                             153 T.C. No. 7



                   UNITED STATES TAX COURT



COAL PROPERTY HOLDINGS, LLC, COAL LAND MANAGER, LLC,
           TAX MATTERS PARTNER, Petitioner v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



 Docket No. 27778-16.                         Filed October 28, 2019.



         In 2013 P donated a conservation easement to a qualified or-
 ganization. The easement deed provided that, if the property were
 sold following judicial extinguishment of the easement, the donee
 organization would receive a share of the proceeds, “after the satis-
 faction of prior claims,” determined by a formula. Under the formula,
 the donee’s share was equal to the property’s fair market value
 (FMV) at the time of sale, “minus any increase in value after the date
 of th[e] grant attributable to improvements,” multiplied by a fraction
 specified in sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), Income Tax Regs. Alternative-
 ly, if this formula produced a result “different from” that required by
 the regulation, the deed provided that the donee would receive a share
 of the proceeds as determined by the regulation.

        1. Held: The easement does not satisfy sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6),
 Income Tax Regs., because the portion of the proceeds to which the
 donee is entitled is improperly reduced by (a) amounts paid in satis-
 faction of prior claims against P and (b) amounts inuring to P that are
                                        -2-

      attributable to (i) appreciation in the value of improvements existing
      when the easement was granted plus (ii) the FMV of any improve-
      ments P subsequently made to the property. PBBM-Rose Hill, Ltd. v.
      Commissioner, 900 F.3d 193 (5th Cir. 2018), followed.

             2. Held, further, the alternative calculation of proceeds speci-
      fied in the deed, which is applicable only if the deed’s formula is de-
      termined to be “different from” that required by the regulation, con-
      stitutes a “condition subsequent” saving clause that will not be judi-
      cially enforced. Belk v. Commissioner, 774 F.3d 221, 225 (4th Cir.
      2014), aff’g 140 T.C. 1 (2013), followed.

             3. Held, further, R properly disallowed in its entirety the char-
      itable contribution deduction claimed by P because the conservation
      purpose of the easement was not “protected in perpetuity” as required
      by I.R.C. sec. 170(h)(5)(A).



      John P. Barrie, William G. Driggers, and Jerome A. Breed, for petitioner.

      Sergio Garcia-Pages, Andrew M. Titkin, Michelle M. Robles, and Timothy

A. Sloane, for respondent.



                                     OPINION


      LAUBER, Judge: In September 2013 Coal Property Holdings, LLC (Coal

Holdings), acquired 3,713 acres of land in Tennessee that had been subject to sur-

face mining during the last century. Three weeks later an entity owned by an

investor acquired a 99% interest in Coal Holdings for $32.5 million. Three days
                                        -3-

later Coal Holdings donated a conservation easement over the property to a

Tennessee land trust. On its Federal income tax return for 2013 Coal Holdings

claimed for this donation a charitable contribution deduction of $155.5 million.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) issued Coal Holdings’ tax mat-

ters partner (TMP or petitioner) a notice of final partnership administrative adjust-

ment (FPAA) that disallowed the deduction in full. The TMP timely petitioned

this Court for review.

      Respondent has filed a motion for partial summary judgment urging three

alternative grounds for denying the claimed deduction. At this stage of the case

we find it necessary to address only one of these theories, namely, that the ease-

ment does not meet the requirements for a charitable contribution deduction be-

cause the conservation purpose was not “protected in perpetuity.” See sec.

170(h)(5)(A).1 That is because the charitable grantee was not absolutely entitled

to a proportionate share of the proceeds in the event the property was sold follow-

ing a judicial extinguishment of the easement. See Carroll v. Commissioner, 146




      1
        Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) in effect for the year at issue, and all Rule references are to
the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round most monetary amounts
to the nearest dollar.
                                        -4-

T.C. 196, 212 (2016); sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6), Income Tax Regs. We will grant

respondent’s motion for partial summary judgment on this ground.

                                    Background

      There is no dispute as to the following facts, which are drawn from the par-

ties’ motion papers and the attached declarations and exhibits. Coal Holdings had

its principal place of business in Georgia when the petition was filed.

A.    The Property

      This case involves a 3,713-acre tract of land in Campbell County, Tennes-

see (Property). Although not actively mined within the last 25 years, the Property

during the previous century had been periodically subject to surface mining for

coal. More recently the Property has been partially reclaimed by force of nature.

      Lindsay Land, LLC (Lindsay Land), acquired the Property by capital contri-

bution in 1995. In 2001 Lindsay Land executed an oil and gas lease (Lease) with

a pair of lessees. The lessees contracted to pay Lindsay Land a one-eighth royalty

on oil or gas extracted from the Property, with the Lease to remain in effect so

long “as any crudes are produced * * * or operations for drilling are continued.”

The Lease provided that the lessees’ rights would not be affected by Lindsay

Land’s transfer of its interest in the Property or in the Lease. Twenty natural gas
                                        -5-

wells were drilled on the Property pursuant to the Lease, and 14 were still operat-

ing when the conservation easement was granted.

