COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2026/7
Module code: LAW3160
Module Overview
This module will equip students with a foundation of knowledge of the principles of the law relating to commercial property within England and Wales. The module will both draw upon and develop concepts taught within Land Law (LAW2100) and will additionally introduce students to the fundamental elements of the law relating to commercial property acquisitions, commercial leases, planning, remedies available and property and insolvency, together with the key transactional processes involved within the relevant legislative and policy framework. The module will further consider the critical perspectives on the commercial property relationships and looking at the dynamics between the different actors/interests. This module will continue to develop the understanding of case law, statutory interpretation, problem solving, critical analysis, legal research and time management.
Module provider
Surrey Law School
Module Leader
MCGLONE Melanie (Law)
Number of Credits: 15
ECTS Credits: 7.5
Framework: FHEQ Level 6
Module cap (Maximum number of students): N/A
Overall student workload
Workshop Hours: 14
Independent Learning Hours: 35
Lecture Hours: 18
Guided Learning: 65
Captured Content: 18
Module Availability
Semester 1
Prerequisites / Co-requisites
N/A
Module content
- Consider the life cycle of a commercial transaction together with the stakeholders involved
- Understand how title to land can be acquired and transferred within a commercial context
- Examine the considerations of policy and planning law
- Understanding the registration system regulating title and interests affecting land in England and Wales within a commercial transaction
- Examine the commercial landlord tenant relationship
- Conceptualising the impact of legal reasoning, regulation, and development of different rights in land
- Understand how to effectively apply the rules of law in reaching reasoned responses and solutions when presented with problem solving tasks
Assessment pattern
| Assessment type | Unit of assessment | Weighting |
|---|---|---|
| Coursework | Coursework | 100 |
Alternative Assessment
N/A
Assessment Strategy
The assessment strategy is designed to provide students with the opportunity to demonstrate that they have understood the way in which commercial property transactions are situated in law. It aims to encourage engagement with the module content by creating an assessment based on a fictional transaction
Thus, the Summative Assessment for this module consists of:
100% Coursework submitted online. The questions will be designed to test students on material covered throughout the semester. This assessment will also allow students a chance to develop their problem solving and practical application skills.
Formative assessment
Informal formative assessment consisting of tutor and peer feedback will be conducted throughout the module during the workshops when students have the opportunity to engage in presenting their prepared solutions to the workshops problem tasks.
Students will also be assigned one formal formative assessment prior to the final summative assessment. The formal formative assessment is intended to allow students to reflect on the informal feedback received during workshops and to engage that information in improving their work and meeting advanced criteria stated in the grade descriptors.
Feedback
- Informal tutor and peer feedback will be provided during workshops
- Formal written feedback and provisional mark provided by tutors for formative assessment
- Verbal feedback provided by a member of module teaching team by appointment for further clarification of feedback
Module aims
- To enable students to form a clear understanding of the life cycle of a commercial transaction together with the stakeholders involved
- To form a clear understanding of how title to land can be acquired and transferred within a commercial context
- To consider and critically examine the considerations of policy and planning law
- To further develop an understanding the registration system regulating title and interests affecting land in England and Wales within a commercial transaction
- To critically examine the commercial landlord tenant relationship
- To explore and critically examine the impact of legal reasoning, regulation, and development of different rights in land
- To enable learners to effectively apply the rules of law in reaching reasoned responses and solutions when presented with problem solving tasks
Learning outcomes
| Attributes Developed | ||
| 001 | Assess, analyse, explain, and apply the principal features of Land Law within a commercial context to demonstrates critical understanding of the legal principles and policy and how they have developed | CKPT |
| 002 | Be able to identify legal issues arising within a range of hypothetical problems | CKPT |
| 003 | Be able to analayse such hypothetical problems by the application of acquired knowledge and critical understanding of the underlying concepts and principles to reach a legal resolution of the problems | CKPT |
| 004 | Develop a critical awareness of the relationship between legislation, regulation, policy and principle in the relevant areas | CK |
| 005 | Develop the ability to study and research independently to enhance their knowledge and critical awareness to inform their evaluation of the law and policy they study | PT |
| 006 | Be able to effectively structure and communicate information, arguments and analyses | PT |
| 007 | Development of the ability to write precise legal answers | CPT |
| 008 | Developing commercial awareness within practice | CKPT |
| 009 | Understand commercial factors and potentially competing interests, together with potential solutions within practice | CKPT |
Attributes Developed
C - Cognitive/analytical
K - Subject knowledge
T - Transferable skills
P - Professional/Practical skills
Methods of Teaching / Learning
The learning and teaching strategy is designed to: ensure that students achieve the stated module learning outcomes and develop competencies through their learning that will enhance the University¿s core educational objectives of employability, digital capabilities, global and cultural intelligence, sustainability and resourcefulness and resilience.
The learning and teaching methodology is designed around large group lectures and smaller group workshops. Lectures will be conducted weekly and will introduce the topics by presenting systematically the key concepts and giving a general overview of the fundamental legal principles of each topic. The lectures are structured around a narrative and give guidance on how to analyse the law, how the law is applied and its effect within a commercial context. The lectures will be supplemented by captured content.
The lectures will not give a full description of, or appreciation of, the law and will be complemented by workshop sessions. The workshop sessions are reserved for active learning and will enhance understanding by allowing students to learn in greater breadth and depth to satisfy the learning outcomes. Students will be expected to exercise a level of ownership over their learning appropriate to their level of study and to display an appropriate level of resourcefulness and resilience in mapping out the knowledge from the lectures and essential reading into structured and applied legal solutions to assigned problem-based and practical tasks in the workshops.
