(Published
in the Idaho Business Review, December 2009)
Thinking of
relocating your business?Have you found
a great new location and you are anxious to make a deal on a lease?Before you start packing up, take a moment to
image this scenario.After more effort
than you could have ever imagined at the start of the process, you have signed
the lease and moved your business into a new space.
Given the current
economic conditions you are pleased by the deal that you negotiated, but the
relocation of your business was still expensive.Upgraded tenant improvements, moving
expenses, lost productivity - all these factors have taken their toll on you
and your business in terms of time, money and energy.You take some comfort
in the fact that you won't have to move again for the next ten years.But, how sure are you about that?
Unfortunately, many
tenants fail to obtain a very important agreement that will protect the
tenant's lease if the tenant's landlord gets into financial trouble - a
non-disturbance and attornment agreement (frequently referred to as an
"NDA").Generally, this is an agreement
entered into with the project's lender, which provides that the lender will
honor the tenant's lease in the event the lender forecloses its deed of trust or
mortgage.This is the "non-disturbance"
part of the agreement.In return, the
tenant agrees to accept the lender as the tenant's new landlord in the event of
foreclosure, and to then pay rent directly to the lender.This is the "attornment" part of the
agreement.
In the absence of a
non-disturbance and attornment agreement, the law does not require the lender
to honor the tenant's lease in the event the lender forecloses.This is because the lender's deed of trust or
mortgage existed prior to the tenant's lease, and when the lender forecloses,
all junior interests in the real property against which the lender has recorded
its deed of trust or mortgage, including the tenant's lease, are eliminated.
A similar situation
occurs when the project is located on real property that is subject to a
long-term ground lease.If the
underlying ground lease is terminated, the tenant's lease also terminates,
unless the tenant has entered into a non-disturbance and attornment agreement
with the ground landlord.
After a foreclosure
or ground lease termination occurs, the lender or ground landlord might offer
the tenant a new lease, and allow the tenant to stay in its leased space on the
same terms that had been in the now-eliminated lease.Alternatively, in the absence of a
non-disturbance and attornment agreement, the lender or ground landlord could
demand more rent or decide to force the tenant to leave (even if the tenant's
lease term has not yet expired) if the lender or ground landlord has other
plans for the leased space.
Without the
protections provided to a tenant by a non-disturbance and attornment agreement,
the rent escalation and eviction types of decisions are entirely within the
control of the lender or ground landlord, who the tenant can expect to act for
its own advantage, not for the tenant's advantage.
Therefore, if you are
leasing space - whether it be office, retail, warehouse, or industrial space -
always require that your landlord deliver to you a non-disturbance and
attornment agreement that has been executed by the project's lender (or by the
ground landlord, as the case may be).
To avoid as much risk
as you can, you should negotiate with your landlord so that the non-disturbance
and attornment agreement is delivered to you at the earliest date possible.
In addition, make it
a condition of your new lease that you be entitled to terminate the lease if
the non-disturbance and attornment agreement is not executed and delivered
within a timeframe that is acceptable to you - which should be before your
relocation schedule dictates that you start to spend significant time, money
and energy on tenant improvements and moving expenses, and before you terminate
the lease on the space you presently occupy from which you desire to relocate.
Kimbal Gowland is a partner with the
law firm Meuleman Mollerup LLP,
representing clients with legal concerns in real property matters including
purchases, sales, leasing, lending, title and development issues, general
business matters, and other commercial matters.He can be contacted at 208.342.6066 or by email at
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.More information is available online at www.lawidaho.com.
For more information contact us at: Meuleman Mollerup LLP
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