Appellate Circuit

As Anticipated, 11th Circuit Hurriedly Issue a Federal Tax Case Opinion Which Will Save Judge Jill Pryor from Financial Ruin

So how’s the IRS tax court going to feel with this opinion as the 2 Jill Pryor related cases are about to get underway? It’s an intimidation tactic by Judge Pryor.

LIT COMMENTARY

May 22, 2020

Phone a friend, phone a dem.

That’s the message from 11th Circuit’s Judge Jill Pryor who clearly influenced the addition of a northern star for her upcoming trials with the Tax Court, over a small sum of $18 million dollars or so. More likely is that the rest of the active judges on the 11th Circuit knew LIT would uncover this opinion and decided they did not want any part of the dirty laundry in Jill Pryor’s basket. A wise choice. So with Judge Wilson by her side, as he is on so many cases at the 11th Circuit, and as a fellow democrat, the writing was on the wall after appointment of another democrat judge for this case – as confirmed, the panel majority would prevail and a corrupt opinion would follow.

LIT assumes this was necessary because of the fact that she’s been outed by the Burkes for her own tax cases, alleging she’s guilty of dodging a serious tax liability. The above golf course opinion by the 11th Circuit “doesn’t look good” from an outside perspective because it’s a premeditated PUBLISHED OPINION which she can rely upon – if and when she has to appeal any and all adverse opinions from the Tax Court.

If you’re unfamiliar with the full details of Judge Jill Pryor’s financial non-disclosures and the Burkes revealing audit, you can read all about it on LIT’s page dedicated to the sitting Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Judge. The most recent and second motion to disqualify Judge Jill A. Pryor can be read here.

So yes, now enters N.D. Federal Judge Robert Hinkle, ‘sitting by designation’ and who as you read below, is now bestowed with LIT’s latest federal doctrine; The Hinkle Font Doctrine. This italicized doctrine allows you to literally get away with murder as it adds new and erroneous interpretation of past decisions and as such, overturns precedent, court procedures and lets a chemically toxic golf course which covers over 80 percent of the alleged conservation area, obtain a free tax windfall from the IRS, or in basic terms, you – the tax payer.

How blatantly corrupt is this opinion?

It’s up there with a golf ball after it’s been teed off with a driver by Bubba Watson. And don’t just take our word for it. First there’s the dissent from Judge Grant, who sees this opinion for what it is, protection of another sitting Judge. And then we’ve added two newsworthy opinions from KPMG and a pro-business law firm. The Tax firm are hinting at ‘en banc’ in the most polite manner possible and the law firm gleefully admits its a free pass for this property developer and a huge financial windfall – a mulligan (golf term) is how they termed it.

An intimidation tactic?

So how’s the IRS tax court going to feel with this opinion as the 2 Jill Pryor related cases are about to get underway? LIT’s not sure if you can intimidate the IRS but the judge in the Federal Court must be feeling rather uncomfortable right now. It’s great timing by the Eleventh Circuit and Judge Pryor to leverage that to its maximum, like OJ Simpson’s glove. LIT predicts Judge Pryor will also, like Simpson, get away with murder if nobody of authority intervenes.

HINKLE, ROBERT L.

Democrat

PRYOR, JILL A.

Democrat

WILSON, CHARLES R.

Democrat

GRANT, BRITT C.

Republican

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT

No. 18-14817

Agency No. 4868-15

CHAMPIONS RETREAT GOLF FOUNDERS, LLC, RIVERWOOD LAND, LLC, TAX MATTERS PARTNER,

Petitioners – Appellants,

versus

COMMISSIONER OF IRS,

Respondent -Appellee.

Petition for Review of a Decision of the U.S. Tax Court

(May 13, 2020)

Before WILSON and GRANT, Circuit Judges, and HINKLE, * District Judge.

* Honorable Robert L. Hinkle, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Florida, sitting by designation.

HINKLE, District Judge:

The appellant taxpayer claimed a charitable deduction for donating a conservation easement over property that included a private golf course and undeveloped land. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the deduction, and the Tax Court upheld the decision. The deduction was proper if the donation was made for “the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem,” or was made for “the preservation of open space . . . for the scenic enjoyment of the general public.” I.R.C. 170(h)(4)(A)(ii) & (iii)(I).

Without the golf course, this easement would easily meet these criteria.

Because the Code does not disqualify an easement just because it includes a golf course, we reverse the Tax Court’s decision and remand for determination of the proper amount of the deduction.

