Commercial Lease Disputes in BC:
Tenant and Landlord Rights

Commercial leases govern some of the most significant financial commitments a business will make. When disputes arise, they move quickly and the consequences for both landlords and tenants can be severe. Understanding your rights before a dispute escalates is the most important thing you can do to protect your position.

How Commercial Leases Work in BC

Unlike residential tenancies, commercial leases in BC are not governed by the Residential Tenancy Act and there is no equivalent tribunal for commercial disputes. Commercial tenants and landlords have far greater freedom to negotiate their own terms, but that also means the lease itself carries almost all the weight when something goes wrong. Courts will look first at what the contract says, then at the applicable law.

The primary legislation governing commercial tenancies in BC is the Commercial Tenancy Act. But most disputes turn on the specific wording of the lease, not the statute.

Common Sources of Commercial Lease Disputes

Disputes can arise at any stage of the tenancy. The most frequent issues include:

  • Non-payment of rent or disagreements over additional charges such as operating costs or property taxes
  • Early termination or abandonment of the premises
  • Disputes over repair and maintenance obligations
  • Eviction and re-entry proceedings
  • Disagreements over lease renewal rights or options to purchase
  • Unauthorized alterations to the premises
  • Assignment or subletting disputes

Tenant Rights in a Commercial Lease Dispute

Commercial tenants have fewer statutory protections than residential tenants, but they are not without rights. If a landlord has breached fundamental lease obligations, such as failing to provide quiet enjoyment or maintain the premises, a tenant may have grounds to seek rent abatement, damages, or in serious cases, to treat the lease as terminated.

  • Time Sensitive: Tenants facing eviction should act quickly. BC courts have the discretion to grant relief from forfeiture, which can reinstate a lease even after a breach, but only if the tenant moves promptly and can demonstrate the breach was remediable.

Landlord Rights in a Commercial Lease Dispute

When a tenant defaults, a BC landlord has several options. One of the most important strategic decisions is whether to terminate the lease or affirm it and continue demanding rent as a debt. In a significant BC Court of Appeal decision, Anthem Crestpoint Tillicum Holdings Ltd. v. Hudson’s Bay Company, the court confirmed that a landlord who keeps the lease alive and sues for unpaid rent as a debt has no obligation to find a replacement tenant. This removes the duty to mitigate that applies when a landlord accepts a termination and sues for damages instead.

For landlords with commercial properties, this distinction can have a substantial financial impact over the remaining term of a long-term lease.

Resolving a Commercial Lease Dispute

Many commercial lease disputes resolve through negotiation or mediation without going to court. This is usually faster, less expensive, and better for preserving any ongoing business relationship between the parties. Where the dispute involves unpaid rent, eviction, or a claim for significant damages, litigation in BC Supreme Court may be necessary.

Some leases include arbitration clauses requiring disputes to be resolved privately. Reviewing the dispute resolution provisions of your lease at the outset of any conflict is essential to avoid pursuing a path the lease itself prohibits.

Get Legal Advice

Talk to a Commercial Lease Dispute Lawyer in Vancouver

Commercial lease disputes involve contract interpretation, statutory rights, and procedural decisions that can significantly affect the outcome. Acting early gives you more options. McKechnie and Company represents both landlords and tenants in commercial tenancy disputes across British Columbia.