DocketNumber: Docket No. 5437-10
Citation Numbers: 105 T.C.M. 1878, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 157, 2013 T.C. Memo. 154
Judges: VASQUEZ
Filed Date: 6/19/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the years in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
We adopt the findings of facts in our prior Opinion,
In the mid-1990s petitioners owned approximately 410 acres of land in North Carolina through Olde Sycamore, LLC (Olde Sycamore). *158 and built Olde Sycamore Golf Plantation (golf course). The golf course is an 18-hole golf course on 184.627 acres of land.
In December 2004 Olde Sycamore executed the conservation easement agreement at issue with Smokey Mountain National Land Trust (SMNLT). The *156 conservation easement covers the 184.627 acres of land on which the golf course is located. Except for the rights reserved, the conservation easement agreement prohibits the golf course from being used for residential, commercial, institutional, industrial, or agricultural purposes. The conservation easement agreement permits petitioners and SMNLT to change what property is subject to the conservation easement. Specifically, Article III: Reserved Rights of the conservation easement agreement states the following: 3. Owner may substitute an area of land owned by Owner which is contiguous to the Conservation Area for an equal or lesser area of land comprising a portion of the Conservation Area, provided that: a. In the opinion of Trust: (1) the substitute property is of the same or better ecological stability as that found in the portion *159 of the Conservation Area to be substituted; (2) the substitution shall have no adverse affect on the conservation purposes of the Conservation Easement or on any of the significant environmental features of the Conservation Area described in the Baseline documentation; (3) the portion of the Conservation Area to be substituted is selected, constructed and managed so as to have no adverse impact on the Conservation Area as a whole; (4) the fair market value of Trust's conservation easement interest in the substituted property, when *157 subject to this Conservation Easement, is at least equal to or greater than the fair market value of the Conservation Easement portion of the Conservation Area to be substituted; and (5) Owner has submitted to Trust sufficient documentation describing the proposed substitution and how such substitution meets the criteria set forth in subsections (1)-(4) above of this Section B.3.a. of this Article III. b. Trust shall render an opinion upon a proposed substitution request of the Owner within sixty (60) days of receipt of notice. A favorable opinion of Trust shall not be unreasonably withheld. However, should Trust render an unfavorable opinion, Trust shall provide *160 a written explanation to Owner as to the reasoning and facts used in reaching such opinion within ten (10) days of the decision. In addition, Trust will undertake a reasonable good faith effort to help Owner identify property for such trade in which Trust believes will meet the above requirements but also accomplish the Owner's objectives. c. No such substitution shall be final or binding upon Trust until made a subject of an amendment *161 to this *158 Conservation Easement acceptable to and executed by Owner and Trust and recorded in the Register of Deeds Office of Mecklenburg County and/or Union County. The amendment shall include, among other things, a revised Conservation Easement Plan or portion thereof showing the portions of the Conservation Area that are to be removed from the coverage of this Conservation Easement and the equal or greater area of contiguous land of the Owner to be made part of the Conservation Area, and thus, subject to the Conservation Easement.
Petitioners claimed a $10,524,000 charitable contribution deduction on their Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, for 2004. Discussion
Reconsideration under
Taxpayers may deduct the values of any charitable contributions made during the tax year pursuant to
In
Petitioners move for reconsideration on three grounds: (1) the Court misinterpreted
Petitioners maintain that the Court misinterpreted
A deduction for a conservation easement is an exception to the general rule that prohibits deductions for the donation of partial interests in property.
Petitioners further assert that
Petitioners argue that we have denied taxpayers and land trusts the flexibility needed in order to accomplish the purpose and intent of
With respect to their first ground, petitioners have failed to show that reconsideration is appropriate.
Petitioners assert that we erred in deciding that the conservation easement agreement permitted substitutions. As discussed in
Petitioners, citing
Petitioners appear to be arguing that the parties intended for the conservation easement to be a qualified conservation contribution under
With respect to their second ground, petitioners have failed to show that reconsideration is appropriate.
