Tenancy Agreement The Landlord shall provide the Agent with any requirements for return and repossession of the Property at the earliest opportunity. Landlords should be aware that any tenancy agreement entered into on the Landlord's behalf is a binding legal agreement for the term agreed. Details of any tenancy agreement being entered into will be communicated to the Landlord as soon as possible. Landlords should be aware that the legal minimum notice period to tenants under assured tenancies is generally two months (should the contract allow for early termination) and this needs to be given even in the case of a fixed term tenancy which is due to expire.
ENDING THE TENANCY 1) The tenant may end a monthly, weekly or other periodic tenancy by giving the landlord at least one month's written notice. A notice given the day before the rent is due in a given month ends the tenancy at the end of the following month. [For example, if the tenant wants to move at the end of May, the tenant must make sure the landlord receives written notice on or before April 30th.] 2) This notice must be in writing and must a) include the address of the rental unit, b) include the date the tenancy is to end, c) be signed and dated by the tenant, and d) include the specific grounds for ending the tenancy, if the tenant is ending a tenancy because the landlord has breached a material term of the tenancy. 3) If this is a fixed term tenancy and the agreement does not require the tenant to vacate at the end of the tenancy, the agreement is renewed as a monthly tenancy on the same terms until the tenant gives notice to end a tenancy as required under the Residential Tenancy Act. 4) The landlord may end the tenancy only for the reasons and only in the manner set out in the Residential Tenancy Act and the landlord must use the approved notice to end a tenancy form available from the Residential Tenancy Branch. 5) The landlord and tenant may mutually agree in writing to end this tenancy agreement at any time. 6) The tenant must vacate the residential property by 1 p.m. on the day the tenancy ends, unless the landlord and tenant otherwise agree.
Occupancy After Foreclosure Any sale of the Mortgaged Property or any part thereof will divest all right, title and interest of Mortgagor in and to the property sold. Subject to applicable law, any purchaser at a foreclosure sale will receive immediate possession of the property purchased. If Mortgagor retains possession of such property or any part thereof subsequent to such sale, Mortgagor will be considered a tenant at sufferance of the purchaser, and will, if Mortgagor remains in possession after demand to remove, be subject to eviction and removal, forcible or otherwise, with or without process of law.
Landlord’s Obligation (a) If the Premises or the Common Area or any portion thereof (whether or not the Premises are affected) are damaged by fire or other casualty (“Casualty”) and Tenant shall be restoring the same in accordance with Section 19.3, Landlord shall make available to Tenant any insurance proceeds payable on account of such Casualty at such time and in accordance with such procedures as are provided in any Leasehold Mortgage (or if there shall be no Leasehold Mortgage, in accordance with such procedures as Landlord shall reasonably determine are customary for leasehold mortgages) and in compliance with the Ground Lease, which proceeds shall be used by Tenant only to fulfill restoration obligations hereunder and for no other purpose. (b) If all or any part of the Premises shall be rendered Untenantable by reason of a Casualty, the Base Rent and the Additional Rent shall be abated in the proportion that the Untenantable area of the Premises bears to the total area of the Premises, for the period from the date of the Casualty to the earlier of (i) the date the Premises is no longer Untenantable (provided that, if the Premises would no longer have been Untenantable at an earlier date but for Tenant having failed diligently to prosecute repairs or restoration required of Tenant under this Lease, then the Premises shall be deemed to no longer be Untenantable on such earlier date and the abatement shall cease) or (ii) the date Tenant or any subtenant reoccupies any Untenantable portion of the Premises for the ordinary conduct of business (in which case the Base Rent and the Additional Rent allocable to such reoccupied portion shall be payable by Tenant from the date of such occupancy). Pending resolution of any dispute with respect to the period or amount of such abatement, Tenant shall pay Rent in accordance with Landlord’s determination. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if by reason of any act or omission by Tenant, any subtenant or any of their respective partners, directors, officers, servants, employees, agents or contractors, Landlord or any Leasehold Mortgagee shall be unable to collect all of the insurance proceeds (including, without limitation, rent insurance proceeds) applicable to the Casualty, then, without prejudice to any other remedies which may be available against Tenant, there shall be no abatement of Rent. (c) Landlord shall not be liable for any inconvenience or annoyance to Tenant or injury to the business of Tenant resulting in any way from such damage by Casualty or the repair thereof. Landlord shall not be obligated to carry insurance of any kind on Tenant’s Property or any Alterations or any other improvements made at Tenant’s sole cost and expense, and Landlord shall not be obligated to repair any damage thereto or replace the same.
Tenant's Obligation Tenant shall, at all times during the Leased Term and at its sole cost and expense, regularly clean and continuously keep and maintain in good order, condition and repair the Leased Premises and every part thereof and all appurtenances thereto, including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, (i) all interior walls, floors and ceilings, (ii) all windows, doors and skylights, (iii) all electrical wiring, conduits, connectors and fixtures, (iv) all plumbing, pipes, sinks, toilets, faucets and drains, (v) all lighting fixtures, bulbs and lamps, (vi) all heating, ventilating and air conditioning equipment located within the Leased Premises or located outside the Leased Premises (e.g. rooftop compressors) and serving the Leased Premises (other tan Common HVAC as defined in Subparagraph B below), and all entranceways to the Leased Premises. Tenant, if requested to do so by Landlord, shall have at Tenant’s sole cost and expense, a licensed heating, ventilating and air conditioning contractor to regularly and periodically inspect (not less frequently than every three months) and perform required maintenance on the heating, ventilating and air conditioning equipment and systems serving the Leased Premises, or alternately, Landlord may so contract in its own name for such regular and periodic inspections of and maintenance on such heating, ventilating and air conditioning equipment and systems and charge to Tenant, as Additional Rent, the cost thereof. Tenant shall, at its sole cost and expense, repair all damage to the Building, the Common Areas or the Project caused by the activities of Tenant, its employees, invitees or contractors promptly following written notice from Landlord to so repair such damage. If Tenant shall fail to perform the required maintenance or fail to make repairs required of it pursuant to Paragraph within a reasonable period of time following notice from Landlord to do so, then Landlord may, at its election and without waiving any other remedy it may otherwise have under this Lease or at Law, perform such maintenance or make such repairs and charge to Tenant, as Additional Rent, the costs so incurred by Landlord for same. All glass within or a part of the Leased Premises, both interior and exterior, is at the sole risk of Tenant and any broken glass shall promptly be replaced by Tenant at Tenant’s expense with glass of the same kind, size and quality.