Prior to the workshops, students are expected to conduct independent legal study and to construct outline briefs of possible solutions to the hypothetical scenarios provided in advance and be prepared to engage with the in class practical sessions. Using the key foundational legal skills acquired during Level 4 and 5, students are expected to demonstrate initiative, resourcefulness, and resilience in obtaining the required sources (through organized and purposeful navigation of digital and physical legal sources) which will assist in preparing their outline briefs. Pre-workshop preparation of outline briefs will be instrumental in facilitating students to reflect on the feedback they receive from tutors and peers during the session and will enable through practice, the development and refinement of ability to identify areas of strengths and weaknesses in their learning.
During the workshops, students will discuss problem-based questions and engage in problem-based practical tasks of some complexity and present solutions, supported with reasoned authority and critical analysis of the law. The workshops provide a crucial space for students to apply their learning in a practical way and ask and develop directed questions to aid their understanding of the subject matter and receive feedback on their learning. Using a series of hypothetical scenarios, the workshops will facilitate students in practicing and refining their ability to read and interpret facts, identify the possible legal issues arising and to conduct analyses to problem solve. Through active participation activities such as presentations, group work and debate, students will develop and demonstrate their ability to apply their knowledge and critical understanding of the key legal principles to legal issues and to construct sound reasoning supported by appropriate legal sources.
Typically, students will work in small groups to research the law and present answers, demonstrating self-direction and originality, of both approach and resolution. In these sessions students are expected to demonstrate their knowledge of the module content, their ability to present a coherent argument and assess the validity of arguments presented by others, and to facilitate their critical understanding of the legal rules and principles studied by applying them to hypothetical problems based on practical issues and disputes that they may encounter in professional practice.
Students should be prepared to field questions during their presentations and discussions, either from their tutor or from fellow students, and to follow up the presentations with discussion and feedback. Presentations may be required in any form, including advocacy for a specific party in a problem question or argument for or against a specific proposition.
The workshops are intended to be active learning sessions which will allow students to develop key transferable professional skills (presentation and communication technique, teamwork, confidence in public speaking, constructing feedback and fostering independence and ownership).
Students are further provided with weekly guided learning in the form of recommended reading. These readings are classified as essential reading which is mandatory for minimum understanding and basic workshop participation and further reading which will aid deeper and more critical understanding and enhance students¿ ability to participate in the workshops at an advanced level.
Indicated Lecture Hours (which may also include seminars, tutorials, workshops and other contact time) are approximate and may include in-class tests where one or more of these are an assessment on the module. In-class tests are scheduled/organised separately to taught content and will be published on to student personal timetables, where they apply to taken modules, as soon as they are finalised by central administration. This will usually be after the initial publication of the teaching timetable for the relevant semester.
Reading list
https://readinglists.surrey.ac.uk
Upon accessing the reading list, please search for the module using the module code: LAW3160
Other information
The School of Law is committed to developing graduates with strengths in Employability, Digital Capabilities, Global and Cultural Capabilities, Sustainability and Resourcefulness and Resilience. This module is designed to allow students to develop knowledge, skills and capabilities in the following areas:
Employability: The module provides students with core knowledge of the law of commercial property and the fundamentals of the law relating to commercial acquisitions and the creation/transfer of leaseholds which are core areas of most practices. Knowledge of key concepts of commercial property law is regarded as part of foundational professional knowledge of legal practice internationally. Students are expected to develop and refine their problem-solving skills and to engage in structuring their advice and analyses in a practical way to a professional standard with clear reference and support from primary and secondary legal sources.
Digital Capabilities: As with all modules, students are expected to engage with material online through effective navigation of the Surreylearn VLE and online legal databases provided by the University library. Students will use digital technology to prepare their and submit their assessment and may use digital technology (including GenAI) in aiding their preparations and presentations during the workshop sessions.
Global and Cultural Capabilities: While the module content focusses on English and Welsh Land law, the global nature of the common law system allows for the principles developed to apply to a wide range of jurisdictions internationally. Some fundamental concepts such as commercial acquisitions and acquisition/transfer of leasehold estates operate internationally and have the capability to impact the lived experiences of students and their families even outside of professional practice. The workshops sessions require students to collaborate and engage effectively to evaluate and provide feedback to each other¿s work and will allow them the space and opportunity to interact, communicate and build relationships with peers from diverse backgrounds and in a way that respects and promotes the interests of cultural groups and individual rights.
Sustainability: The students will learn that one principal policy underpinning much of land law subscribes to the ideal of making land as alienable as possible. As land is a finite resource, the ability to make full and effective use of land will ensure that land is utilised to its maximum potential to contribute to the economic benefit is often considered to be a priority in policy and legislation. Students will also learn about the ways in which the law regulates how land is used through regulation of planning and acquisition together with the opposing argument, consideration of environmental and ethical factors. This will ensure that students understand how title to land will be considered within a commercial context.
Resourcefulness and Resilience: The learning teaching and assessment strategy for this module has been designed to encourage active learning through participation, community building, peer support and reflective practice. Students will draw on individual and collective resourcefulness to design practical and critically reasoned solution to the challenges raised by the legal issues within the workshop problem tasks. Students are encouraged to reflect on feedback and feedforward and to engage with constructive comments and to take ownership of their learning. Formative assessment and feedback provide an opportunity for students to fail in a safe environment and to learn from experience and practical application building confidence and self-efficacy. The formative and summative assessments in this module require students to develop and apply techniques that feedforward to assessments within the module and to future modules within the programme with a problem-solving component.
Please note that the information detailed within this record is accurate at the time of publishing and may be subject to change. This record contains information for the most up to date version of the programme / module for the 2026/7 academic year.