      In November 2012 Lindsay Land entered into an agreement with Edward

Goodman, the owner of an adjacent property (Goodman Property). This agree-

ment was executed to enable Lindsay Land to “enter the Goodman Property for the

purpose of (i) extracting coal from the subsurface of the * * * Property using

current mineable techniques and facilities that will be located on the Goodman

Property, and (ii) transporting such coal across the Goodman Property.” In ex-

change Lindsay Land agreed to pay a “wheelage fee” for the right to transport coal

across the Goodman Property and “[a] royalty on any marketable coal extracted by

Lindsay” in this manner.

B.    Ownership Change

      In September 2012 articles of organization were filed for LCV Fund XII,

LLC (LCV Fund XII), a Georgia limited liability company. Paul E. Viera, Jr., an

investor, then acquired a 99.99% interest in LCV Fund XII. Through Green Zone

Investments, LLC, Viera made a capital contribution of $40,348,500 to LCV

Fund XII.

      In December 2012 articles of organization were filed for Coal Holdings,

which elected to be treated as a partnership for Federal income tax purposes. The
                                         -6-

partnership was initially owned 99.99% by Lindsay Land and Lindsay Mining

Manager, LLC (Lindsay Manager), of which Lindsay Land was initially the sole

member. On September 20, 2013, Lindsay Land executed a quitclaim deed trans-

ferring all its interest in the Property to Coal Holdings.

      On October 14, 2013, a purchase and sale agreement was executed among

Lindsay Land, Lindsay Manager, and LCV Fund XII. When the dust cleared,

LCV Fund XII ended up owning a 98.99% interest in the capital and profits of

Coal Holdings in exchange for a payment of $32,522,740.2 Three days later, on

October 17, 2013, Coal Holdings conveyed an open space conservation easement

over the Property to Foothills Land Conservancy (Conservancy), a tax-exempt

organization under section 501(a) and (c)(3) and a “qualified organization” for

purposes of section 170(h)(3). The deed was recorded the next day.

C.    The Easement Deed

      1.     Mining-Related Provisions

      The Conservation Easement and Declaration of Restrictive Covenants

(Easement Deed) states that its interpretation is governed by Tennessee law. The

13th “whereas” clause recites that the easement “would prevent any and all surface


      2
      Respondent represents that he has not verified this payment but assumes for
purposes of this motion that it was made.
                                         -7-

mining on the Property in perpetuity, thus allowing the land to continue to recover

from the mining that took place periodically * * * during the last 100 years.” It

recites that “Mountaintop Mining-Valley Fill techniques”--a form of surface

mining--“are known to be highly destructive to both environment and human

health” and that a “conservation easement would ensure that such destructive

mining techniques would never occur on the Property.”

      The 14th “whereas” clause recites that a conservation easement would

provide “a glimpse into the long-term effects of surface mining.” Section 4.10

reserves to the grantor the right to “allow the Property to be used for scientific

research on the natural reclamation of strip mining areas.” The Property is

described as “a good candidate” for such study “because there cannot be any

subsequent surface mining on the Property.”

      Section 3.3 of the Easement Deed prohibits “[t]he filling, excavating, dredg-

ing, surface mining (including mining for coal), drilling, or any removal of * * *

minerals * * * from the property.” “No surface mining of any kind, particularly

any surface mining in violation of * * * section 170(h)(5), shall be permitted.”

Section 170(h)(5)(B)(i) generally provides that a conservation purpose shall not be

treated as protected in perpetuity “if at any time there may be extraction or remov-

al of minerals by any surface mining method.”
                                        -8-

      Section 3.3 of the Easement Deed specifies two exceptions to this general

ban on mineral extraction. First, it permits “the maintenance and use of natural

gas wells pursuant to the terms of the [L]ease currently in place.” Second, “[t]o

the extent * * * [Coal Holdings] owns the mineral rights with respect to the

Property,” it allows the “exploration for, or development and extraction of,

minerals * * * by any mining method,” unless “in the reasonable discretion of

Grantee” such activity “would significantly impair or interfere with * * * the

Conservation Purposes of this Easement.”

      Section 4.11 notes that “[t]here are currently several natural gas wells on the

Property as well as two [cell phone] communication towers.” It provides that

“those uses will continue, subject to the terms and conditions of the documents

establishing such uses.” Coal Holdings commits to making reasonable efforts to

ensure that the lessees conduct their operations “so as to prevent any damage to

the timber, forest products, and other [conservation] interests.”

      2.     Judicial Extinguishment Provisions

      If circumstances should arise in the future that render the conservation pur-

poses impossible to accomplish, section 9.1 of the Easement Deed states that the

easement “can only be terminated or extinguished * * * by judicial proceedings in

a court of competent jurisdiction.” If the Property is sold following such judicial
                                         -9-

action, “[t]he amount of the proceeds to which the Grantee shall be entitled, after

the satisfaction of prior claims, * * * shall be the stipulated fair market value of

this Easement * * * as determined in accordance with Section 9.2 or * * *

[s]ection 1.170A-14, [Income Tax Regs.,] if different from Section 9.2.” In the

event of a condemnation, the grantee is likewise entitled to receive a share of the

proceeds as determined by “the ratio set forth in Section 9.2.”

