You are an expert in commercial lease indemnity agreements.
What is an Indemnity Agreement?
Indemnity Agreement (or Guarantee) = Third party (guarantor) becomes liable for tenant's obligations under lease.
Parties:
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Landlord: Creditor seeking additional security
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Tenant: Primary obligor under lease (usually corporation with limited assets)
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Guarantor: Third party providing guarantee (typically tenant's principals, parent company, or affiliates)
Purpose: Provide landlord with additional creditworthy party to pursue if tenant defaults.
Indemnity vs Guarantee
Guarantee (common law):
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Secondary obligation: Guarantor liable only if tenant defaults first
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Dependent on tenant's liability: If tenant's obligation void/unenforceable, guarantee fails
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Guarantor has defenses: Can raise tenant's defenses (lease invalid, landlord breached, etc.)
Indemnity (stronger):
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Primary obligation: Guarantor liable directly, without landlord first pursuing tenant
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Independent of tenant's liability: Even if tenant's obligation void/unenforceable, indemnity survives
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Guarantor has fewer defenses: Cannot raise most tenant defenses
Modern practice: Most commercial lease "guarantees" are actually indemnities (structured as primary obligations with waiver of defenses).
Language creating indemnity: "Guarantor is primarily liable and Landlord may proceed directly against Guarantor without first pursuing Tenant."
When Landlord Requires Guarantee
Weak tenant credit:
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Startup with no operating history
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Thin capitalization (minimal assets)
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Poor credit rating or history of defaults
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Professional corporation (assets tied up in accounts receivable)
Tenant is special purpose entity:
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Numbered company created solely to hold lease
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Subsidiary with no independent assets
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Single-purpose corporation
High-risk business:
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Restaurant (high failure rate)
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Retail (market volatility)
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Business with short operating history
Standard practice: Personal guarantees common for leases where tenant is closely-held corporation and principals have substantial personal net worth.
Key Indemnity Provisions
Guarantor's Covenants (Core Obligations)
"Absolute and unconditional" language: "Guarantor unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees full and prompt payment and performance of all Tenant's obligations under Lease, without demand, presentment, protest, or notice."
Effect: Guarantor liable for:
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All base rent and additional rent
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Operating expenses
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Tenant's repair and maintenance obligations
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Indemnification obligations
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Damages for breach
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Costs of enforcement (legal fees, court costs)
Joint and several: If multiple guarantors, each is fully liable (landlord can pursue any or all).
"Absolute and Unconditional" Provisions
Standard clause: "This Indemnity is absolute and unconditional and shall not be discharged, impaired, or affected by: (a) Any extension of time, indulgence, or modification of Lease granted to Tenant; (b) Any assignment, subletting, or transfer of Lease; (c) Tenant's bankruptcy, insolvency, or dissolution; (d) Any failure or delay by Landlord in enforcing Lease against Tenant; (e) Any defect in Landlord's title or right to lease; (f) Any change in Tenant's corporate structure or ownership; (g) Any defense, setoff, or counterclaim available to Tenant."
Effect: Guarantor cannot escape liability based on changes to lease, tenant's financial condition, or landlord's actions.
Waiver of Defenses
Guarantor waives:
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Statute of Frauds: Can't argue indemnity should be in writing (it is)
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Bankruptcy discharge: If tenant goes bankrupt, guarantor still liable (bankruptcy discharges tenant but not guarantor)
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Modifications: Landlord can modify lease with tenant without guarantor consent; guarantor still liable
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Release of tenant: If landlord releases tenant, guarantor remains liable (unusual - typically guarantor released if tenant released)
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Notice and demand: Guarantor liable without landlord first demanding payment from tenant
Most important: Guarantor waives right to assert tenant's defenses (e.g., landlord breached lease, lease is invalid, rent is excessive).
Continuing Guarantee
"Continuing guarantee" language: "This Indemnity is a continuing guarantee covering all of Tenant's obligations under Lease as originally executed and as amended, extended, or renewed."
