Balsam Mt. Invs., LLC v. Comm'r

2015 T.C. Memo. 43, 109 T.C.M. 1214, 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 48
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2015
DocketDocket No. 20545-11.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2015 T.C. Memo. 43 (Balsam Mt. Invs., LLC v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balsam Mt. Invs., LLC v. Comm'r, 2015 T.C. Memo. 43, 109 T.C.M. 1214, 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 48 (tax 2015).

Opinion

BALSAM MOUNTAIN INVESTMENTS, LLC, BALSAM MOUNTAIN MANAGEMENT COMPANY, LLC, f.k.a. BALSAM MOUNTAIN COMPANY, LLC, TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Balsam Mt. Invs., LLC v. Comm'r
Docket No. 20545-11.
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 2015-43; 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 48; 109 T.C.M. (CCH) 1214;
March 12, 2015, Filed

An order will be issued granting respondent's motion for partial summary judgment.

In 2003 B, a partnership, granted a perpetual conservation easement on a 22-acre parcel of land to a nonprofit corporation. For the next five years B had the right to change the boundaries of the restricted area. B's right to change the boundaries was subject to the following conditions. First, the total area restricted by the easement had to remain 22 acres. Second, at least 95% of the original 22-acre parcel had to remain within the boundaries of the restricted area.

Held: The easement is not a "qualified real property interest" of the type described in I.R.C. sec. 170(h)(2)(C).

*48 David Demoss Dahl and Bradley S. Wooldridge, for petitioner.
David M. McCallum and Matthew E. Epps, for respondent.
MORRISON, Judge.

MORRISON
*44 MEMORANDUM OPINION

MORRISON, Judge: The respondent (referred to here as the "IRS") issued a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment for the 2003 taxable year of Balsam Mountain Investments, LLC (referred to here as "Balsam Investments"). The notice disallowed a charitable-contribution deduction for a perpetual conservation easement and determined a penalty under section 6662. (All references to sections are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.) We have jurisdiction under section 6226(f).

The IRS filed a motion for partial summary judgment. It contends that the easement is not a "qualified real property interest" of the type described in section 170(h)(2)(C). We grant the IRS's motion.

Background

The facts set forth below are based upon examination of the parties' pleadings, moving papers, responses, and attachments.

In 2003, Balsam Investments executed a perpetual conservation easement agreement with the North American Land Trust, a nonprofit corporation. Under the easement agreement, Balsam Investments and "its successors or assigns" were restricted "in perpetuity" from*49 developing or altering the land in the "Conservation *45 Area". The "Conservation Area" was defined in the easement agreement as a specific 22-acre parcel of land in Jackson County, North Carolina, the exact boundaries of which were described in a plat attached to the easement agreement. At the time, Balsam Investments owned the 22-acre parcel of land. Article 3.5 of the easement agreement reserved the right of Balsam Investments to make boundary changes to the "Conservation Area":

3.5 Owner [i.e., Balsam Investments] reserves the right to make minor alterations to the boundary of the Conservation Area if all of the following requirements are satisfied:

3.5.1 The calculated area of land within the Conservation Area after alteration of the boundary of the Conservation Area shall not be reduced from that which was made subject to this Conservation Easement at the time this Conservation Easement was granted.

3.5.2 The land added to the Conservation Area shall be contiguous with and connected by an area of substantial width to the Conservation Area as it exists on the date of this Conservation Easement.

3.5.3. The land added to the Conservation Area shall, in the Trust's [i.e., North American*50 Land Trust's] reasonable judgment, be land which makes an equal or greater contribution to the Conservation Purposes than that which is removed from the Conservation Area.

3.5.4. The aggregate land removed from the Conservation Area (and substituted with other contiguous land) as a result of all boundary line alterations shall not exceed five percent (5%) *46 of the area within the Conservation Area as of the date of this Conservation Easement.

3.5.5. No boundary line adjustments within the Conservation Area may be made under the provisions of this section after the fifth anniversary of the date of this Conservation Easement.

3.5.6. The proposed boundary lines shall be surveyed and proposed in survey plan form by Owner but shall be subject to the prior review and approval of the Trust.

3.5.7. The location and reconfiguration of a boundary of the Conservation Area shall not be approved by Trust if, in Trust's judgment, it would directly or indirectly result in any material adverse effect on any of the Conservation Purposes.

3.5.8. The new Conservation Area boundary shall be * * * set forth in a written amendment to this Conservation Easement * * *.

The term "Conservation Purposes" was defined*51

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2015 T.C. Memo. 43, 109 T.C.M. 1214, 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balsam-mt-invs-llc-v-commr-tax-2015.