18th June 2026
The decision in Shenstone Properties Ltd v Marconi House RTM Company Ltd, addressed a preliminary but decisive issue in respect of notices given under Regulation 3 of the Building Safety (Leaseholder Protections) (Information etc.) (England) Regulations 2022 (the Regulations): whether an appeal against a requirement to pay a remediation contribution had been made in time, and if not, whether the Tribunal could extend the deadline for appeal.
Marconi House RTM Company Ltd (the Respondent) identified building defects and sought to recover remediation costs from Shenstone Properties Ltd (the Applicant), the freeholder, as a “responsible landlord”.
On 18 November 2025, the Respondent served a notice under the Regulations, demanding approximately £4.1 million (the Notice).
The Regulations prescribe a strict challenge process:
The Applicant appealed on 29 January 2026. The validity of the appeal therefore depended entirely on when the notice was received.
The Applicant maintained that the notice was received on 12 January 2026, and as such, the appeal was in time. The Respondent relied on Royal Mail Special Delivery records which included a signature and photographic confirmation of delivery to the Applicant’s registered office and showed delivery of the Notice on 20 November 2025.
The Applicant relied primarily on a director’s witness statement asserting non-receipt and suggesting that recorded deliveries were sometimes mishandled.
The Tribunal rejected that account for several reasons:
On the balance of probabilities, the Tribunal concluded that the notice was received on 20 November 2025. The statutory appeal period had therefore expired well before the appeal was issued, rendering it out of time.
The key legal question was whether the Tribunal had jurisdiction to allow the appeal to proceed.
The Applicant argued that the Tribunal’s general case management powers under the Tribunal Procedure Rules 2013 permitted an extension of time; however, the Tribunal disagreed, holding that this issue was governed exclusively by the statutory scheme in the Regulations. Its reasoning included:
The Tribunal also noted that the Notice itself was required to set out the relevant time limits, reinforcing the expectation of strict compliance.
The Applicant relied on R v Soneji, arguing that the Tribunal should consider the consequences of non-compliance and avoid depriving parties of rights without a fair opportunity to object.
While acknowledging the significant financial consequences, the Tribunal held that strict enforcement of the time limits did not produce unintended prejudice. Non-compliance was therefore fatal.
The Tribunal further indicated that even if it had jurisdiction, it would not have exercised it in the Applicant’s favour. The delay was substantial, no adequate explanation had been provided, and an extension would have prejudiced the Respondent by delaying remediation works.
This decision highlights the strict operation of the Building Safety regime:
This decision reinforces the need for prompt, well‑evidenced responses to building safety notices – our team can support by:
We can also assist in implementing internal processes to ensure future compliance and mitigate the risk of losing valuable rights of challenge.
If you would like to discuss your specific circumstances, please get in touch with Asia Munir or Lewis Couth, who would be happy to assist.