Until the law was amended in 1984, the tenants of agricultural holdings enjoyed security of tenure for life, plus the prospect of two family successions to their tenancies, virtually guaranteeing a tenant- farming family at least three generations occupation of a holding. The orthodox view has been that any transfers of interests that took place before the passing of the Act which introduced the scheme in 1976 would not count towards the inherent 'totting-up' process. The 1993 High Court judgement in Saunders v Ralph has raised serious questions as to the validity of that assertion. This paper seeks to identify the key legal provisions involved and to highlight the problems that may result from the case
Contemporary literature, newspaper articles and seminars have focused on farm succession in recent t...
The New Zealand Kellogg Rural Leaders Programme develops emerging agribusiness leaders to help shape...
Examines the House of Lords ruling in Thorner v Curtis on whether the claimant could rely on proprie...
Agricultural tenancies arising after 1st September 1995 are mostly governed by the Agricultural Tena...
The legal institutions relevant to farmland succession — defined as the transfer of property in and ...
New circumstances in Australian agriculture require new legal arrangements for landholding and for p...
The novelization of the Civil Code in the wake of the Act of 26 March, 1982, (Government Regulation...
The impending decline of the tenanted sector in British agriculture has been forecast for many years...
This paper applies a reading of the postmodernisation of law to the incremental reform of agricultur...
Little research has been conducted on the restructuring activities of tenant farmers in response to ...
Structural change across the agricultural sector in the United Kingdom has continued to reduce the o...
Little research has been conducted on the restructuring activities of tenant farmers in response to ...
A decline in the availability of opportunities for new entrants to agriculture is a recognised conse...
The report presents a repeat of a 1989-90 postal survey to explore the land tenurial changes in Engl...
This study examines family farms and characteristics affecting farm succession. Based on a farm surv...
Contemporary literature, newspaper articles and seminars have focused on farm succession in recent t...
The New Zealand Kellogg Rural Leaders Programme develops emerging agribusiness leaders to help shape...
Examines the House of Lords ruling in Thorner v Curtis on whether the claimant could rely on proprie...
Agricultural tenancies arising after 1st September 1995 are mostly governed by the Agricultural Tena...
The legal institutions relevant to farmland succession — defined as the transfer of property in and ...
New circumstances in Australian agriculture require new legal arrangements for landholding and for p...
The novelization of the Civil Code in the wake of the Act of 26 March, 1982, (Government Regulation...
The impending decline of the tenanted sector in British agriculture has been forecast for many years...
This paper applies a reading of the postmodernisation of law to the incremental reform of agricultur...
Little research has been conducted on the restructuring activities of tenant farmers in response to ...
Structural change across the agricultural sector in the United Kingdom has continued to reduce the o...
Little research has been conducted on the restructuring activities of tenant farmers in response to ...
A decline in the availability of opportunities for new entrants to agriculture is a recognised conse...
The report presents a repeat of a 1989-90 postal survey to explore the land tenurial changes in Engl...
This study examines family farms and characteristics affecting farm succession. Based on a farm surv...
Contemporary literature, newspaper articles and seminars have focused on farm succession in recent t...
The New Zealand Kellogg Rural Leaders Programme develops emerging agribusiness leaders to help shape...
Examines the House of Lords ruling in Thorner v Curtis on whether the claimant could rely on proprie...