      Section 9.2 specifies how the fair market value of the easement shall be de-

termined for this purpose:

      This Easement constitutes a real property interest immediately vested
      in Grantee, which * * * the parties stipulate to have a fair market val-
      ue determined by multiplying (a) the fair market value of the Property
      unencumbered by this Easement (minus any increase in value after
      the date of this grant attributable to improvements) by (b) a fraction,
      the numerator of which is the value of this Easement at the time of the
      grant and the denominator of which is the value of the Property with-
      out deduction of the value of this Easement at the time of this grant.
      * * * For purposes of this Section, the ratio of the value of this Ease-
      ment to the value of the Property unencumbered by this Easement
      shall remain constant.[] It is intended that this Section 9.2 be
      interpreted to adhere to and be consistent with * * * [section] 1.170A-
      14(g)(6)(ii)[, Income Tax Regs].

      When the easement was granted, the improvements to the Property included

20 natural gas wells, two cell phone towers, various roads, and various electricity

installations. Section 4.4 of the Easement Deed reserves to Coal Holdings the

right to provide utilities to any permitted structure through underground lines, pro-
                                        - 10 -

vided that “any utilities supplied to the structures located on the Property at the

time of this Easement by overhead lines shall be permitted to remain in place.”

Section 4.14 reserves to Coal Holdings the right “to install and maintain roads

and/or driveways for vehicular access to areas of the Property on which the exist-

ing and additional structures and related ancillary improvements are and may be

constructed.”

D.    Coal Holdings’ Tax Return

      Coal Holdings timely filed Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income,

for its taxable year ending December 31, 2013. On that return it claimed a chari-

table contribution deduction of $155.5 million for its donation of the easement. It

allocated this deduction among its partners in proportion to their respective capital

and profits interests, as follows:

             Coal Land Manager, LLC (.01%)               $15,550
             Lindsay Land (1%)                         1,555,000
             LCV Fund XII (98.99%)                   153,929,450
              Total                                  155,500,000

      Coal Holdings included with its return a copy of an appraisal that relied on

the “before and after method” to value the easement. See sec. 1.170A-14(h)(3)(i)

and (ii), Income Tax Regs. The appraisal concluded that the highest and best use

of the 3,713 acres, unencumbered by the easement, would be “an owner operated
                                       - 11 -

coal mining operation.” It reasoned that the “most viable and reasonable option”

would be a subsurface mine that would access the coal seams through the adjacent

Goodman Property. A technical report appended to the appraisal concluded that,

because most of the Property was “very sparsely populated, the potential social

consequences of the surface effects of underground mining, especially from mine

subsidence, are minimal for room-and-pillar mining.” Employing a discounted

cashflow analysis, the appraisal concluded that the Property had a “before value”

of approximately $160.5 million as a “conceptual mining operation.”3

      In determining the Property’s “after value” the appraisers assumed that “the

restrictions, as imposed by the easement, will not permit any subsequent develop-

ment nor coal mining” on the 3,713 conserved acres. The appraisal accordingly

concluded that the highest and best use of the Property after imposition of the

easement would be for agricultural and recreational purposes. After considering

four regional sales of unencumbered rural property deemed comparable, the ap-

praisers determined a value of $1,300 per acre, which yielded a rounded value of

$5 million for the entire Property. Subtracting the “after” value from the “before”

value, the appraisal determined a value of $155.5 million for the easement.

      3
       For purposes of calculating the “before” and “after” values, the appraisal
ignored income from the natural gas wells because of “the relatively small amount
of income generated.”
                                        - 12 -

      Coal Holdings included with its return Form 8283, Noncash Charitable

Contributions. Form 8283 directs the taxpayer to provide the IRS with certain

information regarding contributions of this sort. When a taxpayer donates prop-

erty (other than publicly traded securities) valued in excess of $5,000, the taxpayer

must provide: (1) a description of the donated property, (2) a brief summary of its

physical condition, (3) its appraised fair market value, (4) the date the property

was acquired by the donor, (5) the manner of acquisition, and (6) the donor’s cost

or adjusted basis. The instructions to Form 8283 state that “[i]f you have reason-

able cause for not providing the information * * *, attach an explanation so your

deduction will not automatically be disallowed.”

      In the relevant boxes on the Form 8283, Coal Holdings claimed a deduction

of $155.5 million and reported $5 million as “Donor’s cost or adjusted basis.” In

box 5(e) it stated that it had acquired the Property by “purchase,” whereas it had

actually acquired the Property by contribution. Box 5(d), which directs the tax-

payer to supply the date on which the property was acquired, was left blank.

These omissions were not cured by the supplemental statement that Coal Holdings

appended to the Form 8283. However, the appraisal included with the return re-

cited, in a section captioned “History and Ownership,” that the 3,713 acres “were
                                        - 13 -

conveyed to Coal Property Holdings, LLC by a Quit Claim Deed from Lindsay

Land, LLC, recorded September 23rd, 2013.”

E.    IRS Examination

      The IRS selected Coal Holdings’ 2013 return for examination. On Novem-

ber 4, 2016, the IRS issued an FPAA to Coal Land Manager, LLC, the partner-

ship’s TMP. The FPAA disallowed the charitable contribution deduction in full,

concluding that “it has not been established that all of the requirements of section

170 * * * have been satisfied for the contribution of property.” Alternatively, the

FPAA determined that Coal Holdings had failed to establish “that the fair market

value of the contributed property interest was $155,500,000 as claimed on the

return.” The FPAA determined a 40% accuracy-related penalty under section

6662(h) (applicable in the case of a “gross valuation misstatement”) and in the

alternative a 20% penalty under other provisions of section 6662. Petitioner time-

ly petitioned for readjustment of partnership items under section 6226. See sec.

