Landowners Warned To Be
Wary Of Any Conservation Easement
By Colleen Schreiber
AUSTIN — Different opinions are what make the
world interesting, so it’s said. There are
certainly different opinions regarding such
matters as conservation easements, one of the
topics discussed at the Southwest Landowner
Conference here earlier this summer.
Fred Kelly Grant, a property rights attorney
and a consultant to Stewards of the Range,
warned participanting landowners to be wary of
conservation easements.
“The Nature Conservancy, The Wildlife
Federation and all of the non-governmental
agencies have understood property rights a lot
longer than many of us,” Grant told listeners.
“And they understood what they had to do to
get around the Fifth Amendment and to get around
due process. One of the ways is through
conservation easements. In short, conservation
easements have become the tool of choice for
non-profits, even the government, to gain
control over private property.”
In legal terms, a conservation easement may
be defined as “a right of use over the property
of another.” An easement, he pointed out,
creates a “dominant estate” and a “servient
estate.”
“If you’re the property owner and sign a
conservation easement, you have just committed
yourself to serving the dominant interest of
whatever organization bought that interest,”
Grant insisted.
Conservation easements, along with “transfer
of development rights” and “smart growth,” are
tools, Grant reiterated, that allow the
government to condemn one’s property and pay
less than the fair market value, the amount it
would have to pay if the land were acquired
through the eminent domain process.
An example of this occurred with a recent
purchase in Idaho by the Nature Conservancy.
“They purchased a ranch for $480,000 and two
months later they sold a conservation easement
to the U.S. government for $460,000. Then they
traded the land to the government in exchange
for federal land in the foothills of Boise, some
of the most highly valued land in Southern Idaho
except for Sun Valley, and then later sold it
for more than a million dollars.”
That million dollars, he told listeners, was
spent to buy scenic easements from anti-grazing
activists such as John Marvel.
Grant talked about the various problems he
sees with conservation easements. One big
problem, he said, is third-party enforcement.
Anyone who buys a conservation easement now, in
most states, has to be a non-profit organization
or the government. Grant said landowners should
pay particular attention to the statute that
governs the easement.
“If a non-profit governs the easement, an
activist like John Marvel, who is opposed to all
grazing on public lands, could step into any of
the Nature Conservancy easements and contend
that grazing is hurting the natural resource of
that particular land. The court would have to
listen to the case.”
Even after a landowner has given due
diligence to the language of the easement and
thinks he understands the agreement, Grant
warned, “Beware.
“If you think you can rely on the language of
the easement, that it will be the final word,
think again. The courts will interpret in any
way they have to so that the language of the
easement favors the easement owner.”
He found the liberal application of the law
by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to be true
in a case dealing with the Big Meadows Grazing
Association. In this particular case, to take
advantage of the Wetlands Reserve Program, the
rancher had to agree to a conservation easement
that would protect and rehabilitate wetlands and
conserve the natural resource values of the
ranch.
“One of the things that the Department of
Agriculture promised was that the plan that
would be put in place to protect and
rehabilitate the wetlands would cost the
landowner $80,000,” Grant said.
“Two years later the rancher was told they’d
adopted a new plan that would now cost him
$486,000.
“They also changed the contract so that it
now said they would dam up the water instead of
constraining the wetlands to those running along
streams.”
The rancher took the government to court. On
the issue of the government’s promise that the
rancher’s part would only cost him $80,000, the
Ninth Circuit ruled that it was an oral upfront
promise. That promise, the court said, became
unenforceable when the conservation easement
agreement was signed, because an easement is a
real estate action and oral proof is not
admissible.
The rancher also pointed out that the
wetlands reserve manual said he had to agree to
any changes. The court, however, ruled that the
manual isn’t binding on the government.
“This case shows why the land trust groups
have chosen easements,” Grant told listeners.
“They put the word easement in there, and the
court says that’s it. It’s a real
property-binding agreement.”
