T.C. Memo. 2013-27
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ESTATE OF SHIRLEY C. GIOVACCHINI, DECEASED, DONOR, LISA
LEKUMBERRY, EXECUTOR AND TRUSTEE, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 20122-05. Filed January 24, 2013.
R determined a deficiency in E’s Federal estate tax. In a
separate notice of deficiency, R determined a Federal gift tax
deficiency for D’s 2000 tax year. Both deficiencies inter alia were
determined on the basis of a determined understatement of the value of
High Meadows, parcels of real property covering approximately 2,500
acres near Lake Tahoe, California. R also determined accuracy-related
penalties pursuant to I.R.C. sec. 6662 with respect to both deficiencies.
After concessions, the issues before the Court are the values for estate
and gift tax purposes of D’s interest in High Meadows and the
applicability of the I.R.C. sec. 6662 penalty.
Held: The values of the High Meadows parcels of real property
were higher, on the applicable gift tax and estate tax valuation dates,
than those reported on the respective filed gift and estate tax returns.
The values were at the same time lower than those determined in the
notices of deficiency.
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[*2] Held, further, the undervaluations were due to reasonable cause
within the meaning of I.R.C. sec. 6664(c) and, therefore, the I.R.C.
sec. 6662 penalties do not apply.
Daniel M. White, Steven G. Amundson, James L. Kelly, and Linda J.
Sinclair, for petitioner.
David W. Sorensen, S. Mark Barnes, and Derek W. Kaczmarek, for
respondent.
CONTENTS
FINDINGS OF FACT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
A. Brief Family History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
B. The Trimmer High Meadows Ranch and the Williamson Act . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
C. High Meadows: Background of Events Leading Up to an
October 4, 2001, Purchase Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
1. Early Appraisals and Prospective Buyer’s Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2. Creation of Family Trust and Sale of 50% of
High Meadows to High Meadows Six, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
D. October 4, 2001, Purchase Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
E. Events Leading Up to Closing on the Sale of High Meadows . . . . . . . . . . 15
F. Continuing Efforts To Expedite the High Meadows Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
G. Amendments to the High Meadows Sales Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
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[*3] H. Closing on the Sale of High Meadows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
I. 2000 Gift Tax Return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
J. 2001 Estate Tax Return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
K. Notices of Deficiency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
L. Application of the Definition of Fair Market Value . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
OPINION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
I. Burden of Proof . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
II. Gift Tax: General Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
III. Estate Tax: General Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
IV. Value Generally . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
A. Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002, Appraisal Report . . . . . . . . . . . 33
B. Expert Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
1. Respondent’s Expert Lee B. Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
2. The Estate’s Experts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
a. Dr. Thomas F. Cargill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
b. Gary D. Midkiff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
c. Steven J. Herzog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
d. Steven R. Johnson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
e. William G. Kimmel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
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[*4] f. Thomas W. Clark, Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
V. Values of High Meadows for Estate and Gift Tax Purposes . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
A. The January 31, 2003, Sale of High Meadows as Some Evidence
of High Meadows’ Value for Estate and Gift Tax Purposes . . . . . . . 51
1. Evidence of the Sale Is Admissible. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2. The January 2003 Sale Is the Best Evidence of Value . . . . . . 58
B. Other Significant Factors Affecting High Meadows Valuation . . . . 63
1. Highest and Best Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
2. Access Issues and Changing USFS Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
a. McFarland’s Case: Snow Shoes, Dog Sled, and
Cross Country Skis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
b. Mackie’s Case: Hiking, Canoe With Portage and
Horseback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
c. Fitzgerald’s Case: Revokable Permit and
a Kick Me Annual Fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
d. Lessons Learned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
3. Principal Issues Negatively Affecting High
Meadows’ Value as of Both Relevant Valuation Dates . . . . . 78
C. Need for Valuation Adjustments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
D. Court’s High Meadows Sale Price Adjustments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
1. Rising Prices Valuation Correction Date Adjustments . . . . . . 88
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[*5] 2. Adjustment for Uncertainty of Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
3. Parcel Size Adjustment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
4. Application of the Adjustments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
E. Valuation Determinations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
VI. Section 6662 Penalties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
WHERRY, Judge: This case is before the Court on a petition for
redetermination of two separate deficiencies. Respondent determined that the
estate is liable for (1) a $9,818,040 estate tax deficiency and a $2,817,294 section
6662 penalty and (2) a $3,784,333 gift tax deficiency and a $722,573 section 6662
penalty for the 2000 tax year.1
The parties have resolved a number of issues and have filed two stipulations
of settled issues. The remaining issues for decision are (1) the values for gift
and estate tax purposes on June 27, 2000, and October 8, 2001, respectively, of an
interest in real property located near and southeast of Lake Tahoe, California,
1
Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended for the applicable excise tax dates of gift and death, and
Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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[*6] which the parties refer to as High Meadows, and (2) whether the estate is liable
for the section 6662 penalties.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated; the stipulations of settled issues, the
stipulated facts, and the accompanying exhibits, although not necessarily their
contents and conclusions, are hereby incorporated by reference into our findings.
Mrs. Shirley C. Giovacchini (Shirley) was diagnosed with multiple myeloma
in 1999 and passed away on October 8, 2001. Her daughter, Ms. Lisa Lekumberry,
was appointed executor of the estate. Ms. Lekumberry resided in Nevada when she
filed the petition in this case.
A. Brief Family History
Shirley and her husband Mr. Roy Giovacchini (Roy) were members of
pioneer Nevada families who settled near Genoa, Nevada, in the mid-19th century.
Shirley was born to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold and Annie Trimmer (Trimmers) in 1939.
She married Roy in 1959. Roy and Shirley had three daughters. Roy died on
May 28, 1997.
B. The Trimmer High Meadows Ranch and the Williamson Act
In 1929 Shirley’s father and grandfather purchased High Meadows. High
Meadows consists of contiguous parcels of real property, ranging from an
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[*7] elevation of 6,600 feet to over 9,200 feet, well over one mile and rising to
nearly two miles, above sea level. High Meadows is about two miles south of the
Heavenly Valley Ski Resort on the southwest shoulder of the ski resort’s 10,067-
foot high Monument Peak summit. Portions of High Meadows are quite
mountainous and difficult to accurately survey or measure. It covers approximately
2,350 to 2,500 acres near Lake Tahoe, California.2 On or about March 15, 1968, a
deed was executed conveying High Meadows from the Trimmers to Roy and Shirley
Giovacchini.3 Roy and Shirley’s children spent every summer riding horseback at
High Meadows. The family took its cattle there during the summer and cut
firewood and Christmas trees in the fall.
On January 26, 1971, the Trimmers entered into a contract with the County
of El Dorado in which they agreed to limit the use and development of High
Meadows in accordance with the California Land Conservation Act of 1965
(Williamson Act). Cal. Gov’t Code secs. 51200-51297.4 (West 1983 & Supp.
2000). Landowners benefit from Williamson Act contracts by receiving favorable
2
Because of the very steep mountainous terrain which is included in a part of
the property, the parties do not, to this day, know the exact acreage of High
Meadows. In the end they have assumed it to be 2,356 acres.
3
Annie Trimmer died in 1978, and Arnold Trimmer died on March 18, 1985.
The deed conveying High Meadows from the Trimmers to the Giovacchinis was not
recorded until April 23, 1985, after Arnold Trimmer’s death.
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[*8] property tax treatment in exchange for limiting the use of their lands. See
Estate of Luton v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-539.
Under the heading “LAND USE”, the Williamson Act contract stated that
the use of High Meadows was to be limited “to agricultural and compatible uses”
and that “Structures may be erected on the property (and existing structures
enlarged) if they are directly related to and compatible with permitted uses.” The
initial term of the contract was 10 years, but the contract provided for an automatic
1-year extension at the end of each subsequent year unless either party served
written notice of nonrenewal in accordance with the terms of the contract. Stated in
simpler terms, the contract was designed so that the development restrictions would
lapse 10 years after notice of nonrenewal. Otherwise, it was to remain in effect.4
4
Absent notice of nonrenewal and a 10-year wait, the landowner may seek
cancellation of a Williamson Act contract. Cancellation of a Williamson Act
contract requires governmental approval (e.g., the county board of supervisors or
city council) and generally requires that the landowner pay a 12.5% cancellation fee,
which is based on the property’s market value at the time of cancellation. See Cal.
Gov’t Code sec. 51283 (West 1983 & Supp. 2000); see also Evatt v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-368 (“A Williamson Act contract * * * requires
State approval for cancellation of the contracts.”).
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[*9] C. High Meadows: Background of Events Leading Up to an
October 4, 2001, Purchase Agreement
In a letter dated October 24, 1986, Sonia Jacques, a field representative for
The Trust for Public Land (TPL), informed Gilbert G. Wright, a land appraiser, that
TPL wanted a preliminary appraisal of High Meadows because it was interested in
acquiring the property. A subsequent letter from Ms. Jacques to Roy and Shirley
(dated July 16, 1988) also reflects TPL’s continuing interest in acquiring High
Meadows.
1. Early Appraisals and Prospective Buyers’ Interest
In an appraisal report prepared for the U.S. Forest Service (USFS),
appraisers Stephen R. Johnson and Mr. Wright appraised the 2,356.10 acres of
High Meadows at $3,800,000 ($3,300,000 for the land and $500,000 for 6,800,000
board feet of merchantable timber) as of April 10, 1990. Mr. Johnson updated that
appraisal on August 5, 1991, valuing High Meadows at $4,100,000. After Roy’s
death on May 28, 1997, Mr. Johnson and Lynn Barnett-Burton appraised 2,553.96
acres of High Meadows (essentially the same property, but with a different
acreage). This time the appraisal was made on behalf of Roy’s estate for the
purpose of determining High Meadows’ value as of the date of Roy’s death. The
appraised value was $5,375,000 ($4,500,000 for the land per Mr. Johnson and Ms.
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[*10] Barnett-Burton, and $875,000 for the timber as appraised by Steve Cannon
and Jim Fleming). Roy’s estate tax return listed the value of 2,553.96 acres of High
Meadows as $3,837,000 for land and $743,750 for timber.
On April 1, 1998, Anna Hellman, project manager for the American Land
Conservancy (ALC)5 wrote to Ms. Lekumberry and her husband J.B. about a “ranch
tour” for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Dave Marlow, a USFS employee,
met with Shirley and members of her family on April 29, 1998, and May 19, 1999,
regarding USFS’ interest in acquiring High Meadows.6
2. Creation of Family Trust and Sale of 50% of
High Meadows to High Meadows Six, LLC
On July 19, 1999, Shirley transferred ownership of High Meadows to
herself and Ms. Lekumberry, as cotrustees of the Giovacchini Family 1989 Trust
(trust). On June 27, 2000, the trust sold a 50% interest in High Meadows to High
Meadows Six, LLC (HM6), an entity controlled by her three daughters and their
5
ALC is a national sec. 501(c)(3) nonprofit tax exempt land conservation
organization headquartered in San Francisco, California. Its mission is to work with
landowners and public resource agencies to create conservation solutions through
land acquisition, conservation easements, restoration, and stewardship.
6
Mr. Marlow had another meeting with Ms. Lekumberry and J.B. on February
16, 2000, and a telephone conversation with J.B. on July 6, 2000.
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[*11] spouses, for $2,500,000.7 No appraisal was performed with respect to that
sale. High Meadows’ value and sale price were determined by the family and Mr.
Randal S. Kuckenmeister, a certified public accountant (C.P.A.) who advised the
Giovacchinis and their various entities on accounting and tax matters (and who
prepared the estate and gift tax returns underlying this case). The value and sales
price arrived at was reached using the value determined by Mr. Johnson for Roy
Giovacchini’s estate plus an annual increase based on the Consumer Price Index.8
7
HM6 paid $400,000 in cash and signed a promissory note for the remaining
$2,100,000.
8
In early 2001 an attorney named Victor S. Merrill approached the
Giovacchini family’s advisers with an offer to enter into an option to acquire
approximately 1,730 to 1,790 acres of High Meadows for the greater of $12,500 per
acre or a price to be 10% higher than the price determined and approved by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Correspondence concerning the possible option
agreement, with revisions, continued through at least February 20, 2002. His goal
was to get a large portion of High Meadows under option for as long as he could in
order to use it in a hoped-for potential land exchange deal with the U.S. Bureau of
Land Management for land in Jean Valley near and south of Las Vegas, Nevada.
Mr. Merrill never put any money down and testified that his proposed
purchase price “was just a guess” and that “Almost nothing” was considered in
arriving at the proposed purchase price. He also testified that it was in his best
interests to pay the highest possible price for High Meadows because that would
enable him to obtain more land in the subsequently intended exchange. Mr. Merrill
never had the funds or funding to purchase High Meadows and ultimately
abandoned the whole plan when he determined he would be unable to exchange
(continued...)
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[*12] D. October 4, 2001, Purchase Agreement
On May 1, 2001, the Trust, HM6, and ALC met to discuss ALC’s interest in
acquiring High Meadows. On October 4, 2001--four days before Shirley’s death--
ALC, the Trust, and HM6 entered into a purchase agreement (and an addendum
thereto) regarding High Meadows.9 Section 1(a) of the agreement was titled
“Purchase and Sale of Subject Property”. At that time, Mr. Jacques Etchegoyhen
was a Nevada State director for ALC and project manager of the High Meadows
acquisition. Mr. Etchegoyhen was also a lifelong childhood friend of Ms.
Lekumberry and her husband J.B.
The purchase agreement provided that the Trust and HM6 would sell
approximately 1,730 acres of High Meadows to ALC and that the Trust and HM6
acknowledged and understood that ALC intended “to secure acquisition of the
Subject Property by a public agency * * * that will preserve the Sale Property in
its present condition and use the Subject Property for public, open space and
8
(...continued)
California land for Nevada land. The estate objected to some of respondent’s
evidence regarding this offer. In valuing High Meadows we will disregard any
evidence relating to Mr. Merrill’s offer because we find the offer to be without
substance and therefore immaterial to our ultimate conclusions.
9
On September 26, 2001, the Trust and HM6 signed the purchase agreement
and addendum thereto. ALC countersigned those documents on October 4, 2001.
Shirley passed away on October 8, 2001.
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[*13] recreational purposes”. The Trust and HM6 also acknowledged and
understood that ALC intended to “simultaneously close” its acquisition of the 1,730
acres and its conveyance of that land “to the Agency.”
Section 2(a) of the purchase agreement, titled “Determination of Purchase
Price” provided that the purchase price would be “the amount equal to ninety-five
(95%) of the fair market value of the Subject Property as determined in the
Appraisal * * * approved by Seller, Buyer and the Agency in accordance with
Section 4(b)” of the agreement. Section 4(b) provided that ALC would obtain an
appraisal as soon as was practicable and that “If either Seller or Buyer does not
approve the Appraisal, such party shall deliver written notice thereof to the other
party within ten (10) days of receipt of the Appraisal, upon which [event] this
Agreement shall terminate.” If no such written notice was provided, the appraisal
would be deemed approved. If the agency failed to approve the appraisal within 90
days of its receipt of the appraisal report, ALC was to deliver written notice of that
fact to the Trust and HM6, at which time the agreement would terminate.
ALC agreed to deposit $20,000 into escrow within two business days of the
purchase agreement’s effective date. ALC further agreed to deposit into escrow
$250,000 within two business days of the appraisal’s approval by the Trust, HM6,
and ALC, and to instruct the escrow agent to release the original $20,000 earnest
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[*14] money and $50,000 of the $250,000 deposit to the Trust and HM6. If the
closing did not occur within one year of the purchase agreement’s effective date,
ALC agreed to deposit into escrow $250,000 with instructions to immediately
release the funds to the Trust and HM6.
The purchase agreement also set forth a series of conditions precedent to
ALC’s obligation to purchase the land. Among them were the following: (1) ALC,
in its sole discretion, must have approved the condition of the property; (2) the
agency must have been in a position to accept title; and (3) there were no material
adverse changes in the physical or environmental condition of the property between
the purchase agreement’s effective date and the sale’s closing.
When the purchase agreement was signed, ALC did not have an agency or
other public or private entity ready to purchase High Meadows.10 It intended to
contact the California-Tahoe Conservancy, the California Wildlife Conservation
Board, and USFS to gauge their potential interest in acquiring High Meadows.
10
ALC could not have funded the acquisition itself.
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[*15] E. Events Leading up to Closing on the Sale of High Meadows
The day after the purchase agreement was entered into, ALC hired Myron
R. Harrison to appraise High Meadows. His signed final valuation report
indicated that
Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Regulations require that all
properties must have a paved access and utility service [for
development]. * * *
The subject property is accessible by traveling southwest from the City
of South Lake Tahoe on Pioneer Trail and thence southeast on High
Meadows Trail. At the end of the subdivision, High Meadows Trail
becomes High Meadows Road and consists of a road easement across
forest service property to enter the subject property at the westerly end.
***
The access road to High Meadows has been in existence for many
years at the point in time that the subject property was used exclusively
for summer grazing of livestock. Therefore, the continuous use of the
right of way is an unchallenged fact.[11]
11
In 1968 California and Nevada agreed to create an agency to regulate
development and conserve natural resources in the Lake Tahoe Basin. See Lake
Country Estates, Inc. v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency, 440 U.S. 391, 394 (1979).
After Congress consented to that agreement the following year, the Tahoe Regional
Planning Agency (TRPA) was organized “to adopt and to enforce a regional plan
for land use, transportation, conservation, recreation, and public services.”
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[*16] Mr. Harrison sent his completed appraisal report to ALC on November 29,
2001. He valued 1,790 acres of High Meadows at $25 million as of October 10,
2001.12
ALC then enlisted the help of Thomas W. Clark, Jr., a licensed real estate
appraiser in California who operated his own real estate appraisal and consulting
firm in Sacramento, California. Mr. Clark performed a review appraisal of Mr.
Harrison’s October 10, 2001, valuation report. Early in his report, Mr. Clark
observed that
Appraising large tracts of undeveloped land in the Tahoe Basin, such
as the High Meadows property, is extraordinarily difficult for a variety
of reasons; the most significant of which are the land use issues
imposed by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and the lack of
comparable sales. * * * There simply are no sales of land that are truly
comparable to the High Meadows land. Any appraisal review must,
therefore, recognize that the appraiser has to exercise a significant
degree of subjective analysis and judgment.
