-
tenancy under a
lease agreement is
colloquially known as renting. The
leaseholder can
remain in
occupation for a
fixed period,
measured in
months or years...
-
Leasehold reform may
refer to one of the
following UK Acts of Parliament:
Leasehold Reform Act 1967
Commonhold and
Leasehold Reform Act 2002 Leasehold...
- to extend, the
leaseholder is not
under an
obligation to pay any
marriage value to the freeholder.
Following the p****ing of the
Leasehold and
Freehold Reform...
- becomes.
Because of this, the law (the
Leasehold Reform Housing and
Urban Development Act 1993)
gives the
leaseholder the
right to
extend their lease once...
- to vote in
ballots for
leaseholders to take
freeholder rights; the way to
calculate how much a
lease would cost for a
leaseholder to buy a
lease would leave...
-
relay and
radio services within the VHF range.
Because of a
missing leaseholder, the visitor's area
including restaurant and
viewing platform has been...
-
years to £6,000 per
annum for the last 25 years. The
lease required the
leaseholder to put the
property "in good and
substantial repair" and to maintain...
-
Burrells Wharf is a
riverside residential estate,
owned by its
leaseholders, in London, England. It is
situated in
Docklands on the Isle of Dogs and the...
- a po****tion of 50,298 at the 2021 census. It was
named by an
early leaseholder,
Robert Gardiner,
after his birthplace, Berwick-on-Tweed in Northumberland...
-
refers to
regular payments made by a
holder of a
leasehold property to the
freeholder or a
superior leaseholder, as
required under a lease. In this sense, a...