QLD: Is your business' lease registered?
A
lease which is in a registrable form (a Titles Office Form 7 in Queensland),
can be registered on the title for the property. Once registered, the lease is
shown as an interest on title, noting the name of the
tenant and the commencement and expiry dates, along with the next
option term (if there is one). Registration has potential benefits for both the
Tenant and Landlord.
Tenant:
If
the landlord sells/transfers the property, the new owner/landlord may not be
aware of a tenant’s lease. Any lease which is longer than 3 years (including
the option periods) is not protected unless it is registered. If registered,
the lease interest is said to be “indefeasible” (think… “undefeatable”). For
short leases (3 years or less, including the option periods), there is
automatic protection (under legislation).
A
tenant’s interest can be defeated if it is not protected (either by automatic
‘short lease’ protection or by registration on title), for example, by a new
owner (who doesn’t have notice of the tenant’s interest) or by a mortgagee bank
who repossesses the property.
If
a tenant’s interest is defeated, the tenant may look around for someone to
blame, like the original landlord who made contractual promises (which is one
reason why registration is potentially beneficial for the landlord too).
Landlord:
Firstly,
having all leases registered on title can be attractive to a potential buyer.
Property investors (and their financiers) tend to like seeing everything is in
order and having a complete record of all leases in existence on title is nice
and neat.
Secondly,
if a landlord sells/transfers the property, with an unprotected lease, and the
new owner/landlord refuses to honour the tenant's lease and/or option
period(s), the original landlord risks being in breach of contract. The breach
is that the original landlord promised to provide a lease and/or an option
period to a tenant and failed to deliver on that promise.
Ideally,
when a landlord sells/transfers, all of their obligations to a tenant are
transferred over to the new landlord, but this can depend on the wording of
contracts and notices given, and is a messy and uncertain way to deal with the
issue.
Instead,
registration of a lease on title serves as a notice to everyone (including, for
example, a buyer of the property) that there is a lease interest in existence.
The buyer cannot then claim not to have had notice of it. This protects the
original landlord from the risk of contractual breach by ensuring the new
landlord is aware of, and must honour, the tenant’s lease.
Registration
is usually at the cost of the tenant (most lease precedents provide this).
Something
to think about!
As
always, you should always seek advice specific to your particular
lease/property and your individual circumstances.
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