Sentences with phrase «unreasonably withhold consent»

(5)... The tenant shall not unreasonably withhold consent to the landlord to enter the dwelling unit at a specified time where the landlord has given at least one day's notice of intent to enter to exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers or tenants.
(1) The tenant shall not unreasonably withhold consent to the landlord to enter into the dwelling unit in order to... exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers...

Not exact matches

Consent, however, should not unreasonably be withheld.
13.3 The Licensee may not assign or transfer its rights under this License without the express written consent of Publisher, which consent shall not unreasonably be withheld.
«As a result of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, West and Zampella were prohibited from withholding such consent unreasonably or in bad faith.»
Until now the sale or gifting of a mobile home on site — there are around 85,000 of them in England — required the site owner's consent, albeit not to be unreasonably withheld.
If consent is unreasonably withheld by one of the parents, a court application may be necessary to allow the trip.
In a recent judgment the High Court determined that the bank was in breach of the requirement not to withhold its consent unreasonably to the release of a secured asset from its security package for the purposes of sale.
@Nij in at least one state, New York, a lease clause saying «no subleases» is invalid, because landlords may not «unreasonably» withhold their consent to a sublease.
This is why the clause contract has the phrase «the Landlord's consent -LSB-...] will not be unreasonably withheld».
It would have been open to the tenants to try to find an assignee or sub-tenant and then seek the landlord's consent for the assignment or sub-letting, which could not have been withheld unreasonably.
the consent of the traditional owners should not be unreasonably withheld for requests for individual leasehold interests for contemporary purposes;
the consent of traditional owners should not be unreasonably withheld for requests for individual leasehold interests for contemporary purposes;
A potential exception — and this is important — arises if the builder gives prior written consent, although in the more draconian version of these kinds of contract, that consent may be «unreasonably and arbitrarily withheld» by the builder, essentially on its whim.
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