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Tip |
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It's That Time of Year Again
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At the beginning of each
year, landlords reconcile their buildings’ actual expenses
with the amounts contributed by their tenants during the
prior year. They then issue adjusting statements that
settle each tenant’s liability and establish the new
estimates for the current year.
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Although landlords are obligated to follow the leases when
issuing these statements, tenants have the burden of identifying errors and bringing them to their
landlords' attention. If there is anything wrong with these end-of-year
statements, and no objection is raised, the statements are
deemed correct and errors
can become embedded in the leases’ financial structure for the
balance of the term.
This difficulty is exacerbated by three additional factors: |
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Tenants must be careful when dealing with
end-of-year statements.
If no
objection is raised, errors can become embedded
for the entire lease term. |
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1. Catching errors takes time, and most leases give the tenant
only a short window (usually
30-120 days) within which to object to any errors the
statements may contain. If they do not object on time or in
the correct form, the statements are deemed correct and the
errors are no longer fixable. (For a more detailed
discussion of lease audit deadlines, see our Article,
"Negotiating Audit Rights in Leases.")
2. Finding the more subtle errors takes a high level
of expertise. Most tenants and their lease
administrators are able to identify deviations from the
stated lease terms (such as wrong base year, wrong share or
incorrect math), but the
more significant errors are caused by ambiguity and
incompleteness of lease language. These errors are subtle and require
a fairly high level of expertise to detect.
3. Tenants are often deceived by the amounts due pursuant to
these statements and are often of the view that if they don’t owe
anything at the end of the year, they have nothing to worry
about. However, the amount due at the end of the year is
only a reflection of how close the estimates were to the
actual expenses and do not reflect the tenant’s underlying
liability.
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In order to help limit exposure in this area, tenants are
cautioned to review each lease carefully and identify the types of
pass-through charges that are called for. They should
identify the time periods that apply to the tenant’s right
to object and identify the nature
of the action that must be taken within the time period. Finally, they should develop a protocol for issuing blanket
objections to preserve rights to reclaim overcharges, and
develop a plan to apply the appropriate level of review for each bill within the time periods set
forth in each lease.
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About KBA Lease Services |
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KBA Lease
Services is the signature provider of commercial lease audit
services throughout North America. KBA's scope of
services includes operating expense escalations, utility
charges,
real estate tax charges and other occupancy costs.
Formed in
1985, KBA (formerly Kislak Lease Services) pioneered the
lease audit industry. KBA eliminates billing errors,
recovers overpayments and ensures lease compliance. Since
our inception we have reviewed over 50,000 commercial leases
and recovered many millions of dollars in savings for
our clients.
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