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Statutory Instrument

The Housing (Change of Landlord) Regulations 1989

Citation
S.I. 1989/367
As at
Sections
71
Section 1Citation and commencement

These Regulations may be cited as the Housing (Change of Landlord) Regulations 1989 and come into force on 5th April 1989.

Section 2General interpretation

(1) In these Regulations —

“ the Act ” means the Housing Act 1988;

“added dwelling-house” means a dwelling-house which is included in the property to which the acquisition relates and which the landlord desired to have included in the acquisition by virtue of section 98(1) (d);

“applicant” means a person who has made an application claiming to exercise the right conferred by Part IV of the Act;

“business tenancy” means a tenancy to which Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 applies;

“consultation period” has the meaning given by regulation 14;

“landlord” means a public sector landlord to whom an application has been made to exercise the right conferred by Part IV of the Act;

“relevant date”, in relation to an added dwelling-house, means the date of the service of the section 98(1) notice but, subject to that, has the meaning given by section 93(5);

“section 98(1) notice” means the notice served under section 98(1);

“statutory successor” means a person who succeeds on the death of a secure tenant in accordance with sections 87 to 90 of the 1985 Act;

“teller” has the meaning given by regulation 16(2);

“the time of acquisition” means the time of completion of the grant or lease (as the case may be).

(2) References in these Regulations to sections by number are references to sections bearing those numbers in the Act.

Section 3Particulars to be included in section 98(1) notice

The following particulars are prescribed for the purposes of section 98(1)(g) –

(a) details of any property included in the application under section 96(1), or proposed for inclusion in the acquisition by the landlord in its section 98(1) notice, in which the landlord does not hold a fee simple estate;

(b) where details of any tenancy or licence of property proposed to be acquired by virtue of section 93(1) (a) were not given to the applicant in the landlord’s notice under section 97(1), the name and address of such tenant or licensee and the general nature of his tenancy or licence;

(c) in respect of any property proposed to be acquired by virtue of section 93(1)(b), or proposed for inclusion in the acquisition by the landlord in its section 98(1) notice, the name and address of every tenant or licensee of all or any part of that property and the general nature of his tenancy or licence;

(d) in respect of any property which was included in the application under section 96(1) and which was not occupied (whether lawfully or unlawfully) on the relevant date, particulars of its occupation at the date of the service of the section 98(1) notice, including the name and address of any tenant or licensee of that property and the general nature of his tenancy or licence, and details of any other person in occupation whether lawfully or unlawfully.

(e) in respect of property included in the application under section 96(1), particulars of any changes in the circumstances of its occupation not reflected in the landlord’s notice under section 97(1) including:–

(i) whether the current occupant is a successor to a previous tenant or whether it is unoccupied;

(ii) whether the landlord has taken a decision not to enforce an order by which, on the relevant date, the tenant was obliged to give up possession of the dwelling-house in pursuance of an order of the court or would have been so obliged at a date specified in such an order;

(f) where any dwelling-house in a building proposed to be acquired under section 93(1)(a) is subject to an approved co-operative management agreement, particulars of that agreement and the address or description of each building or property which is subject to that agreement, indicating in respect of any property proposed to be acquired under section 93(1)(b) whether it is a building containing a dwelling-house subject to that agreement;

(g) particulars of any flat which, in the opinion of the landlord, will be required in accordance with regulation 6(2) to be leased back to the landlord because it is occupied by a tenant of a description prescribed by regulation 7(a) to (c), including the circumstances on which the landlord relies in support of its opinion;

(h) such particulars of any rights, covenants and conditions and other proposed terms of the conveyance specified by the landlord in its section 98(1) notice as it is necessary to have in order to understand the need for such rights, covenants, conditions or terms.

Section 4Disputes as to property to be included etc.

Any dispute as to any matters stated in a section 98(1) notice shall be determined by the person referred to in section 98(5)(a) in accordance with the provisions prescribed in Schedule 1.

Section 5Disputes as to matters relating to price or disposal cost

Any dispute as to any matters stated in a notice under section 99(1) shall be determined by the district valuer in accordance with the provisions prescribed in Schedule 2.

