building valuations

 

Interim Dilapidations

 

If you need help and advise with regard to dilapidations, schedules of condition, dilaps claims, break clauses or any other matters please call 0800 298 5424 for a friendly chat.

Dilapidations are as certain as death and taxes but always come as a surprise to the tenant

Dilapidations always seem to come as a surprise. This is certainly the case with interim dilapidations, which, as the name implies, are during the course of the lease. They are not as common as terminal dilapidations, which are served at the end of the lease, but nevertheless often rear their head.

 

Dilapidations defined

First, let us define what dilapidations are. Where a lease has been taken between a landlord and a tenant the lease will have stated the condition the property has to be returned in. It will usually be divided into:

•  repairing covenants

•  decoration covenants

•  reinstatement covenants

•  statutory covenants

 

where a covenant is a legal requirement.

 

Repairing covenant

The lease will set the required standard the property has to be returned in. This may use single words, such as repair or to put and keep or it may use what is known as the torrential form of drafting, which some solicitors tended to use and has a whole raft of very similar words, e.g. repair, maintain, replace, etc, which have all been used to ensure that there is no ambiguity and that there is absolute clarity, but ironically due to the case laws that may or may not exist on these terms it can be more unclear than a single word. Nevertheless, it will be a legal interpretation of how the tenant has to return the leasehold property.

 

Schedule of Condition

Unless the tenant has a schedule of condition, in which case the standard of repair/reinstatement may be that set out within the schedule of condition. Just to clarify, a schedule of condition is a schedule identifying the condition of the property at the time the lease was taken on and is usually only appended to the lease where it is accepted by the landlord that this is the condition the property will return in.

 

 

Reasons why interim schedules of dilaps are used

We would describe the uses of interim schedules of dilapidations as either being tactical or firmly advising.

 

Tactical

 

A tactically served interim schedule of dilaps may be served where a break clause is coming up. This is where the tenant could actually leave the property and it may persuade him not to if the interim dilapidations schedule shows that he will be encumbered with a large repair bill when he leaves. Equally the interim dilapidations may be served tactically because a rent review is due and again this may persuade the tenant to renegotiate staying in the same property and therefore not incurring any immediate repair bills he has in mind that he has already about to have a rent increase, which will no doubt affect his bottom line figures.

 

 

Firmly advising

The other time when we have found interim dilapidations to be served is when a tenant is abusing the use of the leasehold property. We have heard this to be termed policing, which can be done also by visits from a surveyor and discussions on any problems or it can be done more formally and firmly by the serving of an interim dilapidations identifying the breaches the landlord believes there to be in the lease contract between the two parties.

 

Format of an interim schedule of dilapidations

In our experience this takes the same format as a dilapidations schedule, which follows the guidance set out by The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.

 

 

Number

Lease Clause

Breach

Remedy

Cost

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dilapidations Protocol

This is the landlord's view of the breach and may not stand up in court. The Property Litigation Association has been concerned in the past with exaggerations from the landlord that there is now a pre-action protocol in place with heavy penalties for those that exaggerate and also the remedy that the landlord's surveyor recommends is not necessarily what you have to do it is his interpretation of what should be done to remedy a breach.

As mentioned, these interim dilapidations are used tactically so the landlord is aware that it is unlikely they will ever go to court on an interim dilapidations (if they are going to go to court and it is relatively rare it will be on a terminal dilapidations). If one is served upon you it is worth having a specialist commercial chartered surveyor inspect the interim dilapidations and advise upon what your true repair liability is likely to be. This may give you a completely different view of how you negotiate your break clause or your rent.

 

How do I deal with an interim dilapidations clause as a tenant?

If you do wish to investigate a break clause then it is worth having specialist advice as the interim dilapidations will no doubt be followed shortly by terminal dilapidations and with break clauses you do have to make sure you completely comply with its requirements (please see our article on break clauses). If the interim dilapidations has been served for practical reasons for a rent negotiation then you may well find once you have appointed a specialist commercial chartered surveyor that the alleged breaches are not breaches and may be what we would term as a heavy handed approach (previously known as a exaggeration by exaggerating) with the landlord knowing that the interim dilapidations is very unlikely to ever go to court. If, however, the interim dilaps has been served as a firm warning against the tenant, due to his lack of compliance with the lease clauses and the landlord may well have a good case for future repairs and simply be positioning himself for when the terminal dilapidations are served. You will need to take specialist advice on how to deal both with the interim dilapidations and the property problems that you no doubt have, as we have found in the past that often landlords are repairing the effects of a problem, i.e. damp stains in a suspended ceiling, rather than the actual cause of the problem, which may be the trees overhanging the gutter outside.

