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Leaseholder Wins £7,900 Compensation for Damp and Water Ingress Caused by Freeholder’s Failure to Repair

5 March 2026

Housing Conditions Claim Against Freeholder — A Case Study

When a leaseholder experienced prolonged damp, mould and water ingress affecting their flat, they turned to our housing disrepair solicitors for assistance. The result? £7,900 in compensation, an agreement that the freeholder would carry out necessary remedial works, and payment of the client’s legal costs following settlement shortly before trial.

The Disrepair Issue — What Happened?

MJV Solicitors acted for a long leaseholder who brought a housing conditions claim against the freeholder and managing authority of a purpose-built block of flats. The claim arose from the freeholder’s failure to comply with its repairing obligations under the express covenants contained within the lease.

The client owned a long leasehold interest in the property and was therefore not a tenant. The claim was pursued on the basis of breach of lease, common law obligations, and failure to maintain the structure and exterior of the building in accordance with the lease terms.

The matter was progressed through the Pre-Action Protocol for Housing Conditions Claims (England), issued at court, and ultimately resolved by way of a Tomlin Order prior to trial.

Nature of the Disrepair

The leaseholder had reported disrepair to the freeholder over a prolonged period. The defects complained of included:

  • Dampness and mould affecting bedrooms and living areas
  • Water ingress associated with external structural elements, including balcony areas
  • Defective external masonry and pointing, allowing moisture penetration
  • Internal damage to plaster finishes arising from external defects

The client had repeatedly placed the freeholder on notice of the defects from early 2020 onwards, including formal complaints and correspondence, but meaningful remedial works were not undertaken within a reasonable timeframe.

Legal Basis of the Claim

The claim was not brought under statutory repairing provisions applicable to tenants. Instead, it was founded on:

  • Express repairing covenants within the lease requiring the freeholder to keep the structure and exterior of the building in repair
  • The freeholder’s obligation to maintain common parts and external elements so as not to cause damage to the demised premises
  • Breach of contract and breach of common law duties arising from failure to act following notice

The relevant lease provisions placed responsibility on the freeholder for the structure, exterior, and common parts of the building, including external walls and balconies, and for making good defects affecting those elements.

For related information, please read: Can Leaseholder Claim Compensation for Disrepair?

Expert Evidence and Court Proceedings

Given the ongoing dispute as to liability and causation, expert evidence was obtained. The claimant’s expert identified defects consistent with water ingress and confirmed that external elements under the freeholder’s control were capable of causing the internal damage complained of.

Following issue of proceedings, the court directed the preparation of a joint expert statement. While there were areas of disagreement between the experts, it was agreed that certain external defects had caused internal damage and required remedial works to prevent recurrence.

The matter proceeded towards trial, with liability and quantum actively contested.

The Legal Outcome – How MJV Solicitors Helped

Shortly before trial, the parties reached agreement and the claim was resolved by way of a Tomlin Order, staying the proceedings on agreed terms.

The settlement provided for:

  1. Payment of £7,900 in compensation to the leaseholder for distress, inconvenience and loss of amenity
  2. An agreement that the freeholder would carry out specified remedial works to external and structural elements within a defined period
  3. Payment of the leaseholder’s legal costs on the standard basis

Important Outcomes of the Case

This case demonstrates that leaseholders can pursue claims where a freeholder fails to comply with repairing obligations contained within a lease. It also highlights the importance of expert evidence and the effectiveness of progressing a claim through the court process where liability is disputed.

MJV Solicitors regularly act for tenants and leaseholders in housing disrepair and housing conditions claims involving damp, mould, water ingress, and structural defects, including claims against councils, housing associations, and private freeholders.

Are You a Leaseholder or Tenant Living with Damp, Mould or Disrepair?

You may be entitled to compensation if your landlord or freeholder has failed to carry out necessary repairs. Our leasehold disrepair solicitors can help you:

  1. Obtain expert evidence
  2. Pursue a claim for compensation
  3. Ensure necessary repairs are carried out
  4. Understand your legal rights as a tenant or leaseholder

Get in Touch Now for a Free Case Assessment

  • Call us on 01253 858231 
  • Message us on WhatsApp or Facebook 
  • Visit our website for more information about how to start your claim for Leasehold Disrepair

Read about some of our other successful disrepair claims, and how we helped:

Conveyancing price guide

Introductory paragraph explaining price transparency and why the costs are displayed below.

Our Service

We will (depending on whether we are acting for the buyer or seller):

  1. Comply fully with the Law Society’s Protocol for Conveyancing transactions;
  2. Prepare or consider all initial documents including the contract, property information form, fixtures and fittings forms, legal title and any other such documents required by the individual circumstances of the transactions;
  3. Prepare or consider enquiries and prepare or consider the responses;
  4. Consider the search reports on a purchase;
  5. Prepare a report on purchase properties;
  6. Assist with the execution of the contract and transfer as well as any other documents that are required;
  7. Exchange and complete the transaction;
  8. Comply with all post completion requirements;
  9. Submit a Stamp Duty Land Tax return upon completion.