Although Mr. Clark deemed Mr. Harrison’s report “reasonably well done”,
he concluded that “In some instances, however, the report raises more questions
than are directly answered and there needs to be additional discussion of various
issues.” Mr. Clark concluded that “A purchaser of land with a $20,000,000 to
12
Although the original purchase agreement was for approximately 1,730
acres, by the time the appraisal was prepared the parties had apparently agreed on
1,790 acres and the purchase agreement was later amended on June 20, 2002, to
reflect this revised acreage.
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[*17] $30,000,000 price is not making a purchase decision without some serious
investigation and to the extent possible resolution of various unknowns that impact
use and development.” He further opined that “there are few buyers * * * that
would pay $25,000,000 for a site that would only accommodate a single residential
compound. The excessive exuberance of the real estate market characterized by the
last few years of the 1990’s is gone.” Mr. Clark went on to express a number of
specific concerns with Mr. Harrison’s report, including questions regarding access
to High Meadows.13
F. Continuing Efforts To Expedite the High Meadows Sale
In a March 4, 2002, letter, ALC informed USFS that ALC “has an option
agreement * * * for the purchase of approximately 1,790 acres” of High Meadows
and “would like to work with [USFS] on conveyance of this land for the benefit of
the people of the United States”. This was the start of what was to become an
ongoing dialogue between ALC and USFS regarding the acquisition of High
Meadows.
13
Among Mr. Clark’s concerns were access, the comparable sales used by
Mr. Harrison, and Mr. Harrison’s use of price per square foot of coverage (i.e.,
permitted developable land, see discussion infra at IV.2.(f)) rather than price per
acre.
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[*18] On August 1, 2002, USFS wrote to Mr. Harrison asking him to appraise the
1,790 acres of High Meadows. In that letter USFS specified that “The appraisal
must conform to the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions
(UASFLA) * * * and the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice
[commonly known as the “yellow book”] (USPAP)” with the former to take
precedence in the event of a conflict. It also defined the sought market value as
the amount in cash, or in terms reasonably equivalent to cash, for
which in all probability the property would have sold on the effective
date of the appraisal, after a reasonable exposure time on the open
competitive market, from a willing and reasonably knowledgeable
seller to a willing and reasonably knowledgeable buyer, with neither
acting under any compulsion to buy or sell, giving due consideration to
all available economic uses of the property at the time of the appraisal.
(UASFLA 2000).
The letter requesting the appraisal also specified:
There is considerable discussion in the Summary of Title regarding
outstanding road rights and lack of recorded access. It is intended that
reciprocal access will be granted between the Giovacchini’s and the
USA crossing existing adjacent National Forest ownership and the
property being retained by the Giovacchini’s. Specific easement
language * * * will be forwarded to you * * * for your consideration as
to any affects to value. Therefore, for purposes of appraisal, access
can be both physically and legally assumed for the subject property.
In his December 11, 2002, appraisal report, which he prepared in response to that
request, Mr. Harrison valued 1,789.33 acres of High Meadows at $29,500,000 as of
September 12, 2002.
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[*19] In a December 16, 2002, “Appraisal Review Report”, USFS Senior Review
Appraiser Sharon K. Moore recommended approving Mr. Harrison’s December 11,
2002, appraisal report. Ms. Moore’s report was approved the next day in a one-
page document by USFS’ acting regional appraiser, Kimberley V. Brower.14
Ms. Moore’s and Ms. Brower’s reviews, like the proverbial “horse led to
water”, did not take into consideration several factors which appraisers are directed
to consider by USPAP. This refusal to drink resulted from their interpretation of the
term “conflict” as it relates to any differences between USPAP and UASFLA.
Specifically, where USPAP directs a factor be considered but UASFLA indicates
consideration of that factor is not mandatory, Ms. Moore and Ms. Brower on
several critical occasions chose to ignore what this Court believes amounted to
decisive factors. In response to respondent’s in-court inquiries about this practice,
the following colloquy with Ms. Brower addressed this issue:
14
USFS was eager to acquire High Meadows and had been for some time.
Leslie Morefield, a realty specialist team leader in USFS’ Lake Tahoe Basin
Management Unit, stated that she learned of High Meadows in 1995 when she
began working for USFS and that “High Meadows has been considered the number
one desired acquisition of the Forest Service” by the Lake Tahoe Basin
Management Unit since she began working there.
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[*20] Q: Ms. Brower, earlier you were asked a number of questions about
the Yellow Book [USPAP], do you still have that in front of
you?
A: Yes, I do.
Q: Could you turn to page 89. I believe petitioner’s counsel pointed you
to the sentence that begins “Examination of the agency’s [USFS]
appraisal should include”. It’s toward the bottom.
A: Yes.
Q: When the U.S. Forest Service looks at something like the
Yellow Book, if the sentence says “should include,” is that a
requirement?
A: No.
Q: If you could please turn to page 90. The first paragraph without
the bullet points. “A review of the agency’s appraisal process
should next be undertaken with particular note. Let me start
over. “A review of the agency’s appraisal should next be
undertaken with particular note being made of any technical or
factual errors reported by the reviewing appraisal.” This
sentence also contains the word “should”. Is the U.S. Forest
Service required to have an appraisal that complies with this
sentence?
* * * * * * *
A: Is the word “should” in there, is it an absolute, no.
Q. Is that the case for the remainder of the paragraphs on page 90
as well as the paragraphs on page 91 that have the word
“should” in them?
A. Yes.
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[*21] Q. So the U.S. Forest Service is not required to have an appraisal
that meets any of these standards, when the word “should” is in
there?
A. Yes.
Ms. Moore and Ms. Brower also chose to ignore or disregard other appraisals
of High Meadows, including Mr. Harrison’s appraisal report of November 29, 2001,
which valued High Meadows as of October 10, 2001, at $25,000,000. Ms. Moore
addressed this issue in the following colloquy with petitioner’s counsel on cross-
examination:
Q. Did you ask him to provide any details about this appraisal, 56-
J, that he told you about?
A. No.
Q. Did you ever ask him what his date of value was?
A. No.
Q. Did you ever ask him what his determination of value was?
A. No.
Q. Would it have been important for you to know, ma’am, what
value he had determined some 11 months prior to the date of
value on Exhibit 58-J, the Forest Service appraisal?
A. No.
Q. It didn’t matter; is that right?
- 22 -
[*22] A. Correct.
Q. I want to be crystal clear about this. The fact that Myron
Harrison prepared what he characterized on November 21 --
strike that, November 29, 2001, as a complete appraisal that had
a value of 25 million, that was not important to you. Is that your
testimony?
A. That is correct. And can I say why?
Ms. Brower’s testimony about this appraisal explained: “We characterize it as an
unsolicited appraisal.” ALC “disclosed to the Forest Service that an appraisal was
done and they wanted us to look at it. And we said no because we do not accept
unsolicited appraisals, because we had nothing to do with the appraisal instructions
or any of that.”
They chose instead to focus only on Mr. Harrison’s appraisal report of
December 11, 2002, valuing High Meadows as of September 12, 2002, at
$29,500,000 because this was the only report specifically sanctioned and contracted
for by USFS. ALC, although it disclosed that their earlier Harrison appraisal was
done, was complicit in this approach as it also apparently suppressed the November
29, 2001, appraisal. In a February 23, 2005, letter to Lawrence Camp, one of the
respondent’s large and medium size business field specialists in San Francisco, Jeff
Stump, its vice president, stated:
- 23 -
[*23] I am in receipt of your January 10, 2005 facsimile request for
additional information regarding the High Meadows property. The
appraisal that you requested was never reduced to final and was not
shared with either the United States Forest Service or the property
owner. Thus, it does not seem appropriate for American Land
Conservancy to provide a copy to your office.
G. Amendments to the High Meadows Sales Contract.
The purchase agreement among the Trust, HM6, and ALC was amended four
times. The first amendment was dated June 20, 2002. It referred to the subject
property as approximately 1,790 acres of High Meadows. Therein, the parties
agreed that the “Approved FMV” of the property would be no less than $26 million.
If escrow did not close on or before December 31, 2002, ALC was required to
deposit $300,000 into escrow not later than January 3, 2003, with instructions to
immediately release the funds to the Trust and HM6. That deposit was to be
nonrefundable unless the purchase agreement was terminated because of a default
by the sellers. If the sale closed, the deposit was to be credited against the purchase
price.
The second amendment was dated June 28, 2002. This “make weight”
amendment was apparently intended as a clarification of the allocation of the
selling price between the selling parties in order to facilitate the subsequent
- 24 -
[*24] intended claim of a charitable contribution.15 The third amendment, dated
August 7, 2002, provided that ALC would pay to remediate a contaminated site on
High Meadows and would receive a credit at closing for that expense.
Escrow on the sale of High Meadows did not close on or before
December 31, 2002. And ALC did not deposit $300,000 into escrow by
January 3, 2003, as it had agreed to do in the first amendment to the purchase
agreement. But, on January 13, 2003, the parties executed a fourth amendment to
the purchase agreement (with a retroactive effective date of January 2, 2003) in
which they then agreed that if the sale did not close on or before February 28,
2003, ALC would deposit $300,000 into escrow with instructions to immediately
release the funds to the Trust and HM6. That deposit was to be nonrefundable
15
It amended sec. 2(a) of the purchase agreement by adding the following two
sentences:
The purchase price for the Subject Property (the “Purchase Price”)
shall be the amount equal to ninety-five percent (95%) of the fair
market value of the Subject Property as determined in the Appraisal (as
defined below) approved by Seller, Buyer, and the Agency in
accordance with Section 4(b) below (the “Approved FMV”). * * *
Seller acknowledges that the Giovacchini Family 1989 Trust is selling
its 50% ownership in the property for 50% of the Approved FMV.
Seller further acknowledges that High Meadows Six, LLC is selling its
50% ownership in the property for 45% of the Approved FMV and will
be entitled to a charitable contribution for the remaining 5% of the
Approved FMV.
- 25 -
[*25] unless the purchase agreement was terminated because of a default by the
sellers. ALC also agreed to pay, subject to certain limits, the costs associated with
a loan of up to $4 million that Shirley’s family was to obtain by January 16, 2003, to
make a required payment of the estate’s estate taxes.16
H. Closing on the Sale of High Meadows
On January 14, 2003, ALC and the U.S. Department of Agriculture entered
into a written contract for the sale of ALC’s interest in High Meadows for
$29,500,000. Escrow closed on the sale of High Meadows to ALC on January 31,
2003. When the dust cleared, the estate retained its share of the $29,500,000 and an
undivided 50% interest in the remaining approximately 566 acres of High Meadows
(i.e., 2,356 - 1,790 = 566) that the family retained.17
I. 2000 Gift Tax Return
In Shirley’s 2000 Form 709, United States Gift (and Generation-Skipping
Transfer) Tax Return, which was prepared by Mr. Kuckenmeister, she reported
having made $754,564 in gifts, $664,564 of which were taxable. That entire
16
The estate had filed an estate tax return on August 19, 2002.
17
See supra note 2.
- 26 -
[*26] taxable amount relates to a 43% interest in a limited partnership.18 Shirley
reported gift tax of $216,689 and, after applying $216,689 of her available unified
credit, there was zero tax due.
She did not report the Trust’s sale of the 50% interest in High Meadows to
HM6 because Mr. Kuckenmeister believed that the sale was a fair market value
transaction and, therefore, no gift was made.
J. 2001 Estate Tax Return
Shirley’s estate’s Form 706, United States Estate (and Generation-Skipping
Transfer) Tax Return, which was prepared by Mr. Kuckenmeister, reported the
value of the estate’s interest in High Meadows as $3,253,117 ($2,800,000 for the
land and $453,117 for the timber). The reported value was derived from an
updated version of Mr. Johnson’s December 1997 appraisal report valuing the
property as of May 28, 1997, that Mr. Johnson had prepared for Mr.
Kuckenmeister.19 When Mr. Johnson prepared his updated appraisal report
18
The parties have settled the gift tax valuation and sec. 6662 penalty issues
with respect to the gift of that Ranch No. 1 limited partnership interest, which was
separate and distinct from the High Meadows and HM6 issues.
19
In his updated appraisal report, Mr. Johnson valued a 100% fee simple
interest in High Meadows (land and residual timber, not otherwise valued
separately) at $8 million as of October 8, 2001. He then multiplied $8 million by
50% (which came to $4 million) to account for the estate’s undivided 50% interest.
(continued...)
- 27 -
[*27] valuing High Meadows as of October 8, 2001, he was aware that there were
ongoing negotiations regarding a sale of High Meadows; but he had not been
provided a copy of the purchase agreement.
K. Notices of Deficiency
Respondent issued the estate two separate notices of deficiency on
October 30, 2005--one for a gift tax deficiency of $3,784,333 in Shirley’s 2000 gift
tax and the other for an estate tax deficiency of $9,818,040. Respondent determined
section 6662 penalties (20% as to gift tax and 40% as to estate tax) with respect to
both deficiencies in the amounts of $722,573 and $2,817,294, respectively.
In the Form 886A, Explanation of Items, attached to the gift tax notice of
deficiency respondent asserted, among other things, that the Trust’s June 27, 2000,
sale to HM6 of the 50% undivided interest in High Meadows for $2,500,000 was
actually in part a sale, and in part a gift in the amount of $6,958,375. In the Form
886A attached to the estate tax notice of deficiency respondent asserted inter alia
that the estate held a 50% interest in 2,356.33 acres of High Meadows (rather than
19
(...continued)
To that $4 million figure he then applied a 30% fractional interest discount, resulting
in an appraised value of $2.8 million for the estate’s interest in High Meadows as of
October 8, 2001.
- 28 -
[*28] the 1,789.33 acres reported on the estate tax return) and that its interest in
High Meadows was worth $16,059,000 on October 8, 2001, significantly more than
the $3,253,117 reported on the estate tax return. The estate, on October 27, 2005,
filed a timely petition with this Court. A trial was held in Reno, Nevada.
L. Application of the Definition of Fair Market Value
Initially the valuation issues presented by this case seem to be
straightforward. The definition of fair market value, specified by the USFS in its
publication UASFLA, and the definition of that term for Federal estate and gift tax
purposes, as specified by the regulations, are essentially similar. There was a
purchase of a large portion of High Meadows by USFS, an unrelated governmental
party, at “fair market value” on January 31, 2003, for $29,500,000. Consequently,
adjusting that price to account for any applicable differences in the appropriate
valuation date, specific location, and development rights should resolve the
valuation issue.
Alas, despite the words used, the USFS’ practical application of its
definition of fair market value in this case is quite different from the Court’s
understanding of the proper application of the term “fair market value” for estate
- 29 -
[*29] and gift tax purposes.20 USFS, in this instance, determined fair market value
without considering certain facts generally acknowledged by the USPAP to be
highly relevant in making such a determination. This occurred either because these
facts, although they should have been considered pursuant to both UASFLA and
USPAP, were assumed or because, pursuant to UASFLA instructions, it was not
mandatory that they be considered, or both; and the USFS employees chose not to
consider them here. Thus, all facts that would affect purchase price in a
hypothetical sale and which should and would have been considered by a willing
seller and a willing buyer aware of all relevant facts were not in fact considered.
OPINION
I. Burden of Proof
The Commissioner’s determination of a taxpayer’s liability for a tax
deficiency is generally presumed correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of
proving that the determination is improper. See Rule 142(a); Welch v. Helvering,
290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933). However, at trial the estate filed a motion to shift the
20
Compare the definitions of fair market value set forth in Uniform Appraisal
Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions sec. A-9 (2000) referencing “a willing and
reasonably knowledgeable seller to a willing and reasonably knowledgeable buyer”,
and sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate Tax Regs., referencing “[a] willing buyer and a
willing seller * * * both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts.”
- 30 -
[*30] burden of proof to respondent pursuant to section 7491. In his response to the
estate’s motion, “respondent concede[d] that the burden of proof, as set forth in
I.R.C. § 7491 will shift to respondent”. Therefore, we granted the motion in an
order dated March 12, 2008. As a result, respondent bears the burden of proving
the estate’s liability for the estate and gift tax deficiencies. As to the determined
penalties, respondent always had the burden of production pursuant to section
7491(c).
II. Gift Tax: General Rules
Section 2501(a) imposes an excise tax on an individual’s transfer of property
by gift. The tax is imposed on the values of the gifts made during the year. See sec.
2502(a). The value of a gift of property is the property’s value on the date of
transfer. Sec. 2512(a). If property is transferred for inadequate consideration, then
the excess of the value of the property transferred over the consideration received is
deemed a gift. Sec. 2512(b); see Commissioner v. Wemyss, 324 U.S. 303, 306-307
(1945).
The donor is primarily responsible for paying the gift tax. Sec. 2502(c); sec.
25.2502-2, Gift Tax Regs. If the donor dies before paying the gift tax, the
personal representative of the donor’s estate is responsible for paying the tax out
- 31 -
[*31] of the estate, as a debt due the United States from the estate. See sec.
25.2502-2, Gift Tax Regs.
III. Estate Tax: General Rules
The Federal estate tax is an excise tax imposed “on the transfer of the taxable
estate of every decedent who is a citizen or resident of the United States.” Sec.
2001(a); see United States Trust Co. v. Helvering, 307 U.S. 57, 60 (1939) (“An
estate tax is not levied upon the property of which an estate is composed. It is an
excise imposed upon the transfer of or shifting in relationships to property at
death.”). Section 2051 defines the taxable estate as “the value of the gross estate”,
minus any applicable deductions. The gross estate includes “all property, real or
personal, tangible or intangible, wherever situated”, to the extent provided in
sections 2033 through 2045. Sec. 2031(a). The gross estate’s value is determined
“at the moment of death”, see Ahmanson Found. v. United States, 674 F.2d 761,
767 (9th Cir. 1981), or the alternate valuation date, if a timely election is made by
the executor or personal representative, sec. 2032(a).
IV. Value Generally
Value, for purposes of both the estate and gift tax, means fair market value.
See sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate Tax Regs.; sec. 25.2512-1, Gift Tax Regs.; see also
Estate of Hurford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2008-278 (“[P]roperty transferred
- 32 -
[*32] either by will or by gift must be taxed at its fair market value.”). As a general
concept, fair market value is well defined. It is “the price at which property would
change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any
compulsion to buy or sell, and both having reasonable knowledge of the relevant
facts”. Frazee v. Commissioner, 98 T.C. 554, 562 (1992); sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate
Tax Regs.; see United States v. Cartwright, 411 U.S. 546, 550-551 (1973) (“The
willing buyer-willing seller test of fair market value is nearly as old as the federal
income, estate, and gift taxes themselves[.]”). The willing buyer and willing seller
are both hypothetical--they are not actual persons or the parties to the case. See
Morrissey v. Commissioner, 243 F.3d 1145, 1148 (9th Cir. 2001) (“The willing
buyer and willing seller are to be postulated, not as a particular named X or Y, but
objectively and impersonally.”), rev’g and remanding Kaufman v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1999-119; Estate of Kahn v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 227, 231 (2005)
(“The willing buyer and the willing seller are hypothetical persons, rather than
specific individuals or entities, and the individual characteristics of these
hypothetical persons are not necessarily the same as the individual characteristics of
the actual seller or the actual buyer.”).
“Valuation is not an exact science and each case necessarily turns on its
own particular facts.” Estate of Spruill v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 1197, 1228
- 33 -
[*33] (1987); see Estate of Spicer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1974-13 (“The
evidence presented in this case produces a classic example of why the valuation of
property is not an exact science.”). Thus, a valuation question is a question of fact.
See Sammons v. Commissioner, 838 F.2d 330, 333 (9th Cir. 1988), aff’g on this
point, rev’g in part on another ground T.C. Memo. 1986-318. Fair market value is a
question of judgment rather than mathematics. Hamm v. Commissioner, 325 F.2d
934, 940 (8th Cir. 1963), aff’g T.C. Memo. 1961-347. Valuation is an
approximation derived from all the evidence. Helvering v. Safe Deposit & Trust
Co., 316 U.S. 56, 66-67 (1942); Silverman v. Commissioner, 538 F.2d 927, 933 (2d
Cir. 1976), aff’g T.C. Memo. 1974-285.
A. Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002, Appraisal Report
The $29,500,000 sale price of High Meadows, as reflected in the January 14,
2003, sales contract, was based solely on Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002,
appraisal report acquiesced in by the parties which valued 1,789.33 acres of High
Meadows, as of September 12, 2002. In his report, Mr. Harrison rounded up the
acreage to 1,790 acres and estimated that they had 3,102,125 square feet of
allowable land coverage.21
21
The portion of High Meadows to be acquired comprised three parcels,
which Mr. Harrison referred to as parcels 4, 5, and 6. Parcel 6 was a 1,471-acre
(continued...)
- 34 -
[*34] In a section of his report titled “California Land Conservation Agreement”,
Mr. Harrison recounted his discussions with two El Dorado County employees
regarding the implications of the Williamson Act contract on High Meadows. In the
next section of his report, titled “Access”, Mr. Harrison observed that access to
High Meadows “is through approximately one-half mile of * * * [USFS] owned
property”. After a discussion with a USFS employee, Mr. Harrison was persuaded
that access across Federal land would not be a problem and that USFS “would
permit the paving and erosion control work necessary to improve the current access
road to meet * * * [TRPA development] specifications.” Nevertheless, in apparent
recognition of the access easement problem, he conditioned his written appraisal
report in the “ASSUMPTIONS AND LIMITING CONDITIONS” section as
follows, stating: “The appraised value of the subject property is based upon the
assumption that legal access rights are granted to the subject property by the
ownership of the remainder and the United States Forest Service”. (Emphasis
added.)
21
(...continued)
parcel. Mr Harrison calculated that 238 of the 1,471 acres were “high capability
acres” (i.e., potentially developable, at least in part, under applicable land use rules
and regulations).
- 35 -
[*35] In preparing his report, Mr. Harrison consulted with an engineering company
and a construction company regarding “The estimated cost of developing utilities
and infrastructure to a selected building site on the subject property”. He then
estimated the total cost of such development at $1,711,120. Using a comparable
sales approach, he selected seven sales occurring between December 3, 1996, and
August 14, 2002. The parcels that were the subjects of those sales ranged in size
from 9.1 acres to 311.2 acres. Mr. Harrison then made various adjustments to each
of those parcels’ sale price for purposes of their comparison to High Meadows.
Because it offers seclusion, overlooks Lake Tahoe, and has a large meadow
that is suitable for horses but is also subject to many development restrictions, Mr.
Harrison declared High Meadows “a desirable site for what is termed as a ‘trophy
residence’”. 22 He anticipated that TRPA would approve a residential allocation and
that High Meadows would qualify for and obtain a buildable Individual Parcel
22
Near the end of his report, in a section titled “Final Value Conclusion”, Mr.
Harrison stated “that the highest and best use of the subject property would be for a
large luxury residential estate.”
- 36 -
[*36] Evaluation System (IPES) score, more than sufficient to allow a residential
improvement.23
Before drafting his report, Mr. Harrison was provided a copy of Mr. Merrill’s
expired offer to enter into an option agreement for the purchase of 1,730 (with some
consideration of increasing that to 1,789.33) acres of High Meadows. Mr. Harrison
referred to that offer as “an expired offer to purchase” in a section of his opinion
titled “Sales History”.
B. Expert Opinion
Both parties have proffered the reports and testimony of expert witnesses in
order to establish High Meadows’ values on the relevant valuation dates. Those
opinions are admissible under the Federal Rules of Evidence (FRE) if they assist the
Court in understanding the evidence or in determining a fact in issue. Fed. R. Evid.
702. We evaluate expert testimony in light of each expert’s demonstrated
qualifications and all other evidence in the record. See Parker v. Commissioner, 86
T.C. 547, 561 (1986). Where experts offer competing estimates of fair market
value, we determine how to weigh those estimates by examining their underlying
23
TRPA uses IPES scores “to rate the suitability of vacant residential parcels
for building and other modification” and “any property must attain a minimum IPES
score to qualify for construction”. Suitum v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 520
U.S. 725, 729 (1997).
- 37 -
[*37] logic and the factors they considered in reaching their conclusions. See Casey
v. Commissioner, 38 T.C. 357, 381 (1962).
The Court is not bound by an expert’s opinions and may accept or reject an
expert opinion in full or in part in the exercise of sound judgment. See Helvering v.
Nat’l Grocery Co., 304 U.S. 282, 295 (1938). We may also reach a determination
of value based on our own examination of the evidence in the record. Silverman v.
Commissioner, 538 F.2d at 933.
1. Respondent’s Expert, Lee B. Smith
Respondent’s expert, Mr. Smith, has a bachelor of science degree in farm
management from California Polytechnic University. Mr. Smith has his own real
estate appraisal business in Carson City, Nevada. He is licensed as a general
appraiser in California and Nevada, has coauthored or edited various real estate
valuation publications, and has been a real estate appraiser since 1971. He has an
MAI designation from The Appraisal Institute and an ARA designation from the
American Society of Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers.
Mr. Smith prepared two retrospective appraisal reports for respondent in
September 2007. One values an undivided one-half fractional interest in High
Meadows in its entirety (approximately 2,289.33 acres) as of June 27, 2000, the
date of the alleged gift (first appraisal report). The other values, as of October 8,
- 38 -
[*38] 2001, the approximately 500 acres of High Meadows not subject to the
purchase agreement (second appraisal report). Respondent asserts that the value of
High Meadows on the date of Shirley’s death, October 8, 2001, “is the
[$29,500,000] sales price agreed to [by the estate and USFS] for the sale of the
1,790 acres [occurring at the end of January 2003] plus the [$6,780,000] value of
the 500 retained acres as determined in [Mr. Smith’s second appraisal report]
Exhibit 173-R.”
In his first September 13, 2007, appraisal report Mr. Smith valued High
Meadows (in its entirety) at $25,185,000 as of June 27, 2000. For his second
September 13, 2007, appraisal, he used a comparable sales approach. He started
with 36 sales of properties allegedly comparable to the 500 acres (actually 566
acres) not subject to the USFS sale and narrowed his focus to 6 sales (including the
sale of High Meadows to ALC) ranging in dates of sales from November 6, 1996, to
October 24, 2003.
At an assumed 1,789.33 acres, the sale of High Meadows was by far the
largest comparable sale. The remaining 5 comparable sale properties ranged in
size from 79.81 acres to 311.20 acres and in price per acre from $17,054 to
- 39 -
[*39] $31,803.24 Mr. Smith made various adjustments for time, buyer (government
or private), size, location (California or Nevada), coverage, development rights, and
access (dirt or gravel/paved). After making his adjustments, he concluded as to the
appraisal of High Meadows that “To develop an opinion of value for the subject,
considering its larger size, a regression analysis will be employed to forecast a value
based on the comparable sales.”25
In his second appraisal report Mr. Smith valued the approximately 500 acres
not subject to the purchase agreement at $6,780,000 as of October 8, 2001. He
used the same six comparable sales and made the same types of adjustments but did
not perform a regression analysis.
Underlying both of Mr. Smith’s reports were a number of extraordinary
assumptions. In his first appraisal report he assumed, among other things, “[t]hat
legal access is sufficient to accommodate a minimum of two residential sites from
the subject to a public access” and “[t]hat upon termination of the Williamson Act
Contract, a minimum of two residential sites can be legally placed on the
24
The sale of 1,789.33 acres of High Meadows to ALC was sale 25 on Mr.
Smith’s original list of 36 comparables. As a result, the parties sometimes refer to
that sale as “sale 25”.
25
Regression analysis is a statistical analytical technique that examines the
relationship between two selected variables, here size of the parcel in acres and
price.
- 40 -
[*40] property.” In his second appraisal report he assumed, inter alia, “[t]hat legal
access is sufficient to accommodate a minimum of one residential site from the
subject to a public access”. These extraordinary assumptions were necessary
because in both appraisal reports he acknowledged that “The property has no public
access” and predicated his appraisal “on the subject having legal access across
intervening Federal lands to public roads within the Montgomery Estates
Subdivision.” He concluded that High Meadows’ highest and best use was “Large
Parcel Residential Estate Development”.
2. The Estate’s Experts
a. Dr. Thomas F. Cargill
Dr. Cargill has a Ph.D. in economics from the University of California, Davis.
He is a professor of economics at the University of Nevada, Reno. He has expertise
in statistics and regression analysis.
Dr. Cargill found “four fatal flaws with Mr. Smith’s statistical work.” Those
“flaws” pertain to the small sample size and Mr. Smith’s purported overreliance on
the High Meadows sale, which Dr. Cargill deems an “outlier” because of its size in
relation to the other comparable sales. Dr. Cargill also criticizes Mr. Smith’s
regression analysis:
- 41 -
[*41] Mr. Smith did not provide statistics on the degree of confidence
one can attach to the two estimated regressions used to determine the
value of High Meadows. This is an egregious omission with serious
consequences. At a minimum, the presentation is unprofessional and
would not be accepted even in an elementary statistics class for any
discipline. Examination of the statistical reliability of Mr. Smith’s
regressions indicates both regressions should be rejected based on
standard levels of statistical confidence used by researchers who
conduct this type of analysis. The lack of statistical reliability means
that either regression generates so wide an “ark of predictability” [as to
the fair market value] of the High Meadows property as to be
meaningless.
Dr. Cargill also opines that Mr. Harrison’s appraisal of December 11, 2002,
valuing High Meadows as of September 12, 2002, used by USFS to establish the
value of High Meadows, for purposes of its January 31, 2003, purchase of that
property from ALC for $29,500,000, was similarly flawed. The reason being that
There is a statistically meaningful relationship between price and
size using Mr. Smith’s data; however, it is not a reliable foundation to
predict the price of large sized property. In a similar vein, this issue
also applies to Mr. Harrison’s appraisal. Mr. Harrison did not
undertake any statistical analysis like Mr. Smith; however, he makes a
gross error in valuing High Meadows because he ignores the
relationship between price and size.
Mr. Harrison assumes there is no relationship between size and
price and multiplies the average price for the selected comparables by
the number of acres in the High Meadows property to obtain a value of
$31,146,200. He adjusts this value for installing access and utilities
and concludes the rounded final value of the property is $29,500,000
(page 74).
- 42 -
[*42] Mr. Harrison’s comparable sales suggest a statistically
significant relationship which is more firmly demonstrated with Mr.
Smith’s data above. Unfortunately, Mr. Harrison has only 7
comparable sales and it is generally not advisable to estimate a
regression based on such a small sample.
b. Gary D. Midkiff
Mr. Midkiff has a bachelor of science degree in forest resources from the
University of Georgia. He has his own planning and permitting consulting firm. He
assists clients in the planning and permitting of projects requiring TRPA approval.
Mr. Midkiff worked for TRPA for about 7 years before leaving to start his own
business. He was acting director of TRPA for 2 years and left as assistant director.
The estate asked Mr. Midkiff to evaluate High Meadows’ development
potential “based on the regulatory environment and advise as to whether the
evaluations that were done * * * reflected the regulatory environment.”
According to Mr. Midkiff, as of the relevant valuation dates, no building sites had
been identified or evaluated for IPES scores and no allowable land coverage for any
building sites had been sought or received. His assessment of High Meadows’
development potential on the relevant valuations dates led him to criticize Mr.
Smith’s reports as reflecting “a poor knowledge and understanding of the Tahoe
- 43 -
[*43] regulatory environment as a whole, and the application of TRPA regulations
specifically to the subject property and its circumstances.”
c. Steven J. Herzog
Mr. Herzog has a bachelor of science degree in forestry from Northern
Arizona University and a master of science degree in forestry with a minor in
statistics from Oregon State University. When he prepared his first appraisal report
for the estate, he was an MAI member and the president of his own real estate
appraisal firm in Modesto, California. By the time he testified at trial in December
2007, he had dissolved his business and had moved to Portland, Oregon, to become
a review appraiser for the Appraisal Services Directorate of the U.S. Department of
the Interior. He had historically undertaken a number of appraisal engagements for
USFS, some of which were for the Lake Tahoe Basin, before being selected for his
new job.
Mr. Herzog prepared three review appraisal reports for the estate. One, dated
July 19, 2007, is a review appraisal of Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002, appraisal
report. The other two, dated December 10, 2007, are review appraisals of Mr.
Smith’s reports.
Mr. Herzog found “many flaws” in Mr. Harrison’s appraisal report. The
three “primary ones” were (1) that Mr. Harrison did not perform a before and after
- 44 -
[*44] analysis;26 (2) that Mr. Harrison did not look outside the Lake Tahoe Basin for
comparable sales;27 and (3) that Mr. Harrison used land coverage as a unit of
comparison rather than as an adjustment item.
Mr. Herzog criticized Mr. Smith for his extraordinary assumptions in both
appraisal reports: “The ramifications of any one of these assumptions proving to
be not valid are enormous from a valuation perspective. It appears that
insufficient research was performed to reach conclusions about the validity of
these assumptions.” Although Mr. Herzog acknowledged that “Legal access over
[USFS] land is probable”, he opined that it was “far more unlikely” that USFS
would allow such “access to be improved and paved” and would “allow
26
A before and after analysis would have valued all of High Meadows before
the USFS sale and the 566-acre portion of High Meadows that remained in the
family’s possession after the sale. Such an analysis is most often used in the
conservation-easement context and in the takings context where something less than
the owner’s full interest in the property is taken. This approach necessarily
considers the effect of the transfer or gift itself on the value of the retained property.
See, e.g., sec. 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i) and (ii), Income Tax Regs.
27
Later in his report Mr. Herzog launched into a detailed criticism of the
comparable sales used by Mr. Smith. For example, Mr. Herzog asserted that those
sales were not affected by the Williamson Act, included a “preponderance of sales
to government agencies” without proper confirmation they were at fair market value,
and would have had lower development costs because they were at lower elevations
with easier seasonal access.
- 45 -
[*45] utilities to be run across its land to facilitate residential development”, both of
which are mandatory TRPA requirements for residential development.
d. Steven R. Johnson
Mr. Johnson is a licensed real estate appraiser in California and Nevada. He
is also president of Johnson-Perkins & Associates, Inc., a real estate appraisal and
consulting firm with a staff of 12 appraisers. Mr. Johnson has a bachelor of science
degree in business administration (with a major in real estate) from the University of
Nevada, Reno.
Mr. Johnson’s appraisal report served as the basis for the value of High
Meadows reported on the estate tax return. In addition, Mr. Johnson prepared four
reports at the estate’s request during the course of these proceedings. One values
High Meadows as of June 27, 2000. Another values High Meadows as of October
8, 2001. The third, titled “A Critique of the U.S. Forest Service Purchase”,
criticizes the January 2003 $29,500,000 purchase price and Mr. Harrison’s report
upon which that purchase price was based. The fourth report is a rebuttal report
addressing Mr. Smith’s appraisal reports.
Mr. Johnson valued High Meadows at $7.4 million (excluding timber) as of
June 27, 2000, $2.6 million for an undivided one-half interest, if sold separately, and
at $8 million (excluding timber) as of October 8, 2001. Like Mr. Smith, Mr.
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[*46] Johnson used a comparable sales approach. Mr. Johnson’s comparable sales
were seven “large acreage land sales” that occurred between January 5, 1999, and
April 12, 2001. The subject parcels ranged in size from 915.9 acres to 2,330 acres
and in price per acre from $1,288 to $3,222. They had potential development of 25
to 146 homes. Some of the subject parcels are in California and some are in
Nevada. Notably, none is in the Lake Tahoe Basin.
Recognizing the uniqueness of the Lake Tahoe Basin, Mr. Johnson
“conducted an extensive sales search in an attempt to find sales within the Tahoe
Basin of similar sized properties.” Because the nearest comparable sales in the
Lake Tahoe Basin involved properties “10 times smaller” than High Meadows and
because Mr. Johnson believed that High Meadows’ development potential did not
increase with its size, he concluded that “the sales of much smaller parcels within
the Lake Tahoe Basin were not felt to be indicative of the Market Value of the much
larger subject property.”
Mr. Johnson ultimately concluded that High Meadows’ highest and best use
for TRPA purposes was “Six potential residential homesites” and for Williamson
Act purposes was “One agriculturally oriented home over the next 10 years”. As
for value, he concluded that High Meadows was worth between $2,800 and $3,000
- 47 -
[*47] per acre as of June 27, 2000, and between $3,000 and $3,200 per acre as of
October 8, 2001.
