Lets start with a few important observations.
- Every single conservation easement must now take into account the provisions of the new law as part of the planning process.
- Every single family lands situation must now take into account the provisions of the new law as part of the planning process.
- Many conservation easements that have already been recorded should now be reviewed because of the provisions of the new law.
- The new law will make planning immediately after the death of many
landowners complex, difficult, expensive, possibly highly beneficial, and absolutely necessary.
- With proper comprehensive planning,
owners of important land can protect that land and save many
more estate tax dollars than was possible under the old law.
Background In mid-1997, President
Clinton signed into law the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997. The
commentary on that legislation generally focused on the cut in
the capital gains rate to 20%, education and retirement-saving
incentives, and lower estate tax rates for individuals and
some family-owned businesses.
For landowners and land trusts, however, there is more news
and good news. The new legislation also included a modified
version of The American Farm and Ranch Protection Act, an
important new tax incentive for landowners
The original version of The American Farm and Ranch
Protection Act was first introduced in Congress in 1990 by
Senator John Chafee and Congressman Richard Schulze. The
proposal originated with the Piedmont Environmental Council
(PEC), based in northern Virginia. Some PEC supporters and
representatives became convinced of the need for additional
tax code incentives for land protection and came up with the
following simple, direct proposal for relief: land subject to
a conservation easement under Section 170(h) of the tax code
should be totally exempt from estate tax. That was essentially
the provision introduced by Senator Chafee and Congressman
Schulze in 1990. Over the next several years, as the federal
legislative process moved forward, the proposal became more
complex and less comprehensive. However, it remains an
important new incentive for private, voluntary land
conservation that landowners, their advisors, and land trusts
must become familiar with.
How The New Law Works
The American Farm and Ranch Protection Act adds to the tax
code a new Section 2031(c), Estate Tax With Respect to Land
Subject to a Qualified Conservation Easement.
Before we review the specific rules of Section 2031(c), let
us clarify what this all means and what it doesnt mean.
It does mean that all of the existing conservation easement
rules of Section 170(h), the current conservation easement
section, are still intact and that Section 170(h) works
exactly the same way it did before the 1997 tax code changes.
If you donate an easement on land you own, and if the easement
meets the requirements of Section 170(h), you are entitled to
an income tax deduction for the value of the conservation
easement. In addition, the value of the land is reduced for
estate tax purposes.
After you have met the requirements of Section 170(h), then
you can look at the additional benefits potentially available
under Section 2031(c). However, at this point two things can
happen. First, and more on this below, it is entirely possible
that even though your easement qualified under Section 170(h)
your situation may not be eligible for the additional benefits
of Section 2031(c). Second, your situation may be eligible for
the benefits of Section 2031(c) but for tax or other reasons
the executor of your estate may decide not to elect Section
2031(c).
Put another way, an easement must qualify under Section
170(h) to be eligible for the benefits of Section 2031(c), but
if the easement doesnt qualify under Section 2031(c) that has
no impact whatsoever on qualification for all of the benefits
of Section 170(h).
In a nutshell, this is what new Section 2031(c) says: if
you have land subject to a conservation easement that meets
the requirements of Section 170(h), and if you own that land
when you die, and if you meet the requirements of Section
2031(c), then you can exclude an additional percentage of the
value of that land from your estate in addition to the
reduction in value already attributable to the easement. Here
are the important parts of new Section 2031(c).
I. The new law will allow an executor to
elect to exclude from a decedents estate for federal estate
tax purposes up to 40% of the value of land (not structures)
subject to a conservation easement if:
- the land is within
a 25-mile radius of a Metropolitan Statistical Area, as
defined by the Office of Management and Budget (typically an
area with a population over 50,000), or a national park or
wilderness area, or within 10 miles of an Urban National
Forest;
- the easement was donated, is perpetual, and
otherwise meets the requirements of Section 170(h). Easements
qualifying solely because they protect historic assets are not
eligible for Section 2031(c) benefits;
- the land was owned by
the decedent or a member of the decedents family for at least
three years immediately prior to the decedents death;
- the
easement was donated by the decedent or a member of the
decedents family; and
- the easement prohibits all but
minimal commercial recreational use of the land (see more on
this point below).
II. The maximum amount that may be
excluded from an estate under the new provisions was $100,000
in 1998, increasing by $100,000 each year up to the maximum
exclusion of $500,000 in 2002 and after. The exclusion applies
regardless of when the easement was donated.
Here is the simplest possible example of how the new
exclusion will work.
John owns land worth $2,000,000. In 1998, he donated a
qualifying conservation easement that reduces the value of his
land to $1,000,000. He dies in 2003. The land is valued in his
estate at $1,000,000. His executor elects to take the Section
2031(c) exclusion; 40% of the $1,000,000 land value is
excluded from Johns estate; $600,000 of land value is subject
to estate tax.
Note that if the planning is done correctly, the estates of
both spouses can be eligible for the new Section 2031(c)
exclusion.
