left-caret

Client Alert

Reform Attempt to Soften the Written Form Requirement for Commercial Lease Agreements

August 20, 2024

By Dr. Jan Gernoth& Johanna Mayer

Lease agreements with a term of more than one year are currently subject to a written form requirement under the German Civil Code. For years, there have been ongoing discussions about a potential abolition of the written form requirement for commercial lease agreements. Recently, the German government has introduced a draft of the Fourth Bureaucracy Relief Act (Viertes Bürokratieentlastungsgesetz) which provides for the requirement of the written form for commercial leases to be replaced by the text form (e.g., by exchange of emails).

The Written Form Requirement for Long-Term Lease Agreements

Under German law, lease agreements which were concluded for a period of more than one year are currently subject to the written form requirement. This means that all essential parts of the agreement between the parties (in particular the parties, the leased property, the lease term, and the rent) must result from a written uniform document signed by both parties.[1] All subsequent amendments to the lease agreement must be in writing also. A lease agreement concluded verbally, by email, or by DocuSign does not meet this written form requirement.

If the requirements have not been observed, the lease agreement is valid but can be terminated by either party at any time with statutory notice period (i.e., in the case of commercial leases, by notice no later than the third working day of a calendar quarter to the end of the next calendar quarter), because—despite its fixed term—it is deemed to have been concluded for an indefinite period due to the breach of form. As even minor, formal errors are sufficient to justify a breach of the written form, this written form requirement represents a considerable economic risk and uncertainty in planning for both contracting parties, particularly in commercial lease agreements (as in Germany, most of the residential lease agreements are concluded for an indefinite term anyhow). This not only affects landlords, who often incur considerable costs for construction or renovation measures that are only amortized over the entire fixed lease term, but also tenants who calculate with a long-term use of the leased property.

The primary purpose of the written form requirement is to protect the purchaser of a leased property. Under German law, the purchaser of a leased property enters automatically into the rights and obligations of the lease agreement. The provision that long-term lease agreements must be concluded in writing is therefore supposed to enable the purchaser of a property to review exactly which contractual obligations it is entering into. If the content of the lease agreement or any additional agreements has not been concluded in writing and a purchaser is therefore unable to obtain comprehensive knowledge of the rights and obligations into which it is about to enter, it is given the opportunity to terminate the lease agreement. However, this option is not only available exclusively to the purchaser of a leased property, but also to the original parties to the lease agreement.

Proposed Abolition of the Written Form Requirement for Commercial Lease Agreements

The draft act introduced by the German government provides for the requirement of the written form for commercial leases to be replaced by the text form. This means that long-term commercial lease agreements (i.e., agreements with a term of more than one year) and any subsequent agreements would no longer have to be signed by both parties in the original but that, for example, the exchange of signed, scanned versions or even an agreement by email or text message would be sufficient. Text form only requires a legible declaration including the name of the declaring person and which is submitted on a durable medium. Verbal agreements do not fulfill the text form requirement and would—as before—result in the possibility of termination of the lease agreement by either party.

Practical Implications of the Abolition of the Written Form Requirement for Commercial Lease Agreements

The suggested text form requirement in commercial lease agreements is a relief for the parties and represents a significant step toward reducing bureaucracy and toward digitalization. The requirement reduces administrative work to a certain extent and simplifies the process of concluding agreements. Lease agreements would no longer have to be printed out several times and sent by post.

The main purpose of the written form requirement—the documentation of the lease agreement and its essential details for a purchaser—can also be met by text form. Sufficient protection for the purchaser of a property can also be provided by carefully reviewing the text-form lease documents during the process of purchasing a property (due diligence). It cannot be excluded that this may lead to increased verification work since tenant files and tenant correspondence would have to be reviewed and checked for any agreements relating to the lease agreement in order to record the parties’ agreements. However, in regard to the current written form requirement, there already is uncertainty as to whether all agreements relating to the lease agreement have actually been recorded in writing. This risk can be mitigated in practice by including corresponding guarantees and warranties regarding the lease situation in the purchase agreement and by requiring the tenant under the lease agreement to submit a confirmation of completeness listing all existing agreements related to the lease.

It remains to be seen whether further criteria developed by various court decisions for compliance with the written form, which go beyond the mere handwritten signature of the parties, will be adjusted. In particular, it is currently required that the lease documents are physically or by content connected so that they appear as a uniform document. Therefore, annexes to the lease agreement or amendments need to make sufficient reference to the original lease agreement (and previous amendments). It seems likely that the requirements for the connection by content will remain the same or even increase. An amendment to a lease agreement by an informal email will therefore still harbor the risk of a breach of form and, thus, the risk of premature termination of the lease agreement. In addition, the line between negotiation and agreement could become blurred in, for example, email correspondence.

Thoughtful parties to a commercial lease agreement will therefore continue to execute lease agreements and amendments according to the current standard but without the final step of handwritten signatures, instead either signing with a simple electronic signature (e.g., via DocuSign) or exchanging electronic copies of the signed agreements. Amendments via text message or simple email should be avoided, as it cannot be excluded that these amendments may also in the future not fulfill the criteria set by the courts.

The draft act has been referred to several expert committees of the parliament. The legislative process will continue after the end of the parliamentary summer break in September 2024, and it is expected that the draft act will be passed later this year.

 

[1]   Although it would be possible under the current legal provisions to sign a lease agreement electronically using a qualified electronic signature, this is not used in practice due to the high requirements that the German Civil Code places on the qualified electronic signature (which are rarely fulfilled).

Click here for a PDF of the full text