In his third report, Mr. Johnson criticized Mr. Harrison for not considering
sales outside the Lake Tahoe Basin. He also noted that “the highest single price
ever paid for a nonlakefront homesite in the Lake Tahoe Basin is $4,500,000” and
criticized Mr. Harrison for focusing on 238 acres of high-capability land that Mr.
Harrison valued at $125,000 per acre:
It has been my observation in my 37 years of appraisal
experience that a buyer acquiring a single-family residential homesite
will base their purchase decision on a price per homesite rather than a
price per acre basis. With larger sites, a buyer will typically make
some additional minimal allowance for larger parcels as they tend to
provide greater privacy, separation, and seclusion. It would require a
large leap of logic to assume that a buyer would increase the price they
are willing to pay for a homesite within the Lake Tahoe Basin to nearly
$30,000,000 simply based upon the added forest land which surrounds
the property.
In his fourth report, Mr. Johnson criticized Mr. Smith for not addressing the
impact on value of any of Mr. Smith’s extraordinary assumptions.
e. William G. Kimmel
Mr. Kimmel has a bachelor of arts degree in economics from Stanford
University. He has been a real estate appraiser in Nevada since 1961 (self-
employed since 1968). He prepared two review appraisal reports for the estate--
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[*48] one (dated October 10, 2007) of Mr. Johnson’s appraisal reports28 and the
other (dated November 30, 2007) of Mr. Smith’s appraisal reports.
His general opinion was that Mr. Johnson’s “value conclusions appear
reasonable” but that “Mr. Harrison has valued the property based upon a series of
assumptions which in effect could be considered entitlements, yet they have not
occurred.”29 Because High Meadows was under significant development
restrictions, Mr. Kimmel disagreed with Messrs. Johnson and Harrison insofar as
they valued the property using price per acre as their unit of comparison. Mr.
Kimmel would have compared High Meadows “with other sales on a per-site
basis.”
In his other report, Mr. Kimmel criticized Mr. Smith for, among other things,
Mr. Smith’s extraordinary assumptions and for overreliance on the January 2003
sale to ALC, which was based on the value determined by Mr. Harrison in his
December 11, 2002, report.
28
As part of his appraisal of Mr. Johnson’s reports, Mr. Kimmel reviewed Mr.
Harrison’s December 11, 2002, appraisal report.
29
In fact, Mr. Kimmel opined that Mr. Johnson might have overappraised
High Meadows in his original report because Mr. Johnson did not discuss the
Williamson Act and its potential 10-year impact on the property’s value.
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[*49] f. Thomas W. Clark, Jr.
Mr. Clark currently heads his own real estate appraisal consulting firm,
Thomas Clark Co., Inc. He has been in the real estate appraisal business since
1957. He received his MAI designation in 1969 and is licensed as a real estate
appraiser in California, but not in Nevada. He has testified frequently as an expert
in real estate valuation matters in both State and Federal courts. As previously
noted, his involvement with this matter arose when he was retained by ALC to
conduct a review appraisal of Mr. Harrison’s October 10, 2001, appraisal. He was
called by the estate with respect to that review appraisal. His testimony at trial was
more extensive than his written report and inter alia also addressed the access issue
at High Meadows.
V. Values of High Meadows for Estate and Gift Tax Purposes
The ultimate question that we are called upon to answer is deceptively
simple: How much was High Meadows worth on June 27, 2000 (for gift tax
purposes), and on October 8, 2001 (for estate tax purposes)? As is all too typical in
valuation cases, the parties have taken widely divergent self-serving views of High
Meadows’ values as of the relevant valuation dates. Petitioner argues that High
Meadows was worth $7.4 million as of June 27, 2000, and $8 million as of
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[*50] October 8, 2001. Respondent argues that High Meadows was worth
$25,185,000 as of June 27, 2000, and $36,280,000 as of October 8, 2001.30
The Supreme Court observed long ago that “At best, evidence of value is
largely a matter of opinion, especially as to real estate.” Montana Ry. Co. v.
Warren, 137 U.S. 348, 353 (1890). That statement is as true now as it was over 12
decades ago.
Sales of comparable properties are credible evidence of real estate’s fair
market value. See Fairfield Gardens, Inc. v. United States, 306 F.2d 167, 172-173
(9th Cir. 1962), noting that “In the field of real estate valuation it has long been the
rule that sales of other property are not admissible unless the other property is
comparable. And comparability, while it does not mean identity, because each
parcel of real property differs from every other parcel, does mean, at the very least,
similarity in many respects.” There is normally no comparable sale superior to the
arm’s-length sale of the subject parcel itself in an open market transaction within a
reasonable time of the relevant valuation date(s).
30
The $36,280,000 represents the $29,500,000 sales price for 1,790 acres of
High Meadows plus the $6,780,000 that Mr. Smith’s appraisal report determined
the retained 566.77 acres was worth. The Court, as a practical matter, concludes
one or both of Mr. Smith’s values is materially mistaken. Although no diamonds,
gold, or oil was found on High Meadows between June 27, 2000, and October 8,
2001, inexplicably Mr. Smith concludes the value increased by a little more than
44% in slightly more than 1 year, despite the tragic events of 9/11.
- 51 -
[*51] Both parties used comparable sales analyses to value High Meadows.
Respondent relies almost exclusively on the January 2003 sale of a large portion of
High Meadows to ALC, while the estate denigrates it and urges us to disregard it.
We will not disregard that sale, as it is undoubtedly some evidence of High
Meadows’ values for estate and gift tax purposes. See First Nat’l Bank of Kenosha
v. United States, 763 F.2d 891, 894 (7th Cir. 1985); Estate of Kaplin v.
Commissioner, 748 F.2d 1109, 1111 (6th Cir. 1984), rev’g T.C. Memo. 1982-440;
Trout Ranch LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-283, aff’d, ____ Fed. Appx.
____, 2012 WL 3518564, at *7-*8 (10th Cir. Aug. 16, 2012); Estate of Shlensky v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1977-148 (relying on the sale of a building 15 months
after death).
A. The January 31, 2003, Sale of High Meadows as Some Evidence
of High Meadows’ Values for Estate and Gift Tax Purposes
1. Evidence of the Sale Is Admissible.
Although this Court has observed that subsequent events are generally
irrelevant (and therefore inadmissible) in determining a property’s fair market
value as of a relevant valuation date, that observation is generally inapplicable
when the subsequent event is a sale of the subject property itself within a
reasonable time of the relevant valuation date. See Estate of Spruill v.
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[*52] Commissioner, 88 T.C. at 1228, 1233; see also Saltzman v. Commissioner,
131 F.3d 87, 93 (2d Cir. 1997), rev’g T.C. Memo. 1994-641. Indeed, “evidence of
actual price received for property in the estate after the date of death is generally
admitted without any discussion of the rule against admission of post-valuation date
events.” First Nat’l Bank of Kenosha, 763 F.2d at 894; see Estate of Kaplin v.
Commissioner, 748 F.2d at 1111 (reversing a Tax Court decision because the Tax
Court failed to consider a sale of the subject parcel itself two years after the
donation of the parcel); Estate of Hillebrandt v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1986-
560 (admitting evidence of sales of the various parcels of the subject property that
occurred five years after the decedent’s death);31 see also Estate of Jung v.
Commissioner, 101 T.C. 412, 431 (1993); Trout Ranch LLC v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2010-283; Estate of Brown v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1969-91, aff’d,
425 F.2d 1406 (5th Cir. 1970).
However, there is an exception where “a material change in circumstances
occurs between the valuation date and the date of sale.” Estate of Keitel v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1990-416. In short, we will not consider subsequent
31
For purposes of determining the fair market value of property, the Court has
even admitted subsequent sales of other comparable properties. See Estate of Jung
v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. 412, 431 (1993); Estate of Brown v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 1969-91, aff’d, 425 F.2d 1406 (5th Cir. 1970).
- 53 -
[*53] events that affect a property’s value, but we will consider subsequent events
which merely serve as evidence of a property’s fair market value as of the relevant
valuation date.32 See Estate of Jung v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. at 432 (“When
viewed in this light--as evidence of value rather than as something that affects
value--later-occurring events are no more to be ignored than earlier-occurring
events.”).
Citing an aforementioned case, on July 11, 2008, we denied the estate’s
March 25, 2008, amended motion to strike from the record evidence of the January
31, 2003, sale of High Meadows. We concluded that evidence of the January 2003
sale is admissible on the issue of that property’s fair market values on June 27,
2000--2-1/2 years earlier--and on October 8, 2001--16 months earlier. See First
Nat’l Bank of Kenosha, 763 F.2d at 894; Estate of Kaplin v. Commissioner, 748
F.2d at 1111.
We reiterate that the sale of most of High Meadows to ALC 2 years and 7
months after the date of the gift and about 16 months after the date of Shirley’s
32
In First Nat’l Bank of Kenosha v. United States, 763 F.2d 891 (7th Cir.
1985), the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit explained this point using an
example. The unexpected discovery of oil on the land after the decedent died would
be inadmissible to prove the value of the property on the date of death, whereas the
actual sale price received within a reasonable time after the date of death would be
admissible in the absence of the discovery of oil or some other unanticipated
intervening event that materially affected the property’s value.
- 54 -
[*54] death was reasonably close to both relevant valuation dates. Nothing that
could not have been foreseen, other than the result of Mr. Harrison’s appraisal,
using extraordinary assumptions as directed by USFS, occurred between the
relevant valuation dates and January 31, 2003, that drastically or materially affected
High Meadows’ intrinsic value so as to render the sale irrelevant.33
On brief the estate cites Estate of Ridgely v. United States, 180 Ct. Cl. 1220
(1967), in an attempt to demonstrate that High Meadows underwent radical changes
between the relevant valuation dates and the date of the January 2003 sale so as to
render that sale not probative. While some changes did occur, we are not persuaded
that they were sufficient to eliminate the sale’s probative value.
Estate of Ridgely is inapposite to the estate’s case. When Mabel Lloyd
Ridgely died, her assets included a 368-acre farm near Dover, Delaware, known as
Eden Hill Farm. See Estate of Ridgely, 180 Ct. Cl. at 1223. Almost a month after
Mabel Ridgely died, the General Foods Corp. retained an agent “to locate a site for
a new plant for its Jell-O Division.” Id. at 1228. General Foods then entered into
an option agreement to acquire approximately 112 acres (later changed to 116
33
The only other truly important events which occurred were the receipt by
USFS of sufficient spending authority and budget approval to accomplish the High
Meadows purchase and the negotiation and formalization of the reciprocal easement
agreement between the parties. Given USFS’ interest in High Meadows, this was
hardly unforeseeable, although they were both critical to the deal.
- 55 -
[*55] acres) of the Eden Hill Farm. See id. at 1228, 1230. Months later, General
Foods reached an agreement with the City of Dover under which the City of Dover
would expend a large amount of money “in order to induce General Foods to locate
its plant in the Dover area”. Id. at 1239.
The City of Dover did as General Foods requested, and General Foods
eventually acquired 116 acres of Eden Hill Farm without even having it appraised.
In rejecting the Government’s argument that Eden Hill Farm’s value on the date of
Mabel Ridgely’s death should have been determined by reference to the subsequent
sale to General Foods, the Court of Claims concluded that there was “not a scintilla
of evidence in the record” that as of the date of Mabel Ridgely’s death
it could have reasonably been foreseen by even the most optimistic of
real estate speculators (1) that a large national corporation would,
within eight months, exercise an option to acquire 116 acres of Eden
Hill Farm, and (2) that to assure consummation of the transaction, the
City of Dover would commit itself to expend over $900,000 for
extensions of sewer and water systems to accommodate that
corporation. * * *
Id. at 1238-1239.
In short, the Court of Claims concluded that, at the time that Mabel Ridgely
died, it could not have been reasonably foreseen that Eden Hill Farm’s highest and
best use would be rapidly transformed from agricultural to industrial use. The
- 56 -
[*56] court nevertheless concluded that Eden Hill Farm was worth $265,000 (rather
than the $137,100 reported by Mabel Ridgely’s estate) because its highest and best
use on the date of Mabel Ridgely’s death “was for agricultural purposes with an
industrial potential”. Id. at 1236-1237.
In contrast, the allegedly unforeseeable significant changes between the
relevant valuation dates and the date of the January 2003 sale of 1,790 acres of High
Meadows to ALC were reasonably foreseeable, if not in fact foreseen. As of the
relevant valuation dates, access issues, the fact that High Meadows contained a
contaminated site, and the lack of (1) a road; (2) utilities; (3) a verified
determination of land capability and coverage; (4) an IPES score; (5) a building
allocation; and (6) certificated parcels were all either known or potentially
knowable.
In declining to strike evidence of the January 31, 2003, sale of High
Meadows, we stated that we were not deciding whether the October 4, 2001,
purchase agreement constituted a binding contract to sell High Meadows under
California law that remained in effect until the sale closed more than a year later.
Although the parties continue to dispute that issue, we need not decide it. As
explained, we will consider subsequent events which merely serve as evidence of
the property’s fair market value as of a relevant valuation date. Evidence of the
- 57 -
[*57] January 31, 2003, sale of High Meadows is, therefore, admissible irrespective
of any decision that we would render on the contract law issue. Trout Ranch LLC
v. Commissioner, 2012 WL 3518564, at *6-*7. Evidence regarding the sale of High
Meadows is admissible whether the purchase agreement constituted a binding
contract, a letter of intent, an option agreement, or something else. And such
evidence is admissible regardless of whether the parties remained in contract or
went out of contract and then got back in.34
Because we have already admitted evidence about the sale into the record, we
have answered affirmatively the question of whether we will consider the sale in
determining High Meadows’ values for estate and gift tax purposes. However, in
keeping with our order denying the estate’s motion to strike, we reiterate that
34
Indeed, respondent is not relying on the purchase agreement to demonstrate
the fair market value of High Meadows on June 27, 2000, or October 8, 2001, only
“to demonstrate that the sale of High Meadows was foreseeable as of the dates of
valuation.” Such a demonstration is unnecessary: The sale need not have been
foreseeable in order to render it relevant (and the evidence therefore admissible).
The sale is relevant (and the evidence admissible) as long as there were no
intervening events between the relevant valuation dates and the date of sale that
materially affected the property’s intrinsic value. Moreover, High Meadows’ fair
market values on the relevant valuation dates cannot be determined solely on the
terms of the purchase agreement. The ultimate sale price was not known until well
after Shirley’s death and was based on Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002,
seriously flawed appraisal report, which valued High Meadows as of September 12,
2002 (well after both of the relevant valuation dates).
- 58 -
[*58] the probative value of the $29,500,000 sale price in relation to petitioner’s
evidence is “an entirely different matter”.
2. The January 2003 Sale Is the Best Evidence of Value.
In the absence of contrary evidence, we accept, as we do with valuations by
the Customs Service, Ross Glove Co. v. Commissioner, 60 T.C. 569, 605 (1973),
that USFS appraised this property before purchasing it as required by 42 U.S.C. sec.
4651 (2006). The effect of another U.S. office or agency’s determination of value
on our tax determination depends on the facts of each case. We are not required to
apply another office or agency’s determination where it is based on erroneous
assumptions or mistaken facts or an unreasonable formula. Brittingham v.
Commissioner, 66 T.C. 373, 403 (1976), aff’d, 598 F.2d 1375 (5th Cir. 1979).
That said, the January 2003 sale to ALC is the only truly comparable sale
worthy of consideration. We will not shun the sale of a large portion of High
Meadows reasonably close to the relevant valuation dates in favor of comparable
sales that are not truly comparable and that must undergo a series of dramatic
speculative adjustments in order to render them the least bit reliable.
Privately owned parcels comparable in size to High Meadows do not exist in
the Lake Tahoe Basin. Indeed, at the time it was sold, High Meadows was the
largest private land holding in the Lake Tahoe Basin. As Mr. Clark noted in his
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[*59] December 31, 2001, review appraisal: “There simply are no sales of land that
are truly comparable to the High Meadows land.” And, as Mr. Johnson himself
acknowledged in his considerably earlier appraisal report for USFS valuing High
Meadows as of April 10, 1990,
The real estate market within the Lake Tahoe Basin is considered to be
highly unique and atypical of most other areas This uniqueness
associated with the Lake Tahoe market is attributed to a number of
factors including strict development controls which limit supply as well
as the unique year-round recreation and entertainment amenities
associated with the Lake Tahoe Basin. An extensive review of the
sales data contained in our files revealed no data from other areas with
a sufficient degree of comparability to be useful in this analysis. Even
if such data were available, it is felt that locational adjustments would
involve an unacceptable degree of subjectivity.
For that reason, when he valued High Meadows in 1990, Mr. Johnson used
comparable sales of much smaller properties all within the Lake Tahoe Basin.
Yet, in preparing his report valuing High Meadows as of October 8, 2001, Mr.
Johnson relied exclusively on comparable sales outside the Lake Tahoe Basin. All
of those sales involved large parcels of land in other areas of California and
Nevada. Those properties were not closely comparable to High Meadows with
respect to their location and desirability. They also do not reflect the significant
interest of environmental organizations and governmental entities in Lake Tahoe
Basin properties, which inevitably affects price because of increased demand.
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[*60] Nevertheless, in a relatively contemporaneous appraisal of an unrelated 311-
acre property called Meadows Edge in the Lake Tahoe Basin, Mr. Johnson used
“comparable sales” in the Lake Tahoe Basin that were 10 to 20 times smaller than
the subject parcel. Mr. Johnson had a similar instance for another 189.5-acre
property in the Lake Tahoe Basin called Sunset Ranch where Tahoe Basin
comparables were 12 to 21 times smaller than the subject property.
There are other reasons to question the probative value of Mr. Johnson’s
reports. Mr. Johnson’s view of High Meadows’ accessibility changed considerably
between 1990 and 2007 even though conditions on the ground did not. In 1990 he
made no mention of access problems across Federal land. In contrast, in his
valuation report for purposes of this case, access across USFS land, particularly
with respect to utility easements, is a significant problem. In 1990 Mr. Johnson
characterized the views of Lake Tahoe from portions of High Meadows as
“excellent dramatic lake and mountain” views. He now characterizes those views
as “distant”. He loosely attributes the contradictions, at least in part, to his former
associate, an English literature professor with flowery writing tendencies.35
35
Although those characterizations are subjective and, therefore, not
necessarily incompatible, Mr. Johnson’s recharacterization tends to make him
appear an advocate for the estate’s position who has not fully accepted that the
(continued...)
