Rent regulation in England and Wales
Rent regulation in England and Wales is the part of English land law that creates rights and obligations for tenants and landlords.
The main areas of regulation concern:
- the mechanisms for regulating prices. Since the Housing Act 1980, prices are generally left for landlords to fix except in the "affordable" sector where councils and housing associations manage around 4.4 million homes which are subject to rent regulation.
- the reasons that a person can be evicted. Since the Housing Act 1996, most tenancies can be terminated on their expiry for any reason.
- the obligations to repair and maintain the property, under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985.
History
Before the 20th century, and during the industrial revolution, the regulation of the rental property relationship was largely left to the market. The first major regulation was introduced by the Rents and Mortgage Interest Restriction Act 1915, largely as a consequence of rent strikes in Glasgow.Regulation
Tenancy contract
- Marchant v Charters 1 WLR 1181, Lord Denning MR, a person has a lease when the occupant had a ‘stake in the room or did he have only permission for himself personally to occupy’ it?
- Johnson v Moreton AC 37, 66, Lord Simon, ‘There was one economic and social relationship where it was claimed that there were palpably lacking the prerequisites for the beneficent operation of laisser-faire – that of landlord and tenant. The market was limited and sluggish: the supply of land could not expand immediately and flexibly in response to demand, and even humble dwellings took more time to erect than those in want of them could spare. Generally, a man became a tenant rather than an owner-occupier because his circumstances compelled him to live hand-to-mouth; the landlord’s purse was generally longer and his command of knowledge and counsel far greater than the tenant’s. In short, it was held, the constriction of the market and the inequality of bargaining power enabled the landlord to dictate contractual terms which did not necessarily operate to the general benefit of society. It was to counteract this descried constriction of the market and to redress this descried inequality of bargaining power that the law – specifically, in the shape of legislation – came to intervene repeatedly to modify freedom of contract between landlord and tenant.’
- Bankway Properties Ltd v Pensfold-Dunsford 1 WLR 1369, Arden LJ, -
Right to repairs
- Bruton v [London & Quadrant Housing Trust] UKHL 26
- Landlord and Tenant Act 1985