WOMEN TRAILBLAZERS IN UK WIN OVER £2M IN GOVERNMENT FUNDING - INCLUDING GB SHARED!
50 of the UK’s leading women entrepreneurs backed by Innovate UK for game-changing ideas and our founder is one of them!From using plants to recover metal from...
50 of the UK’s leading women entrepreneurs backed by Innovate UK for game-changing ideas and our founder is one of them!From using plants to recover metal from...
An employability advisor was unfairly dismissed on the grounds of disability discrimination after requesting a suitable work chair. Jennifer CafferkySolicitor...
The Child Maintenance Service (CMS) is to clamp down on domestic abuse by providing a safer system for maintenance payments. Joanne Grey Associate Solicitor in...
The Employment Tribunal has ruled that a factory supervisor who handed over her keys and said she was “done” did not resign and was unfairly dismissed. Joanne...
Yes it would be perfect if you both wish to adopt and with all adoption assessments we expect that potential adopters are on the same page. However in reality...
There is light at the end of the long economic tunnel for Cumbrian businesses, says Sam Lyon, who leads the Corporate and Commercial team at Cartmell Shepherd S...
A judge has settled the tricky question of who pays for repairs when one leaseholder’s floor is another leaseholder’s roof.
Natalie Tatton Solicitor in our dispute team reports on this recent case.
The case involved two maisonettes contained in a house belonging to two freeholders, who leased them in 1980.
The ground-floor maisonette had been extended to provide an additional room beyond the kitchen.
The roof of the extension served as a balcony of the first-floor maisonette and consisted of a concrete slab topped with an asphalt surface above the extension’s ceiling. The concrete slab was cracked and needed repair.
The freeholders applied to the First-tier Tribunal to consider who was responsible for the repair.
The tribunal found that the leases only obliged the freeholders to repair certain items that were either reserved to them or that they used or could use.
It did not consider that the concrete slab fell within those items. It decided that it was fair to require the leaseholders to pay half each towards the repair.
The ground-floor leaseholder submitted that the tribunal had erred in interpreting the leases and finding that the freeholders were not responsible for the roof of the extension.
However, the Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) upheld the decision.
Judge Elizabeth Cooke said the tribunal was correct in finding that the freeholders were obliged only to repair specified items that belonged to them or that were capable of being used by them. As the concrete slab and horizontal structure were not reserved to them and could not be used by them, they were under no obligation to repair them.
They were the responsibility of the ground-floor maisonette, and their repair was that leaseholder’s responsibility.
However, the service charge clause in the first-floor maisonette’s lease obliged the leaseholder to contribute to the cost of certain items shared with the ground-floor maisonette, in particular, party structures.
Although the structural material between the two floors was the responsibility of the ground-floor maisonette, it was also a party structure, as it immediately adjoined the first-floor maisonette and was used for a common benefit in that it supported the floor of the first-floor maisonette and sheltered the ceiling of the ground-floor maisonette.
Therefore, the cost of repairing the concrete slab would be incurred by the ground-floor leaseholder but shared with the first-floor leaseholder. Each lessee should pay half the cost of the repair.
For more information about this article or any aspect of commercial property law please contact Natalie on 01228 516666 or click here to send her an email.
We’re excited to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Adoption Day and, as part of this, will be holding an online event on Wednesday 1...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025, at 218 Tulketh Road, Ashton, Preston, PR2 1ES from 1pm to 3pm, we’re very excited to open our doors, to join voluntary adoption a...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025, from 1pm to 3pm, Caritas Care are excited to open their doors to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Ad...
On Wednesday, 15 January 2025 we’re excited to open our doors to join voluntary adoption agencies (VAAs) across the UK for Big Adoption Day. If you’re consideri...
Networking, GB Update and New ConnectionsAs our share platforms have continued to grow, so too have our online meet ups! Join us for our next fortnightly meet...
A host of lovely events from Booths at various Booths shops across the North West.