A owns a profitable business selling flowers in a shopping mall. She leases her premises from B, the owner of the mall, at an annual rental of $30,000 . When A's lease is due for renewal, B tells her another flower-seller, C, wants to open a shop in the mall. B also says that if A wants to renew her lease, she must agree to an increased rental of $40,000 per annum: otherwise he will lease her shop space to C. A knows her business depends on her location and local goodwill. Believing B has an alternative tenant for her shop-space, A agrees to the increased rent. In fact B intends to lease a different shop in the mall to C regardless of what A agrees to. After signing her new lease, A finds out that C will be opening a competing flower shop in B's mall. Can A's new lease be set aside on grounds of a breach by B of s 21 of the ACL?
Click here to see section 21. Click here to see section 22.
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