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Home » Make Tenant Reimburse You for Loan-Default Damages

Make Tenant Reimburse You for Loan-Default Damages

May 23, 2013

If you defaulted on the mortgage loan for your office building or center because a major tenant didn’t pay its rent, leaving you short of money to make a loan payment, it seems only fair that the delinquent tenant should have to reimburse you for the loan-related damages you had to pay to the lender. But if your lease doesn’t allow you to recover loan-related damages from a delinquent tenant, you’ll miss the chance for reimbursement. Make sure that your leases address who’s responsible for paying loan-related damages if the loan default was caused by the tenant’s lease default.

Loan-related damages are a form of “consequential” damages, which means they’re losses you suffered as a consequence of the tenant’s default, rather than as a direct or immediate result of it. If you want the right to collect consequential damages from the tenant, the lease must specifically give you that right. There are two ways to set up this right. First, have the tenant acknowledge in the lease that if it causes an “event of default” under the lease, you may end up incurring loan-related damages. Then, get the right to add your loan-related damages to any other damages that the lease requires the tenant to pay if it defaults. This way, the tenant must reimburse you the full amount of your loan-related damages—it can’t argue that they’re already covered in the other damages that it must pay you because of its default.

To add these points, put the following language in the lease clause that describes your remedies if the tenant defaults. Show this language to your attorney before using it.

            Model Lease Language

Tenant acknowledges that an Event of Default under this Lease may cause Landlord to incur damages under its mortgage and related financing documents, including, but not limited to, the payment of default interest, legal fees, late charges, collection costs, and sums necessary to maintain Lender’s yield on the loaned amounts. Accordingly, Tenant agrees that Landlord has the right to add such loan-related damages to the damages for which Tenant is responsible hereunder as a result of an Event of Default.

Dos & Don'ts
    • Related Articles

      Don't Make Defaulting Tenant Guess on Months of Nonpayment

      Don't Rely on Implied Covenant if You Want Tenant to Continuously Operate

      Follow Special Lease Requirements When Providing Default Notice

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