Schaaf
Well-known member
lolSpoke with one of the county commissioners today. They didn’t even know the public will be guaranteed access to this property…
“All the President’s Men” quote comes to mind.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
lolSpoke with one of the county commissioners today. They didn’t even know the public will be guaranteed access to this property…
There's a real fuggin' shock.Spoke with one of the county commissioners today. They didn’t even know the public will be guaranteed access to this property…
I dont see why this "perpetuity" is unique.
That's not a compromise. One side loses every benefit for which they likely entered into a CE. I'll try to explain and illustrate why no property owner should "compromise" with an elected official on this point.So back to my original post, has anyone actually talked to the commission to see what the objection actually is? There is a compromise here and I bet it starts with the word perpetual being removed.
Does that apply if the land is in a trust and no ownership changes?That's not a compromise. One side loses every benefit for which they likely entered into a CE. I'll try to explain and illustrate why no property owner should "compromise" with an elected official on this point.
If state law prohibits these families from being allowed a perpetual CE, they get no value reduction for estate tax purposes on a term-certain easement. The reduction in value for estate tax purposes comes from the fact that at the time of death the land is absent any development rights, for perpetuity, thus reducing values a developer would pay and reducing the appraised value on Form 706 (Estate Tax Return).
IRC Sec 2031 - The fair market value is the price at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts.
No perpetuity - no restrictions on future use - no reduction for estate tax values on which the decedent must pay any estate taxes. That is the practical application when eliminating the right to do CEs in perpetuity.
From your posts, I don't think you want to impose that heavy estate tax burden on these families. I've not talked to anyone who promotes anti-perpetuity ideas who wants that outcome. Yet what anti-perpetuity folks are advocating for costs these families huge amounts of money in the practical application of the position they are promoting.
Just across Montana, removal of the perpetuity possibility for CEs is going to result in millions of additional income taxes and billions in additional estate taxes. Term easements or easements that terminate at death eliminate any income tax savings and any estate tax savings. That's a very unfair outcome for these land rich and cash poor families to get a huge tax bill to satisfy the ideological positions of those against CEs in perpetuity.
Point being, we can have these ideologies all we want. Yet, it is the other person who pays the costs for some imposing that ideology.
Again, that is not a compromise.
Yes.Does that apply if the land is in a trust and no ownership changes?
We are already forced to live with perpetual private property decisions every day. We watch private property owners choose to develop land constantly, and nobody bats an eye about the perpetual nature of a subdivision or an industrial park.Presumptive that will still be the case 647 years from now. None of us know what the future holds. There are very few places so special that a in perpetuity clause makes sense. A easement is not one of them. It should be reviewed and renewed in the future at some point.
Forcing generations unborn to heed your will when we are but a blip in the timeline is not something I’m in to.
Not here where we are discussing rights, he seemed to of lost it in a war.
It sounds like you forced your will on future generations of your family that could’ve grown up toiling on that same land. It’s an awfully socialist position that future generations of other families get to take priority over future generations of the current owner’s family.I spent the evening doing some reading on this and specifically Montana law regarding it. I understand the tax advantages of it as best a lay person can.
However, I am still not in the perpetual boat. As someone who has had to be part of the decision to sell a large property due to land rich cash poor conditions. I grew up there and loved it, I wish my kids could have been part of it as well. A lot of blood, sweat, and tears were spent there. But in the end the best decision for everyone was to sell it. If it gets developed then so be it. I am just a blip in the timeline of that land. It is not up to me to dictate how it gets used in the future. I have no idea what the world will need in the distant future. I think it arrogant of us to force our will on future generations. I’ve been burnt with this in the past. Specifically 9 pages worth of deed restrictions from an over zealous previous owner. One who was so worried about development that he made impossible to do much anything on the property. Details down to what kind of animals you could own. To the point it’s all recorded and no one pays attention to it. Folks just go on living life and the rules are ignored by the new families that live there. But it takes one neighbor to complain and file suit and that whole thing will be a legal mess. That experience has shown me that it’s not for us to decide what happens for eternity here on earth when we are gone.