“Transfer of development rights” and “smart
growth” were two of the other concerns voiced by
Grant. These rights are generally associated
with cities and government, but national
non-profit organizations, the speaker said, are
now able to accomplish the same thing through
conservation easements.
“Transfer of development rights is when you
sell from your property the right to develop it
and you sell or trade the right to develop your
property in exchange for developing another
piece of property,” Grant explained.
The first case in which the Supreme Court
considered the transfer of development rights
was Penn Central Transportation Co. et al. v.
New York City et al. Penn Central, Grant
explained, owned Grand Central Station in New
York City. They wanted to build a multi-story
office tower on top of Grand Central Station.
The City of New York denied permission for the
addition, citing the city’s Landmarks
Preservation Law.
Lawyers for Penn Central filed a “takings”
case, which went all the way to the Supreme
Court. In June 1978 the Supreme Court ruled that
the application of New York City’s Landmarks Law
did not constitute a “taking” because the
property had not been deprived of its full
economic value.
Justice William Rehnquist wrote the
dissenting opinion, which Grant said clearly
warned of the nature of the courts to allow
transfer of development rights to replace
eminent domain.
The closing paragraph of his opinion reads as
follows:
“Over 50 years ago Mr. Justice Holmes …
warned that the courts were ‘in danger of
forgetting that a strong public desire to
improve the public condition is not enough to
warrant achieving the desire by a shorter cut
than the constitutional way of paying for the
change.”
Rehnquist went on to write that “The city of
New York is in a precarious financial state, and
some may believe that the costs of landmark
preservation will be more easily borne by
corporations such as Penn Central than the
overburdened individual taxpayers of New York.
But these concerns do not allow us to ignore
past precedents construing the Eminent Domain
Clause to the end that the desire to improve the
public condition is, indeed, achieved by a
shorter cut than the constitutional way of
paying for the change.”
“Smart growth,” Grant told listeners, does
exactly the same thing.
“Smart growth policy essentially says that
now that the cities have been developed, a
farmer or rancher can no longer sell his
property for development.
“That’s what’s happening throughout the
Northwest. If smart growth is imposed, you
cannot develop your property unless you turn
over 60 percent of it to open space.
“When this happens, along come the
non-profits with their conservation easements.
Most of these easements have such stringent
restrictions that eventually the landowner can
no longer farm or ranch, so the non-profit
offers to buy out the landowner for a price well
below market value.”
Grant closed his remarks by offering
landowners some advice.
“Six years ago I was in Austin. The only
difference is that the number of land use trusts
has increased greatly. The land that is now tied
up by conservation easements has doubled and in
some areas tripled, and people are still signing
them every day in the belief that they have
solved their cash problems and solved the
problem of protecting themselves against future
species regulations and future restrictions by
the movement,” Grant commented.
“If you as a landowner are bound and
determined to sell an easement, remember that
the easement will control everything. Therefore
you need to define very specifically — not
vaguely — what’s to be protected, what the use
of the underlying land will continue to be. You
need to define very specifically the boundaries
of the easement. You need to define very
specifically the management activities that will
be handled and allowed by you, the landowner,
and not the easement owner. You need to identify
specifically what monitoring will be done. They
use their own baseline data, and believe me, if
they buy a conservation easement from you, they
know what the baseline data is, and most often
the rancher or farmer doesn’t.”
Grant encouraged landowners considering a
conservation easement to read the contract
carefully. He also encouraged landowners to find
a competent property rights attorney to review
the document.
“Don’t ever sign a conservation easement
without understanding every word in the
contract,” he stressed.
Finally, Grant told listeners to remember
that the landowner has the commodity that the
non-profit organizations want.
“The landowner has the most amazing commodity
there is; he has the most limited commodity that
exists — land — and it’s highly desired.
“We have to begin to get our stories out the
same way these liberal organizations are getting
theirs out,” Grant stressed. “We have to put
pressure on the cities and the counties, on our
neighbors, friends, and family. We must urge
them not to sign blindly conservation easements
or transfer of development rights or any permit
process that allows ‘smart growth’ to restrain
and restrict the use of one’s property.” |