 

Is an interim dilapidations a good way of dealing with a bad tenant?

As a landlord you may feel relatively powerless in dealing with a bad tenant. One of the remedies you do have is an interim dilapidation, which can serve to advise them of their present and future repair liability. We have also found that visits from a commercial surveyor would possibly help this situation and enable the tenant to see that he does have a responsibility to keep the property as he agreed to within the lease.

 

 

Interim dilapidations, a toothless (for both parties) weapon

It can equally be argued that interim dilaps are relatively useless for really having work carried out. We would comment that it is more a formal process and negotiation that can lead to results than a formal serving of a dilapidations schedule.

We have produced a number of articles and book reviews on dilapidations, for more information go to:

Information on Dilapidations

 

If you need help and advice with regard to leases, dilapidations, schedules of condition, dilaps claims, Scotts Schedules or any other matters please call 0800 298 5424 for a friendly chat. Please note we are independent chartered surveyors.

If you would like Dilaps Help then please visit our www.DilapsHelp.com website and for Disputes go to our Disputes Help site www.DisputesHelp.com .

We hope you found the article of use and if you have any experiences that you feel should be added to this article that would benefit others, or you feel that some of the information that we have put is wrong then please do not hesitate to contact us (we are only human).

The contents of the website are for general information only and are not intended to be relied upon for specific or general decisions. Appropriate independent professional advice should be paid for before making such a decision.

All rights are reserved and the contents of the website are not to be reproduced or transmitted in any form in whole or part without the express written permission of 1stAssociated.co.uk.

 

building engineers

 

 

Home Buyers Reports Property Surveys - why we're the best. Engineers Reports
© Copyright 1stAssociated.co.uk
Site Map

Quick Links:

