break clause การใช้
- A break clause may be enforced by either the landlord or the tenant.
- The lease expires in December 2025 but, includes a mutual break clause in June 2018.
- The contract was due to run until 2013, but the government invoked a six-month break clause.
- In an economic downturn dilapidations are also commonplace either during a lease term or if the tenant exercises a break clause.
- But in January 2007 HSBC activated a break clause in its ten-year contract and withdrew from sponsorship after the 2007 event.
- In February 2015, the break clause in the lease on Top Field passed, meaning that the football club now had a lease for a further 25 years.
- After seven years, B . P . has the option to extend its charter of the ships for a further 14 years with a seven-year break clause.
- Following that decision, the authority exercised the break clause in the lease and claimed possession on the ground that, on termination of the lease, the applicants had become trespassers.
- A "'Break clause "'is in English property law a term in a tenancy agreement that allows a tenancy to come to an end before the end date stated in the tenancy.
- THE government should avoid entering into any long-term tenancy agreement without any break clause, the Public Accounts Committee has recommended in the wake of the costly search for a suitable office for Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa.
- In November 2010, Saracens, searching for a new home after their landlord Watford F . C . activated a break clause in their groundshare agreement, revealed they were in discussions with Barnet Borough Council about a move to the stadium.
- Shortly before the start of the 2008-09 season, the trust revealed that the club's training facilities at Manor Farm were in dire need of repair before the end of the calendar year, or the landlords, previous County chairman Brendan Elwood and Trafford BC would exercise a break clause in the lease and evict the club.