The 1954 act was amended by the
Regulatory Reform (Business Tenancies) (England and Wales) Order 2003 (
SI 2003/3096), which was made on 1 December 2003 and came into effect on 1 June 2004. This order was adopted under the UK's
regulatory reform agenda, which aimed at removing legislative burdens on businesses. The order implemented many of the recommendations of a
Law Commission report of 1992 on business tenancies. The main changes adopted under this order were: • Where landlords are proposing to renew a tenancy under section 25 of the act they must state their proposed rent and other terms • the previous requirement for a tenant to serve a counter-notice was withdrawn • tenancies can be extended at the continuing existing rent • either landlord or tenant can apply to a court for an interim rent, and • a contracting-out procedure which existed under section 38(1) of the act was abolished. A consultation draft for a revised form of section 25 notice was issued in January 2004. This required a landlord to set out the terms proposed for the new lease: without the inclusion of proposed terms the notice would
not be valid. Lawyer Malcolm Dowden commented that landlords who simply wanted a section 25 notice "to contain a wish list of terms" would need to beware, arguing that a 2003 court ruling in
Mount Cook v Rosen, which addressed the meaning of the term "proposal" as used in the
Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, was likely to be applied in Landlord and Tenant Act cases. This would require "proposed terms" to be read as "realistic" terms or terms based on expert
valuation advice. == Reform ==