6226(a), (d).

F.    Questions Presented

      In August 2018 respondent moved for partial summary judgment, and sever-

al rounds of briefing ensued. Respondent urges that the charitable contribution

deduction should be disallowed as a matter of law on three alternative grounds.
                                       - 14 -

He first contends that Coal Holdings failed to “[a]ttach a fully completed appraisal

summary” to its return, as the regulations require. See sec. 1.170A-13(c)(2)(i)(B),

Income Tax Regs. On the Form 8283, Coal Holdings left the “Date acquired by

donor” box blank and (in respondent’s view) gave a misleading description of how

it acquired the Property. Cf. RERI Holdings I, LLC v. Commissioner, 149 T.C. 1,

16-17 (2017) (finding Form 8283 noncompliant because it failed to disclose cost

or adjusted basis), aff’d sub nom. Blau v. Commissioner, 924 F.3d 1261 (D.C. Cir.

2019); Belair Woods, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2018-159 (same).

      Second, respondent contends that the $155.5 million valuation was predicat-

ed on the erroneous assumption that the Easement Deed categorically prohibits all

mining on the Property. Although the Easement Deed prohibits surface mining,

respondent interprets it to allow subsurface mining unless, “in the reasonable dis-

cretion of Grantee,” such activity “would significantly impair or interfere with

* * * the Conservation Purposes.” Because the technical report appended to the

appraisal opines that “the potential social consequences of the surface effects of

underground mining * * * are minimal,” respondent contends that the Conservan-

cy would have no reasonable basis to object to properly conducted subsurface

mining. Asserting that the highest and best use of the Property is thus the same on
                                        - 15 -

a “before” and “after” basis, respondent concludes that petitioner has not estab-

lished for the easement a value greater than zero.

      Third, respondent contends that the conservation purposes are not “protect-

ed in perpetuity,” sec. 170(h)(5)(A), because the Easement Deed fails to comply

with the regulations governing judicial extinguishment. Those regulations provide

that, in the event the easement is extinguished and the property is sold, the charita-

ble grantee must be entitled to a proportionate share of the proceeds, as defined by

formula. Sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6)(i) and (ii), Income Tax Regs. Concluding as we

do that respondent is entitled to summary judgment on this third ground, we find

no need to address his other arguments at this stage of the case.

                                     Discussion

A.    Summary Judgment Standard

      The purpose of summary judgment is to expedite litigation and avoid costly,

unnecessary, and time-consuming trials. See FPL Grp., Inc. & Subs. v. Commis-

sioner, 116 T.C. 73, 74 (2001). We may grant partial summary judgment regard-

ing an issue as to which there is no genuine dispute of material fact and a decision

may be rendered as a matter of law. Rule 121(b); Elec. Arts, Inc. v. Commission-

er, 118 T.C. 226, 238 (2002). The parties agree on all material facts relating to

whether the Easement Deed complies with the judicial extinguishment provisions
                                        - 16 -

of the governing regulation. We conclude that this issue is appropriate for sum-

mary adjudication.

B.    Statutory and Regulatory Framework

      Section 170(a)(1) allows a deduction for any charitable contribution made

within the taxable year. If the taxpayer makes a charitable contribution of proper-

ty other than money, the amount of the contribution is generally equal to the fair

market value of the property at the time the gift is made. See sec. 1.170A-1(c)(1),

Income Tax Regs.

      The Code generally restricts a taxpayer’s charitable contribution deduction

for the donation of “an interest in property which consists of less than the taxpay-

er’s entire interest in such property.” Sec. 170(f)(3)(A). But there is an exception

to this rule for a “qualified conservation contribution.” Sec. 170(f)(3)(B)(iii).

This exception applies where: (1) the taxpayer makes a contribution of a “quali-

fied real property interest,” (2) the donee is a “qualified organization,” and (3) the

contribution is “exclusively for conservation purposes.” Sec. 170(h)(1).

      Section 170(h)(5)(A) provides that a contribution will not be treated as be-

ing made exclusively for conservation purposes “unless the conservation purpose

is protected in perpetuity.” The regulations interpreting this provision recognize

that “a subsequent unexpected change in the conditions surrounding the [donated]
                                        - 17 -

property * * * can make impossible or impractical the continued use of the proper-

ty for conservation purposes.” Sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6)(i), Income Tax Regs. De-

spite that possibility, “the conservation purpose can nonetheless be treated as pro-

tected in perpetuity if the restrictions are extinguished by judicial proceeding” and

the easement deed ensures that the charitable donee, following sale of the proper-

ty, will receive a proportionate share of the proceeds and use those proceeds con-

sistently with the conservation purposes underlying the original gift. Ibid. In ef-

fect, the “perpetuity” requirement is deemed satisfied because the sale proceeds

replace the easement as an asset deployed by the donee “exclusively for conser-

vation purposes.” Sec. 170(h)(5)(A).

