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USE CASES

Legal

Legal teams use Firststreet to verify that billing practices match lease obligations, reduce exposure to tenant disputes, and maintain the documentation record needed to defend every position from claim to resolution.

Documentation Record ALWAYS READY
Compliance Posture PROACTIVE
Audit Response IMMEDIATE
Documentation Record
Audit-Ready Complete
Full evidence chain maintained · lease clause to billed amount
For all active tenants · no reconstruction needed
Proactive
CAM cap violation identified before tenant audit · corrected in-period
Dispute avoided · documentation preserved
Response < 24 Hrs
Audit demand received · documentation package ready immediately
No reconstruction · full clause-level evidence
Legal team reviewing compliance documentation

Disputes Built on Undocumented Billing Practices

When a tenant sends an audit demand letter, the legal team's first question is always the same: can we show exactly how this charge was calculated, and can we show it traces directly back to the lease? In most organizations, the honest answer is: not immediately. The billing was configured years ago by someone who may no longer be at the company. The methodology is embedded in a property management system. Reconstructing the chain of evidence requires pulling the original lease, finding the abstract, locating the billing configuration, and hoping the documentation is consistent.

By the time that reconstruction is complete, the tenant's counsel has had weeks to develop their position. And if the billing actually was incorrect, if the CAM cap wasn't enforced, or an exclusion was omitted, legal is now managing both a dispute and a remediation simultaneously. The exposure compounds with every month that passed without correction.

Firststreet changes this dynamic. When lease obligations are continuously monitored and every billing position is backed by traceable evidence from the moment it was established, legal teams are never reconstructing history under pressure. The documentation exists. The evidence chain is maintained. The team can respond quickly and from a position of confidence.

Supporting Compliance and Reducing Dispute Exposure

Proactive compliance is more effective than reactive dispute management. When Firststreet's continuous monitoring identifies a discrepancy, whether it's a CAM cap that's been violated, an exclusion that was omitted, or a recovery structure that diverges from the lease, legal has the opportunity to address it before a tenant exercises their audit rights.

Firststreet's evidence-based findings also reduce the scope of legitimate tenant audit claims. When billing is continuously verified against lease language and discrepancies are addressed as they're identified, the residual audit exposure narrows materially.

Dispute-Ready Documentation
Every billing position is backed by a traceable chain from lease clause to calculation logic to billed amount, accessible immediately when a dispute or audit demand arrives.
Proactive Compliance Monitoring
CAM cap enforcement, exclusion application, and recovery structure compliance are monitored continuously, so violations are identified before tenants raise them.
Audit Response Efficiency
When tenants exercise audit rights, the documentation record is already compiled. Legal can respond with evidence rather than scrambling to reconstruct methodology.
Documentation Record
Audit-Ready Complete
Full evidence chain maintained, lease clause to billed amount
For all active tenants
Proactive
CAM cap violation identified before tenant audit, corrected in-period
Dispute avoided
Response < 24 HRS
Audit demand received, documentation package ready immediately
No reconstruction needed

Maintaining Audit-Ready Documentation at Scale

For portfolios with dozens or hundreds of leases, maintaining audit-ready documentation manually is operationally unsustainable. The volume of leases, the diversity of obligation structures, and the frequency of billing cycles mean that documentation discipline tends to degrade over time. Evidence that was carefully maintained at lease commencement becomes harder to locate two or three years into a lease term.

Firststreet maintains the governance record systematically. The documentation underlying every finding, the lease reference, the applied logic, the comparison data, is preserved throughout the lease term and remains accessible regardless of staff turnover or system migrations. For legal teams managing a large portfolio, this means audit-ready documentation is a byproduct of operations rather than a periodic project.

How This Looks in Practice

A concrete example of how structured lease documentation changes the outcome of a tenant audit, and what the absence of it costs.

Scenario Urban mixed-use landlord  ·  Anchor retail tenant  ·  Formal audit demand letter  ·  5-year billing period in dispute

The property management team received a formal audit demand letter from counsel representing one of their largest retail tenants. The letter requested five years of CAM billing records, escalation calculations, reconciliation statements, and documentation of the recovery methodology applied under the lease, with a deadline of 30 days to produce the initial package.

The property team had the numbers. They could pull billing reports from the system. But what they didn't have was a clean, structured record linking each billing decision back to the specific lease clauses authorizing it. Which lease provision governed the gross-up election? Why had the management fee exclusion been applied in years 1–3 but not years 4–5? What was the contractual basis for the CAM cap calculation methodology that had changed after a lease amendment?

Without that documentation, answering those questions would require a manual reconstruction of five years of billing history, pulling amendments, cross-referencing original clauses, rebuilding CAM pools from scratch. The outside counsel estimate for that exercise was $180,000 and 4–6 months. And if the reconstruction revealed errors, the exposure would be larger still.

Because Firststreet had been monitoring the lease throughout its term, the documentation already existed in structured form. Every CAM calculation was linked to the specific clause authorizing it. The amendment history was tracked and reflected in the obligation model. The change in management fee exclusion treatment was flagged and documented at the time it occurred, with the lease reference attached.

Outcome

The full evidence package, clause-by-clause billing documentation, escalation history, reconciliation methodology, and amendment log, was compiled in 4 days. The tenant audit was resolved in 6 weeks. No material billing adjustments were required. Legal fees came to $42,000 against an estimated $180,000 without the structured documentation. The landlord's outside counsel noted it was the fastest resolution they had seen on an audit of that complexity.

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