OP
NWOhioChevyGuy
Well-known member
OK here is the response I received via email from the lawyer.
Should I ask the farmer what it would take to buy out the lease? I talked to him this morning at the gas station but didn't at that point, just friendly neighborly conversation.
The response below makes it sound like the only "solution" they plan on doing is writing me a check on what the land is worth for the 21 years left on the lease. Which I am not OK with.
It all sounds like legal mumble jumble to me.... I don't see a clear answer in it.
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I have received and reviewed your email of 07/08/2008 along with its attached letter of 07/08/2008 addressed to me. Accept this email as this Company’s official acceptance of your claim as tendered. Your claim is covered by the terms of your 2006 Owners Policy and accordingly this Company accepts your claim regarding the missed 30 year lease of part of the insured premises to your neighbor.
You seem to want the lease “bought out” but that all depends upon whether or not the neighbor wants to do so. We certainly cannot force him to do so nor can this Company be forced to pay whatever amount the neighbor decides to he wants without any reference to the true value of the lease, etc.
YOU, of course, can make your own approach to your neighbor and find out if he is even interested in being “bought out” by you. You cannot however approach the neighbor and negotiate this matter claiming to represent this Company or to negotiate on our behalf; the neighbor must know that it is YOU who is approaching him over “buying him out” and you are not to even mention this Company when you approach the neighbor on your own behalf.
By all means let me know the outcome one way or another. In the meantime, I have asked out Michigan office to find and retain a Surveyor to do staked survey of the Insured premises as well as to depicted on said survey the legal description contained in the lease so that the extent of the leased property verses the insured property “as a whole” will be readily apparent. It is necessary that this survey be done as the appraiser will need a copy of it so that he/she will know the amount
of the insured land that the Lease affects and be able to determine the diminution in the value of the insured land verses the policy amount caused by the existence of the Lease
Should I ask the farmer what it would take to buy out the lease? I talked to him this morning at the gas station but didn't at that point, just friendly neighborly conversation.
The response below makes it sound like the only "solution" they plan on doing is writing me a check on what the land is worth for the 21 years left on the lease. Which I am not OK with.
It all sounds like legal mumble jumble to me.... I don't see a clear answer in it.
-----------------------------------
I have received and reviewed your email of 07/08/2008 along with its attached letter of 07/08/2008 addressed to me. Accept this email as this Company’s official acceptance of your claim as tendered. Your claim is covered by the terms of your 2006 Owners Policy and accordingly this Company accepts your claim regarding the missed 30 year lease of part of the insured premises to your neighbor.
You seem to want the lease “bought out” but that all depends upon whether or not the neighbor wants to do so. We certainly cannot force him to do so nor can this Company be forced to pay whatever amount the neighbor decides to he wants without any reference to the true value of the lease, etc.
YOU, of course, can make your own approach to your neighbor and find out if he is even interested in being “bought out” by you. You cannot however approach the neighbor and negotiate this matter claiming to represent this Company or to negotiate on our behalf; the neighbor must know that it is YOU who is approaching him over “buying him out” and you are not to even mention this Company when you approach the neighbor on your own behalf.
By all means let me know the outcome one way or another. In the meantime, I have asked out Michigan office to find and retain a Surveyor to do staked survey of the Insured premises as well as to depicted on said survey the legal description contained in the lease so that the extent of the leased property verses the insured property “as a whole” will be readily apparent. It is necessary that this survey be done as the appraiser will need a copy of it so that he/she will know the amount
of the insured land that the Lease affects and be able to determine the diminution in the value of the insured land verses the policy amount caused by the existence of the Lease