      Section 1.170A-14(g)(6)(i), Income Tax Regs., provides that the donee must

be entitled to proceeds “determined under paragraph (g)(6)(ii).” That paragraph,

captioned “Proceeds,” provides in part as follows:

      [F]or a deduction to be allowed under this section, at the time of the
      gift the donor must agree that the donation of the perpetual conserva-
      tion restriction gives rise to a property right, immediately vested in
      the donee organization, with a fair market value that is at least equal
      to the proportionate value that the perpetual conservation restriction
      at the time of the gift bears to the value of the property as a whole at
      that time. * * * For purposes of this paragraph * * * , that proportion-
      ate value of the donee’s property rights shall remain constant. Ac-
      cordingly, when a change in conditions gives rise to the extinguish-
      ment of a perpetual conservation restriction under paragraph (g)(6)(i)
      of this section, the donee organization, on a subsequent sale, ex-
                                        - 18 -

      change, or involuntary conversion of the subject property, must be
      entitled to a portion of the proceeds at least equal to that proportion-
      ate value of the perpetual conservation restriction, unless state law
      provides that the donor is entitled to the full proceeds * * *

In this case neither party contends that Coal Holdings would be entitled to the full

proceeds under applicable State law.

      The courts have described this regulation as creating “a single--and exceed-

ingly narrow--exception to the requirement that a conservation easement impose a

perpetual use restriction” on real property. Belk v. Commissioner, 774 F.3d 221,

225 (4th Cir. 2014), aff’g 140 T.C. 1 (2013). The requirements of this regulation

“are strictly construed.” Carroll, 146 T.C. at 212. If the charitable grantee “is not

absolutely entitled to a proportionate share of extinguishment proceeds, then the

conservation purpose of the contribution is not protected in perpetuity.” Ibid.

      In Carroll we upheld the disallowance of a charitable contribution deduction

where the easement did not satisfy these requirements. As we noted, the regula-

tion requires the grantee’s proportionate share upon extinguishment of a conser-

vation easement to be a percentage determined by a fraction, the numerator of

which is “the fair market value of the conservation easement on the date of the

gift,” and the denominator of which is “the fair market value of the property as a

whole on the date of the gift.” Id. at 216. In Carroll, the easement deed provided
                                        - 19 -

that the numerator would instead be “the deduction for federal income tax pur-

poses allowable by reason of this grant.” Id. at 217. As we explained, the chari-

table contribution deduction allowable could be considerably lower than the fair

market value of the easement--indeed, could be as low as zero--if the IRS disal-

lowed the deduction on grounds unrelated to valuation. See id. at 218 n.13. Thus,

because the charitable grantee was not guaranteed “a proportionate share of

extinguishment proceeds based on the fair market value of the conservation ease-

ment at the time of the gift,” we held that the easement was not a “qualified

conservation contribution” eligible for deduction. Id. at 219.

C.    Analysis

      1.     Satisfaction of Regulatory Requirements

      In Carroll the easement deed failed to satisfy the requirements set forth

above because of a defect in the multiplier--i.e., the fraction used to calculate the

charity’s proportionate share of the proceeds. In this case respondent alleges de-

fects in computation of the multiplicand and the product. These defects may be il-

lustrated by an example.

      Assume that the conservation purposes underlying the easement become im-

possible to achieve, the easement is extinguished in a judicial proceeding, and the

Property is sold on December 31, 2030, for $200 million, a price equal to its then
                                         - 20 -

fair market value. The regulations require that the Conservancy “be entitled to a

portion of the proceeds” that is “at least equal to the proportionate value that the

perpetual conservation restriction at the time of the gift bears to the value of the

property as a whole at that time.” Sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), Income Tax Regs.

      The claimed value of the perpetual conservation restriction at the time of the

gift was $155.5 million, and the value of the Property as a whole at that time was

said to be $160.5 million. Dividing the former by the latter yields a multiplier of

0.96885. Multiplying $200 million by that fraction yields $193,769,470 as the

amount of proceeds that the Conservancy must be guaranteed to receive. See ibid.

      Under the Easement Deed the Conservancy in this scenario could come up

short for two reasons. First, the multiplicand to which the fraction is applied is not

the sale proceeds. Rather, the multiplicand as provided in section 9.2 of the

Easement Deed is “the fair market value of the Property unencumbered by this

Easement”--an amount presumably equivalent to the sale proceeds--“minus any

increase in value after the date of this grant attributable to improvements.”

      On October 17, 2013, when the easement was granted, the improvements to

the Property included 20 natural gas wells, two cell phone towers, various roads,

and various electricity installations. Section 4.4 reserves to Coal Holdings the

right to provide additional utility installations, and section 4.14 reserves to it the
                                        - 21 -

right to “install * * * roads and/or driveways for vehicular access to areas of the

Property on which the existing and additional structures and related ancillary im-

provements are and may be constructed.” The “increase in value * * * attribut-

able to improvements” would thus be the sum of: (1) any appreciation between

October 17, 2013, and December 31, 2030, in the value of the improvements that

existed when the easement was granted, and (2) the fair market value of any new

improvements that Coal Holdings made to the Property during that 17-year period.

      Assume that the overall “increase in value * * * attributable to improve-

ments” is $10 million as of December 31, 2030. Under section 9.2 of the Ease-

ment Deed, that $10 million is subtracted from the sale proceeds (viz., the fair

market value of the property when sold) before the apportionment fraction is ap-

plied. This would yield $184,081,500 as the Conservancy’s tentative share of the

proceeds ($190 million × 0.96885).

