Sorry, comments are closed for this post.
The Landlord Law Newsletter, For landlords and letting agents, separate tenants version available
Join Ben and Tessa's Front Liner newsletter, for social housing workers
[Ben Reeve Lewis is remembering dancing days of Yore...] My beloved Frazzy is a teacher of Salsa and… [more]
Landlords need to be constantly vigilant as criminals are out there and targeting properties like y… [more]
If a property is due to be demolished before the end of the fixed term, where does that leave the te… [more]
Break clauses can be difficult to interpret and this is an example of a particularly confusing one. … [more]
This week on School for Landlords I look at guarantee forms, when you should use them and how they w… [more]
Here is a question to the blog clinic from Jay who is a landlord: Hi I protected the deposit within … [more]
Here is a question to the blog clinic from Andrew who is a tenant: I have, today, received an email … [more]
[In view of the snow, Ben Reeve Lewis has abandoned his Hawaiian shirt for a pair of slippers...… [more]
Powered by Headway, the drag and drop WordPress theme
Go To TopAdministration LoginCopyright © 2012 The Landlord Law Blog
The Landlord Law Blog from Tessa Shepperson
Tessa is an English solicitor who specialises in residential landlord and tenant law.
Tessa's legal services are provided via her online service Landlord Law. This service is provided as part of Tessa's legal practice TJ Shepperson, which is regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority No 78852.
Note that any readers wishing to instruct Tessa professionally to do legal work, should do this via the Landlord Law service. Tessa's one-to-one legal work is now limited to the fixed fee services provided exclusively to Landlord Law annual members, plus Tessa also has a separate Lodger Landlord web-site with guidance for people taking in lodgers.
Tessa is a members of the Norfolk Independent Law Network, consisting of sole practitioner solicitors in Norfolk. She is also a director of Your Law Store
The purpose of this blog is to provide information, comment and discussion. Although Tessa, or guest bloggers, may from time to time, give helpful comments to readers' questions, these can only be based on the information given by the reader in his or her comment, which may not contain all material facts. Any comments or suggestions provided by Tessa or any guest bloggers should not therefore be relied upon as a substitute for legal advice from a qualified lawyer regarding any actual legal issue or dispute.
Nothing on this website should be construed as legal advice or perceived as creating a solicitor-client relationship.
Please note that any opinion expressed by a guest blogger is his or hers alone, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Tessa Shepperson, or the other writers on this blog.
This blog was created by Gill Bishop using the Headway theme.
Helpful links from the Landlord Law site include the Which Tenancy Agreement Guide and the Landlords Tips and Tenants Tips
Empty homes regulations – threat or blessing?
Local Authorities are shortly to get new powers to take over empty properties and rent them out to homeless families. Some press reports have greeted this with outrage, as the regulations apparently state that properties in good condition which have only been lying empty for six months can be repossessed.
For example a report in the Telegraph on 17 June points out that bereaved families may be at risk if family homes are not sold within six months, which may be a bit difficult as it can sometimes take much longer than this to sort out probate and the administration of a deceased persons estate. A more alarmist report in the Daily Mail has the headline “Homes of the dead to be seized by the state”. Tory housing spokesman Michael Gove is even claiming (according to the Mail) that it could be “a stealthy new form of inheritance tax”.
However in fact it is most unlikely that the bereaved will visit their family home seven months after father died, to find the local authority has broken in and let it to homeless families – a scenario implied by the various reports in the press. Indeed the Telegraph report itself states towards the bottom “A spokesman for Ms Kelly denied that the powers would be used to seize homes inherited by relatives. If the issue was not resolved in discussion with the council, he said, it would go to a tribunal”.
But is the local authority taking over a property really such a bad thing for property owners? For example in Tower Hamlets, they are handing out grants in an effort to bring substandard empty properties back into use. In Walthamstow some flats have already been offered to tenants on the Councils waiting list after refurbishment funded largely by the authority.
Some people I have spoken to consider that the new rules will not be much used, as Local Authorities will not want the expense and hassle of taking over and running someone else’s property. Clearly though not all Local Authorities will think this way, as can be seen from another report from Swindon, Wiltshire.
We shall have to wait and see whether the regulations turn out to be a threat to bereaved families or a blessing to impecunious property owners.
Related posts:
Back to top