Mr Kobayashi
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 1 Oct 2020
- Messages
- 17,873
Yes mate there are certain legal requirements in relation to the Environmental Health Authority, I’m in a “smoke free” zone but there are still loads of places up and down the country that aren’t, but even if I wasn’t , I’d still have chosen the smoke free option, but much depends on the borough you live ins policies.
As for the covenants in deeds etc, this may be more your line but I’m pretty sure given most houses were built to burn coal etc I can’t imagine why there would be a huge amount of houses affected or why they’d be there, I d imagine you’re at the mercy of your local authority as in my above paragraph , but happy to be corrected.
What would interest me is where people would stand if they were a private tenant, I can imagine there’d be restrictions in the terms and conditions ?
Depends on how long ago the house was built, I'm no expert but in the Property law module that covered the process of residential conveyancing from start to finish, it was something that was highlighted as a restriction on new build properties (that are sold as leasehold).
There usually would be some restrictions in a private tenancy , my tenancy agreement for a room in a HMO restricted me from using storage heaters, but all bills were included in package.
Depends on the care and skill putting it together, my tenancy agreement icluded the name of the landlord (misspelt), even though she owned it through a company so it should have been the company and not her.
And the management still kept in the standard terms about maintaining garden and cutting grass even though we had gardeners included in the rental package.
I agree about being at the mercy of the local authority, as these kind of restrictions generally vary by LA area.
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