I.      Facts and Proceedings

Pollard Land Company bought over 2,000 undeveloped acres along the Savannah River roughly 13 miles north of Augusta, Georgia. In 2002, Pollard conveyed part of the land, 463 acres, to the taxpayer in this action, Champions Retreat Golf Founders, LLC (“Champions”).

Champions built a golf course with three nines—one each designed by Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, and Arnold Palmer. The course opened for play in 2005. It was and still is private—open only to club members and their guests, not the general public.

The golf course occupies roughly two-thirds of the 463 acres. Champions sold 66 homesites on 95 acres on the west side of the course—the side away from the Savannah River. The golf course and homesites are accessible only through a gate that is staffed 24 hours per day.

Roughly 57 acres, consisting primarily of bottomland forests and wetlands, remain undeveloped. This includes riparian land on the Little River, an offshoot of the larger Savannah. Between the Little and Savannah Rivers lies Germain Island. The island consists of both undeveloped land and six holes of the golf course.

The easement property is home to abundant species of birds, some rare, to the regionally declining southern fox squirrel, and to a rare plant species, the denseflower knotweed. Although not itself accessible to the public, the property is readily observable to members of the public who kayak or canoe on the Savannah and Little Rivers.

By 2009, the Champions golf course, like many in the ongoing recession, was struggling financially. Aware of the Tax Court’s recent decision allowing a charitable deduction for a conservation easement over golf course property, see Kiva Dunes Conservation, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-145 (2009), Champions contributed the conservation easement now at issue to the North American Land Trust (“the Trust”) in 2010. The Trust is an entity that holds and enforces conservation easements nationwide with the goal of preserving natural habitats and environmentally sensitive areas. The Trust accepted the easement.

The easement covers 348 acres consisting of the undeveloped land and the golf course, including the driving range, but not including the golf course buildings and parking lot. The easement does not include the homesites.

Champions claimed a charitable deduction for the contribution. As a limited liability company, Champions was able to steer the corresponding tax benefit to persons who, in anticipation of that benefit, made capital contributions, thus shoring up Champions’ financial position. But the Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the deduction. Champions and a related entity filed this action in the Tax Court against the Commissioner. After a trial, the Tax Court upheld the Commissioner’s decision. This appeal followed.

II.   Standard of Review

We review the Tax Court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error. See Gustashaw v. Comm’r, 696 F.3d 1124, 1134 (11th Cir. 2012). “A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if the record lacks substantial evidence to support it, such that our review of the entire evidence leaves us with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” Blohm v. Comm’r, 994 F.2d 1542, 1548 (11th Cir. 1993) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).

III.  Governing Code Provisions

The Internal Revenue Code allows a deduction for a “qualified conservation contribution.” See I.R.C. § 170(f)(3)(B)(iii). A “qualified conservation contribution” is a contribution “(A) of a qualified real property interest, (B) to a qualified organization, (C) exclusively for conservation purposes.” Id. § 170(h)(1).

A “qualified real property interest” includes “a restriction (granted in perpetuity) on the use which may be made of the real property.” Id. § 170(h)(2). The easement Champions conveyed to the Trust meets this requirement; it restricts use of the property in substantial respects and continues in perpetuity. The Commissioner does not contest this.

The Trust is “a qualified organization.” See id. § 170(h)(3) (defining this term). The Commissioner does not contest this.

This leaves only one issue: whether this contribution was made “exclusively for conservation purposes.” The Code defines “conservation purpose” to mean:

the preservation of land areas for outdoor recreation by, or the education of, the general public,

-the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem,

-the preservation of open space (including farmland and forest land) where such preservation is–

-for the scenic enjoyment of the general public, or

-pursuant to a clearly delineated Federal, State, or local governmental conservation policy,

-and will yield a significant public benefit, or the preservation of an historically important land area or a certified historic structure.

Id. § 170(h)(4)(A) (emphasis added).

This case turns on the italicized provisions.

The other provisions do not apply. The land is not available for recreation by or use of the general public. There is no qualifying federal, state, or local government conservation policy that applies to this land; that the county designated the land as greenspace is not enough. This is not historically important land, and there is no certified historic structure on it.

The issues, then, are whether Champions contributed this easement for “the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem,” or for “the preservation of open space . . . for the scenic enjoyment of the general public [that] will yield a significant public benefit.”

IV.   Habitat or Ecosystem

A.    The Regulation

The Internal Revenue Code explicitly requires deductions for charitable contributions—including those for conservation easements—to meet regulations adopted by the Secretary of the Treasury. See I.R.C. § 170(a)(1). The regulation governing conservation easements is 26 C.F.R. § 1.170A-14. The regulation makes more explicit what one might reasonably construe the Code to mean anyway.

