Tobacco Farms, Court Square, and HB128: Fleming County Kentucky Landlord Law
Fleming County has been a Kentucky county since 1798 — six years after statehood, when the Commonwealth was still very much a frontier enterprise. It was carved from Mason County and named for Colonel John Fleming, one of the region’s earliest pioneer settlers, and the county seat of Flemingsburg was platted the same year. That makes Flemingsburg one of the older continuously functioning county seats in Kentucky, its courthouse square a fixture of the landscape for more than two centuries. The courthouse that sits there today is not the original, of course — Kentucky county courthouses have a way of burning down and being replaced — but the square itself has organized the town’s commercial and civic life without interruption since the Adams administration.
The county covers 351 square miles of rolling northeastern Kentucky landscape drained by the upper branches of the Licking River. The terrain is characteristic of the bluegrass-to-knobs transition zone: gentle limestone uplands good for cattle and horses, with steeper knob edges where the rock breaks toward the surface and the soil thins. Burley tobacco shaped the county’s agricultural economy for generations, as it did across much of northeastern Kentucky, and while the decline of tobacco allotments and the shift in federal farm policy have reduced the crop’s dominance, it remains a visible part of the landscape. Fleming County recorded 13,606 residents in the 2020 census, a figure that has been relatively stable — modest net decline over recent decades, consistent with the pattern across much of rural northeastern Kentucky.
A Small but Functional Rental Market
The rental market in Fleming County is small by any statewide measure but serves a real and stable population. The largest identifiable employer is the Fleming County Schools system, which employs teachers, administrators, bus drivers, and support staff across its facilities in and around Flemingsburg. County and state government provide additional public employment. Siemens Energy (formerly operating under other names at its local facility) represents the county’s most significant private manufacturing employer. Beyond those anchors, a meaningful share of Fleming County residents commute: to Morehead in Rowan County (roughly 25 miles east via KY-32), where Morehead State University and a broader service economy provide employment; to Maysville in Mason County (roughly 30 miles north), which has manufacturing and healthcare; and to the Lexington metropolitan area (roughly 70 miles southwest via US-68 and the Mountain Parkway corridor), which draws commuters from across northeastern Kentucky.
For landlords, this commuter dynamic means that income verification for many applicants will involve employers outside the county. That is perfectly routine — verify the employment exactly as you would for a local employer. Request two to three months of recent pay stubs, or an employer letter on company letterhead specifying position, wage or salary, and employment status. For agricultural workers whose income varies seasonally — including those who supplement wages with tobacco or cattle income — prior-year tax returns provide the most complete picture of actual annual income. Apply whatever income ratio you use (commonly 2.5 to 3 times monthly rent in gross monthly income) consistently across all applicant types.
Mixed Agricultural and Residential Leases
One consideration that arises more frequently in agricultural counties like Fleming than in urban markets is the mixed residential-agricultural lease. A farmhouse on a working cattle or tobacco property may be rented to a farm laborer or manager as part of a broader arrangement that also involves access to outbuildings, equipment, or cropland. In these situations, it is important to understand which elements of the arrangement are governed by Kentucky’s Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act and which are not.
URLTA — as updated by HB128 — governs the residential dwelling. The agricultural land lease, if any, is a separate legal instrument governed by different common law and statutory frameworks. If you have a single document purporting to cover both the residence and the farm acreage, that document may create ambiguity about which parts of the arrangement are subject to URLTA’s notice requirements, habitability duties, security deposit rules, and eviction procedures. A Kentucky attorney can help you structure these arrangements clearly, with a residential lease that complies fully with HB128 and a separate agricultural land lease or license agreement for the farm components. This matters practically: if you need to remove a tenant-farm employee from both the house and the fields, the procedures and timelines for each may differ.
Filing at the Fleming County Justice Center
All residential evictions in Fleming County are Forcible Detainer actions filed in District Court at the Fleming County Justice Center, 100 Court Square, Flemingsburg, KY 41041, phone (606) 845-8461. The justice center sits on the historic courthouse square in Flemingsburg, with street parking generally available around the square. Call ahead to verify current civil hearing dates, office hours, and the clerk’s current filing requirements. Your 14-day nonpayment notice must fully expire before you file; for lease violations, the 14-day cure period and the minimum 30-day termination timeline must both run before filing is appropriate. Bring the original lease, the notice with proof of service, and your complete payment and communication record.
HB128 in Fleming County: The Full Checklist
Kentucky’s HB128 applies uniformly across the Commonwealth. For Fleming County landlords with leases made on or after the law’s effective date, here is the operational checklist:
Nonpayment of rent: Serve a written 14-day notice to pay or vacate specifying the termination date. Retain proof of service. If paid in full within 14 days, the tenancy continues. If not, file your Forcible Detainer after the notice period expires.
Lease violations: Serve a written 14-day notice to cure or quit specifying the exact breach. If cured within 14 days, the tenancy continues. If not, the lease terminates no sooner than 30 days from the original notice date. Repeat violations within 6 months may allow for accelerated termination — consult counsel.
Month-to-month termination: One full month’s written notice required. Week-to-week: 5 days’ written notice.
Security deposits: Cap at two times monthly rent. Separate account. Return within 30 days with itemized deductions. Penalty: $250 or twice the withheld amount, whichever is greater. Document condition at move-in and move-out.
Habitability: Nonwaivable across 13 categories. Respond to written requests within 14 days (5 days for essential services). No lease clause can eliminate this duty.
Entry: 24 hours’ notice for standard entry; 72 hours for routine maintenance or pest control. Emergency entry requires only reasonable notice given the circumstances.
Lead paint: For pre-1978 dwellings — a large share of Fleming County’s stock — written disclosure of known hazards and EPA pamphlet delivery are required before lease signing. Get a signed acknowledgment.
Self-help eviction: Prohibited. Three times periodic rent or actual damages, whichever is greater, is the penalty. File the Forcible Detainer and follow the court process.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. HB128 applies to leases made on or after its effective date; prior Kentucky law governs older leases. Consult a licensed Kentucky attorney for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
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