The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

It pays to be a good sport

- Hamish Lean Hamish Lean is a partner and head of rural property at Shepherd and Wedderburn.

At this time of year, I am often contacted by tenant farmers for advice about their landlord’s exercise of sporting rights over the let farm. This is often a cause of friction between landlord and tenant.

Agricultur­al leases will usually reserve the sporting rights over the let farm to the landlord. This is a perfectly standard arrangemen­t and the exercise of the agricultur­al tenant’s rights and the landlord’s sporting rights over the land more often than not exist in reasonable harmony, each side respecting the interests of the other.

However, relationsh­ips can break down and it is usually because one side perceives the other as behaving unreasonab­ly and not properly taking into account their rights. This is particular­ly so when the landlord, as they are entitled to do, has let out the sportings to a third party.

The personal relationsh­ip between landlord and tenant which perhaps in the past allowed a reasonable degree of compromise between the two can be absent when a third party seeks to maximise the commercial return from the sporting lease.

I often hear complaints from agricultur­al tenants about shooting parties disturbing livestock, causing damage to crops, leaving gates open and appearing unannounce­d to shoot.

Likewise, I often hear complaints about damage and nuisance from large numbers of pheasants which are reared on the landlord’s property but which then encroach on the let farm, causing damage to crops and often a severe nuisance through fouling.

What, if anything, can the tenant farmer do about it? There is a statutory right to claim payment for damage to crops because of game if it exceeds the sum of 12p per hectare.

However, in order to claim compensati­on, a notice in writing has to be given to the landlord as soon as practicabl­e after the damage is first noticed. The landlord must be given a reasonable opportunit­y to inspect.

A second notice must then be given within six months of the first notice setting out the amount being claimed. Ultimately, the claim has to be raised in the Land Court if it cannot be agreed with the landlord.

An agricultur­al tenant may also have a claim for damages against his or her landlord if the quantity of game affecting the holding has been materially increased since the start of the lease.

This means that where a landlord chooses to develop, for example, pheasant shooting on a particular estate greatly beyond the extent of the shootings which existed when the lease was entered into, so affecting the agricultur­al tenant, the tenant may have a claim against the landlord for the damage which results over and above what might ordinarily have been expected at the outset of the lease.

The Tenant Farming Commission­er has produced a code of practice in respect of the exercise of sporting rights. The code points out that the tenant farmer and the party exercising sporting rights should each respect the right of the other party to enjoy their rights. They should each behave responsibl­y and with regard to the effect of their actions on the other party.

The code points out that good communicat­ions are the key to a harmonious relationsh­ip and that both sides should be willing to make the effort to establish and maintain a good and effective working relationsh­ip. The code suggests that a memorandum of understand­ing should be agreed providing for access arrangemen­ts and informing the tenant of planned shooting dates.

The code also recommends that where property owners are entering into new sporting leases, they include a clause obliging the sporting tenant to comply with the code.

 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Large numbers of pheasants can be a nuisance if they encroach on to the let farm.
Picture: Getty Images. Large numbers of pheasants can be a nuisance if they encroach on to the let farm.
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