III. Development rights retained in the
easement will be subject to estate tax. Neither the statute
nor the congressional committee reports answer all the
questions about exactly what is a development right. The
statute defines development right as a right that is
retained for any commercial purpose which is not subordinate
to and directly supportive of the use of such land for
farming, ranching, etc., purposes. Reserved rights to continue
agricultural, farming, ranching, and forestry activities are
permissible and are clearly not development rights. The right
to subdivide and convey additional house lots (of whatever
size) clearly is a development right and clearly will be
subject to estate tax (although see more on this point below).
The right to own and maintain an existing residence is not a
development right.
However, development rights retained in the easement will
not be subject to estate tax (which is due nine months after
the decedents death) if within nine months of the decedents
death the heirs of the property agree to give up permanently
some or all of those development rights. Those rights do not
actually have to be given up within nine months; the heirs
have nine months to agree to eliminate them and then have up
to two years after the decedents death to give up those
rights.
Some landowners and/or donee organizations prefer leaving
potential future house lot sites outside of the tract of land
to be covered by a conservation easement. The ability to
retain or extinguish those rights may make it prudent to
include them under the easement. This can provide a very
important second look, for estate planning purposes, after
the landowners death. In fact, if the extinguishment of the
development rights takes the form of a conservation easement
that meets the requirements of Section 170(h), the
conservation easement section, the heirs may be entitled to an
income tax deduction.
Development rights are not the same as commercial
recreational activities. A golf course is clearly a commercial
recreational activity, and Congress did not want a landowner
to be able to reserve this sort of activity under an easement
and still benefit from the Section 2031(c) exclusion. If an
easement does not prohibit all but what the law calls de
minimis commercial recreational activities the estate will
not be eligible for the Section 2031(c) exclusion.
IV. If there is a mortgage on the
property, an amount of land value equal to the amount of the
indebtedness will not be eligible for the exclusion. In other
words, if land subject to an easement is worth $1,000,000, but
there is a $300,000 mortgage on the property, only $700,000 of
the land value will be eligible for the exclusion. Of course,
the mortgage will usually be deductible as a debt of the
estate.
V. To the extent the estate takes the
exclusion, land will retain the same basis as it had in the
hands of the landowner/decedent, rather than being entitled to
a stepped-up basis, for calculating any gain on a subsequent
sale. These terms need a brief explanation.
The concept of basis is a tax law concept. In many (but
not all) situations, for tax purposes basis and cost mean
the same thing. This is a very simple illustration, but if you
buy stock for $1,000 and sell it for $2,000, you will pay tax
on the $1,000 gain, which is the difference between what you
sold it for and your basis of $1,000.
If you hold that stock until you die, the estate tax will
be based on the $2,000 value of that stock. However, when your
children inherit the stock it will have a basis in their hands
of $2,000. The tax law refers to this as a stepped-up basis.
If the children sell it for $2,000, there will be no tax on
the gain (but remember that there was an estate tax on the
$2,000 value). Once again, to the extent an estate takes
advantage of the exclusion, a portion of the basis of the land
would not be stepped up but would remain the same as it was
in the hands of the decedent; that is, it would be carried
over.
VI. The exclusion is available when land
is owned by family corporations, partnerships, or trusts as
long as the decedent owned at least a 30% interest in the
corporation, partnership, or trust at the time of death.
VII. The amount of the exclusion will be
reduced below 40% by two percentage points for each one
percentage point by which the easement fails to reduce the
value of the land by 30%. This complicated rule is intended to
discourage marginal easements that dont reduce the value of
land very much, although the percentage reduction in value
often has little or nothing to do with the importance of the
conservation values to be protected by the easement.
Here is how this rule works. If land is worth $1,000,000
without an easement and, say, $650,000 subject to an easement,
the full 40% exclusion under the statute will apply because
the easement reduced the value of the land by more than 30%.
On the other hand, if the easement reduced the value of the
land from $1,000,000 to $800,000, because this 20% reduction
in value is ten percentage points less than 30%, the exclusion
is reduced from 40% to 20% (two percentage points for each
point the easement fails to reduce the land value by 30%).
Put another way, if an easement reduces
land value from $1,000,000 to $650,000, using the exclusion
the total value subject to estate tax will be $390,000
($650,000 minus 40% of $650,000). If the easement reduces land
value from $1,000,000 to $800,000, using the exclusion the
total value subject to estate tax will be $640,000 ($800,000
minus 20% of $800,000). These examples assume the maximum
individual exclusion amount of $500,000 is fully phased
in.
One obviously critical issue that has come up about the way
this particular rule works is the question of whether the 30%
reduction in value is to be calculated on the date the
easement was donated (assuming the donation was made during
the landowners lifetime) or on the date of the decedents
death. Although making the determination on the date of the
donation would ensure certainty, it now appears that the
calculation will need to be made as of the date of the
landowners death. Although there is very little data on this,
in the vast majority of cases the evidence seems to indicate
that once an easement is donated the percentage reduction in
value attributable to the easement is not likely to decrease.