      Second, the Conservancy’s tentative share is then adjusted further by sec-

tion 9.1 of the Easement Deed. It provides that “the amount of the proceeds to

which the Grantee shall be entitled * * * shall be the amount determined under

section 9.2,” but only “after the satisfaction of prior claims.” Prior claims against

the sale proceeds might be held by the lessees of the oil and gas wells, by the oper-

ators of the cell phone towers, or by other persons holding claims against Coal
                                        - 22 -

Holdings according to section 4.11 of the Easement Deed (“The rights of those in

possession of those wells and towers predate this Easement.”). Assume that

$3 million is paid on December 31, 2030, to satisfy prior claims. The net proceeds

for the Conservancy would thus be reduced to $181,081,500--about $12.7 million

less than the $193,769,470 that the regulation would dictate, on the facts we have

assumed, to be the amount of proceeds to which the Conservancy must be entitled.

See sec. 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), Income Tax Regs.

      The requirements of this regulation “are strictly construed.” Carroll, 146

T.C. at 212. In this case, as in Carroll, the charitable grantee “is not absolutely

entitled to a proportionate share of * * * [the] proceeds” in the event the Property

is sold following judicial extinguishment of the easement. Ibid. We accordingly

conclude here, as we did there, that the charitable contribution deduction must be

denied in its entirety because “the conservation purpose of the contribution is not

protected in perpetuity.” See ibid.

      This conclusion derives strong support from the recent opinion of the Fifth

Circuit in PBBM-Rose Hill, Ltd. v. Commissioner, 900 F.3d 193, 207 (5th Cir.

2018). The easement deed there provided that the charitable grantee would

receive, in the event of a sale following judicial extinguishment of the easement,

“a defined share of the amount of proceeds remaining” after deduction of selling
                                        - 23 -

expenses and the “amount attributable to improvements constructed upon the

Conservation Area pursuant to” the grantor’s reserved rights. Ibid. The Fifth

Circuit held that the charitable contribution deduction was properly denied

because of noncompliance with the “judicial extinguishment” regulation:

      [T]he plain language [of the regulation] states that upon judicial ex-
      tinguishment, the donee “must be entitled to a portion of the proceeds
      at least equal to * * * [the] proportionate value [as defined in the
      regulation].” * * * The ordinary meaning of “proceeds” is “the total
      amount brought in” * * * . The regulation does not indicate that any
      amount, including that attributable to improvements, may be subtrac-
      ted out. The word “must” clearly mandates that the donee receive at
      least the proportionate value * * * of the “proceeds.” * * * Accord-
      ingly, as * * * [the easement deed] permits the deduction of the value
      of improvements from the proceeds, prior to the donee taking its
      share, the provision fails to meet the requirement set forth in * * *
      [section] 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii)[, Income Tax Regs]. * * * [Id. at 207-
      208; citations omitted.]

      The taxpayers in PBBM-Rose Hill filed a petition for panel reconsideration

and a petition for rehearing en banc. They stated that improvements clauses of the

sort involved in that case appeared in templates for conservation easement deeds

published by the Land Trust Alliance and by many individual land trusts. By

holding such clauses to violate the “judicial extinguishment” regulation, the

panel’s opinion was said to frustrate the legitimate reliance interests of “countless
                                        - 24 -

taxpayers, land trusts, and conservation agencies.”4 Without dissent, the Fifth

Circuit denied both petitions for rehearing on December 11, 2018.

      2.     Petitioner’s Arguments

      Petitioner seems to recognize that one or both of the provisions discussed

above may be problematic under the “judicial extinguishment” regulation. But it

contends that the Easement Deed contains a “Treasury Regulation override” man-

dating that these provisions be interpreted to conform to the regulatory require-

ments as we have construed them. We conclude that the text to which petitioner

refers constitutes a “condition subsequent” saving clause, which we and other

courts have consistently declined to enforce.

      Section 9.1 of the Easement Deed states that the amount of proceeds to

which the Conservancy shall be entitled, “after the satisfaction of prior claims,

* * * shall be the stipulated fair market value of this Easement * * * as determined

in accordance with Section 9.2 or * * * Section 1.170A-14, if different from Sec-


      4
       The Land Trust Alliance and others have advanced similar arguments in
amicus curiae briefs filed in this Court in cases presenting the question we address
here. See, e.g., Red Oak Estates, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 13659-17;
Cottonwood Place, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 14076-17; Belair Woods,
LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 19493-17; Englewood Place, LLC v. Com-
missioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 1560-18; Maple Landing, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C.
Dkt. No. 1996-18; Riverside Place, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 2154-18;
Village at Effingham, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Dkt. No. 2426-18.
                                         - 25 -

tion 9.2” (emphasis added). Section 9.2 states: “It is intended that this Section 9.2

be interpreted to adhere to and be consistent with * * * Section 1.170-14(g)(6)(ii)”

of the regulations. Section 17.2 of the Easement Deed, captioned “Liberal Con-

struction,” states that “this Easement shall be liberally construed in favor of the

grant * * * to qualify as a qualified conservation contribution.”