- 61 -
[*61] See Laureys v. Commissioner, 92 T.C. 101, 129 (1989) (“In the context of
valuation cases, we have observed that experts may lose their usefulness (and
credibility) when they merely become advocates for the position argued by a
party.”).
In contrast to Mr. Johnson’s comparable sales, all of Mr. Harrison’s
comparable sales were of parcels within the Lake Tahoe Basin and were generally
at much lower elevations with less rugged terrain. Similarly, Mr. Smith’s
comparable sale properties (aside from the January 2003 sale to the ALC of a large
portion of High Meadows itself) were qualitatively comparable, except for
elevation,36 to High Meadows with respect to their location and desirability. But
they too were not comparable to High Meadows in size--High Meadows dwarfed
those properties. This size discrepancy, in his opinion, necessitated a regression
35
(...continued)
firm’s appraisal reports necessarily require that it candidly accept responsibility for
its work product, which in turn affects its credibility.
36
Elevation is important here, because of the access problems to the higher
steep slope areas and the “lapse rate” (i.e., effect of surface and atmospheric
compressional heating which generally means ambient outside temperature will
decline 3.5 degrees, on average, per 1,000 feet of altitude). The temperature
differential in this alpine environment significantly affects snow depth, the snow
line, accessability, and livability.
- 62 -
[*62] analysis, which Mr. Smith himself has acknowledged is highly unreliable most
of the time.37
In the end, the dissimilarities between High Meadows and the parcels that
were the subjects of the comparable sales other than the sale of 1,789.33 acres of
High Meadows itself to ALC “seem to us far more striking than the similarities.”
Fairfield Gardens, Inc., 306 F.2d at 173. Thus, the most probative valuation
evidence before us is the January 2003 $29,500,000 sale price paid by ALC for a
large portion of High Meadows. That said, there is ample reason to question how
reflective of fair market value that sale price was, as we agree with the estate that
the $29,500,000 sale price was premised on a seriously flawed appraisal report and
was negotiated by parties that were not truly adverse. Consequently, to a
meaningful extent valuing High Meadows, on the date of Shirley’s death, or as of
June 27, 2000, using the January 2003, sale begs the question. As explained below,
these facts warrant considerable adjustment and discount in the determination of the
estate and gift tax values at issue here.
37
At trial Mr. Smith acknowledged that his linear regression analysis had a
37% accuracy level and that his nonlinear regression analysis had a 50% accuracy
level. He also acknowledged that without his regression analysis he would have
been unable to develop a definitive opinion as to value but that the data supported a
value of less than $13,022 per acre.
- 63 -
[*63] B. Other Significant Factors Affecting High Meadows Valuation
1. Highest and Best Use
The parties agree that, absent governmental approval and payment of a
significant termination charge as of both relevant valuation dates, the Williamson
Act, a.k.a. the Trimmer, contract limited development on High Meadows to one
house.38 They disagree as to whether that house could have been the immense
“trophy house” referred to by Mr. Harrison or whether it was required to be
something far more modest.
The Williamson Act restricted High Meadows’ use “to agricultural and
compatible uses”, and the parties’ disagreement as to the size or type of house that
could be constructed on High Meadows relates to the contract specification that
“Structures may be erected on the property (and existing structures enlarged) if
they are directly related to and compatible with permitted uses.” The estate asserts
that a large luxury estate would have been precluded by the Williamson Act
contract because it was not agriculturally related. Respondent counters that
38
A separate lodging accommodation for High Meadows Ranch workers may
also have been permitted. After High Meadows was split up, the one development
right went to USFS as an aspect of its High Meadows purchase. The 566 acres
retained by the family lacks any development right under the Williamson Act.
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[*64] “Nothing in the Williamson Act would limit the size of any allowed [single
family] residential construction.”
At trial Roger Trout, a principal planner and 17-year employee of the El
Dorado County Planning Department, testified that as of the relevant valuation dates
there were no size limitations imposed on residences in El Dorado County. He also
stated that “The issuance of a building permit” was “a ministerial action” and that it
did not “include the review of the continued agricultural activities or compliance
with the Williamson Act.” The estate has been unable to demonstrate otherwise. In
short, a rancher or farmer need not live in a log cabin.
We agree with respondent that as of the relevant valuation dates, a purchaser
of High Meadows would have been allowed to construct one single family residence
of practically any residential size on the property.39 Nevertheless, as explained
below, we conclude that a private buyer seeking to build a single “trophy house”
would have been willing to purchase 1,790 acres of High Meadows only for a
significantly lower price than $29,500,000.
39
Mr. Johnson and the estate’s other experts incorrectly concluded that the
Williamson Act contract precluded the construction of a large luxury residence on
High Meadows.
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[*65] 2. Access Issues and Changing USFS Policies
The Trimmer and Giovacchini families have apparently encountered no
notable access issues actually occurring with respect to High Meadows since its
acquisition in 1929. Nevertheless, notwithstanding Mr. Harrison’s conclusion that
“the right of way is an unchallenged fact”, there were, as of June 2000, and at the
time of Shirley’s death, significant questions concerning the property owner’s right
to such access. Historical landowner use and USFS acquiescence or indifference is
not a meaningful predictor or assurance of future use or access.
The access difficulties particularly complicate the valuation issue. The
Court intuits that if a purchaser of High Meadows was willing to develop and use
High Meadows in a manner consistent with USFS desires and those of
surrounding neighbors and other environmentally conscious voters, the access
issue would, as in fact it did, get resolved by negotiation.40 However, if a
40
One and a third years after Shirley’s death, in conjunction with, and as a
condition of closing, the sale of the 1,790 acres to ACL and hence to USFS in 2003,
which sale was to include the one single development right, the Giovacchini parties
executed a reciprocal access easement deed with respect to both parcels of High
Meadows. USFS for its part also, as a condition of closing, executed and delivered
to the estate and HM6 a written, notarized grant deed suitable for recording. The
deed provided a “non-exclusive easement for use of a road, whether existing or as
constructed or reconstructed, over and across” a 55-foot-wide strip about six-tenths
of a mile long extending public access from the existing Montgomery Estates
Subdivision to High Meadows.
(continued...)
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[*66] purchaser wished to build a large and ostentatious home with a view and/or
conduct high-occupancy or high-density activities on High Meadows that could
adversely affect its watershed or wilderness atmosphere, the result would likely be
40
(...continued)
The parties also negotiated and executed a road maintenance agreement
covering the access road. While the parties, as a critical aspect of the overall deal,
compromised and worked hard together to negotiate and finalize these documents,
the task was not an easy one. Numerous letters, meetings, and discussions were
required over a period stretching from July 18, 2002, until January 30, 2003.
Among the disputes which were ultimately resolved were: (1) the width of the
easement, 30 feet, 55 feet, or 60 feet; (2) road maintenance responsibilities; (3)
boundary line adjustments; (4) public utility easement to be located along the road
easement; (5) “protect[ion] and [maintenance of] the streams, riparian corridors,
and sensitive meadow systems unique to the High Meadows area;” (6) maintenance
of “the hydrologic functions of ground water of Cold Creek”; (7) “protect[ion of]
the assets of this property including its riparian rights and spring sources;” (8)
livestock access across High Meadows including cattle drinking on Cold Creek
resulting in “fecal coliform” pollution in the basin of great concern to USFS; (9)
“cut bank erosion * * * from moving cattle across and around Cold Creek” over
what would then be USFS property particularly as it affects “potential resource
damage”; (10) “the erosion occurring not only in the High Meadows area but also
along the steep slope to the north”; and (11) location of and protecting “Freel
Spring”.
These issues, because they dealt with USFS roads, point and nonpoint
pollution, the Clean Water Act, and water quality as affected by runoff, were then
and remain today extremely divisive high profile issues. See, e.g., Northwest Envl.
Def. Ctr., Inc. v. Brown, 640 F.3d 1063 (9th Cir. 2011), cert. granted, ____ U.S.
____, 133 S. Ct. 23 (2012); Envl. Def. Ctr., Inc. v. United States, 344 F.3d 832,
860-863 (9th Cir. 2003).
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[*67] quite different.41 Yet a fee simple owner acquires significant right to use his
or her property however he or she wishes, consistent with zoning and land use
restrictions. All material restrictions on general property rights are likely to affect
value.
Because of this complication, a willing buyer or seller aware of all relevant
facts and given the tens of millions at stake would investigate analogous factual
access situations to predict possible and likely outcomes. Today, they would
discover from Federal court pleadings and opinions or other news, statutory or
regulatory sources the following experiences.
a. McFarland’s Case: Snow Shoes, Dog Sled, and
Cross Country Skis
John McFarland owned a 2.75-acre plot, including a residence, within and
surrounded by Glacier National Park, which had been a part of an 89-acre parcel
conveyed to his predecessor in interest, in 1916, by a Federal patent under the
Homestead Act of 1862. The property had been homesteaded before the creation
41
A large flashy home with a view of the basin and lots of reflective glass or
sheeting would also be conversely visible by many in the basin. Some of those
individuals would likely object to its disruption of their otherwise pastoral view of
the basin skyline. High density entertainment and related outdoor activities at a
trophy residence would likely affect noise levels, runoff and water quality, etc.,
precipitating USFS consideration of restrictions or limitations on access permit,
easement grants, and utility easement grants.
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[*68] of the park in 1910. The patent stated: “TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the said
tract of Land, with the appurtenances thereof, unto the said claimant and to the heirs
and assigns of the said claimant forever.” For 70 years Mr. McFarland and his
predecessors accessed their property via Glacier Route 7, a road which passes
through the national park, without USFS interference. Beginning in 1975, the USFS
prohibited snowmobiling in Glacier National Park and generally closed Glacier
Route 7 to automobiles during the winter season but continued, until 1999, to allow
property holders some degree of motorized access in winter months. Use of Glacier
Route 7 in the winter was apparently allowed because the Homestead Act
guaranteed access to patent holders.
In December 1999 USFS notified Mr. McFarland it would no longer
countenance motorized winter access via Glacier Route 7. USFS stated it changed
its policy to protect wildlife and public recreational opportunities. Mr. McFarland
then filed an application for a special use permit. He asked for year-round
permission for family and guests to drive on Glacier Route 7 and to use a
snowmobile when “road conditions make it unsafe or impractical to drive.”
USFS denied the permit request, and his administrative appeal was also
denied. USFS explained that motorized access and snowmobiling are “an
incompatible public use” during the winter in Glacier National Park. USFS
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[*69] contended that the Superintendent can close roads and prohibit motorized
access “for the maintenance of public health and safety, protection of environmental
or scenic values, protection of natural or cultural resources, aid to scientific
research, implementation of management responsibilities, equitable allocation and
use of facilities, or the avoidance of conflict among visitor use activities.” Mr.
McFarland then sued in the U.S. District Court in Montana to quiet title to an
easement over Glacier Route 7. He claimed an easement by necessity, an implied
easement from the Homestead Act, and an express easement pursuant to the original
land patent. The District Court dismissed the case. McFarland appealed, and the
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded the case. See
McFarland v. Norton, 425 F.3d 724,729 (9th Cir. 2005).
On remand, the District Court granted summary judgment for the USFS, and
Mr. McFarland again appealed. The Court of Appeals ruled that “Under the
Administrative Procedure Act, an agency decision will be set aside only if it is
‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with
law.’” McFarland v. Kempthorne, 545 F.3d, 1106, 1110 (9th Cir. 2008) (quoting 5
U.S.C. sec. 706(2)(A)). “A federal court may not substitute its judgment for that of
the agency.” Id. It concluded
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[*70] that the district court properly granted * * * summary judgment.
McFarland has no valid claim to an easement. To the extent he has a
right to access his property across federal land, that right is subject to
the reasonable regulation of the Park Service, implemented through the
permitting process. * * *
Id. The Court of Appeals then held:
Even where a statutory right of access exists, the Park Service has
broad discretion to regulate its use. * * * The proper mechanism for
such regulation is the permitting process. * * *
* * * * * * *
* * * Ultimately, the Park Service determined that its concerns for
wildlife and recreation in the national park justified closing Glacier
Route 7 to motorized vehicles during the winter season.
“If an agency’s determination is supportable on any rational
basis, we must uphold it.” * * * “This is especially true when an
agency is acting within its own sphere of expertise.” * * *
Id. at 1111; see also Fitzgerald Living Trust v. United States, 460 F.3d 1259, 1263
(9th Cir. 2006); Mackie v. United States, 194 F. Supp. 306, 308 (D. Minn. 1961).
An easement by necessity does not exist if the claimant has another
mode of access to his property. * * * In fact, necessity may be
defeated by alternative routes or modes of access--no matter how
inconvenient. * * * McFarland has year-round access to his property
over Glacier Route 7. In the winter, this access is limited to non-
motorized means. * * * [E]ven subject to the seasonal limitations
imposed by the Park Service and in spite of the associated
inconvenience, McFarland enjoys sufficient access to his property.
***
McFarland, 545 F.3d at 1111.
- 71 -
[*71] b. Mackie’s Case: Hiking, Canoe With Portage and
Horseback
The McFarland opinion cites Mackie with apparent approval. George
Mackie, commencing in 1945, owned land and two one-room cabins in Glen Lake.
Mackie, 194 F. Supp. at 307. The land was in the Superior National Forest and
within the boundaries of a USFS designated “Roadless Area”, now accessible only
by horseback, boat, or on foot. Id. at 306. Before 1952 the airplane was a common
means of access, but all air travel was banned in that year. Following the air ban,
Mr. Mackie relied solely on an old Northwest Paper Co., logging road for access to
his property that, for part of the way, traveled over government owned land within
the “Roadless Area”. Id. at 307. Initially this was not a problem, but then USFS
blocked the road at its entrance to the “Roadless Area” with posts and a steel cable
fastened with two locks, one at each end. One lock was furnished by USFS and
used by rangers and other Federal employees for motorized access. The other lock
was furnished by Northwest Paper Co., which was authorized to use the road,
notwithstanding the general ban, in connection with its logging operations. A sign
advised the road was closed to all vehicular traffic.
In 1951 and 1952 Mr. Mackie had a key to one of the locks which was
provided to him by Northwest Paper Co. When he was required to give this up, he
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[*72] resorted to cutting the cable or driving around the posts on an improvised
bypass. From 1952 to 1959 he regularly used the logging road without interference
by the Government, although the Forest Rangers and other USFS employees knew
he was using the road. In May 1959 the Government blew up the road with
dynamite, creating a number of holes in the road. Mr. Mackie continued to use the
road bypassing some holes and jerry-rigging improvised bridges over others. Where
the holes were too wide and/or deep, he procured old autos, parking them between
the holes. He would then carry himself, guests, and supplies on foot from one
vehicle past the hole to the next vehicle and then proceed to the next impassible hole
and repeat the exercise.
Mr. Mackie justified his road use on the allegation that the original patent
from the United States conferred on him an easement by necessity as his land was
surrounded by the Superior National Forest. Id. at 307-308. By using Gun Lake
Road he could drive to within one-third mile of Gun Lake. Id. at 308. From there
he could carry supplies and walk to the lake, then boat across the lake to his
property. Otherwise, Mr. Mackie had to drive on Gun Lake Road without using the
“Roadless Area” portion to the Fourtown area. He then had to travel easterly,
without the car, for 1-1/2 miles and then another 1-1/2 miles to Fourtown Lake. He
could thereafter travel by boat across Fourtown Lake, Boot Lake, and Fairy
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[*73] Lake to Gun Lake and thence to his property. This trip also required three
short portages between lakes and covered a total distance between where he needed
to leave the car and his cabins of not more than eight miles.
Given these impediments, Mr. Mackie filed a suit, asking for a declaratory
judgment that he had lawful rights of access to his land over the Superior National
Forest land and was entitled to damages for USFS’ restricting his mode of access.
Id. at 306. The Government counterclaimed, asking for an injunction preventing
Mr. Mackie from crossing the restricted roadway using a motorized vehicle.
The District Court noted: “The general rule of law herein applicable is that
one cannot claim an easement by way of necessity over lands to which he has
another mode of access, however inconvenient.” Id. at 308 (citing 17A Am. Jur.,
Easements, secs. 61-63). On this basis, the District Court denied all of Mr.
Mackie’s requested relief and granted judgment and injunctive relief against him
and for the Government.
c. Fitzgerald’s Case: Revokable Permit and
a Kick Me Annual Fee
The Fitzgeralds, Raymond and Nancy, d.b.a. Hook Cattle Co., owned the
O’Haco Cabins Ranch about 55 miles from Winslow, Arizona, which included a
residential structure. Fitzgerald v. United States, 932 F. Supp. 1195 (D. Ariz.
- 74 -
[*74] 1996). To access their property they had to cross the Apache-Sitgreaves
National Forest. Id. at 1198. The ranch land was acquired by patent on April 26,
1920, from the United States, pursuant to the Homestead Act of 1862. The primary
access route was FDR 56B, a two-mile forest development road. The Fitzgeralds
also acquired the Pius Farms Ranch, which, with the O’Haco Cabins Ranch,
constituted the “base property” to support a USFS grazing permit covering 65
square miles of Sitgreaves National Forest. The permit was intended to support a
915-head-of-cattle allotment known as the “Limestone Grazing Allotment”. Id. at
1198 n.1. Shortly after the Fitzgeralds purchased the O’Haco Cabins Ranch in
1983, USFS closed several other access roads to their property. Id. at 1199.
In the spring of 1986, USFS requested that the Fitzgeralds apply for a special
use permit for their use of FDR 56B. The Fitzgeralds applied as requested but
would not sign the Special Use Permit the USFS prepared. USFS then closed FDR
56B to all motorized vehicles effective June 1, 1988. The Fitzgeralds
administratively appealed the road closure order to the Regional Forester. USFS
suggested a private road easement in lieu of a permit and prepared an easement
acceptable to USFS, but it was not acceptable to the Fitzgeralds because it was
revokable and required payment of an annual fee. Id. at 1205 n.6. Following a
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[*75] further appeal to the Chief of the Forest Service, FDR 56B was closed in
December 1993. Id. at 1199.
