Post by esshup on Jul 8, 2024 23:00:00 GMT -5
if they own land here in Indiana.
This is a 3 question thread.
Scenario:
Question 1
A non-resident friend owns 80 acres of timber. It currently is NOT listed as a tree farm. His state of residence is Illinois. Here's what Illinois has to say about non-residents purchasing a resident license.
dnr.illinois.gov/hunting/non-resident-landowner-program.html
Qualified applicants are limited to:
Landowners of 40 acres or more of land and their immediate families, and bona fide current income beneficiaries of a trust that owns 40 acres or more of land and their immediate families.
"Immediate family of a landowner or a bona fide current income beneficiary" means, and is limited to, the spouse, children, brothers, sisters and parents permanently residing on the same property as the landowner or bona fide current income beneficiary.
"Bona fide current income beneficiary" means, an individual who, at the time of application for a permit: is entitled to income (whether income exists or not) from the trust that owns the land the applicant wishes to hunt with no condition precedent (such as surviving another person, reaching a certain age, etc.) other than the trustee distributing the income; and is listed by name in the trust documents as an income beneficiary.
Bona fide equity shareholders of corporations or bona fide equity members of limited liability companies owning 40 or more acres of land in a county. For applicants eligible for permits under this Part: A) Only one permit per 40 acres, for a maximum of 15 permits per county, for corporations and limited liability companies shall be issued based on ownership of lands by corporations or limited liability companies. B) Lands leased to corporations, limited liability companies, or trusts shall not be considered a basis for a permit for the shareholders, members, or beneficiaries of the lessee
Question 2
He is 60 years old. Does he need to have a hunters safety cert to purchase a deer hunting license?
Question 3
He is in the process of purchasing another parcel of timber that is 23 acres and will be put in a timber program and listed as a tree farm. IF having a "farm" is part of the requirement, once that property is closed on, and the timber program is in place will that allow him to hunt on both properties with a resident license?
Thanks!
This is a 3 question thread.
Scenario:
Question 1
A non-resident friend owns 80 acres of timber. It currently is NOT listed as a tree farm. His state of residence is Illinois. Here's what Illinois has to say about non-residents purchasing a resident license.
dnr.illinois.gov/hunting/non-resident-landowner-program.html
Qualified applicants are limited to:
Landowners of 40 acres or more of land and their immediate families, and bona fide current income beneficiaries of a trust that owns 40 acres or more of land and their immediate families.
"Immediate family of a landowner or a bona fide current income beneficiary" means, and is limited to, the spouse, children, brothers, sisters and parents permanently residing on the same property as the landowner or bona fide current income beneficiary.
"Bona fide current income beneficiary" means, an individual who, at the time of application for a permit: is entitled to income (whether income exists or not) from the trust that owns the land the applicant wishes to hunt with no condition precedent (such as surviving another person, reaching a certain age, etc.) other than the trustee distributing the income; and is listed by name in the trust documents as an income beneficiary.
Bona fide equity shareholders of corporations or bona fide equity members of limited liability companies owning 40 or more acres of land in a county. For applicants eligible for permits under this Part: A) Only one permit per 40 acres, for a maximum of 15 permits per county, for corporations and limited liability companies shall be issued based on ownership of lands by corporations or limited liability companies. B) Lands leased to corporations, limited liability companies, or trusts shall not be considered a basis for a permit for the shareholders, members, or beneficiaries of the lessee
Question 2
He is 60 years old. Does he need to have a hunters safety cert to purchase a deer hunting license?
Question 3
He is in the process of purchasing another parcel of timber that is 23 acres and will be put in a timber program and listed as a tree farm. IF having a "farm" is part of the requirement, once that property is closed on, and the timber program is in place will that allow him to hunt on both properties with a resident license?
Thanks!