[ 263 J 
Heads of Richard Peters’s Leases to Tenants, on Shares. 
Extracted from the Lease for Belmont Farm. 
The legal form, is such as is common in leases re- 
serving rent in money.—The specific share, or the 
produce of it in cash, when Richard Peters directs or 
consents to its sale, is subject to the legal modes of 
recovery ; and its safety insured, by its being a lien on 
the tenants property. 
1. The premises set on shares are clearly described. 
Reservations of such parts of the farm, mansion house 
&c. as are thought proper by the landlord are made. 
The tenant’s house and barn &c. are at a distance from 
the mansion house; to prevent inconvenient inter- 
ferences, and sources of petty contests. 
2. A fixed quantity of dung, from the tenant’s muck 
heap, may be taken if the landlord chooses. Also straw, 
not exceeding an eighth part of the whole. 
3. The landlord is to put all post and rail fences, and 
the tenant a// worm fences, in good repair.* The tenant 
to hale all materials, found by Richard Peters, for both. 
The materials for the latter, and posts for the former, to 
be taken out of the landlord’s woods: for worm fences 
and repairs of post fences, (after being put by landlord 
in good order) at the tenant’s expence, or by his labour. 
* This applies to the first period when the tenant arrives, 
Afterwards he is lund to keep the fences in repair as they 
require it. It would be inadmissible and unjust, to let them 
rot down, and call on the landlord for entire new fences, 