In fact, the value of the easement seems likely to increase as
development pressure and real estate values in the area
increase.
There may be additional legislative efforts to change this
rule to a date-of-donation determination, but for now a
date-of-death calculation seems likely.
Some Important
Issues Post-mortem easement donation (easement donation
after the death of the landowner). Prior to the new
law, if a landowner died without having either donated an
easement during lifetime or including an easement donation in
his or her will, the estate tax was based on the full,
unrestricted, fair market value of the land. The new law
includes a very important provision that will allow executors
and trustees to elect to donate a qualified conservation
easement after the death of the landowner. This is a so-called
post-mortem or after-death easement donation.
I believe this new opportunity to donate a post-mortem
easement is terribly important and very poorly understood.
The legal rules on when and under what circumstances an
executor or heirs can make such a donation can vary widely
from state to state, and may require changes in some state
laws under some circumstances. In some states, for example,
title to real estate vests in the heirs as of the date of
death, while in other states the executor of the estate may
hold title. It is important to check with your advisors on
this and any other state law issues concerning the post-mortem
easement donation.
If state law issues can be satisfactorily addressed, here
is the simplest possible example of how the post-mortem
donation will work.
John owns land worth $2,000,000. He did not donate an
easement during his lifetime and he did not include an
easement in his will. He dies in 2003 and leaves the land to
his children. The land is valued in his estate at $2,000,000.
His executor and his children agree to donate a conservation
easement; the easement reduces the value of his land to
$1,000,000 and that $1,000,000 of value is subject to estate
tax. In addition, his executor elects to take the Section
2031(c) exclusion; an additional 40% of the $1,000,000 land
value is excluded from Johns estate, with the result that
$600,000 of land value is subject to estate tax. (Under these
circumstances, even though the easement met the requirements
of Section 170(h), the easement rules, apparently neither the
estate nor the children will be able to take an income tax
deduction for donating the easement.)
Commercial recreational activities. Here
is another important post-mortem planning opportunity. Assume
Mary dies owning land restricted by an easement that met the
requirements of Section 170(h) but that the easement does not
prohibit commercial recreational activity and therefore the
estate is ineligible for the Section 2031(c) exclusion. If the
executor can in fact make a post-mortem easement donation in
order to qualify for Section 2031(c), it also appears that the
executor can make a post-mortem easement amendment in order to
eliminate any prohibited commercial recreational activity so
as to be eligible for Section 2031(c).
Note of caution. The post-mortem easement
donation and the post-mortem easement amendment are important.
However, while these planning opportunities are useful
additions to the planners toolbox, a landowner or a family
should not take the position that comprehensive planning
during lifetime should be put off because of the availability
of post-mortem planning opportunities. For one thing, the law
is absolutely clear on the income tax and estate tax savings
that are available when an easement is donated during
lifetime. All the issues are not clear in the case of a
post-mortem donation. In addition, using these post-mortem
tools successfully means addressing a complex array of state
law and other related questions and reaching agreement among
all necessary parties within a relatively short period after
the death of the decedent. It is certainly better to see to it
that the proper planning is done during the lifetime of the
landowner.
Planning
Observations
- Land that falls outside the geographic limitations of new Section 2031(c) simply will not be eligible for the benefits of that section. However, continued urban sprawl will inevitably result in the addition of new Metropolitan Statistical Areas to the map, and that will mean greater coverage under Section 2031(c).
- Every single conservation easement must now take into account the provisions of Section 2031(c) as part of the planning process. Retained development rights can be extinguished after the death of the landowner, but more than de minimis retained commercial recreational rights can disqualify the easement from Section 2031(c) eligibility.
- Every single family lands planning situation must now take into account the provisions of Section 2031(c) as part of the planning process. Do the current owners want to gift the property to children over a period of years as part of the estate planning and succession planning process? Does the family want to remain eligible for the Section 2031(c) benefits? There is no right answer to these questions, but now we have an important additional planning tool in the landowners toolbox.
- Every recorded easement should be reviewed with Section 2031(c) eligibility in mind (to look for a prohibition on commercial recreational activities, for example) if the land is still owned by the same family that donated the easement.
- One of the costs of the new Section 2031(c) benefit is that planning after death becomes much more complicated. Experienced appraisers will need to be available to give the family accurate valuation numbers (land value before and after the easement for purposes of the 30% test, the post-mortem election, and the value of retained development rights) in sufficient time for the family to make an informed judgment about what to do. In connection with the new post-mortem easement provision, a conservation easement that satisfies state law rules and has the agreement of all necessary parties must be successfully completed after the decedents death.
New Section 2031(c) is a very important incentive for land conservation. It will take some time to sort out all of the planning issues, and to answer some of the planning questions that have already come up, but landowners and their advisors and land trusts must begin to work with the new law. Saving important land and saving tax dollars is a tough combination to beat!

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