Having exhausted their administrative remedies, the Fitzgeralds sued in the
U.S. District Court for Arizona. Both parties agreed the Fitzgeralds had a right of
access to their inholding ranch over USFS land. See Adams v. United States, 3
F.3d 1254, 1257 (9th Cir. 1993). The dispute was over the type and extent of that
access and whether it could be restricted or regulated by USFS. The answer to
that question revolved primarily around: (1) the Property Clause of the
Constitution, U.S. Const. art. IV sec. 3, cl. 2, giving Congress plenary power to
regulate the use of Federal land, see United States v. Gardner, 107 F.3d 1314,
1318 (9th Cir. 1997) (noting “the power over the public land thus entrusted to
Congress is without limitations”); (2) the Alaska National Interest Land
Conservation Act (ANILCA) enacted in 1980 which at 16 U.S.C. sec. 3210
provides that it applies to all National Forest Systems land, Mont. Wilderness
Ass’n v. USFS, 655 F.2d 951, 957 (9th Cir. 1981); and (3) the 1976 Federal Land
Policy Management Act, 43 U.S.C. secs. 1701-1785 (FLPMA). ANILCA
provides USFS with the right to regulate access by those owning property who
have no deeded easement but rely on access over USFS land to reach their
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[*76] property. Fitzgerald Living Trust, 460 F.3d at 1262 n. 5; see also 36 C.F.R.
sec. 251.112(a), 110(c), 114(f) (2006).
After considering these factors and the Fitzgeralds’ claims to a preexisting
easement, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected the Fitzgeralds’
claims. That court concluded that “FLPMA vests the Secretary of Agriculture with
the authority to regulate access over the Sitgreaves National Forest. 43 U.S.C.
sec. 1761(a). The FLPMA easement offered to the Fitzgeralds, who hold no
common law easements over the forest service land, is a reasonable exercise of that
authority.” Fitzgerald Living Trust, 460 F.3d at 1268.
d. Lessons Learned
The state of the law and the current USFS policies on the use of USFS land
for access to surrounded private property, expressed here and in the other two
cases, are emblematic of current risks property owners must accept and deal with
if they lack a deeded easement and must cross USFS property to reach their land.
The court decisions in McFarland and Fitzgerald were not yet issued when
Shirley died on October 8, 2001, when Mr. Harrison appraised High Meadows in
his December 11, 2002, valuation report, or when the sale of High Meadows
closed On January 31, 2003. But the law on which these cases was based was in
effect, as were the changes in USFS policies on use and access to inholdings
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[*77] which precipitated these cases. The outcome of the cases was foreseeable
and was presaged by decisions in Superior Oil Co. v. United States, 353 F.2d 34, 37
n.4 (9th Cir. 1965), and Mackie, 194 F. Supp. at 308, which preceded Shirley’s
death. See also Hoffenberg v. United States, 2010 WL 3083533 (D. Ariz. 2010);
Skranak v. Castenada, 425 F.3d 1213 (9th Cir. 2005); McMaster v. United States,
2011 WL 3882475 (E.D. Cal. 2011), appeal docketed, No. 11-17489 (9th Cir. Oct.
17, 2011).
Given the proposed “trophy residence(s)” and its or their probable usage, the
very high altitude of High Meadows, the available home site(s), the rugged terrain,
and the substantial period of each year that High Meadows is snow covered,
motorized vehicle access would be very important. Large homes need lots of
supplies, particularly in cold, snowy weather. A trophy home on High Meadows
would require not only an access easement for people and their supplies, but also for
utilities, and an improved roadway for emergency services in accordance with local
zoning and development codes.
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[*78] 3. Principal Issues Negatively Affecting High Meadows’
Value as of Both Relevant Valuation Dates
As of both relevant valuation dates, High Meadows was burdened by TRPA
and Williamson Act restrictions and had other problems, that negatively affected its
value, which undoubtedly would have been considered thoroughly by a private
buyer before purchasing High Meadows. See Flanders v. United States, 347 F.
Supp. 95, 99 (N.D. Cal. 1972) (“There is little question that a Williamson Act
restriction artificially reduces the fair market value of the property for the period of
time it remains on the property.”). High Meadows was surrounded on all sides by
USFS property. Consequently, access would have been a potential problem for
anyone seeking to build and use Mr. Harrison’s “trophy residence” or any other
residence(s).42 Road and utility easements had been neither sought nor granted.
TRPA had not rendered land coverage determinations. Water rights had not been
adjudicated. An IPES score had not been assigned. There was a contaminated site
that needed to be remedied. In valuing 1,789.33 acres of High Meadows at
42
Anyone entering High Meadows was required to first cross at least six-
tenths of a mile of USFS property. As is illustrated by a recent opinions of the
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, discussed further supra and infra, the right to
access one’s property across Federal land can be an extremely uncertain one. See
McFarland v. Kempthorne, 545 F.3d 1106, 1110 (9th Cir. 2008) (“McFarland has
no valid claim to an easement. To the extent he has a right to access his property
across federal land, that right is subject to the reasonable regulation of the Park
Service, implemented through the permitting process.”).
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[*79] $29,500,000 as of September 12, 2002, Mr. Harrison assumed ideal
conditions, including that the sale transaction would include reciprocal rights “to a
55’ wide easement for access and utilities”, but that was clearly not assured and
actual conditions were far from ideal.43
Although some of the aforementioned issues were resolved by the time the
sale to ALC closed in January 2003, they certainly would have had a negative
effect on the price that a hypothetical willing buyer, including one seeking to build
a single “trophy home”, would have paid on either relevant valuation date.44
43
Under the rubric of “extraordinary assumptions”, Mr. Smith did the same.
44
It is uncertain whether a hypothetical private buyer seeking to build a
“trophy house” would have been able to resolve those issues and, if so, whether
such a buyer would have been able to resolve them as expeditiously as the
Giovacchinis, ALC, and USFS were able to. For example, had a private buyer
seeking to build a “trophy house” purchased all of High Meadows, it is unclear
whether (and, if so, under what terms) USFS would have granted such a buyer the
easements necessary to adequately access the house and supply it with utilities.
Ms. Morefield testified that USFS sent a memo to TRPA in an effort to put
USFS’ weight behind the Giovacchinis’ request for land coverage determinations.
A private purchaser of High Meadows frustrating USFS’ efforts to acquire the
property and obtain control of the prized critical watershed land might not have
enjoyed that benefit. See McFarland, 545 F.3d at 1111 (holding that access across
USFS property to landlocked parcel by nonmotorized transportation such as
snowshoe, horse, cross-country skis, or sled dogs, in winter months, constituted
access to property no matter how inconvenient); Fitzgerald Living Trust v. United
States, 460 F.3d 1259, 1261-1262 (9th Cir. 2006); Skranak v. Castenada, 425 F.3d
1213, 1219-1220 (9th Cir. 2005); Adams v. United States, 3 F.3d 1254, 1260 (9th
(continued...)
- 80 -
[*80] Someone seeking to purchase a single homesite would have likely been very
reluctant to pay $29,500,000 considering the aforementioned issues. We also
agree with the estate and its expert, Mr. Johnson, that valuing a single homesite on
a land coverage, or even on a per-acre, basis led Mr. Harrison to significantly
inflate the value of High Meadows. Moreover, a hypothetical willing buyer
looking to build a “trophy house” on High Meadows would have recognized that
the Lake Tahoe Basin is a heavily regulated environment and that the trend in that
area is toward more--not less--regulation.45 Such a buyer would certainly have
desired assurances that regulatory impediments would not delay, prevent or unduly
burden the construction and use of such a home. Absent such legally enforceable
assurances, a prospective purchaser would most likely have been willing to pay far
44
(...continued)
Cir. 1993).
45
This trend, evident as a historical matter, is further confirmed by the 2003
California legislation imposing new restrictions on Williamson Act properties. That
legislation, Cal. Gov’t Code sec. 51250, provides a penalty applicable to structures
exceeding 2,500 sq. ft., constructed on Williamson Act land in violation of the
contract provisions.
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[*81] less than Mr. Harrison thought.46 ALC and USFS had no such concerns and
46
We recognize that the Williamson Act limitations and restrictions could
have been addressed on a prospective basis by giving notice of termination on or
before the next anniversary date. Then after a 10-year period had lapsed, they
would no longer apply. The Court does not believe this option has a material effect
on High Meadows’ value as of June 17, 2000, or October 8, 2001. At the time of
the gift and at Shirley’s death, the prime interest rate, according to the Wall Street
Journal, with respect to which the Court will take judicial notice was, on May 17,
2000, 9.50% and on October 3, 2001, 5.50%. Even at the lower 5.50% rate, a
dollar discounted at 5.50% is significantly reduced in 10 years. A dollar, discounted
at a compounded annually 5.50% interest rate would be worth only $.585431, or
about $.59 today, if payable in 10 years. The evidence does not reflect that the
increase in High Meadows’ value, if High Meadows were freed from the
Williamson Act restrictions, on June 27, 2010, or October 8, 2011, would materially
exceed, if it exceeded it at all, this time value of money discount.
Further, a 10-year delay in the ability to acquire required governmental
approvals for development and required permits, under High Meadows’ El Dorado
County AE zoning classification, would considerably increase the prospective
purchaser’s risk of further development obstacles. The risk would be even higher
given the then-current environmental sensitive antidevelopment trends as to this
unique, pollution-sensitive basin. That, in turn, would likely further decrease the
fair market value of High Meadows. The Court concludes, and the parties seem to
mostly agree, that waiting out the Williamson Act contract was not, except perhaps
for the 566 retained acres, a significant viable choice in valuing High Meadows.
Early cancellation of the Williamson Act contract was also a theoretical alternative.
But there would be a significant financial cost, of approximately 12% of High
Meadows’ value, to make up for the previously reduced property taxes. There is
also significant uncertainty whether the necessary governmental jurisdictions,
including the El Dorado County Board of Supervisors, would vote to approve
cancellation. These factors render this option too speculative to meaningfully affect
the value of High Meadows. A new owner could also request a rezoning of High
Meadows to Timberland Preserve (TPZ) and, if it were rezoned, could also request
cancellation of the Williamson Act contract without payment of the 12.5% fee.
(continued...)
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[*82] despite assertions, in court, to the contrary, did not properly scrutinize Mr.
Harrison’s December 11, 2002, value conclusion to account for them. To the
contrary, they, at least in part, dictated, abetted, and facilitated such assumptions.
The fact that Mr. Harrison noted Mr. Merrill’s offer to enter into an option
agreement and incorrectly characterized that offer as “an expired offer to purchase”
raises serious questions. The Court is left to speculate whether he allowed that
offer, which we have already deemed immaterial, to influence his judgment as to
High Meadows’ value. See supra note 8.
Finally, it is disconcerting that Mr. Harrison raised the fair market value of
1,789.33 acres of High Meadows to $29,500,000 as of September 12, 2002, a date
approximately 1 year after Shirley’s death, from $25 million as of October 10, 2001,
only 2 days after her death, despite Mr. Clark’s intervening report which was
critical of Mr. Harrison’s first report.47 Even more disconcerting is that, in
46
(...continued)
However, TPZ zoning is extremely restrictive and would permit only a mobile home
or caretaker single family residence on High Meadows. See Cal. Gov. Code sec.
51282.5; El Dorado County Code sec. 17.44.050.
47
Mr. Harrison apparently saw Mr. Clark’s criticism (or was at least provided
with information as to some of Mr. Clark’s concerns) because, in his subsequent
work product, he eliminated the two comparable sales that Mr. Clark had criticized.
This problem is aggravated by the first amendment to the High Meadows sales
contract. At the time the amendment was made, June 20, 2002, Mr. Harrison had
(continued...)
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[*83] their zeal to acquire High Meadows, USFS appraisers turned a blind eye to
that sequence of events in swiftly approving Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002,
valuation report.48 Ms. Moore, Ms. Brower, and Ms. Morefield testified that it is
USFS policy not to consider unsolicited appraisals. That policy coupled with
USFS’ desire to acquire High Meadows led USFS to pay $29,500,000 in order to
acquire 1,789.33 acres of High Meadows.49 As discussed, this Court, while it may
47
(...continued)
already prepared and issued to ALC his November 29, 2001, valuation report,
valuing High Meadows on October 10, 2001, at $25,000,000. The amendment
seems to put the cart before the horse by prescribing an “Approved FMV” of not
less than $26,000,000. Sure enough, Mr. Harrison’s next appraisal report, as of
September 12, 2002, more than met that provision by valuing High Meadows at
$29,500,000.
48
In a similar vein, to ensure that High Meadows would ultimately end up in
the hands of a conservation-minded agency, ALC and Mr. Etchegoyhen (ALC’s
point man for the acquisition of High Meadows and a longtime acquaintance of J.B.
and Ms. Lekumberry) bent over backwards to get the deal done. In Mr.
Etchegoyhen’s own words: “We did some things that I suspect aren’t traditional for
land conservation organizations.” Those “things” included borrowing money on
ALC’s line of credit in order to pay new consideration to resurrect the deal, paying
for the environmental remediation, and agreeing to “pay the points and the interest
of whatever it may be for the family to borrow a significant sum of money to enable
them to re-sign with us and pay whatever things they needed to get paid.” Mr
Etchegoyen took the lead on those issues.
49
They did not look at Mr. Harrison’s November 29, 2001, report. They
reviewed only Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2002, report. Had they seen Mr.
Harrison’s first report and Mr. Clark’s review of that report, they might have (and
notwithstanding USFS policy on appraisals should have, in determining the
(continued...)
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[*84] carefully consider a valuation determination arrived at by another Federal
office or agency, is not bound by that other office’s or agency’s determination. See
Pasqualini v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1994-323.
The fact that one arm of the Federal Government may have overpaid for
1,789.33 acres of High Meadows does not mean that another arm of the Federal
Government should, absent statutory authorization, require the estate to regurgitate
its questionable gain by overpaying estate and gift tax so that the Treasury may
recoup at least a portion of that money.
We previously concluded the sale of High Meadows to ALC is the most
meaningful and comparable sale and as such serves as the initial jumping-off point
for our penultimate value analysis. Unfortunately, this sale was not the result of a
normal free market, arm’s-length transaction but resulted from a contrived, even if
well-meaning, effort to assure the conveyance of critical, mostly pristine, high
elevation watershed property to USFS. In that effort, unlike most private
transactions, price was not, for USFS, always the most important consideration.
Price was driven by the estate’s desire to maximize its financial situation in order to
pay imminent Federal estate taxes. The estate hoped to achieve significant
49
(...continued)
credibility and procedural regularity) expressed concern regarding Mr. Harrison’s
ultimate conclusion as to High Meadows’ value.
- 85 -
[*85] family liquidity and ensure realization and perpetuation of a significant family
estate, amassed by three generations and hard work, while protecting High
Meadows in its historic state.
The High Meadows sale price was based on Mr. Harrison’s appraised value.
In defense of that $29,500,000 value, respondent chose not to call the one person
who set the price, Mr. Harrison, but instead called as his appraisal expert Mr. Smith.
Mr. Smith valued High Meadows, including the approximately 500 acres not sold to
ALC, at $25,185,000 on June 27, 2000, and valued the approximately 500 (actually
566.77 acres) retained acres as of October 8, 2001, at $6,780,000.
In both instances extraordinary assumptions were made at the direction of
respondent equivalent to those made by Mr. Harrison on the instructions of ALC
and USFS. Mr. Smith further acknowledged, on cross-examination, that his
valuation was dependent on his regression analysis and that without it, he could
not have valued High Meadows. He also admitted that his linear regression
analysis would statistically result in a conclusion within an acceptable range of
error only 36% of the time; this appraisal and Mr. Smith’s direct opinion
testimony as to value are thus of little, if any, use and fail our gatekeeper
- 86 -
[*86] test.50 The estate previously objected to this testimony. We allowed it during
and immediately following the trial. The Court has since concluded it is of no
assistance to the Court, because of its credibility and methodology problems, and
has disregarded its ultimate valuation conclusions in reaching our valuation
determinations.
C. Need for Valuation Adjustments
The Court concludes significant price adjustments must be made to Mr.
Johnson’s valuation report. Foremost of concern is his failure to use any
comparables in the Lake Tahoe Basin and, in the Court’s view, to properly adjust
values for that omission. Mr. Johnson’s extraordinary assumptions, implicit in his
appraisal, are also of significant concern, such as his conclusion that construction of
a “trophy home” was not permitted by the Williamson Act.
After careful consideration of the record as a whole, the Court will begin its
work at a preliminary value of $29,500,000 for 1,790 acres of High Meadows.
This is the value originally arrived at by Mr. Harrison, as of September 12, 2002,
which established the purchase price paid by ALC for High Meadows in January
50
See generally Barabin v. Asten-Johnson, Inc., 700 F.3d 428, 431 (9th Cir.
2012); Esgar Corp. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-35, slip op. at 30-32 (citing
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 551 (1993), Federal Rules of
Evidence 702 and 703, and Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 148
(1949)), appeal filed (10th Cir. Sept. 6, 2012).
- 87 -
[*87] 2003. This as-of appraisal valuation date is approximately eleven months
after the date of Shirley’s death. Mr. Harrison valued the same property as of
October 10, 2001, two days after Shirley’s death and before the first amendment of
the sale agreement with ALC assuring at least a $26 million value.51 This prior
value was arrived at by Mr. Harrison before, in the Court’s opinion, he became an
advocate for the estate, in an effort to obtain an unrealistically high sale price for
High Meadows.
The Court, on the basis of the factual record in its entirety and its own
valuation analysis, will adjust the $29,500,000 purchase price, as established by the
sales agreement. First, that price requires correction to October 8, 2001, and
adjustment for the delayed appraisal valuation date of September 12, 2002, which
becomes meaningful only on January 31, 2003, when the sale actually occurs.
Second is the apparent assumption of access, based on the proposed reciprocal
access right to be contained in the conveyance of title. This assumption relied on
51
Mr. Harrison’s November 29, 2001, appraisal report which had arrived at a
$25 million value was admitted into evidence only on a limited basis by stipulation
of the parties. That stipulation limited the admission of Exhibit 56-J “to the extent
that the petitioners [sic] are going to utilize that document to cross-examine the
Forest Service personnel to ascertain or attempt to ascertain or explore the extent to
which Mr. Harrison followed the Yellow Book in his appraisal and what he did in
his appraisal”.