Purchasing

How much will it cost?

If you are purchasing a freehold property, our fees on a purchase are:

Purchase price

Our fee

VAT

Total

£0-£100,000

£600

£120

£720

£100,001 - £150,000

£650

£130

£780

£150,001 - £200,000

£700

£140

£840

£200,001 - £250,000

£750

£150

£900

£250,001 - £300,000

£800

£160

£960

£300,001 - £400,000

£850

£170

£1020

£400,001 - £500,000

£900

£180

£1080

£500,001 - £750,000

£1000

£200

£1200

Each transaction will also incur the additional charges set out below:

Additional charge and explanation

Our fee

VAT

Total

Bank transfer fee

£30.00

£6.00

£36.00

Independent ID verification (per person)

£5.00

£1.00

£6.00

Depending on the specific nature of your purchase, we may also charge you the following:

Charge

Our fee

VAT

Total

Purchase of a leasehold house

£100.00

£20.00

£120.00

Purchase of any other leasehold property

£150.00

£30.00

£180.00

Purchase of a shared ownership property

£250.00

£50.00

£300.00

Gifted deposit

£50.00

£10.00

£60.00

New build property

£250.00

£50.00

£300.00

The above costs are for our fees only and all are subject to the disbursements on your matter.

Disbursements on a purchase

Please note that, subject to the relevant rules in operation at the time of your purchase and the value and nature of your purchase (i.e. whether you are a first time buyer or if you are purchasing a buy to let property), you may be required to pay Stamp Duty Land Tax on your purchase. This is not classified as a disbursement and we will advise you on your tax liability, if any, upon receipt of your instructions or specific enquiry.

Please note that our search and service providers often increase charges at little notice and so the disbursements quoted below are subject to change. We update this website as soon as possible following any such change.

Typically, the following searches are required for a purchase (all charges are inclusive of any VAT or insurance premium tax):

Local Authority’s current search fee (if Blackpool, Wyre or Fylde)

£122.70 inc VAT

Drainage and Water search fee

£79.50 inc VAT

Environmental search

£71.40 inc VAT

Land Registry priority title search

£3.00 no VAT

Bankruptcy search - £2 per seller named on the Register of Title

£2.00 no VAT

Land charges search - £2 per seller named on the Register of Title

£2.00 no VAT

It may transpire through the course of your purchase that further searches are required, but this is not typically so and most of our purchase matters complete having undertaken only the searches listed above.

You will have to pay a fee to register your property.

Purchase price

Land Registry registration fee (no VAT)

£0 - £80,000

£20.00 no VAT

£80,001 - £100,000

£40.00 no VAT

£100,001 - £200,000

£100.00 no VAT

£200,001 - £500,000

£150.00 no VAT

£500,001 - £1,000,000

£295.00 no VAT

£1,000,000 and above

£500.00 no VAT

Selling

How much will it cost? – Sale

If you are purchasing a freehold property, our fees on a purchase are:

Purchase price

Our fee

VAT

Total

£0-£100,000

£600.00

£120.00

£720.00

£100,001 - £150,000

£650.00

£130.00

£780.00

£150,001 - £200,000

£700.00

£140.00

£840.00

£200,001 - £250,000

£750.00

£150.00

£900.00

£250,001 - £300,000

£800.00

£160.00

£960.00

£300,001 - £400,000

£850.00

£170.00

£1020.00

£400,001 - £500,000

£900.00

£180.00

£1080.00

£500,001 - £750,000

£1000.00

£200.00

£1200.00

Over £750,000

To be negotiated

To be applied

To be agreed

Each transaction will also incur the additional charges set out below:

Additional charge and explanation

Our fee

VAT

Total

Bank transfer fee

£30.00

£6.00

£36.00

Independent ID verification (per person)

£5.75

£1.15

£6.90

We are currently on the panels of Lloyds Banking Group (Halifax, Birmingham Midshires and Lloyds) and Barclays. If you are purchasing a property with any of these lenders, we would be delighted to assist you, but cannot act where the mortgage is provided by any other lender.

Depending on the specific nature of your purchase, we may also charge you the following:

Charge

Our fee

VAT

Total

Sale of a leasehold house

£100.00

£20.00

£120.00

Sale of any other leasehold property

£150.00

£30.00

£180.00

Sale of a shared ownership property

£250.00

£50.00

£300.00

The above costs are for our fees only and all are subject to the disbursements on your matter.

Re-mortgages

We charge £500 plus VAT for acting on a re-mortgage.

Our disbursements are limited to the Land Registry searches of £3 per document (there is no VAT on Land Registry charges) and typically the total cost of these is between £6-£15 depending on how many documents are registered and whether the property being re-mortgaged is freehold or leasehold. Most lenders normally permit the purchase of no search insurance rather than undertaking new searches and this costs, inclusive of insurance premium tax.

Call us today: 01253 858 231