Commercial Leasing Intensive
212NZA01: A must attend event for leasing and property lawyers. Ensure you’re thoroughly across the latest leasing updates and topics including Agreements to Lease and a review of how leases are being dealt with in response to COVID-19. Receive an update on the impacts of the Overseas Investment Act plus valuable tips to help you deal with leasing disputes. A practical programme with useful take-always that will enable legal practitioners to easily apply the knowledge to everyday practice.
Description
Attend and earn 4 CPD hours
Chair: Stephen Rendall, Real Estate Advisory, Bayleys
9.00am to 10.00am Leasing 201
- Agreements to lease
- Critical usage of standard form ADLS lease
- Landlord v tenant aspects
- No access provisions
- Repair and maintenance obligations
- Summary of the lease cancellation process under the Property Law Act 2019 and some cautionary tales
Presented by Andrew Orme, Partner, Tompkins Wake
10.00am to 11.00am COVID-19 and Commercial Leases
- Is the tenant entitled to a rent abatement?
- How should outgoings be dealt with?
- What is a “fair proportion”?
- Is there a right for a tenant to terminate the lease?
- Tenant default and termination by the landlord
- Contractual v commercial position
- The future?
Presented by Ed Smithies, Partner, Lane Neave
11.00am to 11.15am Morning Break
11.15am to 12.15pm Commercial Leases and the Overseas Investment Act
- When are leases caught by the overseas investment regime?
- Amendment Acts and COVID-19: What’s changed?
- Changes to sensitive land classifications
- Navigating the temporary emergency notification regime (if applicable in February 2021)
- A brief overview of the application process
- What are the consequences of getting it wrong?
Presented by Campbell Stewart, Partner, Tompkins Wake
12.15pm to 1.15pm Expedited Arbitration Models for Commercial Lease Disputes
- Efficiency in lease arbitration
- Use of technology to aid efficiency
- Choosing the best provider for arbitration
- Keeping costs to a sensible level
Presented by Chris LaHatte, Barrister
Learning Objectives:
- Refine your knowledge of Agreements to Lease and leasing practice
- Receive a timely update on commercial leases and COVID-19
- Gain a deeper working understanding of the Overseas Investment Act
- Examine expedited arbitration models for commercial lease disputes
Venue
Cliftons
Level 4/45 Queen Street
Auckland CBD
Auckland 1010
New Zealand
Parking
Parking is not included in your registration. Nearby options are:
- Downtown Carpark (4 min walk) Click here for rates
- Britomart Carpark (10 min walk) Click here for rates
Directions
CLOSEST TRAIN STATION - Britomart Station, 600m (5 min walk)
CLOSEST BUS STOP - Multiple stops on Queen St and Customs St (1 min walk)
Presenters
Stephen Rendall, Real Estate Advisory, Bayleys
Stephen Rendall is head of the Bayleys Real Estate Advisory team. He provides strategic real estate advice and originates, structures and executes complex real estate transactions across all commercial real estate asset classes. Stephen principally focuses on large-scale national occupier requirements, capital markets transactions, projects and land development, and debt placement. Stephen joined Bayleys from one of New Zealand’s leading law firms, Russell McVeagh, where he was a Partner in the Real Estate and Construction team. He has advised on several of New Zealand’s most high-profile commercial real estate transactions in recent times, spanning both the private and the public sector, while regularly advising on construction and development procurement. Examples of completed transactions include the initial PSP and subsequent CPP acquisition of interests in the $1bn-plus ex-AMP portfolio; Goodman’s development of the VXV precinct; and several of Oyster Property’s recent asset purchases.
Andrew Orme, Partner, Tompkins Wake
Andrew Orme joined Tompkins Wake in February 2017 and is a partner based in our Rotorua office. Andrew has over 13 years’ experience in private and in-house practice in New Zealand and Canada. His areas of expertise includes commercial property development, transactions and leasing as well as, local government property matters and public works. Andrew obtained a BCA and LLB from Victoria University.
Ed Smithies, Partner, Lane Neave
Ed is a property and construction lawyer with over 15 years experience in both New Zealand and the UK. Admitted in the UK in 2005 and New Zealand in 2018, Ed has a track record of advising domestic and overseas clients on significant real estate capital market transactions, commercial investments and developments across the real estate sector. Ed regularly advises clients on the negotiation of sale and purchase agreements, leases, development agreements and construction contracts. He also regularly assists overseas investors in managing the overseas investment approval process. Ed is a confident and trusted legal adviser and is known for his collaborative and solutions focused approach.
Campbell Stewart, Partner, Tompkins Wake
Campbell has been practicing law since 2008, and joined Tompkins Wake in 2012; advising on all aspects of property law, with a specialist focus on agribusiness, trust structuring and local government property. Campbell has particular expertise in the overseas investment regime, Crown minerals, and the emissions trading scheme, and assists domestic and international clients in these areas. Campbell provides commercial and not-for-profit entities with structure, regulatory and governance advice, and works with Tompkins Wake's private clients, specialising in succession planning, asset protection and trusts.
Chris LaHatte, Barrister
Chris initially qualified as a lawyer and then began studying dispute resolution. Chris enrolled in a Masters program at Massey University, and eventually graduated with a dissertation on Judicial Settlement Conferences. Chris joined AMINZ as an associate and was encouraged to study for fellowship. He received the Fellowship Mediation Prize in 2008. The following year he obtained fellowship in arbitration and has presented some papers over the years reflecting an interest in issues such as conflict-of-interest and bias. In 2011 Chris became the ombudsman at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, (ICANN), which is the global body administering the domain name system.