July 18th, 2011, By Dana Haugh
In a typical lease negotiation, the parties, the attorneys and the brokers focus only on the key financial aspects within the lease document. However, there are subtle and seemingly innocuous clauses that can cost the tenant a pretty penny long after the lease has been signed. Here’s a quick list of 5 Dangerous Lease Clauses:
2. THE SUBLEASE CLAUSE
When tenants and even their attorneys are negotiating to get into a space, they typically don’t focus on how to successfully get out of the space- but is something important to think about.
For example, suppose an insurance company takes down 20,000 sq. ft. of office space. At $25/ sq. ft., a five-year term lease would cost $2.5 million without any operating expenses. Also suppose that a year after making this lease commitment, the insurance company merges with another and finds they have redundant office locations. However, the landlord knows full well that this tenant is good for the remaining four years of the lease ($2 million!) and isn’t about to release this tenant from that obligation, especially during this recessionary period when vacancy rates are high.
We represented one of our insurance company clients in a lease with a major New York landlord. You can only imagine how creative his attorney was in coming up with devices that would effectively negate the tenant’s ability to sublease the space and mitigate a potential loss- the sublease clause was five pages long! However, we were able to protect our client and ensure the ability to sublease should it be needed. These are the things we paid special attention to in the Sublease Clause:
Bottom line? In YOUR next lease negotiation, someone better be watching out for the Sublease Clause…