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Article 1810 of the French Civil Code

If the livestock perishes in its entirety through no fault of the lessee, the loss shall be for the lessor. If only part of it perishes, the loss shall be borne jointly, according to the price of the original valuation and that of the valuation at the expiry of the livestock.

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Article 1811 of the French Civil Code

It may not be stipulated: That the lessee shall bear the total loss of the livestock, though it happen by fortuitous event and through no fault of his. Or that he shall bear, in the loss, a greater share than in the profit. Or that the lessor will take, at the end of the lease, something more than the livestock he has provided. Any similar agreement is void. The lessee…

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Article 1817 of the French Civil Code

At the end of the lease, or when it is terminated, the lessor shall take animals of each species, so as to obtain the same stock of livestock as that which he has surrendered, in particular as regards the number, breed, age, weight and quality of the animals: the surplus shall be shared. If there are not enough animals to reconstitute the stock of livestock as defined above, the parties…

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Article 1819 of the French Civil Code

The lessee alone benefits, as in the case of simple livestock, from the milking, manure and work of the animals. The lessor is only entitled to half of the wool and growth. Any agreement to the contrary is null and void, unless the lessor is the owner of the tenant farm of which the lessee is a farmer or sharecropper.

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