Nothing, what is wrong with you? did you not read the bit that said that this was not advice to you? There is no point advising you as you rudely dismiss anything that you do not agree with. However these threads are read by a lot more than just the OP and others in a similar position may read the advice and it may be relevant. Further people ask questions to drag out the details as they may actually be relevant, despite what you think. For example what you stock and actually keep in your office space may be vital, or not. If you simply sold office supplies then this is indeed unlikely to be a concern, if however you sold fireworks, or perhaps foodstuffs, then this would be critical information and potentially cripple any case you have against the landlord. In any thread we generally only hear one side of the story. The other side may be just as relevant and likely to be used in any court case. In many such situations details matter. Sometimes the smallest detail, which you may think is not of concern, may end up being critical. Hence the questions.Why the heck do you need to get so damn personal, what is wrong with you?
It is always worth pointing out the GENERAL situation between landlords and tenants. In general Landlords want to collect the money and do nothing else. Any tenant, no matter how justified, who complains, upsets this ideal of inaction. Now I am not suggesting never complain, but be aware of the commercial realities. Where a landlord collects just £25 a week form a number of people, and all but one are silent, then the landlord will perfer to get rid of the one and replace them with another silent one. if however there is a genuine problem that most or all the tenants are concerned about then a collective complaint is something the landlord is more likely to deal with without consequenses.
All too often we see commercial tenants thinking that they have rights and legal protection similar to residential tenants. This is just not the case. For commercial tenants the only thing that matters is the lease. The only protections (if any) are in the lease. Landlords are not keen to give any such protections and thus they tend not to be written into the lease. This is why we always suggest using solicitors before signing any commercial lease as your solicitor will point out any shortcomings and potentially get some protections written into the lease.
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