Source: http://www.lawcatalog.com/productdetail/15914/?productID=15914&setlist=0&return=listview&CFID=21948873&CFTOKEN=95f78951d363777e-B3F5A938-DC37-9EB1-F77C3E44D36F842A
Timestamp: 2019-01-19 11:07:15
Document Index: 470908446

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 3', '§ 19', '§ 28', '§ 28', '§ 30', '§ 31']

Avoid commercial leasing traps that can prove harmful or even fatal to a business! Take the advice of these experienced professionals on how to examine a complex modern leasing document and how to identify the “red flags.”
Negotiating and Drafting Office Leases book and CD offers a practical road map through the entire negotiation process. It reviews the clauses of a typical complex modern lease in detail, with explanation and commentary, examining the legal, economic and financial accounting ramifications. Topics include: negotiating strategies and styles; pitfalls created by other agreements entered into by the parties to a lease; repairs and maintenance; assignments and subleases; environmental compliance and due diligence; electricity and utilities costs and issues; the “Porter's Wage” escalation provision; tenant monitoring of landlord's escalation calculations; guarantors and security deposits; proving the existence of a lease when the original document is lost; quiet enjoyment; expansion space; bankruptcy; work letters; restrictive clauses; renewals and options; financing development through participation leases; synthetic leases; brokerage; lease audits; and many others. This invaluable primer, complete with glossary, comes with 150 forms on CD-ROM, including: landlord/tenant checklists of typical and atypical lease provisions; a sample tenant's proposal letter; work letter materials; a sample asbestos removal clause; good guy clauses; and other samples that will help beginners and experts alike involved in commercial real estate transactions.
Book #00624; looseleaf, two volumes, 2,406 pages and one CD-ROM; published in 1995, updated as needed; no additional charge for updates during your subscription. Looseleaf print subscribers receive supplements. The online edition is updated automatically. ISBN: 978-1-58852-061-6
[2] Issues for the Future
[4] Can an E-Mail Satisfy the Writing Requirement Under the Statute of Frauds?
[4] Long Range Planning
[3] Landlords Payment Obligations
[5] Tenants Right to Terminate
§ 3.06 Summary
[6] Accounts Receivable as Security
[7] Landlord’s Lien on Tenant’s Property
[8] Securities and Stock as Pledged Security
[9] Concluding Comment
[2] BOMAs Measurement Standards
[6] The Right to Go Dark
[2] What Is Green Law?
[3] Green Rating Systems and Green Government Requirements
[4] Other Rating Systems
[2] Landlord Green Covenants
[3] Major or National Tenant Green Requirements
[4] Impact of Major Tenant Green Requirements on Other Tenants
[5] Remedies for Breach of Green Covenants
[6] Indemnification for Breach of a Green Covenant
[7] Rights and Costs to Cure
[8] Green Issues in Bankruptcy
[9] Green Issues in Subleases and Assignments
[10] Disclosure Issues
[1] When Tenants Will Encounter LEED/Green Ratings
[2] Design and Construction of Tenant Fit-Out
[3] Design and Construction of Future Alterations
[4] Tenant Use and Operating Covenants
[5] Green Cleaning and Rubbish Disposal
[6] The Movement Toward Model Green Leases and Lease Clauses
[4] Landlord Self-Help When Tenant Defaults
[1] Under the Common Law
[2] Under the “Killer Lease”
[3] Statutory Provision for Termination and Remedies
[4] Reletting and Mitigation of Damages
[5] The “Good Guy” Clause
[6] Liquidated Damages
§ 19.08 Summary
[3] Subordination, Nondisturbance and Attornment Agreements
[4] The Nondisturbance Agreement as an Important Corrollary Subordination Agreement
[4] The Basic Nondisturbance Agreement
[4] Post 9-11 Changes
[5] “Turn Key” Work Letter
[8] Landlord Credits in a “Modified Turn Key”
[1] Trustee’s Options
[3] Is a Lease or Contract Executory for the Purposes of the Code?
[4] Assumption of Rejection of Commercial Leases by Debtor
[2] Effect of Rejection on Sub-Tenants and Leasehold Mortgages
Tenant’s Checklist of Silent Lease Issues (Second Edition)
[1] Genesis of the Checklist
[2] What the Checklist Is and Does
§ 28B.02 Tenant’s Checklist of Silent Lease Issues
Landlord’s Checklist of Silent Lease Issues (Second Edition)
[5] Written from the Landlord’s Perspective
§ 28C.03 The Landlord’s Checklist
[10] Development-Related Issues
[18] Future Documents and Deliveries
[21] Insurance
[22] Landlord’s Access to Premises
[23] Landlord’s Liability
[24] Landlord’s Representations
[25] Maintenance and Repairs
[26] Occupancy
[27] Options (Expansion/Renewal/Reduction)
[28] Percentage Rent and Radius Clause
[29] Quiet Enjoyment
[30] Real Estate Taxes
[31] Remedies
[32] Rent
[33] Rules and Regulations
[34] Security
[35] Services
[36] Subordination and Landlord’s Estate
[37] Tenant’s Equipment and Installations
[38] Use
[39] Vault Space
[40] Miscellaneous
[41] Due Diligence
[42] Other Documents
[43] Post-Closing; Monitoring
[1] Direct Capitalization Method
[2] Discounted Cash Flow Method
[1] Space Lease for a Large Portion of a Multi-Tenant Building
[2] Net and Master Leases; Ground Leases Under Office Properties
[3] Protecting a Tenant’s Sublease Rights—The Importance of Nondisturbance and Recognition Agreements
§ 30.02A Landlord Considerations Following a Tenants Request to Sublease
§ 31.01 ATransfer Clauses