The regulation says a contribution “to protect a significant relatively natural habitat in which a fish, wildlife, or plant community, or similar ecosystem normally lives” will meet the Code’s conservation-purpose requirement. Id. § 1.170A-14(d)(3)(i).

For the first time on appeal, Champions takes issue with the word “significant,” asserting this impermissibly departs from the requirement set out in the Code itself. But even without the regulation, the Code would not be construed to apply to a completely trivial habitat—a few commonly occurring ants plainly would not do, nor would many other species not in need of conservation.

Requiring some level of significance thus is unobjectionable. So long as the regulation’s use of this term is not construed to mean more than the Code will support, there is no reason to doubt the regulation’s validity. Perhaps this is why the regulation has been applied for many years without any challenge to its validity, and why even Champions did not raise this issue in the Tax Court.

The regulation says qualifying significant habitats and ecosystems “include, but are not limited to,” those of three kinds. Two are relevant here.

First are “habitats for rare, endangered, or threatened species of animal, fish, or plants.” Id. § 1.170A-14(d)(3)(ii). Neither the Tax Court nor the parties assert that “rare,” “endangered,” and “threatened” have, for this purpose, a precise, technical meaning; instead, the terms distinguish species that reasonably warrant protection, on the one hand, from commonly occurring species for which the loss of habitat is not of significant concern. That the regulation explicitly says qualifying habitats are “not limited to” the listed categories supports this flexible reading.

Second are “natural areas which are included in, or which contribute to, the ecological viability of a local, state, or national park, nature preserve, wildlife refuge, wilderness area, or other similar conservation area.” Id. The Champions easement runs to the bank of the Savannah River, and on the other side, 700 feet away, is a large national forest.

The third category listed in the regulation covers “natural areas that represent high quality examples of a terrestrial community or aquatic community, such as islands that are undeveloped or not intensely developed where the coastal ecosystem is relatively intact.” Id. As Champions acknowledges, this provision does not apply here.

The upshot is this.

The Code allows a deduction for an easement contributed for “the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem.” Under this provision and the implementing regulation, Champions is entitled to a deduction if its easement includes habitat for “rare, endangered, or threatened species of animal, fish, or plants,” or if the easement contributes to the “ecological viability” of the adjacent national forest.

These are the standards that apply despite the presence of a golf course on part of the property. The Code requires only a “relatively natural habitat . . . or similar ecosystem,” not that the land itself be relatively natural. I.R.C. 170(h)(4)(A)(ii). The regulation, in turn, says a deduction is available even if the land “has been altered to some extent by human activity,” so long as “the fish, wildlife, or plants continue to exist there in a relatively natural state.” 26 C.F.R. 1.170A-14(d)(3)(i).

The regulation gives as an example the construction of a dam or dike and resulting lake or pond, but neither the Code nor the regulation excludes otherwise-qualifying property with alterations, including, as relevant here, a golf course. Kiva Dunes is of limited precedential value—the Commissioner did not oppose the deduction there—but it is consistent, at least, with the view that conservation easements across golf courses qualify for a deduction if they meet the otherwise-applicable standards. See also PBBM-Rose Hill, Ltd. v. Comm’r, 900 F.3d 193, 204–05, 209 (5th Cir. 2018) (holding that an easement over a golf course served a conservation purpose but was not deductible because it was not made in perpetuity).

B.    Rare, Endangered, or Threatened Species

The record establishes without genuine dispute that this property is home to abundant species of birds, some rare, to the regionally declining southern fox squirrel, and to a rare plant species, the denseflower knotweed. This is established by the testimony of three experts—two called by Champions and one by the Commissioner—who generally agreed on the underlying facts. The Tax Court explicitly credited the testimony of all three.

One expert observed 61 species of birds on the property, including 26 that are listed as a priority by one or more conservation organizations. These included the eastern whip-poor-will, brown-headed nuthatch, red-headed woodpecker, and prothonotary warbler. The expert saw a wood duck with fledglings, suggesting on- site breeding. The Commissioner’s expert saw a wood stork—a federally listed endangered species—though he opined it was just passing through.

The parties have analyzed in detail the placement of the various bird species on conservation priority lists compiled by organizations with expertise in this field. Of critical importance here, though, is not precisely which bird ranks precisely where on one or more of these lists, but the more general question whether the presence of these many species, including some of substantial conservation concern, shows that the property is a significant habitat for “rare, endangered, or threatened species.” It plainly does.

