Enterprise freeholder in beer tie stand-off

By Ewan Turney

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Public house

Black Lion in Kilburn: bought at auction for £1.3m
Black Lion in Kilburn: bought at auction for £1.3m
An Enterprise tenant who bought his freehold at auction on a sale and leaseback basis believes he no longer has to buy beer through the tie. Brian...

An Enterprise tenant who bought his freehold at auction on a sale and leaseback basis believes he no longer has to buy beer through the tie.

Brian Mannion, who runs four pubs in London, acquired the freehold of the Black Lion in Kilburn at auction last year for £1.3m.

Under the terms of the sale and leaseback, Enterprise now pays Mannion £80,000 a year in rent and he, in turn, pays them £50,000 a year in rent, with Enterprise collecting additional wet rent through the beer tie.

However, Mannion has decided to buy outside the tie, believing he is now free to do so. "I am essentially giving Enterprise a building in which to charge me a £200 premium on a barrel of beer," said Mannion.

"It is a ludicrous situation." He said the relationship had become "unworkable" and if the tie was enforced, there would be "no incentive" for him to sell any beer.

"I would be better off closing down the pub and converting it all into beds," he said.

Mannion also recently bought one of his freeholds from Punch Taverns.

"At least they had the decency to sell off the freehold unencumbered to the tenants," he said. Mannion added that he would consider buying Enterprise out of the agreement.

Enterprise said it would try to resolve the situation amicably but an injunction to enforce the tie remained an option.

It is the second time one of Enterprise's tenants has acquired the freehold.

Entrepreneur Paul Rigby​ side-stepped Enterprise by buying the Palmerston in East Dulwich at auction for £986,000 in October last year.

Enterprise now pays Rigby £65,000 per annum in freehold rent — £21,000 more than the £44,000 he pays the company in dry rent.

Mannion's argument

Tenant Brian Mannion is arguing his case under the EU block exemption, which gives commercial agreements, including the tie, an opt-out from competition law.

He believes that the sale and leaseback has created an "artificial ownership construction", which exempts him from purchasing obligations after five years — his original agreement with Enterprise dates back to March 1999.

However, Enterprise has said it does not believe that he has a valid case.

Related topics Beer Legislation Stonegate Group

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