It is a tricky legal concept and occurs when one party refuses to meet its contractual obligations under an agreement. The non-defaulting party can then accept that conduct (or failure to act) as demonstrating an intention that the defaulting party no longer intends to be bound by the contract, thereby allowing the non-defaulting party to terminate the agreement. It must be a serious breach and requires evidence of a clear intention to no longer be bound by the terms of the contract. The courts are slow to infer a lease has been repudiated by a Landlord. However, there are signs the Court and VCAT are more willing to do so where a Landlord has failed to repair or maintain the premises. This gives tenants greater leverage than they had previously to fight a Landlord’s claim for breach if the tenant decides to walk out of a lease due to dilapidated premises where the Landlord fails to “maintain” the premises. Leases often contain a covenant requiring either the Landlord or the tenant to ‘repair and maintain’ certain aspects of the premises. Disputes often arise what ‘maintain’ means and to what extent this obligation requires investigation and preventive maintenance.
It is a tricky legal concept and occurs when one party refuses to meet its contractual obligations under an agreement. The non-defaulting party can then accept that conduct (or failure to act) as demonstrating an intention that the defaulting party no longer intends to be bound by the contract, thereby allowing the non-defaulting party to terminate the agreement. It must be a serious breach and requires evidence of a clear intention to no longer be bound by the terms of the contract. The courts are slow to infer a lease has been repudiated by a Landlord. However, there are signs the Court and VCAT are more willing to do so where a Landlord has failed to repair or maintain the premises. This gives tenants greater leverage than they had previously to fight a Landlord’s claim for breach if the tenant decides to walk out of a lease due to dilapidated premises where the Landlord fails to “maintain” the premises. Leases often contain a covenant requiring either the Landlord or the tenant to ‘repair and maintain’ certain aspects of the premises. Disputes often arise what ‘maintain’ means and to what extent this obligation requires investigation and preventive maintenance.