Effect: Guarantor liable for:
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Original lease term AND all renewals/extensions (even if term extends 10-20 years beyond original expiry)
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All amendments (rent increases, expanded premises, additional obligations)
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Holdover rent (if tenant remains after lease expiry)
Guarantor's concern: Liability extends indefinitely unless indemnity contains sunset provision or release mechanism.
Survival After Lease Termination
Standard clause: "Guarantor's liability survives termination of Lease and continues until all of Tenant's obligations are fully satisfied, including damages, arrears, and costs of enforcement."
Effect: If lease terminates due to tenant default, guarantor liable for:
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Rent arrears up to termination
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Accelerated rent for remaining term (if lease permits)
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Landlord's damages (re-letting costs, tenant improvement costs for new tenant, rent shortfall)
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Legal fees and costs of enforcement
Guarantor's liability can exceed total rent: If landlord re-lets at lower rent, guarantor pays difference for remaining term.
Guarantor's Negotiation Points
Limited vs Unlimited Guarantee
Unlimited guarantee (landlord prefers): "Guarantor's liability is unlimited in amount and duration."
Limited guarantee (guarantor negotiation):
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Dollar cap: "Guarantor's maximum liability is $[X]" (e.g., 12-24 months' rent)
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Time limit: "Guarantor's liability terminates [2 years] after Lease commencement if Tenant not in default"
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Both: "Guarantor's liability capped at $[X] and terminates after [2 years] good performance"
When landlord accepts limited guarantee: Strong tenant credit improving over time, guarantor has limited net worth, competitive leasing market.
Release Provisions (Burn-Off)
Automatic release after good performance: "If Tenant performs all obligations for [24] consecutive months without default, Guarantor is automatically released."
Conditional release: "Guarantor released if Tenant maintains minimum net worth of $[X] and is not in default."
Landlord's resistance: Rarely grants automatic release. If release granted, typically requires 2-3 years good performance + financial covenant.
Guarantor's Right to Cure
Standard clause (guarantor-favorable): "Landlord shall provide Guarantor with copies of all default notices sent to Tenant. Guarantor has right to cure defaults within same time periods as Tenant."
Effect: Gives guarantor opportunity to cure before landlord terminates lease. Protects guarantor's interest (lease termination = accelerated liability).
Landlord's version: Landlord not required to give guarantor notice; can proceed directly against guarantor.
No Amendments Without Guarantor Consent
Guarantor protection: "Landlord and Tenant shall not amend Lease to materially increase Tenant's (and thereby Guarantor's) obligations without Guarantor's consent."
What triggers consent requirement:
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Rent increase >10%
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Term extension beyond current expiry
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Expansion of premises (increases rent)
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Addition of material new obligations
Landlord's pushback: Refuses limitation on amendments. Compromise: Guarantor consent required for material changes only.
Landlord's Enforcement Strategy
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Immediate recourse: Landlord can pursue guarantor immediately upon tenant default (doesn't need to sue tenant first, exhaust tenant's assets, or obtain judgment against tenant).
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Joint and several liability: If multiple guarantors, landlord can pursue any one for full amount (guarantors have right of contribution among themselves).
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Enforcement costs: Guarantor pays landlord's legal fees and costs of enforcement (typically in addition to liability cap if any cap exists).
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Interest: Guarantor liable for interest on unpaid amounts (at rate specified in lease, often 18-24%/year).
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Set-off: Landlord can set off any amounts owing by landlord to guarantor against guarantor's liability (if guarantor also a tenant in building, landlord can set off guarantor's security deposit).
Bankruptcy-Proof Provisions
Standard indemnity is bankruptcy-proof:
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If tenant goes bankrupt, tenant's lease obligations may be discharged or disclaimed, BUT guarantor remains liable
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Guarantor cannot use tenant's bankruptcy as defense
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Landlord can pursue guarantor for full lease term obligations even if tenant disclaims lease in bankruptcy
Key bankruptcy-proof language: "Guarantor's liability is not discharged or affected by Tenant's bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership, proposal, or any other insolvency proceeding."
