- Original Poster
- #1
We've got a long-term lease on a warehouse. Typically in such leases, the tenant is responsible for the entirety of the warehouse. We negotiated away responsibility of the roof to remain with the landlord. In the wording of the contract, the landlord is to use reasonable endeavours to keep the property water-tight.
The roof is at/nearing the end of its life, it is ~50 years old and it leaks. We've lost ~£3k in equipment in the past few months due to various leaks. They send someone out every couple of months to do spot-fixes (with limited success). But it is rare for us to have less than a few buckets out catching leaks at any one time, and it is only a matter of time before a leak breaks something worth £20k+ (we use a lot of specialised electronics).
At what point are spot-fixes to a sieve no longer considered "reasonable endeavours"? Are there any guidelines/protections out there for tenants, to this effect, or is "reasonable endeavours" a magic "open to interpretation" bullet?
The prospect of carrying out major works has triggered the landlord into voicing that the contract would need to be renegotiated to account for the associated cost...
The roof is at/nearing the end of its life, it is ~50 years old and it leaks. We've lost ~£3k in equipment in the past few months due to various leaks. They send someone out every couple of months to do spot-fixes (with limited success). But it is rare for us to have less than a few buckets out catching leaks at any one time, and it is only a matter of time before a leak breaks something worth £20k+ (we use a lot of specialised electronics).
At what point are spot-fixes to a sieve no longer considered "reasonable endeavours"? Are there any guidelines/protections out there for tenants, to this effect, or is "reasonable endeavours" a magic "open to interpretation" bullet?
The prospect of carrying out major works has triggered the landlord into voicing that the contract would need to be renegotiated to account for the associated cost...