Time is of the essence

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Time is of the essence[1] is a magic incantation that one puts into a contract to designate that, whatever else might go down, a party’s failure to comply with obligations within the stated time-frame is a fundamental breach justifying termination of contract, a plague upon your houses, apocalyptic horsemen on the ridge and so on.

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Now at common law, time is — wasalways of the essence. When any time is specified for the completion of an action, one party has an action if the other doesn’t performed by that time.[2]

But as always, the dear old courts of chancery have to have their say. In equity, time is only fundamental to a contract if:

  • it is expressed to be “of the essence”; or
  • Otherwise, the circumstances indicate the time limit must be complied with exactly;
  • Where neither of the above applies, but one party has been unduly delaysome, the other can give notice requiring performance within a reasonable time, therefore making time of the essence.

Thanks to the Law of Property Act 1925, Section 41, the rules at equity now apply in contract as well. Eheu.

Grace periods and “the essence”

We have heard it argued that time being of the essence might override otherwise carefully negotiated grace periods. When challenged, the counsel in question was tongue-tied for a moment, before mumbling something about litigation over the Lehman administration[3] but could not, ultimately supply any grounds, let alone actual authority, for this proposition.[4] Time being of the essence means, more than anywhere, that one should assume the parties meant what precisely what they said. Here, one should pay exact attention to the time limits prescribed by a contract — including the grace periods so tediously injected into it — not ignore them.

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See also

References

Time being not of the essence

We rarely foray into commercial leases, folks, but you may see written the rent review section of a commercial lease that “time is not of the essence”.

What? Not of the essence?

As these contracts are inevitably written to protect the landlord, you may puzzle at this. Is this just unusual generosity by the landed gentry?

Quite the contrary. This is to give the landlord the excuse to retrospectively increase rent if it neglects to at the earliest opportunity. It permits the landlord to backdate the increase, on the argument that, “well, time wasn’t of the essence, so I didn’t bother to set the new rent at the time, and am doing it now.” Commercial tenants are warned to be proactive about re-setting rentals, therefore, to deprive the landlord of such optionality.

This may strike you as crappy behaviour — it did me, at first blush: if you don’t reset the rent at the time — or at least try to — then the rent delta for that missing period it ought to be your loss, and indeed would be on ordinary principles of waiver. Your increase would take effect prospectively.

But the rent review process in a commercial lease is negotiated between arms’ length parties who are not regarded, as are domestic tenants, as needing the protection of fair treatment. And it is meant to be an agreed, or failing agreement, independently determined market rent. This is not a free option for landlords, but a “marking to market”.

This seems to runs somewhat counter to the common law principles of waiver and estoppel — or would do, if standard commercial leases did not expressly provide for it, which they do. This is not something that needs to be waived, that is to say. Time is just not of the essence, so it isn’t your problem if you forget do do it.

Take, for example, this, from the Model Commercial Lease:[5]

4.1 If, by the Rent Review Date, the reviewed Main Rent has not been ascertained, then:

4.1.1 the Main Rent reserved under this Lease immediately before the Rent Review Date will continue to be payable until the reviewed Main Rent has been ascertained;
4.1.2 following the ascertainment of the reviewed Main Rent, the Landlord will demand the difference (if any) between the amount the Tenant has actually paid and the amount that would have been payable had the Main Rent been ascertained before the Rent Review Date; and
4.1.3 the Tenant must pay that difference to the Landlord within 10 Business Days after that demand and interest at three per cent below the Interest Rate calculated on a daily basis on each instalment of that difference from the date on which each instalment would have become payable to the date of payment. If not paid those sums will be treated as rent in arrear.

See also

References

  1. Or “time shall be of the essence”, or “time shall be deemed to be on or about the essence” — let your imaginations run wild.
  2. Parkin v Thorold (1852) 16Beav. 59.
  3. As we all know, the Lehman administration was, in the Harry Potter universe, a Horcrux and, in our own, charted a new portion of legal space-time where normal rules of Euclidean geometry do not apply.
  4. Please write in if you can think of one.
  5. https://modelcommerciallease.co.uk/leases/#tab-4