Section 6Exclusion or lease back of dwelling-houses in accordance with section 100

(1) Any dwelling-house which is a house and is occupied by a tenant to whom section 100(2) applies shall be excluded from the acquisition.

(2) Immediately after the acquisition, a lease of any dwelling-house which is a flat and is occupied by a tenant to whom section 100(2) applies or by a tenant of a description prescribed in regulation 7 below shall be granted by the applicant to the landlord.

Section 7Tenants prescribed for the purposes of section 100(1)(b)

The following descriptions of tenants of flats are prescribed for the purposes of section 100(1)(b) –

(a) a tenant whose tenancy is as described in any of paragraphs 2 to 7, 10 or 11 of Schedule 1 to the 1985 Act (tenancies which are not secure tenancies) who was in occupation on the relevant date, unless that tenancy is a business tenancy or a long tenancy;

(b) a tenant of a flat which, on the relevant date, was occupied by a secure tenant in the circumstances set out in any of paragraphs 5, 7, or 9 to 11 of Schedule 5 to the 1985 Act (exceptions to the right to buy);

(c) a secure tenant who –

(i) on the relevant date was obliged to give up possession of the flat in pursuance of an order of the court or was to have been so obliged at a date specified in the order, and

(ii) does not satisfy regulation 8(b) below;

(d) a statutory successor to a qualifying tenant where the qualifying tenant had been consulted in accordance with section 102 and indicated his wish to continue to occupy the dwelling-house as tenant of the landlord;

(e) a statutory successor to a qualifying tenant, where that qualifying tenant occupied on the relevant date but did not give notice in the prescribed manner whether or not he wished to remain a tenant of the landlord, and where that successor within the 21 day period ending at the end of the consultation period has provided the applicant with a certificate from his landlord to the effect that he is such a successor;

(f) a qualifying tenant who has, within the 21 day period ending at the end of the consultation period, provided the applicant with a certificate from the landlord to the effect that his tenancy was, after the relevant date, assigned to him by way of exchange, by a qualifying tenant whose tenancy commenced before the relevant date.

Section 8Tenants prescribed for the purposes of section 100(2)(b)

(1) Tenants of the following descriptions are prescribed for the purposes of section 100(2)(b) where they continue to occupy the dwelling-house during the consultation period –

(a) a qualifying tenant of an added dwelling-house whose tenancy commenced before the relevant date;

(b) a secure tenant who is precluded from being a qualifying tenant by section 93(4)(a) and who, not less than 21 days before the end of the consultation period, has provided the applicant with a certificate from the landlord to the effect that it no longer intends to enforce the possession order against him;

(c) a tenant whose tenancy began in the circumstances described in any of paragraphs 4, 5 or 10 of Schedule 1 to the 1985 Act and who, not less than 21 days before the end of the consultation period, has provided the applicant with a certificate from the landlord to the effect that, on the expiry of such period as is mentioned in the relevant paragraph, he has become a secure tenant.

(2) A statutory successor to a qualifying tenant who occupied the dwelling-house on the relevant date and who, not less than 21 days before the end of the consultation period, has provided the applicant with a certificate from the landlord to the effect that he is such a successor is also prescribed for the purposes of section 100(2)(b).

Section 9Tenancies or licences to which section 101 does not apply

Section 101 does not apply to –

(a) a lease of a dwelling-house granted after the relevant date to a tenant of that dwelling-house whose tenancy commenced before the relevant date;

(b) a tenancy or licence granted after the relevant date in respect of a dwelling-house which, on the relevant date, was as described in any of paragraphs 5, 7, or 9 to 11 of Schedule 5 to the 1985 Act;

(c) a tenancy or licence of property which the landlord proposes for exclusion in its section 98(1) notice on any of the grounds mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (c) of that provision, being a tenancy or licence granted –

(i) where the applicant does not dispute its exclusion, after the expiry of the period of four weeks from the service of that notice, or

(ii) where he disputes its exclusion, on the resolution of the dispute in favour of its exclusion.

Section 10Notice to applicant of grant of a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies

The landlord shall at the same time as it grants a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies, serve notice of that grant on the applicant at the address given by it in its notice under section 96.

