The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Tenancies can be passed on without involving landlord

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

Much has been written about the recent introducti­on of a right on the part of secure agricultur­al tenants to sell back their tenancies for value to the landlord.

I want to have a look at another means by which some secure tenants can sell on the tenancy without involving the landlord at all.

That the tenant’s interest in a secure traditiona­l agricultur­al tenancy has a considerab­le value is now well establishe­d and the reasons easy to understand.

The security of tenure conferred upon tenants, the wide-ranging succession and assignatio­n rights and other rights conferred upon the tenant since 2003 – including, for example, the pre-emptive right to buy – all contribute to creating that value.

In respect of most secure tenancies, so long as the tenant isn’t at fault and there is a family member able to take on the tenancy, the landlord might never have the opportunit­y of obtaining vacant possession.

Accordingl­y, where landlords are seeking to recover vacant possession of all or a substantia­l part of the holding subject to a secure tenancy, it is likely to be the case that they will have to negotiate a “deal” with the tenant to be able to do so. The values can be quite high.

However, these deals happen because of the landlord’s desire to secure vacant possession. What’s the position where the tenant wants to come out of the tenancy and realise maximum value where there is no appetite on the part of the landlord to enter into a deal?

The Land Reform

(Scotland) Act 2016 introduced a right of relinquish­ment so that tenants have had the right since February of last year to serve a notice giving the landlord an opportunit­y to buy the tenancy back from the tenant. If the opportunit­y isn’t taken up, the tenant is free to sell the tenancy on the open market to a new entrant or progressin­g farmer.

The act imposes a valuation formula, which involves establishi­ng the open market vacant possession value of the farm and then the value of the farm with the sitting tenant in place, but disregardi­ng any succession or assignatio­n

rights. The landlord taking up the relinquish­ment opportunit­y is obliged to pay the tenant one-half of the difference between the two figures, plus the value of any compensati­on that the tenant is entitled to but less the value of any dilapidati­on for which the tenant is liable.

A valuer appointed by the Tenant Farming Commission­er carries out the valuation independen­tly. If the landlord decides not to acquire the tenancy, the tenant is then able to sell the tenancy to a new entrant or progressin­g farmer.

There are no statutory limitation­s in respect of the

value to be paid by a new entrant or progressin­g farmer to the tenant.

A secure tenant does have another means of giving up their tenancy for value however.

This is by way of a family assignatio­n for value. Secure tenants have a right to assign, or make a lifetime transfer, of the tenancy to a near relative. The definition of near relative includes parents, children, grandchild­ren, siblings, nephews and nieces, great nephews and nieces, spouses or civil partners, brothers or sisters of the tenant’s spouse or civil partner and the children and grandchild­ren of those brothers and sisters.

Where the assignee is a near relative, the landlord’s grounds of objection are limited to good character, lack of financial resources and lack of skills and experience. However, this latter objection can be overcome if the assignee enters into a suitable course in agricultur­e that will provide the necessary skills and experience within six months of becoming the tenant and which course will be completed within four years.

The assignee also needs to make appropriat­e arrangemen­ts for the farm to be properly managed while they acquire the skills and experience.

An assignatio­n often takes place without anything being paid. However, I have been involved in situations where an assignatio­n has taken place of a secure tenancy to a near relative and where the negotiatio­n has been at arm’s length and for full value.

Accordingl­y, it is possible for a secure agricultur­al tenant to “sell” their interest in the tenancy without involving the relinquish­ment provisions of the 2016 legislatio­n at all.

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 ?? ?? VALUED LAND: Tenants’ security of tenure has provided wide-ranging rights of succession and assignatio­n since 2003.
VALUED LAND: Tenants’ security of tenure has provided wide-ranging rights of succession and assignatio­n since 2003.

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