Residential Property Surveying

Accessing Chimneys
Advice On Disputes
Animals and Plants Living around your Building
Beautifully Naive Thoughts
Approved Inspectors -v- Local Authority Building Control Officers
Are Surveys Better Than Valuations?
Asbestos
Asphalt Flat Roofs
Basement Conversions
Builders, Building Problems and Roofs and how a Chartered Surveyor can help
Building Regulations
Building Control Approval
Boundary Disputes
Boundary Disputes Solved with Common Sense
Building Disputes
Building Survey Glossary
Building Surveys or Structural Surveys
Buying and Selling General Information
Buying a house
Buying at Auction Information
Buying Off-Market -v- Buying at Auction
Buying Property at Auction
Can you trust a Chartered Surveyors Valuation
Cavity Wall Problems
Changing quick weather causing Spring house problems!
Chartered Surveyors pt1
Chartered Surveyors pt2
Cheap Building Surveys, or being wrongly advised by your Building Surveyor
Close Boarding
Chimney Issues
Common Chimney Problems
Compare Building Surveys
Compare Home Buyers Reports
Common Pitched Roofs
Condensation and Cold Bridging
Condensation
Condensation and Damp Walls
Condensation problems
Conservatories, sometimes called Sunrooms
Cowboy Builders and Cowboy Clients
Cracking and Movement Information
Cracking to my Plaster
Cracks in my Wall
Damp in properties
Damp Meters
Damp Proof Course, How do older properties keep dry without one?
Damp Proof Courses, What are these for?
Damp Proof Courses Defined
Damp Proof Courses and Modern Property
Damp Proof Courses in Older Properties?
Damp Proof Specialists, Talk to us First
Damp Surveying To A Different Standard
Dampness Defects Report
Dampness Problems
Damp Walls
Dampness A Different View
Dampness in buildings - the basics
Dangers of working on your own
Definitions of Building terms
Deteriorating Brickwork Cement Repointing
Disrepair Notices being served on Letting Agents
Do All Houses Have Condensation?
Disputes
Do Banks and Building Society Surveyors Really Value Property?
Do Chartered Surveyors Value Property?
Dormer Roof Leaking
Drainage and Manholes
Dry Verges
Energy Efficiency Have We Got It All Wrong?
Energy Surveys or Energy Condition Reports v Thermal Imaging
Engineers Report
Environmental Reports
Estate Agents
Can You Trust an Estate Agent?
Estate Agent, There is no point being honest
Do Estate Agents Tell The Truth Or Do They Just Want a House Sale?
Estimating Building Costs
Expert Witness
Fascia and Soffit Board Problems
Financial Advisers
Flat Roofs
Foundations
Foundations and Underpinning
French Drains
From Fire Marks to Surveyor John Braid Wood
Georgian and Regency Properties and their common problems
Get a Survey Quote
Good Design can Save you Money
Health and Safety in the Property Industry
Homebuyers Report or Structural Survey
How Developers Thinks
How do i convert my Loft?
How do older properties keep dry without a damp proof course?
How, in our experience, insurance companies deal with cracks in properties
How to Buy a Property at Auction, FAQs
How to get on with your Builder
How to Solve Building Disputes
Glass
Independant Financial Advisers - Are they Independent?
Independant Financial Advisors pt1
Independant Financial Advisors pt2
Insulation, DPCs and Energy Performance Certificates
Insurance Claim
Insurance Claim Against Surveyors
Insurance Companies
It is important to remember where builders come from
Leaking Dormer Roofs
Leaking Flat Roofs
Lime Mortar
Listed Buildings and Character Properties
Location, Location, Location
Loft Conversions
London Clay
London Mansion Houses
Modern Timber Frame Properties and their common problems
1970s Modern Timber Frame Properties
Mortgage Valuations
Mortgages Aren't they interesting?
Movement and Cracking Information
My House Is Too Hot
My property has been repointed in a cement mortar, what can I do?
New Houses and Wood Cladding
NHBC Warranty Problems
Noisy Neighbour - A Different Sort
Non Traditional Housing
Not So Common Pitched Roofs
Old ceilings and how to repair them
Parking Dispute
Party Walls
Places of Worship and D1 User Class Buildings
Pre and Post Suburban Properties and their common problems
Pre Sales Survey
Pre School And Day Nursery Dampness And Condensation Problems
Problem Solving
Problems with cap over and overclad fascia and soffit boards
Problem with efflorescence
Problems with fascia and soffit boards
Problem with newly built properties
Problems with Roof Windows, Roof Lights and Sky Lights
Property Eras and Common Problems
Property Acquisition Companies
Property Investors Wanted
Property Management - It's all about cash flow
Sorting out Property Problems with Solicitors and Surveyors
Property Refurbishment
Property Valuations
Renting out a property Have you thought about this?
Repairing Cracks
Residential Surveys
Resolving dampness in your basement
Rising damp, or is it
Rising Damp and Independent Reports
Rising Damp, Condensation and Damp through Walls
Roof Problems and Information
Roof Problems
Roof Windows, Roof Lights, Sky Lights and Light Tunnels
Settlement, Subsidence and Heave
Shared Freehold and Problems with Damp
Should I buy or sell land?
Should I have a Structural Survey?
Snow causing winter house problems
Solar The Options
Specific Defects Reports
Spray Foam Insulation in Roofs
Structural Cracking
Structural Report
Structural Surveys
Structural Survey, What Does a Chartered Surveyor Do?
Structural Wall
Structural walls or non-structural walls
Surveys of Georgian Buildings in Ealing, London W5
The Great Fire of London
The History of Non Traditional Building
Thermal Imaging
Traditional and Non-Traditional Properties, What are they?
Traditional Tudor Timber Frame Properties and their common problems
Unhealthy alliance between Estate Agents and Surveyors
Valuation
Valuation the same, Snap
Value and Worth The Moral Maze
Valuations Information
Victorian and Edwardian Properties and their common problems
Wall Issues
Wall Tie Problems
What Is An Independent Survey?
What is my Home Worth?
What type of doors do i have and are they worth saving?
Where do i find a good builder?
Where is my boundary?
Who ensures your builder does a good job?
Why Do Building Costs Always Go Up?
Why Have One Of Our Surveys?
Why Have a Residential Survey?
Why Use Us?
Why You Have Never Seen any Building Surveys or Structural Surveys Like Ours
Woodworm problems in the floor
Woodworm Treatment
Build, Buy or Restore?
Country House Rescue
Cowboy Builders
DIY SOS
Help! My House Is Falling Down
Help! My Brighton House is Falling Down
Help! My House Victorian Is Falling Down
Homes Under The Hammer
Location, Location, Location
Property Ladder and Property Snakes and Ladders
Secret Shopper on Estate Agents
 

