From leasing-commercial
Analyzes assignment and subletting consent requests under Ontario's Commercial Tenancies Act s.24, evaluates reasonable grounds for refusal, and guides drafting of consent clauses and recapture rights.
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/leasing-commercial:commercial-lease-assignment-consent-frameworkThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
**s.24(1)**: "A covenant in a lease that the lessee will not assign or sublet without leave shall, unless the lease contains an expressed provision to the contrary, be taken to be subject to a proviso that such leave is not to be unreasonably withheld."
s.24(1): "A covenant in a lease that the lessee will not assign or sublet without leave shall, unless the lease contains an expressed provision to the contrary, be taken to be subject to a proviso that such leave is not to be unreasonably withheld."
Default: If lease silent on assignment, tenant may assign freely (no landlord consent required)
Implication: Commercial leases ALWAYS include assignment restrictions
Standard restriction: "Tenant shall not assign or sublet without landlord's prior written consent, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld."
Effect:
Burden of proof: Landlord must prove consent refusal reasonable (tenant does NOT prove unreasonableness)
Absolute prohibition: "Tenant shall NOT assign or sublet under any circumstances."
Enforceability: Valid if clear and unambiguous
Example:
Rare in practice: Most commercial leases use "consent not unreasonably withheld" (attracts better tenants)
If lease contains no assignment clause: Tenant may assign without landlord consent (s.24 default rule)
Example:
Landlord's remedy: None (cannot void assignment) - should have included restriction in lease
Defining "unreasonable" - when landlord MUST consent vs. when landlord MAY refuse.
Landlord's refusal reasonable if based on legitimate business concerns.
1. Poor credit/financials of proposed assignee:
2. Incompatible use with building tenant mix:
3. Proposed use violates lease terms or bylaws:
4. Direct competition with landlord's other tenants (if exclusive use clause):
Refusal based on factors unrelated to legitimate landlord interests.
1. Wanting higher rent from new tenant:
2. Personal dislike of assignee:
3. Arbitrarily refusing well-qualified tenant:
4. Excessive delay in responding:
Rule: Landlord bears burden to prove refusal reasonable
NOT: Tenant's burden to prove unreasonable
Implication: If landlord cannot articulate legitimate business reason → deemed unreasonable, consent required
Example:
Landlord's option to terminate lease when tenant requests assignment - eliminates tenant's profit on assignment.
Clause: "If tenant requests assignment consent, landlord may (a) consent, or (b) terminate lease and recapture premises."
Effect: Landlord need not consent - can instead terminate lease, preventing assignment
Tenant's dilemma:
Example:
Requirement: Recapture right must be express in lease
No implied recapture: If lease silent, landlord cannot recapture (only consent/refuse consent)
Example:
Compensation if landlord recaptures: Some leases require landlord to compensate tenant for profit on assignment
Calculation:
Example:
Landlord payment: $330,000 to tenant (compensation for lost assignment profit)
Rare in practice: Most leases do NOT require compensation (landlord can recapture without payment)
Facts: Tenant (Citibank) requests assignment to ABC Corp, landlord refuses (concerns about ABC's creditworthiness)
Test: Refusal reasonable if based on factors that would influence reasonable landlord
Factors court considers:
Holding: Landlord's refusal reasonable - ABC Corp weaker credit than Citibank, landlord entitled to maintain creditworthy tenant
Principle: Reasonableness assessed objectively (would reasonable landlord refuse?), not subjectively (this landlord's preference)
Facts: Tenant requests consent, landlord delays response for 9 months
Holding: Excessive delay = deemed consent
Reasonable timeline:
Landlord's duty: Respond promptly, request additional information if needed (don't delay indefinitely)
Example:
Facts: Lease contains recapture clause, tenant requests assignment, landlord recaptures lease
Holding: Recapture clause enforceable - landlord need not consent if recapture option exists
Valuation: Court assesses tenant's loss (profit on assignment tenant would have received)
Compensation: Lease required landlord pay tenant 50% of profit on assignment as compensation for recapture
Principle: Recapture clauses valid if express in lease, but courts favor compensation to tenant (prevent unjust enrichment)
npx claudepluginhub reggiechan74/vp-real-estate --plugin leasing-commercialDrafts or reviews consent to assignment agreements for commercial leases, evaluating tenant liability, recapture rights, and assignment-plus-sublease structures.
Reviews lease clauses, identifies risky terms, and guides negotiation of amendments using the BATNA framework. Useful before signing any lease.
Assesses likelihood of s.83 discretionary relief from eviction under Ontario RTA. Helps prepare tenant relief arguments or counter relief on behalf of a landlord.