Leases
-
The case which created a new form of tenancy: the so-called contractual, non-proprietary lease.
-
A case in which the court confirmed that retention of keys to a property does not automatically destroy exclusive possession but the court is alive to the possibility of shams.
-
The case which confirmed that the provision of services to an occupier will prevent a finding of exclusive possession.
-
The Supreme Court case in which the court engaged in a sustained assault upon the certainty of term requirement though, ultimately, confirmed its continued application.
-
The case which in which Lord Templeman laid down the three essential elements of a lease.
-
Authority for the proposition that whether shared occupation gives rise to separate licence agreements or a single, joint tenancy is to be determined by a close examination of the facts of each individual case.