Plugging Loopholes

Are Landlords Liable for Criminal Attacks on a Tenant’s Employees?

July 21, 2021    

One reason general liability insurance is so expensive is that landlords can be sued for money damages if an individual gets injured on their property. While there are lots of legal theories trial lawyers can rely on, the vast majority of personal injury cases against landlords involve one or...

Keep Guarantors on the Hook for Attorney’s Fees

June 17, 2021    

Guaranty agreements may cap how much the guarantor has to pay if the tenant defaults. For example, the agreement may say that $100,000 is the most the landlord can collect from the guarantor. If you include dollar caps in your own lease guaranties, just be sure that they exclude attorney’s...

Don't Let Rent Abatements Reduce Future CPI-Based Rent Increases

May 19, 2021    

Granting rent concessions and abatements (which we’ll refer to collectively as “abatements”) has become standard operating procedure in these troubled times. But before you engage in the practice, check your lease for a loophole that can limit how much of a rent increase you...

Require Tenant Notice of Default to Avoid Surprise Claims in Court

January 22, 2021    

Litigation is a big hassle, and when you resort to it you want to be sure you collect as much as possible from tenants who have left the space and are no longer paying rent. But your lease may have a loophole that defaulting tenants can rely on to get a court to reduce or even...

Ensure Post-Assignment Lease Changes Don’t Let Original Tenant Off the Hook

March 17, 2020    

The nice thing about lease assignments is that you can always go after the original tenant if the assignee violates its lease obligations. At least that’s the common assumption. But if you modify the lease after the assignment, you could end up inadvertently losing your right to hold the...

Get Right to Remove Tenants’ Signs Temporarily During Construction Work

November 21, 2019    

Disputes are apt to arise when temporarily covering or removing a tenant’s storefront sign becomes necessary for the landlord to carry out building work. Tenants have an obvious interest in keeping their signage clear, visible, and unobstructed by scaffolding and such, especially during...

Keep Tenants from Introducing Topless Entertainment

October 28, 2019    

One thing to look out for when leasing to bars, restaurants, nightclubs, and other entertainment establishments is unanticipated—and unwanted—use changes after the business opens. Such changes may include the introduction of topless dancing. Needless to say, this is the kind of thing...

Standard Entry Clause May Not Give You Right to Inspect Space

July 23, 2019    

Landlord shall have the right to enter tenant’s space at any time to examine the same, and to make repairs, replacements, and improvements [emphasis added].

Addressing the Special Concerns of Companies That Use Co-Working Spaces

March 28, 2019    

By Sujata Yalamanchili, Esq. and Elizabeth A. Holden, Esq.

Co-working spaces look like cool, hip, innovative spaces, so you may have wondered if you can do your job in one of those spaces. Could a law firm or just an individual attorney sit at a table for a day, type away, and...

Spell Out Right to Keep Unapproved Sublet Profits

October 18, 2018    

When you negotiate a lease with a tenant, you and your attorney try to cover all your bases—drafting provisions that protect you in every conceivable circumstance under which the tenant would breach the lease during the lease term. However, one situation isn’t as common as other...

Add Protections to Make Tenant's Contraction Option Airtight

July 19, 2018    

During the economic downturn several years ago, contraction options—which let tenants give back part of their space during their leases and pay a lower rent—became popular because downsizing was one way for tenants in trouble to scale back costs. But two now-common commercial real...

Plug Five Loopholes in Damage and Destruction Clause

May 29, 2018    

Unfortunately, fires, floods, and other casualties can happen at the shopping center or office building you own. If you’ve signed typical leases with your tenants, they probably place some limits on your restoration obligations. But after a casualty, it may not be cost effective or...