Section 11Notice to tenant or licensee of a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies

The landlord shall, when granting a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies, give notice of the effect of that section to the tenant or licensee.

Section 12Vacant possession

(1) The landlord shall, on the service of the notice of intention to proceed under section 103(1), serve a notice to quit on each tenant or licensee to whose tenancy or licence section 101 applies.

(2) The landlord shall use its best endeavours to secure vacant possession at the date of the grant referred to in section 104(1)(a) of any property which is subject to a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies, including, if necessary, enforcing the right to recover possession by applying to the court for, and enforcing, an order for possession.

(3) If, at the date of such grant, the landlord fails to give vacant possession of any property subject to a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies, any costs or expenses attributable to the recovery of vacant possession by the applicant and any losses consequent upon the failure of the landlord to give vacant possession shall be recoverable by the applicant as a simple contract debt.

Section 13Disapplication of section 101

(1) Section 101 ceases to apply –

(a) when any relevant period (or such period as extended in accordance with section 110(2)) expires without the applicant doing what he is required to do within that period, to all property proposed to be acquired; or

(b) where the landlord has specified property in its section 98(1) notice as property to be excluded on the grounds mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (c) of section 98(1), in relation to that property –

(i) where the applicant does not dispute its exclusion, on the expiry of the period of four weeks from the service of that notice, or

(ii) where it disputes its exclusion, on the resolution of the dispute in favour of its exclusion.

(2) Where section 101 ceases to apply to property at any time, the landlord shall forthwith notify the tenant or licensee and may, within the period of four weeks beginning with the date of that notification, serve notice to quit in accordance with section 101(3), but nothing in this regulation shall make a tenancy or licence to which section 101 applies a secure tenancy unless the landlord notifies the tenant or licensee that the tenancy or licence is so to be regarded.

Section 14The prescribed period for consultation

The prescribed period for consultation (in these Regulations referred to as “the consultation period”) is the period beginning with –

(a) if there is a determination by the district valuer under section 99, notification to the applicant of that determination;

(b) if there is no such determination, service of the landlord’s notice under section 99;

and ending at the end of the period of fourteen weeks beginning with the date of the giving of that notification or the service of that notice as the case may be.

Section 15Tenants prescribed for the purposes of section 102

Tenants of the following descriptions are prescribed for the purposes of section 102 –

(a) a tenant who was on the relevant date a business tenant and continued to be such a tenant during the consultation period;

(b) a tenant of an added dwelling-house under a long tenancy who occupied the dwelling-house on the date of the service of the section 98(1) notice and continued to occupy it during the consultation period;

(c) a qualifying tenant of a dwelling-house who has, not less than 21 days before the end of the consultation period, provided the applicant with a certificate from the landlord to the effect that his tenancy was, after the relevant date, assigned to him by way of exchange, by a qualifying tenant whose tenancy commenced before the relevant date and who did not give notice in the prescribed manner whether or not he wished to remain a tenant of the landlord.

Section 16Prescribed provisions as to consultation

(1) The applicant shall, within seven weeks of the beginning of the consultation period, serve on each tenant to whom section 102 applies who has not given a notification in accordance with paragraph (7) below the information specified in and in accordance with Schedule 3.

(2) The applicant shall engage a person independent from him (in these Regulations referred to as the “teller”) to whom the tenants consulted under section 102 shall give notice of whether or not they wish to continue as tenants of the landlord.

(3) The applicant shall secure that the teller shall, not sooner than 7 days or later than 10 days from the service of the information described in paragraph (1) above, serve on each tenant referred to in that paragraph (or, where the tenancy is held by two or more persons jointly, those tenants jointly) –

(a) a notice for giving notice of his (or their) wishes (in the form prescribed by regulation 3(g) (form 7) of the Housing (Change of Landlord) (Prescribed Forms) Regulations 1989 ) (in this and the following regulation referred to as “the notice of decision”);

(b) a description of the provisions in regulation 17 below;

(c) a reply paid envelope for return of the notice to the teller by post;

(d) a statement as to the nature of his tenancy, and the consequences for him of giving notice of a wish to continue as the tenant of the landlord or of a wish to become a tenant of the applicant, or of giving no notice in the event that the acquisition takes place.

