Lawbite: How many buildings do you see?
February 26, 2025
Lawbite: How many buildings do you see?February 26, 2025 This case is the first authority to provide any particularly useful guidance on the factors that the Court will take into account when assessing what constitutes a ‘building’ for the purposes of the provisions in the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 (“the Act”). The provisions in question require a landlord of a residential building in England and Wales who wishes to dispose of its interest, to first offer to sell that interest to qualifying tenants. The decision will be of particular interest to landlords and tenants of residential buildings in England and Wales and their professional advisers. The right of first refusalWhere it applies, the Act requires:
Failure to comply with the Act’s requirements can have substantial and far reaching consequences - a disposal in breach of the Act is a criminal offence and entitles the qualifying tenants to undo the relevant transaction and have the interest transferred to them at the same price for which it was initially sold. Where the landlord has an interest in more than one building in an estate, the Act requires such a landlord “to sever the transaction so as to deal with each building separately”. Unhelpfully, however, the Act (famously once described as “ill drafted, complicated and confused”) offers no guidance as to what constitutes a ‘building’ for the purposes of the Act. This presents real issues for landlords of residential estates which might appear, at first glance, to consist of a number of separate buildings – failure to identify and serve a s.5 notice in respect of each ‘building’ (as properly regarded under the Act) will mean that the notice is invalid, exposing the landlord and any purchaser of the interest disposed of to the above consequences. This decision which will be of assistance to those tasked with drafting s.5 notices. The FactsThis High Court decision concerned four residential blocks, known as A, B, C and E, in one residential development in Everton. The landlord wanted to sell its freehold interest in these blocks and served two s.5 notices: one in respect of block A (on the basis that it alone constituted a ‘building’ for the purposes of the Act) and a second in respect of blocks B, C and E (as these were regarded to constitute a separate ‘building’ together under the Act). The DecisionUltimately the judge decided that the four blocks constituted one ‘building’ for the purposes of the Act, and so the notices were invalid. In arriving at that decision, the judge felt bound by the decision in Long Acre Securities Ltd v Karet, which established that a ‘building’ can consist of a number of detached blocks which together comprise an integrated estate, and that the correct approach is the weighing of various factors in the balance. The judge identified the following factors as relevant for consideration:
In his judgment, the judge conducted a careful review of each factor, setting out the conclusion that each factor tended towards, and then using these within the balancing exercise. The court felt that the most persuasive factor in this case was the shared means of access between all four of the blocks and that the weight attached to this factor tipped the balance to the conclusion that there was one building for the purpose of the Act. Key Points
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