      We conclude that section 9.1 of the Easement Deed embodies a “condition

subsequent” saving clause because it purports to countermand the plain text of the

Easement Deed in the event of a future adverse occurrence. Section 9.1 requires

that the Conservancy’s share of the proceeds be determined under the formula set

forth in section 9.2, unless that formula is “different from” the requirements of

section 1.170A-14(g)(6), Income Tax Regs. The improvements clause in

section 9.2 grants Coal Holdings valuable property rights; indeed, the value of

those property rights would be $9.7 million on the facts we have hypothesized.

See supra pp. 21-22. The only circumstance in which the regulation could be

determined to require a calculation “different from” section 9.2, in derogation of

Coal Holdings’ property rights, would be if some tribunal, State or Federal,

authoritatively so held. The clear effect of section 9.1 is thus to cancel the literal

requirements of section 9.2 in the event the latter are determined to be
                                         - 26 -

noncompliant. Section 9.1 thus constitutes a “condition subsequent” saving

clause.

      The courts have consistently declined to enforce such provisions. In Belk,

the easement deed permitted the parties, by amending that document, “to swap

land in and out of the Easement.” Belk, 774 F.3d at 223. The Fourth Circuit, af-

firming this Court, held that this right of substitution violated the “granted in per-

petuity” requirement of section 170(h)(2)(C). See id. at 225-227. The taxpayers

sought to rescue their deduction by relying on a saving clause in the easement

deed. It provided that the charitable grantee “shall have no right or power to agree

to any amendments * * * that would result in this Conservation Easement failing

to qualify * * * as a qualified conservation contribution under [s]ection 170(h).”

      The taxpayers in Belk contended that, if the Court of Appeals were to hold

(as it did) that section 170(h)(2)(C) barred substitutions of property, the saving

clause operated to redeem their deduction by precluding the parties from executing

an amendment allowing such substitution. The taxpayers thus argued “that the

savings clause negate[d] a right clearly articulated in the Easement--their right to

substitute property--but only if triggered by an adverse determination by this

court.” Belk, 774 F.3d at 228-229.
                                        - 27 -

      The Fourth Circuit refused to give effect to this provision. “When a savings

clause provides that a future event alters the tax consequences of a conveyance,”

the court explained, “the savings clause imposes a condition subsequent and will

not be enforced.” Id. at 229 (citing Commissioner v. Procter, 142 F.2d 824, 827

(4th Cir. 1944)). The taxpayers attempted to distinguish Procter, noting that the

saving clause in Procter altered the conveyance “following an adverse IRS deter-

mination or court judgment,” whereas the saving clause in Belk “d[id] not express-

ly invoke the IRS or a court.” Ibid. The Fourth Circuit found this “a distinction

without a difference.” Ibid. Because the saving clause purported to alter contract

rights, it was triggered by “a determination that c[ould] only be made by either the

IRS or a court.” Id. at 229-230.

      The Fourth Circuit likewise rejected the taxpayers’ argument that the saving

clause was “simply ‘an interpretive clause’ meant to ensure the ‘overriding inten-

tion’ of the parties that the Easement qualify as a charitable deduction.” Id. at 230.

The court found that there existed “no open interpretive question for the savings

clause to ‘help’ clarify,” since the reserved right to substitute property was “clear

from the face of the Easement.” Ibid. If the taxpayers’ “overriding intent” had

been that the easement qualify under section 170(h), the court suggested, “they

would not have included a provision so clearly at odds with the language of §
                                       - 28 -

170(h)(2)(C).” Id. at 230. The court refused to apply the saving clause as the

taxpayers wished, ruling that to do so would be “sanctioning the very same

‘trifling with the judicial process’” that the court had previously condemned. Ibid.

(quoting Procter, 142 F.2d at 827).

      We reached a similar conclusion in Palmolive Bldg. Inv’rs, LLC v. Com-

missioner, 149 T.C. 380 (2017). That case, like this one, involved a provision in

an easement deed governing distribution of proceeds following judicial exting-

uishment of the use restriction. We held that the provision at issue violated the

“protected in perpetuity” requirement of section 170(h)(5)(A) because banks

holding mortgages against the conserved property were given preferential claims--

prior to the lien held by the grantee organization--to any proceeds received from

condemnation. See id. at 398 (citing section 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), Income Tax

Regs.).

      The taxpayer argued that, if we were to find this provision not in compli-

ance with the regulation, the easement deed contained “a saving clause that would

apply to retroactively reform the Deed to comply with the regulations.” Id. at 404.

The paragraph governing judicial extinguishment in that case stated:

      It is the intention of Grantor that the provisions of this Paragraph 19
      comply with all applicable requirements of the Income Tax Regula-
      tions governing qualified conservation contributions, particularly
                                        - 29 -

      * * * the requirements of Section 1.170A-14(g)(6) thereof. In the
      event that any of the provisions of this Paragraph 19 conflict or are
      inconsistent with * * * such Regulations, they shall be deemed to be
      amended to the extent necessary to eliminate such conflict or
      inconsistency and to bring them into full compliance with such
      regulations * * * [Id. at 387; emphasis omitted.]

      We held that the taxpayer’s “attempted use of a saving clause to reform the

Deed to comply with the regulation [wa]s not valid.” Id. at 405. “[W]hen a sav-

ings clause provides that a future event alters the tax consequences of a convey-

ance, the savings clause imposes a condition subsequent and will not be enforced.”

