Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Abe_froeman Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Greene King would not buy a sub lease though.

>

> They would buy a freehold pub with no lease at all

> on it - i.e. no lease to enterprise and no

> sub-lease to the pub manager.

>

> That seems to be the most likely scenario here. If

> the lease with Enterprise expires in June and the

> sub lease also expires the whole operation could

> be sold as one. I would guess that might be worth

> about ?5m.

>

> If I could cash in for that (after 15 years of

> hard work!) then personally I would let my lease

> expire and take no action to 'save' the pub.



That would imply it reverts to the freeholder after June (and I note your last paragraph :) ).

?If the lease with Enterprise expires in June and the sub lease also expires the whole operation could be sold as one. I would guess that might be worth about ?5m.?


As far as I can make out, Jamie?s lease with Enterprise IS the sub-lease which is due to expire in June. I haven?t seen anything about Enterprise?s lease with the freeholder expiring soon though happy to be corrected.

nxjen Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Freehold owned by Jamie and Paul Rigby who

>

> Lease to

>

> Enterprise who

>

> Sub-lease to Jamie and this sub-lease is due to

> expire in June.




I'm wondering if this originated as a "sale and leaseback" - would only be the case if EI were the Freeholder before Jamie - and dont know how to check this


15 years ago:

EI (tbc) owned pub freehold, but have no tax deductible expense.

EI sell FH to Jamie, on the understanding that he will then offer to lease it back to them on the long lease.

EI get cash from the sale of the freehold

EI's annual lease cost to Jamie is tax deductible - they have therefore created an ongoing tax deductible expense out of an asset they previously owned


EI creates a sub lease to Jamie out of the long lease, perhpas 15 years - all is friendly

EI decides after 15 years not to renew the short lease. As freeholder who has granted a long lease Jamie has no control over this


EI now free to either create a new short sub lease for the remainder of the long lease term to a new venture, or take over the running of the pub themselves under the long lease


If EI feel that they had undercharged for the original 15 year sub lease, and will charge significantly more for the new sub lease they may have offered this renewal to Jamie at a rate that was too expensive for him to continue - or they may have just, as is assumed, not wanted to continue working with him, full stop.

Penguin68 says:


"Where the commercial lease has time-terminated the freeholder has no requirement to extend the lease or offer the leaseholder a new lease." That's not right in all circumstances, but not worth a teach-in here...


This all sounds very like what happened to another EI tenant I know. EI are commercially as sharp as razorblades. A petition won't help, unfortunately, because they're solely about getting sufficient cashflow to service their humonguous debt. They won't GAF about the community aspects. Only money talks.

  • 2 months later...

Looks like EI are becoming quite vindictive in all of this row


https://www.instagram.com/p/BxehbI1nofX/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link


Seems they've granted a new lease to a vehicle called "Old Spot Pubs" which is actually just a subsidiary of Enterprise Inns.

Having looked at the other Old Spot pubs mentioned in the press release it seems that the food menu is fashioned according to each location. Unsurprisingly the pub in Farnham Common appears to have a food offering closest to the current Palmerston whereas the Limehouse offering is distinctly pub grub. I guess we have to hope the ED offering will be closer to the Farnham Common end of the spectrum!


http://lgn1390837841.site-fusion.co.uk/restaurant-menu

Abe_froeman Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Looks like EI are becoming quite vindictive in all

> of this row

>

> https://www.instagram.com/p/BxehbI1nofX/?utm_sourc

> e=ig_web_copy_link

>

> Seems they've granted a new lease to a vehicle

> called "Old Spot Pubs" which is actually just a

> subsidiary of Enterprise Inns.


I agree on the pinkish colour with one of the comments - It's a great colour :)

The whole thing is a 21st century swindle. And frankly a disgrace. How can a successful and much-loved part of the community be taken away so easily.

May I bring everyone's attention to what these guys who are apparently taking over say they're about.


Dave Ford, who is behind this joint venture with Ei that is taking over the Palmerston, said as recently as February, the following.


"We tend to take on pubs that have been shut for a while with the intention of giving the community back their local."


You're a hypocrite Mr Ford. If you want to give, as you say "the community back their local," give us back the Palmerston.


Until that time, I hope I see no one in whatever emerges. You don't have to call it a boycott. It's standing up for the community and its people.


I suggest that when Mr. Ford's crew turn up, we throw this line back in his face, time and time again.

Not even sure that a 'boycott' will be necessary. Looking at 'The Star of the East' the food offering is nothing like the quality of the Palmerston, so think that it won't necessary attract the same people. Will be interesting to see if there is a market for the middle of the road pubco pub food offering? Feels a bit like the pub food bit is well catered for, but I guess we will see once it opens. It reminds me a little of when Adventure Bar moved in, totally misjudged the market and closed down in a relatively short period of time.

goldilocks Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Not even sure that a 'boycott' will be necessary.

> Looking at 'The Star of the East' the food

> offering is nothing like the quality of the

> Palmerston, so think that it won't necessary

> attract the same people. Will be interesting to

> see if there is a market for the middle of the

> road pubco pub food offering? Feels a bit like

> the pub food bit is well catered for, but I guess

> we will see once it opens. It reminds me a little

> of when Adventure Bar moved in, totally misjudged

> the market and closed down in a relatively short

> period of time.


Adventure Bar should have worked at that point but now it would be Peckham :)

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I'm certainly not surly - it's Friday, so I'm in a delightful mood.  As Earl Aelfheah said, the money has to come from somewhere. But Labour new that hiking fuel as well as employee NIC in would be a step too far - for businesses and consumers. It was the right decision for this moment in time. Suggesting that someone who's against fuel duty increase on this occasion is against and fuel duty full stop is quite a leap. Why do you demonise everyone who doesn't think that owning a car is a cardinal sin?  I'm not sure using Clarkson as an example of your average farmer holds much weight as an argument, but you know that already, Mal. 
    • Hope it's making others smile too! I don't know the background or how long it's been there 😊
    • If you are against the increase in fuel duty then you are surly against fuel duty full stop.  It has not kept up with inflation, I'm talking about getting it back on track.  Ultimately road user charging is the solution. Labour will probably compromise on agricultural land inheritance by raising the cap so it generally catches the Clarksons of the world who are not bothered about profits from land beyond, in his case, income from a highly successful TV series and the great publicity for the farm shop and pub
    • Were things much simpler in the 80/90s? I remember both my girls belonging to a 6th Form Consortium which covered Sydenham Girls, Forest Hill Boys and Sedgehill off Bromley Road. A level classes were spread across the 3 schools - i remember Forest Hill boys coming to Sydenham Girls for one subject (think it was sociology or psychology ) A mini bus was provided to transport pupils to different sites, But I guess with less schools being 'managed' by the local authority, providers such as Harris etc have different priorities. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...