The National Restaurant Association reports that there are approximately 960,000 restaurants in the United States, which will generate more than $604 billion in sales in 2011. For every dollar spent on food, 49 cents of it will be spent in a...
Disasters have always affected commercial owners who must deal with property damage caused by snowstorms, hurricanes, fires, and floods. Passing disaster-related expenses through to tenants in common area maintenance (CAM) charges can lower your repair bills and boost your bottom line after your...
Facts: An employee of an office building tenant suffered injuries after she tripped and fell on a raised edge of the metal molding surrounding a trapdoor on the floor of the tenant's pantry room. The purpose of the trapdoor was to access a crawl space approximately three feet high...
Facts: A career center tenant signed a lease with the owner of an office building to rent space in four office suites for an initial term of 124 months. The building was sold, and the tenant and new owner extended the lease. The owner later claimed that the tenant had defaulted on its...
High-risk tenants, such as liquor and gun stores, pose potential dangers that typical retail businesses don't. But because alcohol and guns are available at limited locations, these high-risk tenants have a captive audience of customers that create a steady income stream, lessening the...
Although the commercial real estate market is steadily improving, tenants still are negotiating aggressively for lease terms that they otherwise wouldn't have been able to get before the downturn. During that time, most national tenants—whether or not they were struggling—asked...
If you've signed a “governing document” with the owner of an adjoining shopping center or the tenant of a freestanding building at your center, you've agreed to be subject to certain restrictions. A governing document—which can be an operation and easement agreement (...
You signed a lease with a tenant who agreed to use its space for a specific purpose. When you find out that the tenant sublet the space, and that the subtenant is using it for a completely different purpose than you and the tenant had agreed upon, you realize that your lease's use clause...
Commercial owners have much to learn from the case law issued by U.S. federal and state courts over the past year. The biggest challenge for owners seems to be drafting clear lease language, which can protect them from lawsuits filed by tenants arguing that they have rights the owner didn't...
Renting to a tenant on a percentage rent basis can be rewarding if the tenant operates a profitable business—and accurately reports its gross sales. The higher the profit, the higher the amount you can collect from the tenant. But if the tenant underreports its sales, you'll get paid...
If one of your tenants has defaulted on its lease or damaged its space, you know the importance of having both a security deposit amount large enough to cover expensive problems and a clause in the lease that will protect you from having to spend your own money rectifying them. But be...
All office building and shopping center leases should have the same basic provisions that address the rules and regulations for how the property will operate, such as rent collection, allocation of CAM costs, exclusives and co-tenancy rights, operating hours, and security measures. But owners...