Book reviews
Commercial Leases in Scotland: A Practitioner’s Guide
3rd edition
Kenneth Gerber
PUBLISHER: W GREEN
ISBN: 978-0414054264
PRICE: £71.40
It only seems like yesterday when I wrote the foreword to the second edition of this book. Indeed, in “book terms” it was, as it was only in April 2013! While I acknowledge the increasing desire of publishers to produce new editions of books, I am left wondering if this is really necessary. Now this may simply be the rantings of someone who can remember what it was like at university with a copy of Gloag & Henderson’s Introduction to the Law of Scotland (1969) and Walker’s Principles, and I do not wish to go back to these days, but do we really need new editions published with such frequency? Is there not something to be said for independent research of core materials when checking that the law as outlined in a textbook is still current?
These comments aside, I turn my attention to this new edition of this very useful textbook. There are four new chapters – see below. All are worthwhile additions. As one might expect, the text has also been updated to reflect changes in the law and practice of commercial leasing since the second edition was published. A good example of that is the new para 31-07 regarding the proposed restriction on leasing a building with a poor EPC rating. This is overdue as, without it, what is the point of having EPCs?
The new chapter 34 is a useful complement to the form of multi-occupancy lease reproduced in the CD which accompanies the book. The commentary in para 34-02 about TPI based rent reviews is very worthwhile – especially the advice to “sense check” the calculations which are produced.
Chapter 35 deals with options. The commentary on confidentiality in paras 35-03 et seq is good, albeit that the English case law referred to in paras 35-05 to 35-06 is not considered from a Scots law perspective.
Chapter 36 considers the leasing of licensed premises. It is a short chapter but the key information is covered.
Chapter 37 is a useful review of leases for renewables, minerals and boreholes, although the subject of mineral leases is, in some respects, a topic in itself. The list of requirements in each type of lease is helpful, as it can be so easy for an inappropriate lease style to be used for the wrong purpose.
Was a third edition required? In this reviewer’s opinion, no, although it is, of course, helpful to have an up-to-date textbook of this quality to hand. That should not be at the cost of individual research of a particular topic, however.
In this issue
- Sewel in statute: competence or confusion?
- Data protection rewritten
- When divorce and maintenance collide
- Child cases: who decides?
- Deliver us from evil: the totalitarian temptation
- Reading for pleasure
- Opinion: Tom Marshall
- Book reviews
- Profile
- President's column
- Certainty guaranteed with DPA service
- People on the move
- A hard race well won
- EU referendum: choice for a better future
- Of chance and change
- Land reform: back, and here to stay
- Frameworks dismantled
- Charity advice: the full picture
- Lifting the lid on lives
- A judgment on judgments
- Pay: private or transparent?
- Horses make a clean break
- Trustees – damned either way?
- Scottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal
- Silverburn: sold on the right to buy
- Career building
- Oops – lost attorneys
- Paralegal pointers
- How will my family know what assets I have?
- Law reform roundup
- Gender pay: squeezing the gap
- The trend is good
- Ask Ash
- Success is in store