(4) The applicant shall secure that anything required by this regulation to be served on the tenant is served on him at his address at the property proposed to be included in the acquisition or, if he notifies the applicant before the service of the information referred to in paragraph (1) above that he wishes to be served at a different address, at that address.

(5) The applicant shall secure that, where a tenant served with information in accordance with paragraph (1) above has not within a period of four weeks beginning with the date of service of that information returned the form giving notice of his wishes, the teller shall use his best endeavours to visit the tenant within the consultation period to explain the effect of regulation 17 and the consequences of failure to give notice of his wishes.

(6) Where a tenant provides the applicant with a certificate as described in regulation 8(1)(b) or (c), (8)(2) or 15(c) above after the applicant has complied with paragraph (1) above in relation to other tenants, the applicant shall within seven days of that provision serve on the tenant the information specified in Schedule 3, and shall secure that the teller shall, within those seven days, serve on the tenant the items referred to in paragraph (3) above, but the applicant need not comply with paragraph (5) above.

(7) Where, before the service of the information referred to in regulation 16(1), a tenant other than a joint tenant notifies the applicant that he will, or is likely to, be absent from the property in which he holds his tenancy during the whole or a substantial part of the period between that notification and the end of the consultation period, and there is no convenient different address for service, the applicant shall, after the beginning of the consultation period, supply that tenant with an absentee’s notice of decision, and a reply paid envelope for the return of the notice to the applicant by post, and where the tenant within the consultation period returns the notice by post or by delivering it to the applicant, he shall give it unopened to the teller.

(8) In this and the following regulation “an absentee’s notice of decision” means the notice for giving notice of a tenant’s wishes prescribed by regulation 3(f) (form 6) of the Housing (Change of Landlord) (Prescribed Forms) Regulations 1989.

Section 17Prescribed manner for tenants to indicate their wishes

(1) Subject to paragraph (2) below, a tenant giving notice of his wish to continue as the tenant of the landlord or to become the tenant of the applicant shall complete the decision notice and shall within the consultation period return such notice to the teller by one of the following methods –

(a) by post;

(b) by delivering the notice to the teller.

(2) Where a tenant has been supplied by the applicant with an absentee’s notice of decision in accordance with regulation 16(7) he shall give notice of his wish by completing that notice of decision and returning it by post or by delivering it to the applicant within the consultation period.

Section 18Covenants under section 103

(1) An applicant may in all circumstances inform the landlord that he wishes to enter into a prescribed covenant in accordance with section 103(1).

(2) The covenant prescribed for the purposes of section 103(1) is a covenant in writing by the applicant to pay the landlord an amount determined in accordance with paragraph (4) on the occasion of any prescribed disposal occurring not more than 15 years after the time of acquisition.

(3) A disposal of a dwelling-house to a tenant of that dwelling-house is a disposal prescribed for the purposes of section 103(1)(a).

(4) The amount referred to in paragraph (2) is 65 per cent., or such other percentage as may be agreed by the parties, of the total consideration for the disposal of the dwelling-house by the applicant.

Section 19Requirements of grant of fee simple and leases back

A grant of an estate in fee simple absolute in accordance with section 104(1)(a) or a grant of a lease in accordance with section 104(1)(b) shall comply with the requirements prescribed in Schedule 4.

Section 1

(1) The provisions of this Schedule apply where the applicant notifies the landlord in accordance with section 98(4) of any matters in the section 98(1) notice which he does not accept, and in this Schedule such a notifiction is referred to as a “section 98(4) notification”.

(2) The person agreed to by the parties or appointed by the Secretary of State in default of agreement to determine the dispute is referred to in this Schedule as “the adjudicator”.

Section 2

The applicant shall together with his section 98(4) notifiction send the landlord a statement of his grounds for disputing each matter which he does not accept.

