Impact of death on farm leases
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[June 21, 2007]
URBANA -- As a general rule, the tenant's lease
of farmland continues after the death of the landowner according to
terms agreed to by the landowner before death, a University of
Illinois Extension agricultural law specialist concluded.
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"This holds true even for a multiyear lease," said Donald L.
Uchtmann, who prepared the report "Farm Owner's Death: Can
Tenant Continue Farming Under the Lease?" The report is
available in the
Agricultural Law and Taxation Briefs section at U of I
Extension's farmdoc site.
The rule also generally applies, Uchtmann noted, if the owner
subsequently becomes mentally incompetent or sells the Illinois
farm to another (assuming the lease itself does not limit the
tenant's rights in such circumstances).
"Rents that would have been paid to the now deceased or
incompetent owner, or to the prior owner before the sale to a
new owner, will be paid to an executor, guardian or new owner,"
he said.
"Special rules apply where the landowner had a 'life estate'
in the farmland, rather than ownership in 'fee simple.' A
special Illinois statute protects the farm tenant in some
situations, but for multiyear leases, getting additional
signatures on the lease may be needed to protect the tenant."
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Uchtmann recommended consulting legal counsel.
"Legal counsel can be very helpful to farm tenants in determining
whether the farmland owner is a life owner or a fee simple owner, in
crafting the lease to accommodate the particular circumstances
involved, or in negotiating reasonable compensation for fall field
work if the rented land is owned by a life owner who dies in the
last six months of the lease year," he said.
Uchtmann's article reviews the applicable Illinois law in such
situations as well as examples of how it is applied and ways tenants
and farm landowners can avoid problems. The article is part of a
law-related education program for Illinois family farmers made
possible by a gift from the Illinois Bar Foundation.
[Text from file received from
the University of
Illinois Extension] |