For what it’s worth, the priority lists were compiled by Partners In Flight (“PIF”), the Atlantic Coast Joint Venture (“ACJV”), the United States North American Conservation Initiative Committee (whose list is denominated and referred to here as the “Watch List”), and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (whose list is denominated and referred to here as “Birds of Conservation Concern”). The priority designations of the property’s various birds include the following: eastern whip-poor-will (ACJV highest priority level, PIF needing management attention, Watch List yellow, Fish and Wildlife Service Birds of Conservation Concern), brown-headed nuthatch (ACJV high priority, PIF planning and responsibility, Fish and Wildlife Service Birds of Conservation Concern), red- headed woodpecker (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility, Watch List yellow), prothonotary warbler (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility, Watch List yellow), eastern wood pe-wee (ACJV moderate, PIF management attention), Carolina chickadee (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility), eastern kingbird (ACJV moderate, PIF management attention), yellow-billed cuckoo (ACJV moderate, PIF management attention), Acadian flycatcher (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility), blue grosbeak (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility), brown thrasher (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility), indigo bunting (ACJV moderate, PIF planning and responsibility), barn swallow (PIF management attention), belting kingfisher (PIF management attention), northern flicker (PIF management attention), blue-gray gnatcatcher (PIF planning and responsibility), Carolina wren (PIF planning and responsibility), downy woodpecker (PIF planning and responsibility), eastern bluebird (PIF planning and responsibility), pine warbler (PIF planning and responsibility), red- bellied woodpecker (PIF planning and responsibility), ruby-throated hummingbird (PIF planning and responsibility), tufted titmouse (PIF planning and responsibility), yellow-throated vireo (PIF planning and responsibility), and eastern Phoebe (PIF planning and responsibility).

The Commissioner’s expert takes no issue with the proposition that many birds use the property including some that are worthy of protection. He says, though, that the habitat itself is not relatively natural. For this he focuses on the fairways and greens—they consist of non-native bermuda and bent grass—not the undeveloped portion of the easement, which is, at least for the most part, quite natural.

What matters under the Code and regulation is not so much whether all the land is natural, but whether the habitat is natural. Indeed, the regulation says it is not disqualifying that the land has been altered, so long as “the fish, wildlife, or plants continue to exist there in a relatively natural state.” 26 C.F.R. § 1.170A- 14(d)(3)(i). The Commissioner’s expert noted nothing unnatural about these birds’ existence; they apparently find the habitat quite suitable.

Champions also cites the property’s population of southern fox squirrels—a species for which the habitat, including the golf course, is hospitable. The species is not threatened but has suffered declines caused by diminishing habitat, due in part to forest-management practices. The Commissioner discounts the importance of the species, noting that Georgia has a six-month season in which hunters may take up to 12 squirrels per day. But that is not dispositive of the question whether providing the squirrels a habitat is a conservation purpose. That Georgia chooses not to protect the species hardly seems a reason to deny whatever protection is available under federal law. Protecting fox squirrels would not alone be sufficient to establish a conservation purpose, but they add to the weight on Champions’ side of the scale.

Finally, while the golf course itself is comprised primarily of non-native grasses, the remainder of the easement property is natural and includes a rare species of plant, the denseflower knotweed. The Commissioner has offered no theory under which protecting the denseflower knotweed is not an appropriate conservation purpose.

It is true, as the Commissioner notes, that the knotweed exists on only a limited proportion of the easement—perhaps 7%, with the capacity to occupy up to 17%. But the knotweed that exists, whatever its proportion, is worthy of protection. Full coverage of a species is not required and might even cut the other way; one might reasonably doubt that land consisting entirely of knotweed would provide a relatively natural habitat or would support the many bird species present on this land.

The Commissioner also says part of the golf course drains toward the bottomland where the knotweed is located and that the knotweed thus may suffer harm from the chemicals used on the course. Perhaps so. But the easement explicitly requires Champions to follow the best environmental practices prevailing in the golf industry—an obligation the Trust is entitled to enforce. Moreover, the relevant question is not so much whether chemicals from the course may harm the knotweed, but whether the easement improves the chance that the knotweed will be preserved. The answer is yes for two reasons: first, because the obligation to use best environmental practices would not exist without the easement; and second, because unrestrained development of the land where the knotweed is located would pose a greater risk than the golf course.

Despite the abundant bird species, including many of conservation concern, the declining southern fox squirrels, and the rare denseflower knotweed, the Tax Court said Champions had not established the required conservation purpose. To reach this result, the court considered, or at least discussed in its opinion, only birds seen by both Champions experts—ignoring any bird seen by only one Champions expert, even if the bird was also seen by the Commissioner’s expert.

