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Overly Extroverted Bull
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<blockquote data-quote="Brute 23" data-source="post: 1821606" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>You only have the rights explicitly given to you in writing, in the lease. Even then, if penalties for breach of the lease terms are not explicitly written in, it's very hard to even sue back for damages, assuming you had the money to sue, and the losses even justified that.</p><p></p><p>I go back to, you can ask land owners to do things, you can try to explain things, you can make leases to show what was agreed on for reference, but it is near impossible to force a land owner not to do some thing on their property that they want to do.</p><p></p><p>... and no lease, a vague lease, or not saying you can't do some thing is to the lessors' benefit, not the lessees'.</p><p></p><p>The land owner will always win in the end. You can either choose to work with them or leave.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brute 23, post: 1821606, member: 6291"] You only have the rights explicitly given to you in writing, in the lease. Even then, if penalties for breach of the lease terms are not explicitly written in, it's very hard to even sue back for damages, assuming you had the money to sue, and the losses even justified that. I go back to, you can ask land owners to do things, you can try to explain things, you can make leases to show what was agreed on for reference, but it is near impossible to force a land owner not to do some thing on their property that they want to do. ... and no lease, a vague lease, or not saying you can't do some thing is to the lessors' benefit, not the lessees'. The land owner will always win in the end. You can either choose to work with them or leave. [/QUOTE]
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