Section 3

(1) The applicant shall, within 7 days of the parties agreeing to, or the Secretary of State’s appointing, an adjudicator, send him –

(a) a copy of the application under section 96(1);

(b) a copy of the notices served by the landlord under section 97(1) and 98(1);

(c) a copy of the section 98(4) notification;

(d) a copy of the statement referred to in paragraph 2 above; and

(e) any further information which is, in his opinion, relevant to determination of that dispute.

(2) Where the applicant sends the adjudicator information in accordance with paragraph (e) above, he shall at the same time send a copy of it to the landlord.

Section 4

(1) The adjudicator shall, on receipt of the copies referred to in paragraph 3 above, forthwith –

(a) notify the applicant and the landlord in writing that he has received them; and

(b) notify the landlord that its response to the applicant’s case is required within 21 days of the date of the adjudicator’s notification under this sub-paragraph.

(2) Where the applicant does not send all the copies referred to in paragraph 3 above to the adjudicator, the adjudicator shall notify the applicant that he is required to send them forthwith to both the adjudicator and the landlord.

Section 5

The landlord shall send copies of its written response to the applicant’s case within the period referred to in paragraph 4(1)(b) above both to the adjudicator and to the applicant, and, where the landlord does not accept the applicant’s case, as respects any mattter, the response shall include a statement of its grounds for disputing it.

Section 6

The applicant shall, within 7 days of the date of the landlord’s response, notify the adjudicator and the landlord in writing whether he accepts the landlord’s response as respects any matter, together with, where he does not, a statement of his grounds for disputing it.

Section 7

(1) Where –

(a) it appears to the adjudicator that it would be desirable to inspect all or any part of the property to which the acquisition relates; or

(b) either the applicant or the landlord requests such an inspection in writing;

the adjudicator shall notify the applicant and the landlord that at a specified date and time within 14 days of the applicant’s notification in accordance with paragraph 6 above or, where the period for that notification has ended and there has been no such notification, within 14 days of that period ending he shall inspect all or any part of the property to which the acquisition relates.

(2) The applicant and the landlord may accompany the adjudicator when he inspects property, but he is not bound to defer the inspection where the applicant or the landlord is not present at the time notified.

Section 8

Where it appears to the adjudicator that it would be desirable to hear the cases put by the landlord and applicant as respects any matter, he shall make arrangements for a hearing, and shall give the landlord and applicant not less than 7 days notice of the date, time and place of such a hearing.

Section 9

The adjudicator may at any time after service of the section 98(4) notification and before determining the dispute require either the applicant or the landlord to supply information which in his view it is desirable to take into account and which it is reasonable for that person to supply, and the person to whom that requirement is addressed shall supply that information within 7 days sending a copy at the same time to the other.

Section 10

The adjudicator shall, as soon as is reasonably practicable after conclusion of the proceedings provided for in this Schedule, notify the applicant and the landlord in writing of his determination of the matters referred to in the section 98(4) notification.

Section 11

(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2) below, the costs of the adjudicator in determining the dispute shall be borne in equal shares by the applicant and the landlord.

(2) Where it appears to the adjudicator that the applicant or the landlord has behaved unreasonably in presenting his or its case, by failing to comply with any of the time limits in this Schedule or otherwise, he may order the applicant and the landlord to bear such costs in whatever proportion seems to him appropriate.

(3) Any costs which are to be borne by one of the parties under this paragraph may be recovered from that party by the adjudicator as a simple contract debt.

Section 1

The provisions of this Schedule apply where the applicant notifies the landlord in accordance with section 99(5) of any matters which he does not accept, and in this Schedule such a notification is referred to as “a section 99(5) notification”.

Section 2

The applicant shall send to the landlord together with his section 99(5) notification a statement of his grounds for disputing each matter which he does not accept.

Section 3

(1) At the same time as the applicant sends his section 99(5) notification to the landlord, he shall send the district valuer –

(a) a copy of the application under section 96(1);

(b) a copy of the notices served by the landlord under sections 97(1), 98(1) and 99(1);

(c) a copy of the section 99(5) notification;

(d) a copy of the statement referred to in paragraph 2 above; and

(e) any further information which is, in his opinion, relevant to the determination of the dispute.

(2) Where the applicant sends the district valuer information in accordance with paragraph (e) above, he shall at the same time send a copy of it to the landlord.

