The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Not every lease of land is an agricultur­al lease

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

When is an agricultur­al lease not an agricultur­al lease?

An agricultur­al lease provides a tenant with various rights, including security of occupation for the agreed length of the lease.

That might be for five or 10 years or longer under a fixed duration tenancy or even for the foreseeabl­e future, if the lease is a traditiona­l lease entered into before November 28 2003.

However, not every lease of land is an agricultur­al lease.

Whether it is or not depends on the purpose of the lease.

To be an agricultur­al lease, the land subject to the lease must be used for agricultur­e for the purposes of a trade or business.

Agricultur­e is defined by the Agricultur­al Holdings Acts as including: horticultu­re; fruit growing; seed growing; dairy farming; livestock breeding and keeping; the use of land as grazing land, meadow land, osier land, market gardens and nursery grounds; and the use of land for woodlands where that use is ancillary to the farming of land or other agricultur­al purposes.

Livestock is defined as including any creature kept for the production of food, wool, skins or fur or for the purpose of its use in the farming of land.

Accordingl­y, letting out land for grazing horses or for breeding horses or for serving a livery business will not create an agricultur­al lease regulated by the Acts because the horses are not being kept for the production of food, wool, skins or fur or for the purpose of being used in the farming of land.

I suppose if we began eating horsemeat in Scotland and horses were kept for that purpose then a lease of land for horses might be an agricultur­al lease, but this seems unlikely in the near future.

In the right circumstan­ces, a let of a building on its own can create an agricultur­al tenancy regulated by the Agricultur­al Holdings Acts, depending on what the building is being used for.

Letting out land for grazing or mowing for a period of less than a year, where the use of the land is specified as being the grazing of livestock or growing a hay or silage crop, will not create an agricultur­al lease.

A lease of that nature does not attract the protection of the Agricultur­al Holdings Acts unless the tenant remains in occupation after the end of the grazing lease without challenge by the landlord and pays rent for subsequent occupation, which is accepted by the landlord.

It’s quite common for grazing tenancies to be entered into without any sort of written agreement.

There are a number of secure tenancies in existence that began their lives as grazing tenancies but where the tenant remained in occupation without challenge by the landlord at the end of the let and subsequent­ly paid rent on a continuing basis.

If that happened prior to November 28 2003, those tenants are fully secure traditiona­l agricultur­al tenants.

However, since that date, it has been impossible to create a fully secure traditiona­l tenancy in that way.

What will happen, however, is that the grazing tenant will become a short limited duration tenant in a tenancy of five years, backdated to the start of the original grazing let.

As ever, this can be a complicate­d area of law and landlords and tenants who are unsure of their rights shouldn’t hesitate to seek appropriat­e legal advice.

“As ever, this can be a complicate­d area of law

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 ??  ?? SHEEP MAY SAFELY GRAZE: Leasing land does not automatica­lly secure a tenant’s rights under the law.
SHEEP MAY SAFELY GRAZE: Leasing land does not automatica­lly secure a tenant’s rights under the law.

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