Lease Legalese Made Easy
Lease Legalese Made Easy
Lease Legalese Made Easy
I doubt Professor Rodell was thinking about commercial leases when he said this. But ask any
real-estate professional, and he/she will tell you that leases contain too much legalese. Although
lawyers defend legalese as a way to be precise in their drafting, many lease provisions are quite
mystifying. Hopefully, this will demystify some of the most commonly misunderstood lease
clauses and explain why they matter.
Legal Compliance
A landlord client once asked me, “Why do we care if the lease requires the landlord to comply
with the law. Don’t we have to obey the law anyway?” While it is true that we should always
obey the law, the bigger issue here is, Who pays to keep the premises in compliance with the
law? During the lease term, laws such as the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the Texas
Architectural Barriers Act, and numerous zoning ordinances, building codes, and the like, may
require substantial upgrades to the building and common areas. To understand this issue, a
landlord should know the answers to all of these questions:
➔ Who pays for and performs upgrades to the premises and common areas to keep them in legal
compliance when the lease starts?
➔ Who pays for and performs upgrades to the premises triggered by a tenant’s specific use? For
example, a hospital or medical clinic has different ADA requirements than a “spec” warehouse
space.
➔ Who pays for and performs upgrades to the premises and common areas triggered by changes
in the law after the lease starts? The answers to these questions – and thus the allocation of costs
– vary from lease to lease.
Force Majeure
Force majeure are events that cannot reasonably be anticipated or controlled, such as acts of
God, labor shortages, materials shortages, fire, legal actions, terrorism, etc. A force majeure
clause allows a landlord to escape certain defaults, and is sometimes affectionately referred to as
the landlord’s “get out of jail free” card. On the flip side, tenants often want that same right to
“get out of jail free” card and to avoid obligations due to a force majeure event. But before you
agree to make this right mutual, be careful to state that your tenant cannot use force majeure
to evade fundamental lease obligations, such as the obligation to pay rent, carry insurance, or
surrender the premises at expiration. A careful landlord will also require a tenant to provide
notice before invoking the force majeure clause, and will also put a time limit on the number of
days the tenant can use force majeure to delay performance.
Quiet Enjoyment
The legal concept of “quiet enjoyment” is a long-standing legal theory. At its core, the concept
means that as long as the tenant is not in default, the landlord will not disturb its right to use the
premises. That includes the landlord’s actions as well as those of other tenants in the building or
shopping center. If the landlord or another tenant breaches this covenant, the suffering tenant can
file a lawsuit to stop the disturbance and seek damages. In certain (extreme) circumstances, the
tenant may even have the right to abandon the premises, stop paying rent, terminate the lease and
sue for damages. Some leases expand this concept to protect the tenant from third parties (other
than the landlord and other tenants). Landlords should never agree to this concept. Likewise,
landlords should examine their lease language and consider adding limits on their liability in case
a tenant makes a claim for breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment. From a property
management standpoint, a landlord should not summarily dismiss a tenant’s complaints about
noises, odors or other disturbances.
Subordination,
Non-Disturbance and Attornment
These three concepts took center stage during the economic downtown because, generally
speaking, if a landlord defaults on its mortgage, and its lender forecloses, the tenant risks getting
kicked out and losing its investment in the premises, even though the tenant is not in default. The
tenant’s risk is the result of being “junior” (subordinate) to the landlord’s lender. The tenant is
almost always junior either because the lender’s deed of trust (mortgage) was recorded before the
lease was signed or because the lease states that tenant’s rights are subordinate (junior) to any
existing or future mortgages. Tenants can protect themselves with a subordination, non-
disturbance and attornment agreement, (a/k/a SNDA). The subordination portion permits the
landlord’s lenders’ lien to be superior to the tenant’s lease. The attornment clause in a SNDA
ensures that a tenant can’t get out of the lease after a foreclosure. The attornment provision states
the tenant will recognize the lender as the landlord in the event of a foreclosure. So, where does
the tenant’s protection come from? Well, the non-disturbance clause in the SNDA permits the
lease to stay in force so long as the tenant is not in default. Tenants looking toward a long-term
lease with expensive improvements will most certainly want a good SNDA.
Conclusion
While all this lease language may just be a play on words, it is a game that all real-estate
professionals need to understand to protect their interests and reduce their risks