Section 4

(1) The district valuer shall, on receipt of all the copies referred to in paragraph 3 above, forthwith –

(a) notify the applicant and the landlord in writing that he has received them; and

(b) notify the landlord that its response to the applicant’s case is required within 21 days of the date of his notification under this sub-paragraph.

(2) Where the applicant does not send all the copies referred to in paragraph 3 above to the district valuer, the district valuer shall notify the applicant that he is required to send them forthwith to both the district valuer and the landlord.

Section 5

(1) The landlord shall send copies of its written response to the applicant’s case within the period referred to in paragraph 4(1)(b) above both to the district valuer and to the applicant, and, where the landlord does not accept the applicant’s case as respects any matter, the response shall include a statement of its grounds for disputing it, and any modification which the landlord proposes to the price in the light of the applicant’s case.

(2) The landlord shall within that same period inform the district valuer and the applicant in writing of the extent to which the following factors (where relevant to the dispute) have been taken into account in reaching the proposed purchase price or disposal cost –

(a) any subsidence attributable to mining which affects or may affect the property to which the acquisition relates;

(b) the existence of any defects in the structure of any buildings included in the property to which the acquisition relates or any disrepair in such buildings, and the existence of any relevant designation under Part XVI of the 1985 Act;

(c) the nature and extent of any works reasonably necessary to put the buildings included in the acquisition into the state of repair required by the landlord’s repairing obligations;

(d) the number of properties which have become available for reletting to new tenants during each of the last four years;

(e) details of any costs and income associated with the property to which the acquisition relates not detailed elsewhere;

(f) information about sales to persons having the right to buy under Part V of the 1985 Act of dwelling-houses occurring within the property to which the acquisition relates and its locality during the period of four years preceding the relevant date, and details of any claims to exercise the right to buy which have not yet been completed.

Section 6

The applicant shall, within 14 days of the date of the landlord’s response, notify the district valuer and the landlord in writing whether he accepts the landlord’s response as respects any matter together with, where he does not, a statement of his grounds for disputing it.

Section 7

(1) Where –

(a) it appears to the district valuer that it would be desirable to inspect all or any part of the property to which the acquisition relates; or

(b) either the applicant or the landlord requests such an inspection in writing;

the district valuer shall notify the applicant and the landlord that at a specified date and time within 14 days of the applicant’s notification in accordance with paragraph 6 above or, where the period for that notification has ended and there has been no such notification, within 14 days of that period ending he shall inspect all or any part of the property to which the acquisition relates.

(2) The applicant and the landlord may accompany the district valuer when he inspects property, but he shall not be bound to defer the inspection where the applicant or the landlord is not present at the time notified.

Section 8

Where it appears to the district valuer that it would be desirable to hear the cases put by the landlord and applicant as respects any matter, he shall make arrangements for a hearing, and shall give the landlord and applicant not less than 7 days notice of the date, time and place of such a hearing.

Section 9

The district valuer may at any time after service of the section 99(5) notification and before determining the dispute require either the applicant or the landlord to supply information which in his view it is desirable to take into account and which it is reasonable for that person to supply, and the person to whom that requirement is addressed shall supply that information within 7 days sending a copy at the same time to the other.

Section 10

The district valuer shall, as soon as is reasonably practicable after conclusion of the proceedings provided for in this Schedule, notify the applicant and the landlord in writing of his determination of the matters referred to in the section 99(5) notification.

Section 11

(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (2) below, the costs of the district valuer in determining the dispute shall be borne in equal shares by the applicant and the landlord.

(2) Where it appears to the district valuer that the applicant or the landlord has behaved unreasonably in presenting his or its case, by failing to comply with any of the time limits in this Schedule or otherwise, he may order the applicant and the landlord to bear such costs in whatever proportion seems to him appropriate.

(3) Any costs which are to be borne by one of the parties under this paragraph may be recovered from that party by the district valuer as a simple contract debt.

