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If Prince Andrew didn't pay rent on the Royal Lodge for 20 years, why wasn't he evicted?

After facing the loss of his Duke of York title, recent reports have explored whether Prince Andrew can afford to stay in the Royal Lodge where he lives despite not paying rent for 22 years. Barrister Jacob Gifford Head explains why things work differently for the disgraced royal

Disgraced royal Prince Andrew looking at a statue

Disgraced royal Prince Andrew recently announced he would not use his Duke of York title as he faces fresh accusations related to his friendship with late paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein. Image: York Minster / Wikimedia Commons

For most people, paying the rent on time is one of their most important financial priorities. Fall into arrears and you can get evicted. Yet it has been reported that Prince Andrew hasn’t paid rent on the ‘Royal Lodge’, the huge mansion where he lives, for more than 20 years. How does he get away with it?

The answer is, while he rents the Royal Lodge from the Crown Estate, his lease is quite different to the assured shorthold tenancies that are common for most private sector tenants.

Instead of paying a substantial rent each month, most of the costs of his lease were paid up front in 2003: £1 million in cash together with an agreement to fund repairs and renovations which eventually cost £7.5 million. In return for this he has the right to live there until 15 June 2078.

He does still have to pay rent but this is symbolic or “nominal” rent. The reason for this is that English law thinks both sides need to get something out of an agreement for it to be legally binding, even if what one side is getting is just symbolic.

In Andrew’s case the nominal rent is “one peppercorn”. Why not £1? The answer to this is historic. In the Middle Ages tenants often had to pay their rent in goods rather than money (e.g. providing grain, cows or beer). So when people looked for a symbolic item they chose the least valuable item they could think of: a peppercorn.

Both peppercorn rents and these long leases, sometimes called leaseholds, have long been common in commercial and higher-value property. Leasehold has also been used by property developers for normal homes in more recent decades, where abuses of the system involving the charge of substantial rather than symbolic rents has resulted in various legal reforms.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

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Can Andrew be evicted if he doesn’t pay the peppercorn? No. The lease says that he only has to pay it if it is demanded. And even then, the court would be extremely unlikely to evict someone for not paying.

Does anyone actually pay the peppercorn? Some people do! Sevenoaks Vine Cricket Club hands over a peppercorn each year to Sevenoaks Town Council for its cricket ground. Elsewhere, the Covent Garden Area Trust pays five red apples and five posies of flowers. Though the strangest ritual is the Quit Rents Ceremony where the City of London pays one blunt knife, one sharp knife, six horseshoes and 61 nails. Celebrated since the 13th century it has been going on for so long that no one can remember what land is being rented. And, after the ceremony, everything is handed back to be used again next year!

Jacob Gifford Head is a barrister and mediator practising at Thomas More Chambers in London.

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