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Legal documents for business

P125L - Serviced Office Agreement

Description and usage

Serviced Office Agreement

This is an agreement suitable for use by the owner of a building who provides suites of furnished and equipped offices for occupation on a short term basis.


What's in it? - Read explanatory notes

 

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Serviced Office Agreement

£37.00 + VAT

Your purchase will be available for online download from the 'My Contracts' area immediately after you have paid.


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You will find this contract in:

Full Catalogue
Commercial Contracts
Property Contracts

 

You could also consider these related contracts:

P101LLicence to Occupy Offices
P109LRent Deposit Agreement
P110LHeads of Terms for Commercial Letting
P111LUnderlease of Office Building
P123LLicence to Share Occupation of Business Premises


What's in it?

Whilst for obvious reasons we can't show you the actual item before you purchase it, we can do the next best thing. We show you the explanatory notes that go with each contract and, in the case of books and forms, a brief summary. These will give you a good idea of the content of the document before you buy it. 

Explanatory Notes

Serviced Office Agreement


This document is a form of agreement for short-term occupation of accommodation which is fully equipped by the owner and ready for use.  Such arrangements are essentially temporary and a licence rather than a tenancy will usually be appropriate.

The characteristic of a licence is that it does not grant the occupier exclusive possession in contrast to a lease which does, although there have been exceptions.   This Licence expressly declares that the Licensee does not have exclusive possession.

As a general rule:

• the grant of exclusive possession,
• for a term,
• at a rent,

will create a tenancy rather than a licence.

The differences between a lease and a licence matter a great deal. 

In relation to business tenancies, leases are generally protected by Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.  This means that when the contractual term of the business lease comes to an end, the tenant’s right to occupy the premises continues and (subject to other requirements in the 1954 Act), a landlord would not be able to recover possession of the business premises unless a notice procedure has been complied with and one or more of a limited number of grounds of possession has been established.
A licence, on the other hand, does not give any protection to the licensee: you have no right to renew a licence once the landlord asks you to leave.

Our comments on the specific clauses of the agreement are set out below.

Date and Parties

For you to complete.

1. Definitions

 These need to be completed according to the particular circumstances of your contract.

2. The Licence

 This Clause sets out the purpose of the contract.  It recites that the Licence does not give the Licensee exclusive possession of the premises and that the Licensor is entitled to enter and use the premises at any time.

 
3. Licensee’s undertakings

 These Clauses set out the Licensee’s obligations to pay the licence fee and a deposit to cover breakages and damage.  It also sets out the Licensee’s obligations regarding his use and occupation of the premises.

4. Licensor’s obligations

 This Clause recites the obligations of the Licensor to provide the facilities and services unless prevented by matters beyond his control

5. Termination

 This Clause allows the Licensor to terminate the agreement in certain circumstances.

6. Notices

 This document includes a short form notice clause.  Notices must be in writing and do not include fax or e-mail.

7. Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999

 This Clause sets out that the provisions of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 will not apply to this Licence. (This Act came into force on 11 May 2000 and applies to contracts entered into on or after that date.  It allows the parties to a contract to confer rights on third parties so that a third party may enforce the contract as if he were a party to it).

The Schedule summarises the rights being granted to the Licensee.  You will need to vary this depending on the circumstances.  As Licensor, you may also want to provide for some services at an extra charge – e.g. use of photocopier, or use of a conference room etc. 
 
 

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