Section 1

The information served in accordance with regulation 16(1) –

(a) shall be written in clear and straightforward language;

(b) where there is a significant foreseeable demand from tenants by whom written English is unlikely to be readily comprehended, shall include for those tenants material in alternative language or medium, including, where appropriate, braille and audio tape recording; and

(c) without prejudice to paragraph (b) above, where served in Wales, may be in English and Welsh.

Section 2

The information shall explain –

(a) that the information is served in accordance with regulations prescribed under section 102(1);

(b) that it is served by the applicant and its purpose is to enable the tenant to decide whether he wishes to continue as a tenant of the landlord or to become a tenant of the applicant;

(c) that the tenant may serve a notice of his wishes and that the manner of voting will be explained in information which is being circulated by a teller together with a form of notice for the tenant to express his wishes;

(d) the role of the teller in general terms;

(e) that joint tenants will each receive a copy of the items supplied by him but one form only for giving notice of their wishes;

(f) the effect of section 103(6) on any offer to a tenant relating to the terms on which, after the acquisition, he is to occupy a dwelling-house occupied by him on the relevant date;

(g) the circumstances in which the transfer may proceed;

(h) the circumstances in which the tenant will become a tenant of the applicant;

(j) the effect on –

(i) a secure tenant,

(ii) a tenant under a long tenancy, and

(iii) a business tenant,

of becoming a tenant of the applicant;

(k) the circumstances in which a tenant of the applicant has the right to refer proposals for a rent increase to a rent assessment committee to determine rent in accordance with section 17;

(l) an explanation of his rights, if he becomes a tenant of the applicant, under sections 18 to 30 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 and section 42 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 ;

(m) that the information served by the teller engaged by him will inform each tenant of the nature of his tenancy;

(n) the applicant’s policy for determining priority as between people seeking tenancies in the allocation of his housing accommodation, including means of taking account of special difficulties as respects housing experienced by particular groups including elderly people, people from ethnic minorities, people suffering domestic violence, people suffering from physical or mental disability and those caring for people suffering such disability, and any arrangements it will maintain to facilitate the move by his tenants to other accommodation;

(o) the applicant’s proposals (if any) for day to day management including numbers, location and responsibilities of management staff.

Section 3

The information shall include a statement as to what the applicant is offering or has offered to secure tenants (and if he is making or has made no such offer, that no such offer is made) in respect of the following matters –

(a) the amount of rent and the amount of any service charge which will be payable under the proposed tenancy and the procedure for reviewing such amounts and the frequency of such review and any limitation on the level of increases in rent and service charges;

(b) the tenant’s entitlement to allow persons to reside in the dwelling-house as lodgers and any entitlement to sublet or part with possession of part of the dwelling-house;

(c) the tenant’s entitlement to carry out works of improvement;

(d) the arrangements which the applicant will maintain to ensure that his tenants are informed of those of his proposals which are likely to affect them and that the tenants are able to make their views known to the applicant before he makes decisions based on those proposals;

(e) the respective obligations of the applicant and the tenant under the proposed tenancy as to repair of the dwelling-house and any common parts included in the acquisition (including the making good of structural defects);

(f) any works of repair (including the making good of structural defects) which the applicant proposes to carry out including the time within which they are to be completed;

(g) the arrangements which the applicant will maintain for assessing the need for works of maintenance and repair (including the frequency of visits for such assessment) and for enabling tenants to notify the applicant of the need for such works;

(h) the time within which the applicant undertakes to carry out emergency works and other works;

(j) the tenant’s entitlement under the terms of the tenancy to assign his tenancy to a tenant who assigns his tenancy to the first mentioned tenant;

(k) any arrangements which the applicant will make as to arbitration to determine any dispute arising under the tenancy, or between tenants arising from their occupation of property acquired under Part IV of the Act;

and that statement should include information as to whether the applicant’s consent is to be required for any purpose, and the circumstance in which such consent is to be withheld, and shall say how, if at all, the terms offered differ from the tenant’s existing secure tenancy.

Section 4

The information shall include –

(a) an address and telephone number at which the tenant may seek further information and assistance from the applicant;

(b) a statement that the Corporation may provide information, advice and assistance to tenants of landlords under section 106.