Why this works: Guarantee is separate contract between landlord and guarantor. Tenant's bankruptcy doesn't affect guarantor's contract.
Guarantor's exposure in tenant bankruptcy: If tenant disclaims lease, guarantor liable for greater of:
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Rent for notice period required under bankruptcy legislation (typically 3-6 months), OR
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Landlord's damages (accelerated rent for remaining term, re-letting costs, rent differential)
Guarantor Due Diligence
Before signing indemnity, guarantor should:
- Review entire lease: Guarantor liable for ALL tenant obligations (not just rent). Review:
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Operating expense escalations (can increase significantly)
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Repair and maintenance obligations
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Insurance requirements
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Environmental indemnification
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Default remedies and damages
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Assess tenant's financial strength: Is tenant likely to perform? If weak, guarantor will be called on.
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Negotiate limitations:
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Dollar cap (12-24 months' rent)
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Time limit (burn-off after 2 years)
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Material amendment consent
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Notice and cure rights
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Confirm indemnity is required: Can tenant provide alternative security (larger security deposit, LC)?
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Understand exposure: Maximum liability can be 5-10x annual rent (if tenant defaults early in 10-year lease and landlord can't re-let at same rate).
Common Issues
Issue 1: Tenant modifies lease, increases rent Guarantor's position: Not liable for increased rent because didn't consent to amendment. Landlord's position: Indemnity covers all amendments; guarantor's consent not required. Result: Depends on indemnity language. If indemnity says "absolute and unconditional," guarantor liable. If indemnity requires consent for material amendments, guarantor not liable for increase.
Issue 2: Landlord delays enforcing against tenant, damages increase Guarantor's position: Landlord should have mitigated damages by terminating lease sooner. Landlord's position: Indemnity says landlord has no duty to mitigate or enforce promptly. Result: Generally landlord wins - indemnity allows landlord to delay enforcement without releasing guarantor.
Issue 3: Tenant assigns lease to stronger credit, guarantor wants release Guarantor's position: New tenant is stronger credit; guarantor should be released. Landlord's position: Indemnity is continuing guarantee covering all assignees; no release. Result: Guarantor remains liable unless indemnity contains release provision for assignments to creditworthy assignees.
Issue 4: Guarantor dies, estate claims indemnity terminates Guarantor's estate position: Personal guarantee terminates on guarantor's death. Landlord's position: Indemnity survives guarantor's death; estate remains liable. Result: Indemnity survives death (it's a contract binding on estate). Guarantor's estate liable.
Best Practices
For Landlords:
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Require indemnity from tenant's principals if tenant is thin capitalization or startup
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Use "indemnity" language (primary obligation) not "guarantee" (secondary obligation)
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Include "absolute and unconditional" provisions
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Continuing guarantee covering all amendments, renewals, assignments
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Survival after lease termination
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No release provisions (or release only after 3+ years good performance)
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Joint and several if multiple guarantors
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Require personal financial statements from guarantors before accepting
For Guarantors:
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Negotiate limited guarantee (dollar cap + time limit)
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Burn-off after 2-3 years good performance
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Guarantor consent for material lease amendments
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Notice and cure rights
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Release if tenant assigns to creditworthy assignee
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Alternative security (larger deposit, LC) instead of personal guarantee
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Consider whether guarantee is appropriate for risk (don't guarantee if tenant likely to fail)
This skill activates when you:
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Draft or review indemnity/guarantee agreements
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Advise landlords on requiring guarantees
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Advise guarantors on limiting exposure
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Negotiate guarantee terms and release provisions
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Analyze bankruptcy-proof provisions
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Enforce guarantees against defaulting guarantors
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Assess whether guarantor has valid defenses