Leases as inhibitors of best practice in service charge management
ISSN: 0263-7472
Article publication date: 11 December 2018
Issue publication date: 5 April 2019
Abstract
Purpose
The relationship between the owner and an occupier of a commercial property is determined by the lease, inasmuch as it sets out the legally enforceable duties and obligations of each party. However, it is only that, a legal framework; it is not a practical management handbook on how best to operate the premises and generate an amicable business relationship. The purpose of this paper is to consider the role of the lease in reinforcing and disrupting the generation of best practice within real estate management.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper examines actual leases to understand the service charge and how data pertinent to it is collected, disseminated and interpreted by both parties in carrying out their activities within and about the property. This is then benchmarked against provisions of the Service Charge Code of Practice.
Findings
Despite a number of incarnations of a code of practice on service charges during the lifetime of the leases examined, the research finds a troublingly small uptake of its ideas within new leases.
Practical implications
The findings predict future problems in the practical management of multi-tenanted properties, coupled with a call that leases are written to the Code’s requirements.
Originality/value
No such lease examination has been undertaken to date.
Keywords
Citation
Holt, A.D. and Eccles, T.S. (2019), "Leases as inhibitors of best practice in service charge management", Property Management, Vol. 37 No. 2, pp. 275-286. https://doi.org/10.1108/PM-07-2018-0041
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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