Section 1Interpretation

In this Schedule –

“the 1925 Act ” means the Law of Property Act 1925 ;

“grant” means the grant of an estate in fee simple absolute in accordance with section 104(1)(a) by the public sector landlord to the applicant;

“lease” means the grant of a lease in accordance with section 104(1)(b) by the applicant to the public sector landlord;

“grantor” means the person or body who makes the grant or grants the lease; and

“grantee” means the person or body to whom the grant is made or the lease granted;

“public sector landlord” means the landlord as defined in these Regulations;

“relevant secure tenancy” means the secure tenancy of the flat in question in favour of the tenant who immediately prior to completion of the grant had a secure tenancy of that flat;

“right to buy lease” means a lease granted by the public sector landlord under Part V of the 1985 Act;

“tenancy subsisting at the time of acquisition” includes a relevant secure tenancy.

Section 2Grants and leases – general

The grant or lease shall not exclude or restrict the general words implied under section 62 of the 1925 Act unless:

(a) in the case of a grant, the exclusion or restriction is made for the purposes of reserving a right or interest to be retained by the public sector landlord by or in accordance with these Regulations or of preserving or recognising an existing right or interest of another person, or

(b) in the case of a lease, the public sector landlord consents or the exclusion or restriction is made for the purpose of preserving or recognising an existing right or interest of another person, or relates to a right or interest required by or in accordance with these Regulations to be retained by the applicant.

Section 3Rights of support, passage of water etc.

(1) The grant or lease shall have the effect stated in sub-paragraph (2) as regards –

(a) rights of support for a building or part of a building;

(b) rights to the access of light and air to a building or part of a building;

(c) rights to the passage of water or of gas or other piped fuel, or to the drainage or disposal of water, sewage, smoke of fumes, or to the use or maintenance of pipes or other installations for such passsage, drainage or disposal;

(d) rights to the use or maintenance of cables or other installations for the supply of electricity, for the telephone or for the receipt directly or by landline of visual or other wireless transmissions.

(2) The effect is –

(a) to grant with the property which is the subject of the grant or lease all such easements and rights over other property as existed at the time of acquisition and such further easements and rights (if any) as are necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the property (in either case so far as the grantor is capable of granting them);

(b) to make such property subject to such easements and rights for the benefit of other property to which it was subject at the time of acquisition and to such further easements and rights (if any) as are necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of other property, being property in which at the time of acquisition the grantor has an interest, (in either case so far as the same are capable of existing in law).

(3) This paragraph –

(a) does not restrict any wider operation which the grant or lease may have apart from this paragraph; but

(b) is subject to any provision to the contrary that may be included in the grant pursuant to paragraph 11 of this Schedule or in the lease pursuant to paragraph 14 of this Schedule.

Section 4Rights of way

(1) The grant or lease shall include –

(a) such provisions (if any) as the grantee may require for the purpose of securing to him rights of way over other property so far as the grantor is capable of granting them, being rights of way that are necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of the property which is the subject of the grant or lease; and

(b) such provision (if any) as the grantor may require for the purpose of making the property to be granted or leased subject to rights of way necessary for the reasonable enjoyment of other property, being property in which at the time of acquisition the grantor has an interest, or to rights of way granted or agreed to be granted before the relevant date by the grantor or by any predecessor in title of the grantor.

(2) This paragraph –

(a) does not restrict any wider operation which the grant or lease may have apart from this paragraph; but

(b) is subject to any provision to the contrary that may be included in the grant pursuant to paragraph 11 of this Schedule or in the lease pursuant to paragraph 14 of this Schedule.

Section 5Covenants and conditions

The grant or lease shall include such provisions (if any) as the grantor may require to secure that the grantee is bound by, or to indemnify the grantor against breaches of –

(a) restrictive convenants (that is to say, covenants or agreements restrictive of the use of any land or premises) affecting the property to be granted or leased and enforceable for the benefit of other property;

(b) any other covenants affecting the property to be granted or leased.

71 sections

Cite this legislation

The Housing (Change of Landlord) Regulations 1989 (legislation.gov.uk, OGL v3.0). Retrieved via LawPlayer, https://lawplayer.com/uk/act/uksi-1989-367

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

OGL-3

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