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| Lease
Tips |
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Negotiating
Audit Rights in Leases |
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After
years of refunding rent overcharges to tenants, landlords
across the country are striking back: they are creating obstacles to stop tenants from auditing and
challenging their lease charges.
What are Lease Audit Rights
and Why Does a Tenant Need Them?
In most
leases, the tenant is obligated to pay for a share of building
operating expenses, taxes, utilities and other costs.
The provisions that impose these obligations are
often complex, requiring a high level of diligence on both
the landlord to bill correctly and the tenant to monitor the charges.
Errors
are commonplace. Statistics
show that close to 90% of leases have mistakes, mostly
because landlords’ administrative personnel don’t tailor the bills to
each individually negotiated lease.
Often,
the only way for a tenant to know if the bills are correct
is to dig into the landlord’s accounting records related
to the property.
But do
tenants have the right to do this?
Audit Rights
Specifically Granted by the Lease. Many
leases grant tenants the right to review the books and
records of the landlord to ensure that the charges billed
are correct. Similar
rights exist in partnership agreements and many other types
of financial contracts.
Audit rights can be found
within the clauses outlining the tenant’s
obligations to pay these charges.
These clauses often state that the tenant has, upon
reasonable notice, the right to visit the landlord’s
offices and review the applicable accounting records. These
clauses sometimes also have procedures for resolving any
disagreements that may result.
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Audit Rights Granted by
the Law. Every
tenant
has a general contract right to ensure that the bills received are correct. This right comes from any
contracting party’s general right to enforce its
agreement.
Other rights exist as well. Some
courts have specifically read into the lease an implied
right for the tenant to verify the numbers, and
others have gone so far as to
make an audit a precondition to the tenant's obligation to
pay the invoice.
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Often,
the only way for a tenant to know if the bills are correct
is to dig into the landlord’s accounting records related
to the property. |
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In
addition, any
party to a contract can bring a suit for an
“accounting,” which would require the other party to
substantiate and verify the charges flowing through the
agreement. Of course, if the tenant suspects an
overbilling, it can always sue for breach of the agreement.
It is not
suggested that any of these remedies be pursued by tenants
on a regular basis. But it is important for the tenant
to know its rights so that it can effectively negotiate the
lease.
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Keeping
Tenants from Checking Their Bills. During
lease negotiations, landlords regularly try to convince
tenants to willingly accept limitations in these rights.
Two common ways are as follows:
Shortened Time Limits
Many
landlords ask the tenant to provide a detailed written objection to the
landlord's bills within a very short
time period--in most cases 30-90 days--failing which the bill is
“conclusive and binding” on the tenant, who is
“deemed” to have agreed to the bill as rendered.
The
landlord’s most common argument for this limitation is that it needs
to “close the books” for the year in question. Of course, the flaw in this argument is that the books for the year
being billed have already been closed (they were closed
prior to rendering the statement).
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problem with accepting this limitation is that it
is virtually impossible for most tenants to determine
whether there is anything wrong with the bill within 90 or
even 180 days. That’s because making such a determination often requires
lots of steps: hiring
a lease audit firm to review the lease and the bills; gathering
needed internal information; coordinating schedules for an
audit; conducting an on-site review of the building’s
books and records; completing the analysis; preparing a
report; presenting the findings to the landlord. Each
step can take weeks or months. |
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restriction that effectively prevents the review from taking
place should be removed from the lease. |
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The
result? The
work can’t be done within the time limit and the tenant
can't meet the deadline. Any
overcharges that may exist are lost forever.
What's
most ironic about these clauses is that without
a time limitation in the lease, the tenant’s right
to audit is governed by the statute of limitations.
This is the
time a party to a contract has to enforce its
rights. In most states, should a landlord bill a tenant
incorrectly (i.e., breach its lease agreement), the tenant
would have 4 to 10 years in which to bring an
action against the landlord.
Thus,
when a tenant agrees to limit the time to a number of days,
it is severely reducing the rights it otherwise would have
under the law. At
a bare minimum, the tenant should have a year or two to review the
charges.
Restrictions on Who Can Do the Audit
Another
common restriction is to require the tenant to use a “Big-5” accounting firm, or a firm that is not
compensated on a contingency fee basis.
The
landlord’s argument here is that contingency firms are
more “aggressive” in pursuing overcharges than
non-contingency or accounting firms and will pursue items
that are not legitimate. However, let’s examine the
facts:
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Contingency
audit firms are very careful not to pursue claims that
aren’t legitimate because they ultimately won’t get
paid for their time.
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Most
audit firms are controlled directly by their clients and
by contract can't exceed their mandates.
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If
contingency
lease audit firms have a bias, it is the same as that of
the tenant: to eliminate charges that are
inconsistent with the lease. The compensation
structure simply ensures that this goal is always in
view.
The
important point here is that a landlord has no legitimate interest in telling a tenant who can work on its
behalf. Would
it ever tell a tenant not to use a certain attorney or
broker? Would the tenant ever think it appropriate
to tell the landlord which HVAC contractor to use or how to
compensate it?
Contingency audit firms exist because tenants don’t have
the time to focus on these issues and can’t budget the
expense needed to audit leases on an hourly or fixed-fee
basis.
Thus,
the result of this restriction is that although the tenant
has permission to verify the charges, in reality it most likely
won't be able to do so.
Conclusion
Many
hours are expended negotiating and drafting operating
expense, tax, utility and other similar clauses. Yet, despite all of the “points” that a tenant may win in
this negotiation, it frequently gives it all up by agreeing
to restrictions on its ability to enforce these provisions.
As long
as there are leases that have complex financial terms, there
will be a need for tenants to check the landlords to ensure
compliance. Any
restriction that effectively prevents the review from taking
place should be removed from the lease.
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