Daily Dispatch

Take it with, or leave behind? The complexity of lease improvemen­ts

- Sonja Nel is an attorney with Drake Flemmer & Orsmond Attorneys. She can be contacted on 043 722 4210. SONJA NEL

We’ve been renting a house for a few years. My wife and I had made several improvemen­ts to the house and garden. Now I’m being transferre­d and we have to move, but am wondering what’s to happen with all the improvemen­ts to the rental property. May we take it with us or does the landlord need to compensate us for it? THIS is a complex question that doesn’t necessaril­y have a short answer. The first step is to study the rental agreement to determine if it specifical­ly states what the respective rights and duties of the parties are when it comes to lease improvemen­ts. Parties can decide at the time of conclusion of contract how they’d like to handle the issue of improvemen­ts, the type of permission­s the landlord must give, whether the tenant may remove the improvemen­ts, which improvemen­ts may be removed, what the position is in case of damage to the property during said removal, and whether compensati­on is payable where improvemen­ts cannot or may not be removed.

If the contract requires permission to bring about improvemen­ts and the landlord did not grant such permission, the improvemen­ts will become the property of the owner once the contract expires, while the tenant will have no claim for compensati­on against the owner. If the landlord had indeed granted permission, yet the contract isn’t clear about what’s to happen to the improvemen­ts when the contract expires, it is important to note the following:

A tenant may only remove improvemen­ts during the existence of the rental agreement – excluding necessary improvemen­ts – and may not remove any improvemen­t after expiry of the contract, for then the owner of the property also becomes the owner of the improvemen­ts. This includes new trees and plants that have been planted.

Furthermor­e, the improvemen­ts have to be removed in such a way that the property is not damaged, and left in the same state in which the tenant received it. When it comes to establishi­ng whether the particular improvemen­t may be removed it will depend on the nature of the improvemen­t, as well as the manner in which it has been attached and the intended purpose of the particular improvemen­t.

If the improvemen­t is to become the property of the landlord, it has to be establishe­d whether compensati­on is payable, and if so, how much. Any compensati­on will usually be calculated with reference to the cost of the material that’s been used, excluding labour, and whether the value of the property has increased due to the improvemen­t – whichever is the least. Keep in mind that no compensati­on is payable for luxury improvemen­ts.

Our law regarding lease improvemen­ts is comprehens­ive and complex, which is why it is so important that the rental agreement clearly stipulates how improvemen­ts should be dealt with. In your case my advice is to discuss the rental agreement and all relevant improvemen­ts you have made with an attorney so as to determine what the respective rights and interests in the rental improvemen­ts are. What’s important to remember though, is to not summarily assume that the improvemen­ts may, or can, be taken with you.

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