- 88 -
[*88] discussions with Mr. Bob Rodman, a USFS employee,52 under the heading
“Limiting Condition Access”. Third is the fact that the comparables, while located
within the Lake Tahoe Basin, were not of comparable size. Fourth is the valuation
of High Meadows by size rather than development rights. Fifth are the other
miscellaneous condition matters mentioned previously.53
D. Court’s High Meadows Sale Price Adjustments
1. Rising Prices Valuation Correction Date Adjustments
We begin with the $29,500,000 sales price for 1,789.33 acres of High
Meadows, which includes High Meadows’ one currently existing development
52
Mr. Harrison also alludes to “The Alaska National Interest Land
Conservation Act and 16 U.S.C.A. § 3210(a) [which he implies] provides that the
federal government must provide reasonable access to allow the reasonable use and
enjoyment of the land serviced.” Missing from his analysis is a consideration of
what “reasonable access” in this context means and how that may affect the value of
High Meadows.
53
A number of factors were considered that affect High Meadows’ value, but
were not fully and appropriately weighed in Mr. Harrison’s December 11, 2001,
appraisal report. These included: no official determination of land coverage or
capability was made, a small portion was contaminated, and no official IPES score
existed. The cumulative effect of these problems is de minimis when compared with
the factors specifically discussed infra.
- 89 -
[*89] right.54 Initially, we adjust this value to correct for inflation,55 the time value
of money, and increases in market prices from the relevant June 20, 2000, and
October 8, 2001, valuation dates to the ALC-USFS sale date of January 31, 2003.
A preponderance of the evidence indicates that prices for Lake Tahoe Basin real
property were (except for a few months following the September 11, 2001, terrorist
attack) rising during this period. Mr. Harrison’s value for the same 1,790 acres of
High Meadows increased from $25,000,000, as of October 10, 2001, to
$29,500,000 as of September 12, 2002. The difference is not explained and we are
left to ponder whether it is due to the valuation dates, a change in his opinion,
client pressures, a change in facts, or all of the above. He does note in the
October 10, 2001, appraisal that “Annual appreciation of value has been
substantial in lakefront properties, lake view properties, and large residential estate
properties.” In the same vein, the September 12, 2002, appraisal states: “Over
54
The appraisal on which the sale price was determined was as of
September 12, 2002, but the original sales agreement was, at best, in a state of
hiatus, as of January 3, 2003, until the January 13, 2003, fourth amendment was
executed and when USFS received funding to permit the sale. The sale itself did not
occur until January 14, 2003, as to equitable title and January 31, 2003, as to legal
title. These facts indicate a January 31, 2003, not a September 12, 2002, valuation
date.
55
The January 2000, All Urban Consumers U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
inflation rate using 1982-1984 = 100, of which we shall take judicial notice, stood at
172.4. As of October 2001, it was 177.7, and in January 2003, it was 181.7.
- 90 -
[*90] recent years, real estate values have generally increased for both residential
and income producing properties.” The estate’s expert Mr. Johnson, in his July 29,
2002, appraisal report indicates that
Residential property values have increased significantly. This is
particularly true for lakefront properties or properties with views of
Lake Tahoe. The national recession and the tragic events of
September 11, 2001 did cool the local economy through the winter.[56]
However, property values have continued to increase during the spring
and summer of 2002. * * * [Emphasis added.]
Respondent’s expert, Mr. Smith, concluded in his September 3, 2002,
appraisal report on the value of 2,289.33 acres as of June 2, 2000, that “The last
twenty years has seen surge in residential development which has accelerated land
values on residential and commercial properties.” He further opines in his
September 13, 2002, appraisal report on the approximately 500 High Meadows
acres not sold to ALC-USFS that “Adding to the limited amount of private land is
the highly regulated environment and subdivision moratorium that curtails
development on a large portion of the existing private lands. This results in a
scarcity situation which has resulted in significant increases in land values for
developable properties.”
56
This conclusion also found some support, with a slightly different time
period, from Mr. Clark, who, to the question from petitioner’s counsel “The market
had pretty much tanked in 2000?” answered “That was my opinion.”
- 91 -
[*91] To reflect the rising prices, Mr. Harrison uses a 10% per year appreciation
rate.57 Mr. Smith, looked at appreciation of Lake Tahoe Basin properties (in
essentially the same physical condition at all times, ordinary wear and tear
excepted) which sold more than once during the period January 6, 1997, to October
7, 2005. From this study he concluded real property prices rose from January 6,
1997, to August 9, 2002, at an average appreciation rate of .606% per month, and
from August 9, 2002, to October 7, 2005, at an average rate of .7605% per month.
Mr. Johnson also adjusted for appreciation during this period, but was less specific
as to his amounts.
The Court concludes that the $29,500,000 sale price should be adjusted
down by 9% to the October 8, 2001, date of Shirley’s death, and by 17% to the
June 27, 2000, HM6 sale date to adjust for the roughly 16-month and 31-month
57
In his December 11, 2002, appraisal, Mr. Harrison states:
I have discussed the change in value due to time with many
brokers and appraisers within the Lake Tahoe Basin. Real Estate
Brokers are generally of the opinion that lakefront properties have
increased fifteen to twenty percent per year over the past five years.
In reference to residential estate properties with a view, this estimate
ranges from ten percent to fifteen percent per year. In my opinion,
the comparable sales data should be adjusted at an overall rate of ten
percent per year.
- 92 -
[*92] periods between the January 31, 2003, sale and Shirley’s death, and the HM6
sale, respectively.
2. Adjustment for Uncertainty of Access
There were critical legal access difficulties with respect to High Meadows’
ingress, egress, and utilities on both June 27, 2000, and October 8, 2001. By
arbitrary fiat the appraiser, whose determination of fair market value established the
$29,500,000 January 31, 2002, sale price, was instructed to ignore this fact, thereby
triggering the so-called GIGO Rule, garbage in-garbage out. As all ALC and USFS
appraisals assumed sufficient access for the intended residential use, accompanying
utility easements and building/zoning code emergency (police, fire, health, etc.)
access, the task is left to the Court to determine the applicable price adjustment
needed to correct this glaring deficiency. The evidentiary record is of little help,
other than its confirmation that the needed access did not exist on June 27, 2000, or
October 8, 2001. Without each of these issues being resolved, no residential or
commercial development was permitted.58
58
Mr. Clark confirmed the obvious that convenient year-round access was
necessary for a “trophy residence”. He stated:
From the buyer’s perspective, he’s going to be concerned what
limitations there are, if any, on access to the property. In other words,
you can have access to the property by foot, but if you’re going to
(continued...)
- 93 -
[*93] If respondent’s $36,280,000 value for all of High Meadows and its single
development right on the October 8, 2001, date of Shirley’s death was correct, then
the single trophy residence land cost alone would run from $29,500,000 to
$36,280,000, depending upon how much land was purchased. Improvement costs,
including road, utilities, environmental remediation, and site preparation, and
residential structure and associated structural improvements would be extra. Total
investment would likely run from $35 to $55 million for a home which, because of
winter conditions, might not be occupiable for two to four months per year.
58
(...continued)
develop the property with a major McMansion, you’ve got to have a
public roadway, you have to have a roadway sufficient for large trucks
and other equipment to come in and do the work. * * * You know,
any time you’re dealing with easements of any sort, but particularly
access easements, it’s pretty critical to know what the rights of the so-
called dominant tenement really are. * * * Very critical.
When cross-examined about access, he was asked: “In an assignment such as this,
is it typical for the person hiring the appraiser to give the appraiser certain
assumptions he can work with?” In response, Mr. Clark answered: “Not unusual.
But--but the assumptions can’t be so onerous as to distort the value of the property.”
Mr. Johnson testified that it was important to know whether there was legal
access and that there was none to High Meadows. Where, as here, legal access was
assumed, he stated: “If they’re appraising the property in an as-is condition as it
existed on a certain date, they should address any risk associated with the legal
access.”
- 94 -
[*94] That investment would be at considerable risk if only inconvenient
nonmotorized physical access could be obtained and residential improvements, as
intended, would be impossible without utilities and governmental emergency
vehicle access. This risk factor is hard to quantify, but a price discount of 20% to
50% is indicated for what is evidently a pattern of USFS policy and Federal court
cases which establish availability of convenient utilities and year-round motorized
access over USFS land as a significant risk.59 However, on October 8, 2001, not
all of the previously discussed access cases had yet been resolved and some were
59
If convenient access were not obtained, a purchaser would be left with a
“white elephant” unsuitable for development for at least 10 or more years and
usable in the meantime for only its historic commercial uses, cattle grazing, timber
harvesting, and growing Christmas trees. Absent that, a purchaser who was
unwilling to work the land or felt contracting the work out inconvenient could be left
with property taxes and furnishing to the public a no-cost conservation easement
and scenic view (i.e., “Big hat no cattle”). We reach the discount by consideration
of all the evidence in the record. That our determination is appropriate receives
some support from Ga. Power Co. v. 138.30 Acres of Land, 596 F.2d 644, 650 (5th
Cir. 1979), vacated and remanded on rehearing en banc on another issue sub. nom.
Ga. Power Co. v. Sanders, 617 F.2d 1112 (5th Cir. 1980), where, in the discussion
of an appropriate access discount, the appraisers, noting the qualified easement
access, opined that a 20% to 25% discount to “account for the limited nature of the
easement” was appropriate. See also Bank One v. Steffens (In re Steffens), 275
B.R. 570, 575 (D. Colo. 2002) (noting uncontroverted testimony that a foreclosure
on two parcels of property would leave a third parcel without access, thus its value
“will decrease significantly (perhaps by as much as 50%) if Bank One is allowed to
complete its judicial foreclosures on Parcels 1 and 2. This decrease in value springs
directly from Parcel 3’s ‘landlocked’ location.”).
- 95 -
[*95] in active litigation with the possibility of an owner-favorable result.
Consequently, we shall use the lower number in this range and reduce the
$29,500,000 sale price by 20% to reflect the generally unfavorable, but still
unsettled, legal status of the existing historic access over USFS land on June 27,
2000, and October 8, 2001.
3. Parcel Size Adjustment
All of the appraisers concurred that the value per acre is significantly
affected by the purchase parcel size. Generally, the appraisers agreed that the per-
acre price for small parcels is higher to considerably higher for small parcels.
With respect to his first appraisal, Mr. Harrison notes that “Sale seven is the only
comparable sale [he considered] that has comparable size to the subject [High
Meadows] property.” It was in the end disregarded because it was “substantially
far inferior to the subject [High Meadows] site and is located outside of the Lake
Tahoe Basin. * * * All of the sales data indicators, in * * * [Mr. Harrison’s]
opinion, would have to be reduced substantially to indicate a fair market value for
the subject property on an acreage basis.” Mr. Harrison declined to adjust for size
on a per-acre basis because he believed it “would be extremely subjective and
would not * * * produce an indicator of value that would be reliable.” Instead, he
- 96 -
[*96] elected to value High Meadows by a determination of High Meadows’
“Market Value by Coverage”.
At the end of his December 11, 2002, appraisal report, under the heading
“Test of Reasonableness”, Mr. Harrison states: “It would be anticipated that the
average market value per acre for the subject property in comparison to all of the
sales data would be lower than each of the comparable sales as a result of the size
relationship of the subject to the sales data.”
Mr. Smith’s appraisal report under the title “SUMMARY AND
CONCLUSION OF VALUE” states:
All of the sales required downward adjustment to the subject.
Sale No. 25 ($13,022/Acre) was a 1,789.33-acre parcel that was a
portion of the subject. This sale was identical to the subject in all
regards except for its smaller size. * * * To develop an opinion of
value for the subject, considering its larger size, a regression analysis
will be employed to forecast a value based on the comparable sales.
The Court is convinced that the size of a parcel and its relative price per acre
are closely related. Smaller otherwise comparable parcels each with their own
development right(s) sell for considerably higher prices per-acre than larger
otherwise comparable parcels as Mr. Harrison and Mr. Smith noted. This is
consistent with this Court’s general conclusion with respect to real estate values.
See Akers v. Commissioner, 799 F.2d 243, 246 (6th Cir. 1986) (agreeing with this
- 97 -
[*97] Court that the closer in size a property is, the more comparable it is), aff’g
T.C. Memo. 1984-490; Estate of Kolczynski v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2005-
217 (noting premium paid for smaller parcels); Pope & Talbot, Inc. & Subs. v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-116 (concluding the larger the parcel the higher
the appropriate discount and countenancing a 39% discount for size over a lower
21.6% discount urged by respondent), aff’d, 162 F.3d 1236 (9th Cir. 1999). In this
instance the Court concludes that the efforts by Mr. Harrison and Mr. Smith to
adjust for size were inadequate. Because of the appraisal assumptions including
access their appraisal reports were materially inaccurate.
Mr. Johnson determined this problem was so significant that he eschewed all
Lake Tahoe Basin sales, none of which involved enough acres to be comparable, for
much larger parcels in surrounding areas, primarily the Nevada eastern slope of the
Sierra Nevada Carson Range.
Mr. Smith recognized that the disparate parcel size differential was so
significant that its effect on value would require a material adjustment. He
addressed the adjustment with his statistically flawed regression analysis and
- 98 -
[*98] acknowledged that without it, he could not value High Meadows other than to
opine that the value ceiling would be no more than $13,022 per acre.60
In his as of October 10, 2001, appraisal, rather than confront the disparity in
acreage between his 9 comparables and High Meadows, Mr. Harrison sought to
circumvent this issue by valuing High Meadows on the basis of usable developable
square feet of “coverage” in lieu of a price-per-acre comparison.61
60
See supra note 37.
61
Mr. Harrison, in his as of October 10, 2001, High Meadows appraisal,
explains that
Analyzing the subject property on a basis of overall market value per
acre is extremely complicated because the subject property has
935,206 square feet of sensitive level coverage. This results in a non-
sensitive land coverage of 535,609 square feet. * * *
All of the [comparables] sales data indicators, in my opinion, would
have to be reduced substantially to indicate a fair market value for the
subject property on an acreage basis. Any adjustments to the sales
data, on an acreage basis, would be extremely subjective and would
not, in my opinion, produce an indicator of value that would be
reliable. Therefore, estimating the market value of the subject property
by the application of an overall value per acre simply is not possible.
Coverage refers to usable developable land under the TRPA regional plan for
land use within the Lake Tahoe Basin. In this context it is, in significant part,
determined by the IPES score assigned to the property at issue. At the relevant
valuation dates, there was no IPES score officially assigned to High Meadows.
Therefore, Mr. Harrison relied upon a land coverage and estimate analysis made by
(continued...)
- 99 -
[*99] This approach actually ended up specifically addressing and valuing
1,470,815 high-capacity, presumably developable, square feet of the total
77,972,400 square feet (i.e., 1,790 x 43,560 sq. ft. per acre) comprising the High
Meadows sale to ALC-USFS. Even at that much lower number it ignored the fact
that there was far more coverage than required for even the largest reasonably
conceivable “trophy residence”. It valued High Meadows against his selected
comparables, all of which were dramatically smaller, using a price per square foot of
coverage. His value of $50 per square foot x 535,609 square feet of nonsensitive
coverage produced a value rounded to the nearest million of $27,000,000. After
adjusting for cost of a road and utilities and adding in $872,000 for timber, he
arrives at his rounded $25,000,000 appraised value.
For his as of September 12, 2002, appraisal, Mr. Harrison used a somewhat
similar approach. But instead of valuation per square foot, he used seven
comparable sales selected inter alia on their square feet of coverage, and then, on
the basis of those seven comparables, arrived at a value of $125,000 per acre for
61
(...continued)
Basin Strategies, a land consulting firm he believes was conversant with and familiar
with TRPA land coverage rules and regulations. TRPA classifies soils (i.e., land
surface) into seven categories. Categories 1, 2, and 3 are so erosion and drainage
sensitive that no physical improvements are allowed. Categories 4, 5, 6, and 7 are
considered to be higher capability land where physical improvements, based upon
land coverage ratios ranging from 20% to 30%, are permitted.
- 100 -
[*100] the high-capability land. Mr. Harrison then concluded High Meadows
contained, in the aggregate, 238 acres (within the 1,471 acres of so-called parcel 6
of high-capability land because of its aggregate IPES scored classes 4, 5, 6, and 7
land). In High Meadows’ case, the 238 acres came from classes 4 and 6 land
permitting 2,169,288 square feet of developable coverage. He then valued the 238
acres at $29,750,000 (i.e., 238 x $125,000 = $29,750,000), added in $1,396,200 for
the other 1,551.33 acres and subtracted $1,710,000 for access and utility costs to
get $29,436,200, which he rounded to the $29,500,000 value at September 12,
2002.62
He based his enlarged amount of high-capacity coverage land on a TRPA
survey that had apparently been conducted since his as of October 10, 2001,
appraisal, that had relied on the Basin Strategies coverage estimate. While this
62
Mr. Harrison also noted 159,430 square feet and 236,365 square feet of
coverage on parcels 4 and 5; but because these parcels “lie at the easterly edge of
the subject property and would be difficult to improve, due to the cost of utilities
and a paved access”, he largely disregarded this coverage. The coverage and its
related acres are lumped together as a part of the 1,551.33 acres comprising the
balance of High Meadows. These acres he valued at $900 per acre, or a total of
$1,396,000.
Mr. Johnson in his critique of the USFS purchase indicates TRPA-approved
coverage of 4,641,006 square feet, whereas Mr. Harrison used 3,102,125 (i.e.,
2,169,288 + 159,430 + 236,313 = 3,102,125). The difference is not clearly
explained by the record but may relate to the coverage on the 588 retained acres not
sold to ALC-USFS.
- 101 -
[*101] change in facts helps in explaining his change in value from $25,000,000 to
$29,500,000 between the two appraisals, it, and his adjustments to the seven
comparables, do not effectively address the parcel size problem.
The coverage approach improperly values High Meadows because it equates
value with coverage even though the coverage is, as a practical matter, superfluous,
so long as the Williamson Act applies to the property. As previously noted, absent
government approval and payment of the 12-1/2% cancellation charge, Williamson
Act termination would require at least 10 years.63 We have already concluded
cancellation is extremely unlikely. Consequently, when coupled with the time value
of money, excess high capacity coverage has only a de minimis effect on value.
