• NY Apartment Law
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Guidebooks
  • Archives
  • Main Articles
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Q&A
  • Dos & Don'ts
  • Recent Court Rulings
  • eAlerts
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • NY Apartment Law
  • New York Apartment Law Insider
  • New York Landlord V. Tenant
  • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
  • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
  • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Fair Housing Coach
  • Assisted Housing Management Insider
  • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
  • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Commercial Lease Law Insider
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Main Articles
  • Features
  • Broker's Buzz
  • Drafting Tips
  • In the News
  • Negotiating Tips
  • Plugging Loopholes
  • Traps to Avoid
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Model Lease Clauses
  • Model Agreements
  • Other Model Tools
  • Q&A
  • Q&A
  • Pop Quiz
  • Winners & Losers
  • Ask the Insider
  • Recent Court Rulings
  • Landlord Wins
  • Landlord Loses
May 27, 2025
We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy.
The Habitat Group Logo
  • NY Apartment Law
    • New York Apartment Law Insider
    • New York Landlord V. Tenant
    • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
    • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
    • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
    • Fair Housing Coach
    • Assisted Housing Management Insider
    • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
    • Commercial Lease Law Insider
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Guidebooks
  • May 27, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • May 27, 2025
CLLI_logo_2020.jpg
  • Archives
  • Main Articles
    • Features
    • Broker's Buzz
    • Drafting Tips
    • In the News
    • Negotiating Tips
    • Plugging Loopholes
    • Traps to Avoid
  • Model Lease Clauses
    • Model Lease Clauses
    • Model Agreements
    • Other Model Tools
  • Q&A
    • Q&A
    • Pop Quiz
    • Winners & Losers
    • Ask the Insider
  • Dos & Don'ts
  • Recent Court Rulings
    • Landlord Wins
    • Landlord Loses
  • eAlerts
Free Issue
The Habitat Group Logo
May 27, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
Home » Require Tenant to Maintain Elements of Space that Aren't Clearly Interior or Exterior

Require Tenant to Maintain Elements of Space that Aren't Clearly Interior or Exterior

Sep 8, 2008

Your lease may make a tenant responsible for doing all interior maintenance work at its space, while you're responsible for doing all exterior maintenance work. Although you may think that distinguishing between the interior and exterior of the tenant's space is a snap, think again. Certain elements of a tenant's space can have both interior and exterior characteristics. For example, windows and automatic glass sliding doors at entrances and exits may face both the interior of a tenant's space and the outside of the space and the center's common areas.

This ambiguity may mean that your lease, like many others we've seen, has a loophole: It may neither take into account that certain elements of a tenant's space could be classified as either interior or exterior, nor specify who's responsible for maintaining those elements. As a result, if a customer is injured because such an element was badly maintained, you and the tenant could end up in court battling over who was responsible for maintaining that element.

Were Glass Doors Exterior or Interior?

Consider what happened in a Florida case. A shopper exiting a department store in a center was hit by an automatic sliding glass door. The shopper sued the department store and the center over her injuries. The center then sued the department store, claiming that the department store alone should be held responsible for the accident because it was responsible for maintaining the doors. The department store had agreed in the lease to perform all interior maintenance, with the center handling everything else. The department store asked that the center's lawsuit be dismissed without a trial, claiming that the automatic sliding glass doors were clearly “exterior” and not “interior,” and thus weren't part of the department store's maintenance responsibilities.

A Florida appeals court ruled that a trial had to be held to decide the issue, because it was ambiguous whether the doors were exterior or interior. The doors faced the store's exterior and the center's common areas, for which the center would be responsible. But they also faced the store's interior, for which the department store would be responsible [C R Mall v. Sears, 1996].

Specify Maintenance Responsibility

To avoid ambiguities and protect your wallet, state in the lease that the tenant is responsible, at its own expense, for operating, maintaining, repairing, and replacing all windows, window frames, doors, and door frames on the interior and exterior of its space, advises Toronto attorney Harvey M. Haber. If there are any other elements that could be classified as both interior and exterior, mention them in the lease, too. This way, you don't have to specify whether a particular window or door is part of the interior or exterior of the tenant's space'the tenant is responsible for maintaining all of them. That should be the case even if you're responsible for all other exterior maintenance work.

To get this protection, Haber suggests that you add the following language to the lease where it says that the tenant is responsible for all interior maintenance work:

Model Lease Language

Notwithstanding the foregoing or anything in this Lease to the contrary, Tenant shall be responsible for operating, maintaining, repairing, and replacing all windows, window frames, doors, door frames, and [insert any other elements with both interior and exterior characteristics] on the interior and exterior of the Premises.

Insider Source

Harvey M. Haber, Q.C.: Partner, Goldman Sloan Nash & Haber LLP, 250 Dundas St. W., Ste. 603, Toronto, ON M5T 2Z5; (416) 597-3392; haber@gsnh.com.

Plugging Loopholes
    • Related Articles

      Require Tenant Notice of Default to Avoid Surprise Claims in Court

      Require Tenant to Pay for All of Its Parking Spaces, Even Unused Ones

      Make Tenant That Controls Its Space Responsible for Mold Issues

    • Publications
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Co-op & Condo Case Law Tracker Digest
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • New York Landlord v. Tenant
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    • Additional Links
      • Contact Us
      • Advertise
      • Group Subscriptions
      • Privacy Policy
    • Boards of Advisors
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    ©2025. All Rights Reserved. Content: The Habitat Group. CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
    The Habitat Group Logo
    • NY Apartment Law
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • New York Landlord V. Tenant
      • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
      • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
      • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
    • Fair & Affordable Housing
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
      • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
    • Commercial Lease Law
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
        • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
    • Guidebooks
    • May 27, 2025
    • Log In
    • Log Out
    • My Account
    • Subscribe
    • May 27, 2025
    CLLI_logo_2020.jpg
    • Archives
    • Main Articles
      • Features
      • Broker's Buzz
      • Drafting Tips
      • In the News
      • Negotiating Tips
      • Plugging Loopholes
      • Traps to Avoid
    • Model Lease Clauses
      • Model Lease Clauses
      • Model Agreements
      • Other Model Tools
    • Q&A
      • Q&A
      • Pop Quiz
      • Winners & Losers
      • Ask the Insider
    • Dos & Don'ts
    • Recent Court Rulings
      • Landlord Wins
      • Landlord Loses
    • eAlerts
    Free Issue
    The Habitat Group Logo
    May 27, 2025
    • Log In
    • Log Out
    • My Account