Commercial Property Surveying

Directories and Indexes that you can find us in on the Internet

A-Z of Dilapidations
Asbestos
Beware of the Late Served Schedule of Dilapidations by the Landlord
Break Clauses, Are they Worth it?
Building Survey Glossary
Buying a Commercial Property at Auction
Buying at Auction Information
Commercial Property, What is a Primary, Secondary or Tertiary Property?
Commercial Surveys
Commercial Survey Forms
Compare Commercial Surveys
Compare Commercial Building Surveys
Commercial - Dealing with Asbestos in Retail Units
Dilapidations and Chartered Accountants and your Accounts
Dilapidations for Tenants and Leaseholders
Dilapidantions Negotiations (Landlord or Landlord's Surveyor not acting fairly)
Dilaps and Poker Playing
Dilaps Break Clauses
Dilaps Claim
Dilaps Claim by a Landlord
Dilaps Disagreements on the Repairs Needed
Dilaps Dilaps Help Course Book, Comments by Vivien King
Dilaps More Information
Experienced Businesspeople understand the importance of a Schedule of Condition being appended to a Lease
Expert Witness
Good Design can Save you Money
Health and Safety in the Property Industry
How do Civil Procedure Laws Affect Dilapidations
How to read a Dilapidations Schedule
Industrial Commercial Properties - The Asbestos Cement Dilemma
Information about Buying at Auction
Interim Dilapidations
Landlords
Landlords and Tenants
Landlords can you have too good a retail tenant?
Landlords can you have too good an industrial tenant?
Landlords Industrial Properties
Landlord's view on a new business taking on a lease
Landlords Retail Investment Properties
Landlords What can we do for You?
Lease Negotiations with your Landlord
My First Lease What Should I Do?
Negotiating Dilapidations
Negotiating with a Landlord
Negotiating FRI Lease Clauses
Property Report
Reading your Village, Town and City
Retail Leases or Licences
RICS Guidance Notes on Dilapidations
Schedule of Condition - What should I expect?
Scedule of Conditions for Commercial Properties
Scott's Schedules
Section 18 Valuation
Structural Survey
The Lazy Solicitor and the Lease
Tenants
Terminal Schedules of Dilapidations
Vivian King on RICS Guidance Note and Dilaps
What is a Schedule of Condition?
Why Advanced Rent
Your Lease in Plain English

Links to Surveyors and Property Related Companies Around the World

 