Using the updated coverage figures, Mr. Johnson, in his critique of the USFS
purchase, concludes that even after allocating 250,000 square feet to access road
and home site(s), there would be 2,852,125 square feet of excess coverage.64
63
Any additional development, if allowed by TRPA would, according to
respondent’s expert, Mr. Smith, also require purchase of a development right, which
he indicates cost around $1,000 from 1999 through 2002, and at least one unit of
use which, during this time, he indicates sold for about $10,000 per unit.
64
Mr. Johnson assumes existing coverage located on the USFS Upper
Truckee parcel would be sufficient to develop the paved road across that parcel. He
notes that even the largest estates built to date in the Lake Tahoe Basin required less
(continued...)
- 102 -
[*102] Excess coverage can only be transferred to others who are in the same one of
the nine watersheds (hydrologic areas) that the coverage comes from, in this case
the Upper Truckee River Watershed in California, not watersheds in Nevada where
demand was greater.
In his review appraisal Mr. Clark, who was using the earlier lower coverage
numbers from the Basin Strategies estimate, noted that
Considering the coverage available through the California Tahoe
Conservancy Soil Bank of some 330,000 square feet at a price of $5
per square foot there would appear to be little demand for an additional
535,609 square feet of coverage. * * * Over an eleven-year period,
the California Tahoe Conservancy has been able to market only 83,000
square feet of coverage.[65]
Under any circumstance the coverage available on the subject property
is so large and excessive for development of the subject
64
(...continued)
than 250,000 square feet of coverage, which, he concludes, could be provided by
only 19.13 acres of high-capability land. The Court generally agrees with that
conclusion.
65
Mr. Johnson indicates that over the last 16 years California Tahoe
Conservancy, which claims to have cornered 90% of the coverage market, sold
332,000 square feet of coverage in the Upper Truckee Hydrological Area, an
average of 20,750 square feet per year. Even assuming an absorption rate of 30,000
square feet per year, he calculates it would take 88 years to dispose of the excess
coverage. We note Mr. Smith recognized an additional 538,880 square feet of
coverage in his September 14, 2007, report which he assigns to the 566-acre
retained piece of High Meadows not considered by Mr. Harrison, who appraised
only the separate 1,790 acres.
- 103 -
[*103] property and the demand for coverage on other parcels is so limited
that there can only be a minimal value for sensitive soil coverage.
The superficial measures and adjustments using Lake Tahoe Basin
comparables, based on coverage, were inadequate because they fail to integrate
coverage with development rights. One without the other is, as a practical matter,
meaningless. We conclude a further 11% discount to the value as of October 8,
2001, and the value as of June 27, 2000, is appropriate to resolve this deficiency
and the other small items previously identified.
4. Application of the Adjustments
Applying these three discount adjustments, which total 40% (i.e., 9% + 20%
+ 11% = 40%) as of October 8, 2001, to the $29,500,000 sale amount, indicates a
value for 1,790 acres and the one development right of $17,700,000 as of October
8, 2001. The three discount adjustments total 48% as of June 27, 2000. Applying
this to the $29,500,000 results in a value of $15,340,000. To these figures must be
added the value of the 566 acres not sold to ALC-USFS and excluded from the
Harrison appraisal.
On a per-acre basis this amount would be, as to October 8, 2001, $5,596,760
(i.e., $17,700,000 x 566/1,790 = $5,596,760) and as of June 27, 2000, would be
$4,850,525 (i.e., $15,340,000 x 566/1,790 = $4,850,525). However, a pro rata
- 104 -
[*104] analysis ignores differences in land coverage, terrain, view, accessibility, and
development costs. Most importantly, it ignores the fact that the value of the one
existing development right was included in the sale of the 1,790 acres.
The lazy L-shaped retained parcel was closer to the existing subdivision and
its utilities. It enjoys flatter terrain, is overall at a lower average elevation and, like
the 1,790 acres, had sufficient coverage for one or two possible future residences, as
speculated by Mr. Smith, after a termination of the Williamson Act contract. That,
however, would also require TRPA approval. Views are less dramatic from this
parcel. To adjust for these factors, especially the lack of a development right and
after considering the possibility of Mr. Smith’s postulated two additional rights upon
Williamson Act termination, most likely at least 10 years or more in the future, we
will reduce the value of the 566 acres by a net 35%. This results in a value of
$3,637,894 (i.e., $5,596,760 x 65% = $3,637,894) as of October 8, 2001, and
$3,152,841 (i.e., $4,850,525 x 65% = $3,152,841) as of June 27, 2000. These
parcel values result in a total value for High Meadows on October 8, 2001, of
$21,337,894, and as of June 27, 2000, of $18,492,841.66
66
For October 8, 2001, $17,700,000 (the value of the 1,790 acres,
$29,500,000, discounted by 40%) plus $3,637,894 (the value of the 566 acres,
$5,596,760, discounted by 35%) equals $21,337,894.
(continued...)
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[*105] E. Valuation Determinations
We ultimately decide that Mr. Johnson dramatically underappraised High
Meadows. The January 2003 sale and Mr. Smith’s two appraisal reports were
based on flawed findings and conclusions. Mr. Harrison’s similarly defective
appraisal substantially overvalued 1,789.33 acres. Mr. Smith also overvalued both
the sold 1,790 acres and the retained 566 acres of High Meadows. After reviewing
and analyzing all relevant evidence in the record, and using our best judgment, the
Court concludes: respondent, who has the burden of proof, has failed to establish
that High Meadows, in its 2,356-acre entirety, was worth more than a rounded
$21,300,000 as of October 8, 2001, and $18,500,000 as of June 27, 2000.67 Thus,
66
(...continued)
For June 27, 2000, $15,340,000 (the value of the 1,790 acres, $29,500,000,
discounted by 48%) plus $3,152,841 (the value of the 566 acres, $4,850,525,
discounted by 35%) equals $18,492,841.
67
Concerning the estate tax, we accept that the value of the estate’s interest in
the merchantable timber on High Meadows is $453,117, as reported on the estate
tax return. That figure is based on a report prepared for Mr. Kuckenmeister in July
2002 by Mr. Steve Cannon, a registered professional forester. Mr. Cannon valued
High Meadows’ merchantable timber at $1,294,620. The $453,117 figure is arrived
at by multiplying the value of the harvestable timber (after subtracting logging costs,
timber harvest planning costs, fish and game fee, and three removable log stringer
bridges needed for the harvest) by 50% to account for the fact that the estate had a
50% undivided interest in High Meadows on October 8, 2001. The resulting figure,
$647,310, is then multiplied by 70% to account for the 30% discount rate claimed in
its tax return. Likewise, the values for High Meadows which we have arrived at for
(continued...)
- 106 -
[*106] the value of High Meadows for estate tax purposes was $21,300,000 as of
October 8, 2001, and the estate tax liability should be calculated using that figure as
a starting point. The value of High Meadows for gift tax purposes was a rounded
$18,500,000 as of June 27, 2000, and the gift tax liability should be calculated
appropriately.
VI. Section 6662 Penalties
Under section 7491(c), respondent bears the burden of production with
respect to the estate’s liability for the section 6662(a) penalty. This means that
respondent “must come forward with sufficient evidence indicating that it is
appropriate to impose the relevant penalty.” Higbee v. Commissioner, 116 T.C.
438, 446 (2001).
Subsection (a) of section 6662 imposes an accuracy-related penalty on an
underpayment of tax that is equal to 20% of any underpayment that is attributable to
a list of causes in subsection (b). Among the causes justifying the imposition of the
penalty are negligence or disregard of rules or regulations and any substantial
67
(...continued)
both the estate and gift tax (i.e., relevant dates October 8, 2001, and June 27, 2000,
respectively) are for a sale of the entire property including marketable timber, but
except for marketable timber as discussed above, do not consider any discounts for
blockage, fractured ownership, etc. The parties have resolved the discount issue.
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[*107] estate or gift tax valuation understatement. Sec. 6662(b)(1), (5). Section
6662(c) defines negligence as “any failure to make a reasonable attempt to comply
with the provisions of this title”. “[D]isregard” is defined to include “any careless,
reckless, or intentional disregard.” Id. Under caselaw, “‘Negligence is a lack of
due care or the failure to do what a reasonable and ordinarily prudent person would
do under the circumstances.’” Freytag v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 849, 887 (1987)
(quoting Marcello v. Commissioner, 380 F.2d 499, 506 (5th Cir. 1967), aff’g on this
issue 43 T.C. 168 (1964) and T.C. Memo. 1964-299), aff’d, 904 F.2d 1011 (5th Cir.
1990), aff’d, 501 U.S. 868 (1991).
There is a substantial estate or gift tax valuation understatement where the
value of property reported on an estate or gift tax return is 50% or less of its correct
value. Sec. 6662(g)(1).68 Where property is reported at a value less than 25% of its
correct value, there is a “gross valuation misstatement” and the penalty imposed
under section 6662 is increased from 20% to 40%. Sec. 6662(h).69
68
No penalty is imposed unless the portion of the underpayment attributable to
substantial estate or gift tax valuation understatements for the taxable period (or
with respect to the estate of the decedent) exceeds $5,000. See sec. 6662(g)(2).
69
In the Pension Protection Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-280, sec.
1219(a)(1)(A) and (2)(B), 120 Stat. at 1083, Congress made it easier to trigger the
substantial valuation and gross valuation misstatement penalties. For estate and gift
tax returns filed after August 17, 2006, the penalty for a substantial valuation
(continued...)
- 108 -
[*108] There is an exception to the section 6662(a) penalty when a taxpayer can
demonstrate (1) reasonable cause for the underpayment and (2) that the taxpayer
acted in good faith with respect to the underpayment. Sec. 6664(c)(1).70
Regulations promulgated under section 6664(c) further provide that the
determination of reasonable cause and good faith “is made on a case-by-case basis,
taking into account all pertinent facts and circumstances.” Sec. 1.6664-4(b)(1),
Income Tax Regs.
Reliance upon the advice of a tax professional may, but does not
necessarily, establish reasonable cause and good faith for the purpose of avoiding a
section 6662(a) penalty. See United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241, 251 (1985)
69
(...continued)
misstatement is triggered if the valuation is 65% or less of the correct value amount,
up from 50%. The penalty for a gross valuation misstatement is triggered if the
value is 40% or less of the correct value amount, up from 25%.
70
There is a special rule in sec. 6664(c)(2) with respect to charitable
contribution deduction property requiring a qualified appraisal and a good-faith
investigation of the claimed value by the taxpayer. While the purchase agreement
apparently contemplated a charitable contribution deduction to be claimed by HM6
on its Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, there were no charitable
contribution claims with respect to this transaction relating to either the Form 706 or
the Form 709 at issue here. Further, neither party has contended that sec.
6664(c)(2) is applicable here. See supra note 14. In any event, respondent has the
burden of proof in this case as he acknowledged. Thus, respondent would also bear
that burden of showing a charitable contribution was in fact claimed and the
additional limitations on a reasonable cause defense because of sec. 7491(c), and he
has not carried that burden here.
- 109 -
[*109] (“Reliance by a lay person on a lawyer is of course common; but that
reliance cannot function as a substitute for compliance with an unambiguous
statute.”). Such reliance does not serve as an “absolute defense”; it is merely “a
factor to be considered.” Freytag v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. at 888.
The Court’s caselaw sets forth the following three requirements in order for a
taxpayer to use reliance on a tax professional to avoid liability for a section 6662(a)
penalty: “(1) The adviser was a competent professional who had sufficient
expertise to justify reliance, (2) the taxpayer provided necessary and accurate
information to the adviser, and (3) the taxpayer actually relied in good faith on the
adviser's judgment.” Neonatology Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 43, 99
(2000), aff’d, 299 F.3d 221 (3d Cir. 2002).
As a consequence of our conclusion as to High Meadows’ value, the estate
petitioner substantially understated High Meadows’ value for estate and gift tax
purposes. On brief, the estate argues that it is not liable for the penalties because
Ms. Lukemberg and the estate relied on professional advisers in valuing High
Meadows for estate and gift tax purposes (and in reporting those valuations on the
estate and gift tax returns). Respondent’s position is that the estate cannot establish
a reasonable reliance defense because the Giovacchinis failed to provide
- 110 -
[*110] Messrs. Kuckenmeister and Johnson with the information that was needed to
accurately report High Meadows’ value.71
With respect to the first prong of the Neonatology test, we conclude that the
estate has established that Messrs. Kuckenmeister and Johnson were competent
professionals who had sufficient expertise to justify reliance. See Neonatology
Assocs., P.A. v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. at 99; see also Boyle, 469 U.S. at 250-
251.
With respect to the second prong of the Neonatology test, we are satisfied
that the evidence of record reflects that Messrs. Kuckenmeister and Johnson were
provided the information that they needed to accurately and appropriately advise the
family as to High Meadows’ value. Mr. Kuckenmeister testified that the
Giovacchinis were always forthcoming, never misstated anything, and provided him
with sufficient information to prepare the returns. Mr. Kuckenmeister was
particularly well informed and knowledgeable about High Meadows as the result of
his extensive earlier work for the family and his involvement in the June 27,
71
Concerning the penalty relating to the gift tax, respondent asserts that the
Giovacchinis failed to inform Mr. Kuckenmeister of a $7 million offer from Mr.
Merrill for High Meadows that they had received in February 2001. We have
previously concluded that this “offer” was without substance and immaterial. See
supra note 8.
- 111 -
[*111] 2000, sale of a 50% interest in High Meadows to HM6. The estate has
satisfied the second prong of the Neonatology test.
Turning to the third prong of the Neonatology test, we conclude that the
estate has demonstrated good faith reliance on the advice of Messrs. Kuckenmeister
and Johnson. The issue in this case involves the tax consequences that flow from
the valuation of a unique property in a unique location that is very difficult to value.
The Giovacchinis had no tax expertise and relied on their advisers for the
preparation of the estate and gift tax returns.72 Mr. Kuckenmeister prepared the
estate and gift tax returns. He was never instructed by the Giovacchinis to take any
particular tax positions. We note also that the valuation reached by USFS and
respondent contain material error further indicating the complexity and extreme
difficulty of the valuation issues confronting the estate and its advisers.
Respondent argues that the estate’s reliance was unreasonable because Mr.
Harrison’s first appraisal put the Giovacchinis, including Ms. Lukumberry and the
72
The Giovacchini’s, including Ms. Lekumberry and the estate, relied on Mr.
Kuckenmeister to file the estate and gift tax returns and on Mr. Johnson to value
High Meadows. They were also advised by an attorney named Andrew Mackenzie.
We will take judicial notice of the State Bar of Nevada’s business records, which
appear to reflect that Mr. Mackenzie was admitted to practice in 1966 and has no
record of discipline.
- 112 -
[*112] estate, on notice that High Meadows was worth at least $26 million. The
parties to the purchase agreement signed the first amendment on June 27, 2002,
which indicated that, for purposes of the proposed ALC transaction, the minimum
fair market value for 1789.33 acres of High Meadows would be $26 million. High
figures were being thrown at the estate but there was no reason to believe that
those figures reflected reality, especially in the light of Mr. Kuckenmeister’s
advice and Mr. Johnson’s valuation report.73 ALC, by its own admission, could
73
Respondent, in the estate tax statutory notice of deficiency, dated August 1,
2005, Form 886A, Explanation of Items, page 2, states:
It is determined there is included in the value of the gross estate a 50-
percent interest in 2,356.33 acres known as High Meadows Property
located in El Dorado County, California rather than 1,789.33 acres as
shown at item 10, schedule G of the estate tax return. It is also
determined the date-of-death fair market value of the decedent’s
interest in this land and the timber growing thereon is $16,059,000
rather than $2,800,000 and $453,117 as shown at items 10 and 11.
The explanation intimates that the estate tax return included only a value for the
1,789.33-acre portion of High Meadows which was sold to ALC and hence to
USFS. Allegedly omitted from the taxable estate was any amount for the retained
566 acres making up the balance of High Meadows at the date of Shirley’s death.
Were that allegation correct, the Court would agree with respondent that the estate
would not have demonstrated good faith as it was well aware of High Meadows’
total size and that 566 acres of the property was not included in the 1,789.33 acres
sold to ALC. The Court concludes, however, that Mr. Johnson’s appraisal of High
Meadows and the estate’s 50% ownership thereof included the entire property
within its $2,800,000 value which was reported as Schedule G, item 10, of the
estate tax return. We note that the $2,800,000 value is ascribed to the entire
(continued...)
- 113 -
[*113] not fund a purchase of High Meadows at anywhere near the $26 million
amount, and any transaction was totally dependent on the identification of another
purchaser by ALC who was willing and able to make a purchase of High Meadows
at a yet to be negotiated price. All ALC held was an option which they themselves
could not afford to exercise. The Giovacchinis and Mr. Kuckenmeister were in the
Court’s view justifiably skeptical that the transaction would ever close. Mr.
Kuckenmeister is not qualified to value real estate, and we question Mr.
Kuckenmeister’s valuation for gift tax purposes using a CPI adjustment to Mr.
Johnson’s 1997 report. Nevertheless, under the circumstances, the Giovacchinis
and the estate were not required to second guess his advice. See Boyle, 469 U.S.
at 251 (“To require the taxpayer to challenge the attorney, to seek a ‘second
opinion,’ or to try to monitor counsel on the provisions of the Code himself would
nullify the very purpose of seeking the advice of a presumed expert in the first
73
(...continued)
“subject property” excluding the separately valued timber. The “subject property”
is defined and identified in Mr. Johnson’s appraisal report as 2,553 ± acres at pages
5, 11, 18, and 19. Those 2,553.96 ± acres at $3,000 to $3,200 per acre result in the
$8,000,000 value assigned to High Meadows (i.e., 2,553 ± x $3,000 = $7,661,880
and 2,553.96 ± x $3,200 = $8,000,000) as the value of the entire property, thus the
estate’s 50% interest in the subject property ($8,000,000 x .50 = $4,000,000) as the
value of the estate’s interest. From this amount, he deducted his determined 30%
fractional interest discount, resulting in a value of $2,800,000 for all of High
Meadows, including the 566-acre retained portion.
- 114 -
[*114] place.”). The estate has, therefore, demonstrated reasonable cause and good
faith for the underpayment. As a result, the estate is not liable for the determined
accuracy-related penalties under section 6662.
The Court has considered all of the estate’s and respondent’s contentions,
arguments, requests, and statements. To the extent not discussed herein, we
conclude that they are meritless, moot, or irrelevant.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.