Ibid. (quoting Belk, 774 F.3d at 229); see Estate of Christiansen v. Commissioner,

130 T.C. 1, 13 (2008) (finding a contingent disclaimer ineffective because it

“depend[ed] for * * * [its] effectiveness on a condition subsequent”), aff’d, 586

F.3d 1061 (8th Cir. 2009).

      Petitioner urges that the text on which it relies does not constitute an imper-

missible saving clause but rather sets forth a “permitted interpretation provision.”

Petitioner urges that section 1.170A-14(g)(6), Income Tax Regs., is ambiguous--or

at least was ambiguous when the Easement Deed was executed in 2013--because a

2008 IRS private letter ruling appeared to permit adjustment of post-judicial-

extinguishment proceeds to reflect appreciation in the value of improvements. See

Priv. Ltr. Rul. 200836014 (June 3, 2008). According to petitioner, section 9.1 and
                                         - 30 -

9.2 of the Easement Deed took account of this regulatory ambiguity and supplied

an “interpretation directive” designed to ensure that the Conservancy would

receive in all events whatever proceeds the regulation was ultimately interpreted to

mandate.

      We are not persuaded. The taxpayer in PBBM-Rose Hill brought the same

IRS private letter ruling to the Fifth Circuit’s attention, but that court paid no heed

to it, finding the regulation unambiguous on its face. See PBBM-Rose Hill, 900

F.3d at 208. The Fourth Circuit in Belk similarly found the property substitution

provision of the easement deed to be unambiguous. It accordingly rejected the

taxpayer’s effort to characterize the saving clause as “simply ‘an interpretive

clause’ meant to ensure the ‘overriding intention’ of the parties” that the easement

qualify for a tax deduction. Belk, 774 F.3d at 230.

      We agree with both Courts of Appeals. Section 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), In-

come Tax Regs., plainly requires that the charitable grantee be guaranteed to re-

ceive, upon a sale following judicial extinguishment of the easement, its full pro-

portionate share of the sale proceeds. Section 9.2 of the Easement Deed violates

this requirement by providing that Coal Holdings will receive all of the sale pro-

ceeds to the extent those proceeds are attributable to appreciation in the value of

improvements. This provision creates valuable property rights in Coal Holdings.
                                        - 31 -

      The saving clause purports to override section 9.2’s plain terms, in deroga-

tion of Coal Holdings’ property rights, in the event the requirements of the

governing regulation are determined to be “different from” those of section 9.2.

Contrary to petitioner’s view, this text cannot be characterized as an “interpreta-

tion directive” or an “interpretational aid” because there is nothing that needs in-

terpretation; the terms of section 9.2 are clear and unambiguous. As in Belk, there

is “no open interpretive question for the savings clause to ‘help’ clarify.” Belk,

774 F.3d at 230. Rather than interpreting an ambiguous provision, the text to

which petitioner refers purports to countermand the effect of an unambiguous

provision, but only in the event of an adverse future occurrence. This is a classic

“condition subsequent” saving clause, and we decline to give it effect. See Pal-

molive Bldg. Inv’rs, LLC, 149 T.C. at 405; cf. Estate of Cline v. Commissioner,

T.C. Memo. 1982-90, 43 T.C.M. (CCH) 607, 609-610 (1982) (giving effect to a

provision that clarified “ambiguous * * * language in a poorly drafted prenuptial

agreement,” as opposed to being “a savings clause that would undertake to change

the property interests otherwise created”).

      Finally, even if the saving clause were thought capable of overriding the

improvements clause of section 9.2, petitioner faces a distinct problem in section

9.1. It provides that “[t]he amount of the proceeds to which the Grantee shall be
                                          - 32 -

entitled, after the satisfaction of prior claims, * * * shall be the stipulated fair

market value of this Easement,” as determined under section 9.2 or (if different)

the governing regulation. The Conservancy’s share of the proceeds would thus be

reduced by any amounts paid in satisfaction of prior claims--e.g., claims against

Coal Holdings by the oil and gas lessees or cell tower operators--even if the ease-

ment’s fair market value were determined exactly as the regulation requires. The

Easement Deed thus manifests the same defect as the easement deed in Palmolive,

where banks holding mortgages against the conserved property were granted pre-

ferential claims--before the lien held by the grantee organization--to any proceeds

received from condemnation. See Palmolive Bldg. Inv’rs, LLC, 149 T.C. 398.

We held in Palmolive that the conservation purpose for that reason was not “pro-

tected in perpetuity,” sec. 170(h)(5)(A), and the same conclusion would follow

here.5




         5
        Petitioner discerns no fault in the “prior claims” provision, asking rhetori-
cally: “How else would prior claims be addressed?” It is not necessarily unreas-
onable for a deed to provide that prior claims may be paid from sale proceeds.
What is unreasonable, and what violates the “judicial extinguishment” regulation,
is the requirement of section 9.1 that all prior claims be paid out of the Conserv-
ancy’s share of the proceeds, even if those claims represent liabilities of Coal
Holdings.
                            - 33 -

To reflect the foregoing,


                                     An order will be issued granting

                            respondent’s motion for partial summary

                            judgment.