Property Courses

Dilapidations - New Improved Presentations Click Here

Dilapidations - Original Presentations Click Here

Party Walls Presentations Click Here

Building Surveying Presentations Click Here

Building Surveys New Improved Click Here

Final Countdown Presentations Click Here

Lectures 1 Click Here

Lectures 2 Click Here

Building Pathology
Building Survey Glossary
Building Surveying Acapulco Presentation
Building Surveying Clients and Introduction Presentation
Building Surveying Executive Summaries Presentation
Building Surveying Follow the Trail Presentation
Building Surveying Survey Groups and Managing Presentation
Building Surveying Project Minutes
Building Surveying Questions Georgian and Regency
Building Surveying Questions Modern Timber Frame
Building Surveying Questions Pre and Post Suburban Years
Building Surveying Questions Traditional Timber Frame
Building Surveying Questions Victorian and Edwardian
Buying and Selling Your Property Course: Course Aim
Commercial and Section 18 Valuations Presentation 5
Commercial Building Survey Example Presentation 5
Dilapidations Courses
Dilapidations Courses
Dilapidations Follow the Trail Presentation 3
Dilapidations Introduction to Surveying Presentation
Dilapidations Legal Framework Presentation 4
Dilapidations Overview and Schedules of Condition New Presentation 1
Dilapidations Overview and Schedules of Condition Presentation 1
Dilapidations Review Industrial New Presentation 3
Dilapidations Review Property Reports New Presentation 2
Dilapidations Review Schedules of Condition and Property Reports New Presentation 1
Dilapidations Review Industrial Presentation 3
Dilapidations Review Property Reports Presentation 2
Dilapidations Review Schedules of Condition and Property Reports Presentation 1
Dilapidations Review of Schedules of Condition and Property Reports Presentation 3
Dilaps Help Course Book, Comments by Vivien King
Dilaps Help Presentation 9
Property Eras Georgian and Victorian Photos Presentation
Property Eras Georgian Photos Presentation
Property Eras Modern Photos Presentation
Property Eras Post War and Modern Photos Presentation
Property Eras Post War Photos Presentation
Property Eras Regency, Victorian, Post War and Modern Photos Presentation
Property Eras Tudor Photos Presentation
Property Eras Victorian Photos Presentation
Estimating Building Costs Presentation 5
Final Countdown - Last 3 Weeks Presentation
Final Countdown - Dilapidations Example Presentation
Final Countdown - Schedule of Condition Example Presentation
Final Countdown - Last 2 Weeks - Expert Witness Presentation
Final Countdown - Last 2 Weeks - Speaker Review Presentation
Final Countdown - Last Week - Party Walls Presentation
Goals, Presentations and Offices Presentation 6
Improving Your Presentation
Industrial Dilapidations Presentation 3
Industrial Unit Dilapidations Issues in Photos Presentation 3
Leases RICS Guidance and Protocol Presentation 3
Our Beliefs and Values
Outstanding Building Surveys Presentation
Party Walls Five Types of Party Walls Presentation 1
Party Walls Example used in Presentation 1
Presentations, New Presentation 8
Presentations, Presentation 8
Property As An Investment Course
Property Report and Schedule of Condition Example Presentation 5
Property Courses
Reading your Village, Town and City
Reading your Village, Town and City for Dilaps Students
RICS Guidance Notes Presentation 7
Schedules of Dilapidations Review Presentation 6

1st Associated Chartered Surveyors Are Also Available in the Following Areas:

East Anglia and East

Norfolk
Suffolk
Essex
Cambridgeshire
Lincolnshire

South and South East

Isle of Wight
East Sussex
West Sussex
Surrey
Kent
Berkshire
Oxfordshire
Buckinghamshire
Bedfordshire
Hertfordshire

West Country and South West

Cornwall
Devon
Somerset
Bristol
Dorset
Wiltshire
Hampshire
Gloucestershire
Shropshire
Herefordshire
 

Midlands

Northamptonshire
Rutland
Leicestershire
Nottinghamshire
Derbyshire
Warwickshire
Staffordshire
Worcestershire
West Midlands

North and North East

Cheshire
Cleveland
Merseyside
Lancashire
Cumbria
West Yorkshire
South Yorkshire
East Riding Of Yorkshire
North Yorkshire
Northumberland
Tyne and Wear
Durham
Greater Manchester

Wales

Blaenau Gwent
Bridgend
Caerphilly
Cardiff
Carmarthenshire
Ceredigion
Conwy
Denbighsire
Flintshire
Gwynedd
Isle of Anglesey
Merthyr Tydfil
Monmouthshire
Neath Port Talbot
Newport
Pembrokeshire
Powys
Rhonda Cynon Taff
Swansea
Torfaen
Cardiff
Vale of Glamorgan
Wrexham
 

London

Central London
- City of London
- City of Westminster
- Soho
- Kensington
- Chelsea
- Hammersmith and Fulham
- Wandsworth
- Lambeth
- Southwark
- Tower Hamlets
- Hackney
- Islington
- Camden
- Brent
- Ealing
- Stratford
- Hounslow
- Richmond upon Thames
- Kingston upon Thames
- Merton
- Sutton
- Croydon
- Bromley
- Lewisham
- Greenwich
- Bexley
- Marylebone
- Havering
- Barking
- Dagenham
- Redbridge
- Newham
- Waltham Forest
- Haringey
- Enfield
- Barnet
- Harrow
- Hillingdon
North London
South London
East London
West London

This firm does not accept service of documents by email or fax

Admin/Registered Office:

Hoo View House
Stanley Street
Bedford
Bedfordshire
MK45 7RU