So, selling the farm so it can be subdivided and developed into 25 little suburban lots with houses on them and no green space or wildlife habitat is 'leaving things in the hands of future generations to decide', while putting a perpetual easement on it is forcing our will on future generations? That doesn't make sense to me. I understand the feeling that is driving your opinion. I have felt it myself and still do at times (and I work with CE's). But, used wisely, conservation easements allow us to conserve land that would be difficult to conserve in any other way and they are no more presumptive, or arrogant than any other "permanent" decision a landowner might make.I spent the evening doing some reading on this and specifically Montana law regarding it. I understand the tax advantages of it as best a lay person can.
However, I am still not in the perpetual boat. As someone who has had to be part of the decision to sell a large property due to land rich cash poor conditions. I grew up there and loved it, I wish my kids could have been part of it as well. A lot of blood, sweat, and tears were spent there. But in the end the best decision for everyone was to sell it. If it gets developed then so be it. I am just a blip in the timeline of that land. It is not up to me to dictate how it gets used in the future. I have no idea what the world will need in the distant future. I think it arrogant of us to force our will on future generations. I’ve been burnt with this in the past. Specifically 9 pages worth of deed restrictions from an over zealous previous owner. One who was so worried about development that he made impossible to do much anything on the property. Details down to what kind of animals you could own. To the point it’s all recorded and no one pays attention to it. Folks just go on living life and the rules are ignored by the new families that live there. But it takes one neighbor to complain and file suit and that whole thing will be a legal mess. That experience has shown me that it’s not for us to decide what happens for eternity here on earth when we are gone.
I would argue that the best decision for you was to sell it. And that is perfectly acceptable…only you know your situation and values and all the other intangibles that go into making that decision.However, I am still not in the perpetual boat. As someone who has had to be part of the decision to sell a large property due to land rich cash poor conditions. I grew up there and loved it, I wish my kids could have been part of it as well. A lot of blood, sweat, and tears were spent there. But in the end the best decision for everyone was to sell it.
That’s odd. All they would have had to do is read the cover letter and EA, if that information hadn’t already been communicated to them.Spoke with one of the county commissioners today. They didn’t even know the public will be guaranteed access to this property…
I am just a blip in the timeline of that land. It is not up to me to dictate how it gets used in the future. I have no idea what the world will need in the distant future. I think it arrogant of us to force our will on future generations. I’ve been burnt with this in the past.
That experience has shown me that it’s not for us to decide what happens for eternity here on earth when we are gone.
They can do a CE, I have no issue with that. In fact I support them, just not in perpetuity. The world changes and evolves. No contract should be perpetual. There are other ways to deal with the immediate problem in front of our nose. Taxes are a in front of our nose problem when viewed from a forever timeline. The other options may not be popular or fun but where there is a will, there is a way.I would argue that the best decision for you was to sell it. And that is perfectly acceptable…only you know your situation and values and all the other intangibles that go into making that decision.
But I think the point most of us are making is that everyone isn’t you. We all have our own set of situations and values that sometimes make a perpetual easement the right choice. I completely disagree when one subset of folks impose their own values and ideals on the rest of society to dictate what they may or may not do with their private property, especially while preaching private property rights from the rooftops. Sounds a little “private property rights for me, but not thee”, no?
If you (a general “you”, not directed at you specifically) don’t want to have private property encumbered by a perpetual easement, then don’t sign one, and don’t buy land encumbered by one. It’s all recorded, there’s no secret. Due diligence will ensure you have unfettered right to do as you please with your property. But I don’t think it’s too much to ask to afford all other landowners the same luxury.
Those statements actually support the value of a perpetual easement, with whatever the provisions encumbered by the "someones" who are part of the decision. Even a perpetual CE may provide some subdivision of tracts, depending. You have good reason for strong feelings about that property, as well as regret that it's gone from your family.I grew up there and loved it, I wish my kids could have been part of it as well. A lot of blood, sweat, and tears were spent there.