Petitioners assert that the Court has imposed an impossible and impractical requirement on taxpayers and qualified organizations. Petitioners argue that in the *166 absence of a substitution provision, State law would still permit petitioners and SMNLT to modify the terms of the contract by mutual agreement. Thus, because they could change what property was subject to the conservation easement agreement even if there was not a substitution provision, the Court cannot deny their deduction because it includes a substitution provision in the conservation easement agreement. Respondent disagrees, stating that "[p]etitioners' interpretation of state law as giving parties unfettered ability to modify contracts is nonsensical and would make all conservation easements meaningless".
Petitioners confuse their right under State law to modify the terms of a contract by mutual consent with the effect such a modification would *171 have for tax purposes. Even if petitioners and SMNLT had the right to modify the terms of the conservation easement agreement under State law by mutual agreement, North Carolina law does not dictate the resulting tax consequences of the modification. Whatever modifications petitioners might have envisioned making to the conservation easement agreement after the fact are irrelevant in determining the tax consequences of those provisions that were, in fact, included. Petitioners chose to include a provision in the conservation easement agreement that permits substitutions.
When we evaluate a conservation easement under
Petitioners also argue that
While petitioners are correct that the courts trust qualified organizations to fulfill their responsibilities, that trust is based on the requirements imposed on the qualified organizations by the conservation easement and local law. In
With respect to their third ground, petitioners have failed to show that reconsideration is appropriate.
Petitioners have failed to demonstrate unusual circumstances or substantial errors of fact or law. Accordingly, we will deny petitioners' motion for reconsideration.
To reflect the foregoing,
*. This opinion supplements our prior Opinion,
1. During the years at issue B.V. Belk, Jr., owned 99% of Olde Sycamore and Harriet Belk owned 1%.↩
2. Article VIII: Miscellaneous of the conservation easement agreement states the following with respect to amendment: Owner and Trust recognize that circumstances could arise which would justify the modification of certain of the restrictions contained in this Conservation Easement. To this end, Trust and the legal owner or owners of the Conservation Area at the time of amendment shall mutually have the right, in their sole discretion, to agree to amendments to this Conservation Easement which are not inconsistent with the Conservation Values or the purposes of this instrument; provided, however, that Trust shall have no right or power to agree to any amendments hereto that would result in this Conservation Easement failing to qualify as a valid conservation agreement under the "Act," as the same may be hereafter amended, or as a qualified conservation contribution under
3. Olde Sycamore's charitable contribution passed through to petitioners under
4. Although private letter rulings are not precedent,
5. Petitioners object to our finding that the substitution provision and amendment provision are in conflict. Petitioners argue that the provisions coexist, with the substitution provision simply providing the procedures for effecting amendments relating to substitutions. However, we find that the provisions are unable to coexist when the amendment provision seemingly prohibits substitutions.↩
6. Under
7. We note that it is exactly because of the trust and confidence placed in qualified organizations that we presume such organizations would not agree to change what real property is subject to the conservation easement in the absence of a provision permitting substitutions. Petitioners' argument that they could, without a substitution provision, change what property was subject to the conservation easement by mutual agreement is premised on the assumption that SMNLT would have abdicated the trust and confidence placed in it to fulfill the purpose of the conservation easement and would have agreed to substitution.↩
Woods Inv. Co. v. Commissioner , 85 T.C. 274 ( 1985 )
Commissioner v. National Alfalfa Dehydrating & Milling Co. , 94 S. Ct. 2129 ( 1974 )
Belk v. Comm'r , 140 T.C. 1 ( 2013 )
ESTATE OF QUICK v. COMMISSIONER , 110 T.C. 440 ( 1998 )
Hanover Bank v. Commissioner , 82 S. Ct. 1080 ( 1962 )
Commissioner v. Duberstein , 80 S. Ct. 1190 ( 1960 )
Commissioner v. Simmons , 646 F.3d 6 ( 2011 )