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This Workshop Lease Agreement, in a “Download Now” Word format, is a commercial lease between landlord and tenant for the letting of a workshop on a short-term basis.
This Commercial Lease for a Workshop can be used when the term of the workshop lease is less than seven years.
Our Workshop Lease Agreement provides you with an easy to use commercial lease, which can be simply adapted to meet your needs.
In an instant, our Commercial Lease for a Workshop ensures that you meet the requirements of tenancy law and includes the necessary forms and wording to stop the tenant from getting security of tenure under the Landlord & Tenant Act 1954.
This Workshop Lease Agreement is a comprehensive document, which includes 19 easy-to-follow sections that outline the following:
For further details of the terms included in this Workshop Lease Agreement, see the ‘Contents’ tab above.
Drafted by solicitors for straightforward completion, the “Download Now” Commercial Lease for a Workshop includes guidance on how to fill the workshop lease in.
Commercial Lease for a Workshop is one of a range of commercial leases we provide. The others are:
Commercial Lease for a Restaurant
Commercial Lease for an Office Building
Workshop Lease Agreement Note:
Commercial Lease for a Workshop is supplied by ContractStore.com.
For obvious reasons we can't show you the actual Workshop Lease Agreement before you purchase it, but outlined below are the explanatory notes that go with it. These explain the thinking behind the commercial lease, and should give you a good idea of the terms of the workshop lease.
Explanatory Notes Commercial Lease for a Workshop This form of commercial lease agreement is intended for use of a short-term lease of a workshop (i.e. one of less than 7 years’ duration). Assignment and sub-letting is not permitted. It is assumed that the workshop lease will be contracted out of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 and that it will be a headlease or, if an underlease, that it complies with the requirements of the headlease. This Commercial Lease for a Workshop has been drafted so as to comply with the relevant recommendations of the Code of Practice for Commercial Leases (second edition, April 2002). Landlord and tenant law is a complex area of law and it is always recommended that you take legal advice before entering into a commercial lease, whether you are a landlord or a tenant. Section 1: Definitions and Interpretation Note that:
Section 2: Grant The workshop lease agreement is granted for a fixed term. No title guarantee is given. The grant is made subject to the matters affecting the landlord’s title at the date of the commercial lease. The rent together with VAT on it and all other sums due under the commercial lease are all reserved as rent. Section 3: Rights This section of the workshop lease agreement describes the rights granted to the tenant and the rights reserved to the landlord together with other rights to which the commercial lease is subject. Reference is made to the rights and reservations in the transfer under which the landlord holds the freehold of the Premises. Clause 3.3 expressly excludes any rights over any adjoining property (other than any rights which may be specifically granted under Clause 3.2). Clause 3.3 also excludes the provisions of section 62 of the Law of Property Act 1925 in the absence of which the commercial lease would confer on the tenant all easements, rights and advantages enjoyed by the Premises at the date of the commercial lease agreement. Section 4: Rent and Other Payments This section of the workshop lease agreement lists payments the tenant must make to include Rent and all outgoings in respect of the Premises to include VAT. Section 5: Insurance It is for the landlord to insure the building (other than plate or window glass) and for the tenant to refund a fair proportion of the premium. Section 6: No Assignment, Subletting or Dealings This section of the commercial lease includes an absolute prohibition on dealings. Section 7 Repair and Decoration This is not intended to be a full repairing and insuring commercial lease. There are 4 specific obligations on the tenant:
There is then a general repairing obligation on the tenant. On the assumption that the workshop lease is not a full repairing lease, the section includes wording limiting the repairing obligation by reference to a schedule of condition. It may not be worth the time and expense of preparing a schedule of condition for a short-term commercial lease and, from the tenant’s point of view, it would be better to delete the obligation all together. If the tenant retains structural parts, the tenant may require a repairing obligation on the landlord. Section 8: Alterations and Signs This section of the workshop lease agreement allows the tenant to put up and remove non-structural, demountable fittings. Re-instatement is required at the end of the term, only if this is reasonable. Otherwise, the tenant may not carry out any alterations including alterations to service media. Section 8 may therefore need to be amended, if needed. Section 9: Tenant to Remedy Breaches The landlord has a right to enter the Premises to carry out repairs if the tenant fails to do so. Section 10: Use The Permitted Use is as a workshop in connection with the tenant’s business. This section of the commercial lease also covers further obligations placed on the tenant concerning his use and occupation of the Premises. Section 11: Legal Obligations This section of the workshop lease sets out the tenant’s obligations to comply with all lawful requirements in respect of the Premises. Section 12: Returning the Premises to the Landlord This section of the commercial lease sets out the tenant’s obligations at the end of the workshop lease to remove all stock, fixtures and fittings. Section 13: Indemnity There is a broad obligation on the tenant to indemnify the landlord both for breach of covenant and for the tenant’s acts or omissions. Acts or omissions are not limited to negligent acts or omissions and a tenant will need to check that it has appropriate insurance cover or seek to amend the provisions in this section of the commercial lease. Section 14: Landlord’s Covenant for Quiet Enjoyment The landlord covenants with the tenant that, so long as the tenants pays the rents reserved by and complies with its obligations in the commercial lease, the tenant shall have quiet enjoyment of the Premises without any lawful interruption by the landlord or any person claiming under the landlord. Section 15: Condition for Re-entry The right of re-entry on a breach of covenant by the tenant must be expressly reserved. Section 16: Liability Note to include the provisions of Clause 16.2, where the tenant is more than one person. Section 17: Notices This Workshop Lease Agreement includes a short form notice clause. Notices must be in writing (except in case of emergency or if the commercial lease states otherwise) and writing includes faxes but does not include email. Section 18: Entire Agreement and Exclusion of Representations The purpose of an entire agreement clause is to set the limits of contractual obligations and to prevent the party relying on the clause from being liable for representations made before the commercial lease agreement is entered into. In this clause, the landlord seeks to exclude liability for pre-contractual (mis)representation. This will only be valid if it is reasonable and the issue of reasonableness will be looked at in the context of each particular case. Section 19: Miscellaneous Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 It is assumed that the commercial lease will be excluded from the security of tenure provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. |