeal were:
The Court of Appeal dismissed the landlord’s appeal. The judge in the lower court had appreciated that the overall question was whether it was fair to the landlord to require him to re-enter into a legal relationship with the tenant, having regard to the tenant’s past behaviour, concluding that it was.
The case provides welcome guidance for the courts, landlords and tenants when considering these grounds of opposition, particularly in relation to the compartmentalised approach: “In my judgment, [that] approach should no longer be followed and to do the trial judge justice, in this case he considered the grounds of opposition both singly and cumulatively. That was entirely the correct approach.”
Welcome to our Real Estate Podcast series, where we explore the themes and trends that our clients are facing in today’s fast changing real estate market.
This Podcast features David Stevens, Partner in our Real Estate Litigation team and Amy Armitage, Counsel in our contentious Construction team. In their first Podcast on the Building Safety Act 2022, David and Amy explored the complex issue of who pays for the replacement of defective cladding in residential high-rise buildings. On this occasion they consider what has changed since then, with a particular focus on Remediation Orders.
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Artificial intelligence (AI) raises many intellectual property (IP) issues.
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