The business models of criminal landlords explained – Part 4
This short series is a guide to those landlords and professionals working in the PRS who might find it difficult to get their head around the vastly different way that the criminals view the market.
This is certainly the case in the four London boroughs that my outfit ‘Safer Renting’ operate in which is echoed by my experiences talking to officers in councils across Britain as a trainer.
Lesson #4: dodgy contracts and misdirection
Let’s be clear, the worst of the worst don’t even bother with contracts at all. Not a problem in terms of housing law because a principle called ‘Parol’ kicks in, where you don’t need a written contract to create a tenancy if the period of the tenancy is for less than three years.
Street v. Mountford (1985) also helps by telling us that there are three hallmarks of a tenancy:-
- Rent or service
- For a clear term
- Exclusive possession
So if all three are in place there will generally be a tenancy in force (there are exceptions). But tenants aren’t lawyers, or even housing advisers. Stop anyone in the street and ask them the difference between a tenancy and a licence and you’ll get a blank stare.
Landlords and agents similarly aren’t lawyers but there is a big difference between issuing an occupier with a licence agreement, simply because you don’t know the legal niceties and the array of tactics used by some to expressly deceive the occupant into thinking they have less legal rights than they do.
More confusion
A task made even easier if that occupier is from abroad, with no knowledge of the UK renting law, or a young person in their first rental property, perhaps since leaving care. The gold standard cash crop for criminal landlords and agents that I explained in lesson 1.
Perhaps the most common thing we see in the rogue landlord advice and enforcement world is simply the fake ‘Licence agreement’ and fake Lodger agreement.
The general aim of such contracts is:-
- To avoid deposit protection (only required for assured shorthold tenancies)
- To make it appear that the landlord doesn’t have to get a court order to evict (another myth as many licensees still need a court order first)
- To avoid repairing issues
Fake license prosecution
In 2017 Islington Council successfully prosecuted Green Live Estates, who were ordered to pay around £11,000 for issuing just two licence agreements that should have been tenancies. But these are far more routinely issued than that.
Trouble is, as I said in lesson 3, get too close to the perpetrator agent and they just shut down before you can recoup the money, only to open up again under a different name a few months later.
A person issued a lodger agreement might well google advice on lodgers and find out that they have little protection from eviction but would understandably not grasp the important points that actually create a lodger arrangement in the first place, which may not be the case for them.
I doubt the dodgy agent or landlord understands these points either but its enough to just issue a document that misleads.
Other areas of lettings are still affected
I have written elsewhere on this blog about the growing trend for fake holiday let agreements and commercial contracts issued to residential occupiers.
A holiday let must be being used for that purpose and a commercial let must be a place where an occupier is conducting a commercial concern and in many cases, a property can still be a residence even if it is being used as a business at the same time.
The deception involved in holiday lets is to avoid deposit protection and possession orders and in commercial leases, to avoid residential property licensing schemes.
My experience
Working in rogue landlord/agent land I would say that the vast majority of contracts you are shown aren’t worth the paper they are written on and even if they are actually assured shorthold tenancies the clauses added in are often completely unenforceable.
Spurious penalties being added for late rent payments or as I recently saw a £35 penalty should the agent visit the property to talk to the tenant. I’ve seen blanket fees of £20 per phone call, and strange demands that all housemates be present for a visit by a repairman.
It has to be said that they are ably assisted in this deceitful endeavour by the acceptance of occupants who don’t scrutinise the contract, even at a most basic level. The ‘Nil’ deposit entry I mentioned in lesson 2 being just one example, often there is the name of a different landlord or agent to one the one they know.
On a recent visit to a shared house where I was shown six different contracts, nobody had actually spotted that each contract detailed a different agent, even though they were all paying the same landlord (see lesson 3 on aliases and obfuscation).
It’s all in the contract…or maybe it isn’t
Sometimes a spurious contract is easy to spot, simply because there isn’t much to it. There is a commonly used AST that we see regularly consisting of one side of A4 but just as common is the dodgy agreement that runs to 12 pages and is full of legal jargon. It is only upon close scrutiny you can identify all kinds of weird nonsense.
Clauses such as:-
“Tenants must not allow entry to officers of the council”
or
“This contract in no way creates an assured shorthold tenancy”,
or my particular favourite
“Tenants must not hang around causing problems”
Let’s face it, contracts are quite boring things and a 12-page one will end up swiftly located in the back of the kitchen drawer without so much as a glance.
Back in the 1950s, Lord Denning proposed what he called the “Red Hand Rule”, which is where some seemingly innocuous clause should be written in red and have a big red hand pointing to it, its importance being more than many would spot.
Read the other posts in this series
- 1 How tenants are a crop for criminal landlords to harvest
- 2 Why the real rogue landlords are all about the money
- 3 Aliases and fake companies in the rogue landlord world
- 4 How criminal landlords use dodgy contracts and misdirection
- 5 The criminal business model of ‘Rent to Rent’
- 6 Accommodation models for criminal landlords
- 7 Tackling the Problem of Criminal Landlords
Do dodgy landlords and agents actually know what documents they should and should not be issuing? Or do they just write something and call it a Tenancy Agreement?
Do they know which laws they are breaking and deliberately break them. Or do they not know and not care?
Variations of all of that Smithy.
Simply not knowing is very common among normal landlords but My team work with the bottom feeder criminals who dont care one way or the other and those with deliberate criminal intent, issuing fake holiday let contracts, club memberships, etc and where you see the clauses spelling out that the agreement doesnt create a tenancy and prohibiting the occupants from allowing access to local authority officers. You dont do things like that by accident.
The law what is complicating matters. Had it been a good tenant us landlords would never ask them to leave. You should allow free market to dictate relationships instead of passing all these laws and involving yourselves but then you would be out of a job…. not?
Lawyers are the people who learn how the laws work so we can help people. It’s MPs who actually pass them.
But can you imagine the chaos which would result if there was no law? No independent place where you could go to resolve disputes. No laws which protect consumers from the big companies? No laws which punish people for wrongdoing?
Law and the legal system is the basis of a civilised society. Granted not all laws are well drafted but its better than nothing. Otherwise, you are left with ‘might is right’.
A common misdirection is for the contract to be in the name of “The Landlord’s Agent” without naming the superior LL/owner at all. The “agent” has a lease agreement so is in fact the LL, but could presumably deny all knowledge of such if it suited, seeing as short leases don’t need to be lodged with Land Registry.
Also common is to grant actual exclusive possession of a particular (lockable) room in an HMO but not to specify the room on the contract.
I’m not entirely sure what either of these sleights of hand are meant to achieve, other than to confuse an ill-informed tenant. Surely they could back-fire in court?
Off topic – what is it with websites such as yours falling prey to this really awful fashion for illegible low-contrast light grey fonts (in this case fortunately only here in the comments reply box.)?
Haha on that last point you’ll have to take that up with Tessa I’m afraid. Its her blog, I just guest.
Sleights of hand, aliases, fake companies are the bog standard deal but to be honest it doesnt so much confuse the tenant as set in place innumerable factors that block enforcement. You cant get a judge to make any sort of order unless you can prove to the court’s satisfaction that everyone is who they say they are and the property in question is exactly what was is on the paperwork.
We once took action against a John Smith (not real name) and he evaded prosecution by simply telling the court that whilst he was indeed John Smith, he wasnt THAT John Smith. The courts believed him