EMBLEMENTS, a term applied in English law to the corn and other crops of the earth which are produced annually, not spontaneously but by labour and industry. Emblements belong therefore to the class of fructus industriales, or "industrial grow ing crops" (Sale of Goods Act, 1893, s. 62). They include not only corn and grain of all kinds, but everything of an artificial and annual profit that is produced by labour and manuring; e.g., hemp, flax, hops, potatoes, artificial grasses and clover, but not fruit growing on trees, which come under the general rule quic quid plantatur solo, solo cedit. Emblements are included within the definition of goods in s. 62 of the Sale of Goods Act, Where an estate of uncertain duration terminates unexpectedly by the death of the tenant, or some other event due to no fault of his own, the law gives to the personal representative the profits of crops of this nature as compensation for the tilling, manuring and sowing of the land. If the estate, although of uncertain duration, is determined by the tenant's own acts, the right to em blements does not arise. The right to emblements became of less importance in England after the passing of the Landlord and Tenant Act, 1851. Under s. I of that statute as reproduced by s. 14 of the Agriculture Act, 1920, where the lease or tenancy of any farm or lands is held by a tenant at a rack-rent deter mined by the death or cesser of the estate of any landlord en titled for his life, or any other uncertain interest, the tenant shall continue to hold or occupy such farm or lands until the occupa tion is determined by a 12 months' notice to quit, expiring at the end of a year of the tenancy, paying a proportionate rent to the successive owner. The right to emblements still exists, however, in favour of (a) a tenant not within the Landlord and Tenant Act, 1851, whose estate determines by an event which could not be foreseen, (b) the executor, as against the heir of the owner in fee of land in his own occupation, (c) an execution creditor under a writ directing seizure of goods and chattels. A person en titled to emblements may enter upon the lands after the deter mination of the tenancy for the purpose of cutting and carrying away the crops. Emblements are liable to distress by the land lord for arrears of rent, or rent during the period of holding on under the act of 1851 (the Distress for Rent Act, 1737). (See