• NY Apartment Law
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Guidebooks
  • Archives
  • Main Articles
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Q&A
  • Dos & Don'ts
  • Recent Court Rulings
  • eAlerts
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • NY Apartment Law
  • New York Apartment Law Insider
  • New York Landlord V. Tenant
  • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
  • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
  • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Fair Housing Coach
  • Assisted Housing Management Insider
  • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
  • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Commercial Lease Law Insider
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Main Articles
  • Features
  • Broker's Buzz
  • Drafting Tips
  • In the News
  • Negotiating Tips
  • Plugging Loopholes
  • Traps to Avoid
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Model Agreements
  • Other Model Tools
  • Q&A
  • Q&A
  • Pop Quiz
  • Winners & Losers
  • Ask the Insider
  • Recent Court Rulings
  • Landlord Wins
  • Landlord Loses
May 09, 2025
We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy.
The Habitat Group Logo
  • NY Apartment Law
    • New York Apartment Law Insider
    • New York Landlord V. Tenant
    • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
    • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
    • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
    • Fair Housing Coach
    • Assisted Housing Management Insider
    • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
    • Commercial Lease Law Insider
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Guidebooks
  • May 09, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • May 09, 2025
CLLI_logo_2020.jpg
  • Archives
  • Main Articles
    • Features
    • Broker's Buzz
    • Drafting Tips
    • In the News
    • Negotiating Tips
    • Plugging Loopholes
    • Traps to Avoid
  • Model Lease Clauses
    • Model Lease Clauses
    • Model Agreements
    • Other Model Tools
  • Q&A
    • Q&A
    • Pop Quiz
    • Winners & Losers
    • Ask the Insider
  • Dos & Don'ts
  • Recent Court Rulings
    • Landlord Wins
    • Landlord Loses
  • eAlerts
Free Issue
The Habitat Group Logo
May 09, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
Home » Don't Forget to Give Tenant Proper Notice for Fixture Removal

Don't Forget to Give Tenant Proper Notice for Fixture Removal

Jul 16, 2015

You may want to negotiate to keep your tenant's fixtures—for example, lights, seating, or shelves that are attached to its space—after it moves out. But what if you change your mind later and want the tenant to remove and take its fixtures with it before it leaves? You can carve out that option in the lease by specifying that you will provide notice to the tenant at a certain point before the term is over that you are requiring it to take its fixtures with it. But it's important to keep the date you've set on your radar.

The owner of Massachusetts restaurant space gave itself the flexibility to keep or get rid of its tenant's fixtures at the end of the lease, but its noncompliance with the notice provisions landed it in court—and with the burden of paying to remove the fixtures later—after an appeals court concluded that the owner's untimely notice relieved the tenant from removing the items.     

There, the owner claimed that its restaurant tenant breached the lease by failing to remove “trade” fixtures before moving out. The tenant argued that it wasn’t required to remove the fixtures because the owner hadn’t complied with the lease terms regarding fixture removal. The owner sued the tenant. The tenant asked a court to dismiss the case. A Massachusetts trial court ruled in favor of the tenant.

The tenant argued that the owner failed to provide it with the 60-day notice of compelled fixture removal required by the lease. The owner had provided it with 11 days’ notice. It said that additionally the owner’s right to hold the tenant responsible for the cost of disposing of the tenant’s abandoned property doesn’t extend to such fixtures anyway. The court agreed.

The court said that the lease was clear that fixtures installed by the tenant become property of the owner upon termination of the lease, and are deemed surrendered to the owner as part of the premises at that time; this applied to “any and all fixtures,” including “trade” fixtures that are attached to the space’s floors, walls, or ceilings. The provision was not intended to exclude any categories of fixtures from its coverage.

The court determined that all fixtures of every type that are attached to the premises belong to the owner, unless the owner “shall notify tenant approximately 60 days prior to the end of the term of the lease whether the owner requires the tenant to remove any or all such additions, improvements, and fixtures from the demised premises.”

Here, because the owner hadn’t provided the required notice, the tenant wasn’t responsible for removing the fixtures or paying for the cost incurred by the owner to remove them [Wilder Cos., Ltd. v. California Pizza Kitchen, Inc., January 2015].

Online Alerts
      • Related Articles

        Don’t Forget to Address Transfer of LLC Interests in Lease

        Don't Inadvertently Give Defaulting Tenant an Option to Buy

        Take Charge as to When Non-Lease Tenants Must Give Notice

      • Publications
        • Assisted Housing Management Insider
        • Commercial Lease Law Insider
        • Co-op & Condo Case Law Tracker Digest
        • Fair Housing Coach
        • New York Apartment Law Insider
        • New York Landlord v. Tenant
        • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
      • Additional Links
        • Contact Us
        • Advertise
        • Group Subscriptions
        • Privacy Policy
      • Boards of Advisors
        • Assisted Housing Management Insider
        • Commercial Lease Law Insider
        • Fair Housing Coach
        • New York Apartment Law Insider
        • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
      ©2025. All Rights Reserved. Content: The Habitat Group. CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
      The Habitat Group Logo
      • NY Apartment Law
        • New York Apartment Law Insider
        • New York Landlord V. Tenant
        • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
        • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
        • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
      • Fair & Affordable Housing
        • Fair Housing Coach
        • Assisted Housing Management Insider
        • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
        • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
      • Commercial Lease Law
        • Commercial Lease Law Insider
        • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
          • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
        • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
      • Guidebooks
      • May 09, 2025
      • Log In
      • Log Out
      • My Account
      • Subscribe
      • May 09, 2025
      CLLI_logo_2020.jpg
      • Archives
      • Main Articles
        • Features
        • Broker's Buzz
        • Drafting Tips
        • In the News
        • Negotiating Tips
        • Plugging Loopholes
        • Traps to Avoid
      • Model Lease Clauses
        • Model Lease Clauses
        • Model Agreements
        • Other Model Tools
      • Q&A
        • Q&A
        • Pop Quiz
        • Winners & Losers
        • Ask the Insider
      • Dos & Don'ts
      • Recent Court Rulings
        • Landlord Wins
        • Landlord Loses
      • eAlerts
      Free Issue
      The Habitat Group Logo
      May 09, 2025
      • Log In
      • Log Out
      • My Account