Tenant Fees Act 2019 – Elephant trap for the unwary!

Tenant Fees Act 2019 – Elephant trap for the unwary!

17:27 PM, 17th May 2019, About 6 years ago 28

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Landlords be warned – From 1st June 2019 if you take a holding deposit (which must not exceed one week’s rent) ahead of a new letting, the Tenant Fees Act 2019 says it must be repaid if you go ahead with the tenancy agreement. Yes, if you complete the tenancy, you are supposed to repay the holding deposit. That obligation may not apply if, as it almost always the case, the holding deposit is set off against the tenancy deposit or the first instalment of rent due on completion.  The problem is that the duty to repay is only removed if the holding deposit is applied towards the tenancy deposit or first instalment of rent “with the consent of the person by whom it was paid”.

Consider the following scenario.  A prospective tenant pays a holding deposit of £200 in respect of a proposed rental at £1,000 per month.  The tenancy is to be completed ten days later. The landlord sends the tenant a completion statement showing £1000 tenancy deposit and £1000 for the first month’s rent with £200 set off against the total.  The tenant pays £1800 and moves in.

Unless the tenant consents to the £200 being applied towards the rent deposit, the legal position is that the landlord is in breach of the Act. He should have repaid the £200 and the tenant should have paid the full £2000.  Most reasonable people would say that is pointless. However, if the landlord does not obtain the tenant’s consent the payment of the holding deposit has become a prohibited payment. The landlord becomes liable to a fine of up to £5,000 for a first breach and up to £30,000 for a second offence within 5 years.

Local authorities are tasked with pursuing landlords. Now, it might be that in these circumstances a local authority will not be interested. They really should have better things to do! However, on a plain reading of the Act, the words “with the consent of the person by whom it was paid” must mean that if the consent is not obtained the payment is a prohibited payment.  Paragraph 6 of Schedule 2 to the Act could quite easily have omitted the words in quotation marks. The result would have been what most reasonable people would consider fair, namely that the holding deposit has been applied towards the first rent or the tenancy deposit.  However, Parliament in its wisdom, has decreed that unless the tenant has consented to this the landlord is in breach. It might be argued the tenant has impliedly consented to the holding deposit being applied. However, if that is the case, the words “with the consent of the person by whom it was paid” are superfluous. If the holding deposit is applied towards the first payment of rent or towards the tenancy deposit then, by definition, accounts between the landlord and the tenant are square and the landlord has not retained the holding deposit. In what circumstances would the implied consent not apply?

In the vast majority of cases, tenants will not know there is an issue. They have suffered no injustice if they are given credit for the holding deposit. However, if the landlord and tenant later fall out, the tenant can bring up the prohibited payment to threaten with legal action a landlord who is trying to recover arrears of rent or possession for other breaches of covenant.  He can ambush the landlord in any application under Section 21 (so-called no fault eviction) until the “prohibited payment” is repaid. That leads to the absurdity that as soon as the landlord repays the prohibited payment, the tenant owes the landlord precisely the same amount in rent arrears. The Tenant Fees Act 2019 piles absurdity upon absurdity.

What can landlords do? When taking a holding deposit, get the prospective tenant to sign an acknowledgement that if the tenancy goes ahead the holding deposit can be applied towards rent or the tenancy deposit. Unless landlords go through this bureaucratic nonsense they will fall into the elephant trap that has been set – wittingly or unwittingly I do not know – by this ill-thought out piece of legislation.


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Michael Barnes

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22:57 PM, 25th May 2019, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by at 25/05/2019 - 13:11
What is the situation for the holding fees held by landlords for student properties, where the money is often taken long before the rental start date?

It appears to me that there are 4 options:
1.Agree (in writing and signed by tenant) that the holding deposit goes toward the 1st month's rent;
2. Agree (in writing and signed by tenant) that the holding deposit goes toward the deposit AND protect it within 30 days of the date of the agreement (not the start of the tenancy).
3. Return the holding deposit, take the full tenancy deposit AND protect it within 30 days.
4. return the holding deposit and take the first month's rent.

Michael Barnes

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23:02 PM, 25th May 2019, About 6 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Michael Barnes at 24/05/2019 - 01:05
I see that I was wrong about applying the holding deposit to the tenancy deposit.

Schedule 2 paragraph 7 states "If all or part of the amount of the deposit is applied in accordance with paragraph 6(b), the amount applied is treated for the purposes of section 213 of the Housing Act 2004 (requirements in connection with deposits) as having been received by the landlord on the date of the tenancy agreement.

So the 30 days for complying with deposit rules starts on the date of the agreement (I imagine that means the date the agreement is signed).

Di

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20:05 PM, 16th June 2019, About 6 years ago

I think the intention of this part of the legislation is to protect anyone who may have paid the holding deposit on a temporary basis for the prospective tenant(s) – that’s why it specifically states “with the consent of the person by whom it was paid”.
The funds could, for example, have been paid by a relative, an unrelated 3rd party, or just one of the prospective tenants for a joint/multiple tenancy.
The cynic in me can't help thinking a local council or government office lost a few bob in this way in the past – hence a sledgehammer to crack a nut.

Graham Bowcock

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14:41 PM, 16th December 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Michael Barnes at 25/05/2019 - 22:57
Fascinating comments Michael, I was just wondering about this point. I am now out of agency and not up to date.
My daughter has signed for a student house for September next year and paid a holding deposit (one week). The agreement has been completed and she has paid the deposit (one month) which has been protected.

Should she now get the holding deposit back? The agent/landlord seem to want it go to against the first month's rent in September next year.

From what you say, i think the agent is wrong.

Chris @ Possession Friend

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14:56 PM, 16th December 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Graham Bowcock at 16/12/2019 - 14:41The best is to apply the holding deposit towards the first months rent. Keep it totally distinct from a Deposit.

NigelH

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15:02 PM, 16th December 2019, About 5 years ago

I have added to my application forms a paragraph to specifically state that "The applicant agrees that the holding fee will be held until the first month's rent is paid, from which it will be deducted"
I believe this gives the required consent.

Graham Bowcock

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21:23 PM, 16th December 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Chris Daniel at 16/12/2019 - 14:56
Thanks Chris,
on this occasion my query is for the tenant (my student) daughter, not myself as landlord. It seems to me that agents shouldn't be retaining holding deposits once the agreement is entered into, even if the tenancy has not actually started.

Chris @ Possession Friend

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23:14 PM, 16th December 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Graham Bowcock at 16/12/2019 - 21:23Correct, unless its been agreed, as in Nigel's example above.
Basically, the choice is, Take Holding fee and sign AST in 15 days, or delay by agreement with Tenant ( as in Nigels example ) so if Tenant doesn't agree to continue to hold, landlord has to sign up AST or give money back, - Simples.
( That's in England, of course - Tenant Fee Ban is different, more landlord favourable in some respects, - at the moment in Wales )

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