The court did this despite explicitly crediting the testimony of both Champions experts. The court offered no explanation for this approach, and we can conceive of none.

The court also ignored a bird that was heard but not seen. The court did not explain how a bird could be heard if not present on or at least near the property.

The Tax Court’s implicit finding that the only birds on the property were those seen by both Champions experts is clearly erroneous. More importantly, the Tax Court’s conclusion that Champions did not contribute this easement “for the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem”—a conclusion based in part on the clearly erroneous finding of fact— is wrong as a matter of law.

Were it not for the presence of a golf course on part of this property, the assertion that contributing an easement over property with this array of species does not qualify as a conservation purpose would be a nonstarter.

C.    Support of the National Forest

The easement lies across the Savannah River from a large national forest.

The river is 700 feet wide. Birds sometimes fly farther than that. Champions asserts the easement “contributes to . . . the ecological viability” of the forest—an assertion that, if true, would show a conservation purpose. But the Commissioner’s expert testified, and the Tax Court found, that the easement does not support the forest’s ecological viability. The finding is not clearly erroneous.

The presence of the national forest across the river is relevant—it supports the species that live on the easement, as the Commissioner’s expert acknowledges, and it contributes to the scenic enjoyment from, and public interest in, preventing development of the easement property. But contributing to the ecological viability of the forest, standing alone, does not establish a conservation purpose.

V.      Scenic Enjoyment

A.    The Regulation

The Internal Revenue Code lists as a qualifying conservation purpose “the preservation of open space . . . for the scenic enjoyment of the general public.”

I.R.C. § 170(h)(4)(A)(iii). The corresponding regulation says this means, as relevant here, “to preserve open space (including farmland and forest land)

. . . [f]or the scenic enjoyment of the general public,” so long as the contribution “will yield a significant public benefit.” 26 C.F.R. § 1.170A-14(d)(4)(i) & (d)(4)(i)(B).

The regulation continues: “Preservation of land may be for the scenic enjoyment of the general public if development of the property would impair the scenic character of the local rural or urban landscape or would interfere with a scenic panorama that can be enjoyed from a park, nature preserve, road, waterbody, trail, or historic structure or land area, and such area or transportation way is open to, or utilized by, the public.” Id. § 1.170A-14(d)(4)(ii) (emphasis added).

The regulation says scenic enjoyment must be evaluated based on all the circumstances and with flexibility. Id. The regulation includes a nonexclusive list of highly abstract factors that may inform the analysis but provide little guidance here. Id. More specifically, the regulation says the general public need only have visual, not physical, access to or across the property. Id. § 1.170A-14(d)(4)(ii)(B). The “entire property” need not be “visible to the public,” but the public-benefit requirement may not be met “if only a small portion of the property is visible to the public.” Id.

B.    View from the Rivers

The record establishes without dispute that members of the public can and do canoe and kayak on the Savannah River alongside the easement and on the Little River as it runs through the easement. The view from the rivers includes the easement’s natural areas as well as the golf course. The record includes a video illustrating the stark difference in the views of the easement property, on the one hand, and the property farther down the Savannah River, on the other. The downriver property includes considerable development—development that few canoers or kayakers would find scenic.

One could perhaps debate whether a golf course provides scenic enjoyment.

But the natural areas covered by this easement surely do. And the golf course, whose most prominent feature visible from a canoe or kayak on the river is the trees, detracts only a little, if at all. When compared to a condominium building or even private homes, the easement property qualifies as open space providing scenic enjoyment. And preserving relatively natural views along these two rivers— views free of development on the other side as well because of the national forest—serves a public interest.

In asserting the contrary, the Commissioner says the rivers’ banks are from three to ten feet high, as if this somehow eliminates the opportunity for scenic enjoyment. The Tax Court took the same approach. But trees, on the one hand, and condos or other buildings, on the other hand, can be seen from a canoe or kayak, even when a river’s banks are ten feet high. Indeed, if a ten-foot bank obscures anything, it is the fairways and greens and other non-natural features of a golf course, not the trees. From a kayak on a river with a ten-foot bank, the flat parts of a golf course look just like open land. The notion that the banks somehow prevent scenic enjoyment is a makeweight.

Were it not for the presence of a golf course on part of this property, the assertion that preserving open space alongside rivers with three- to ten-foot banks cannot be “for the scenic enjoyment of the general public” and provide a public benefit would be a nonstarter.

VI.   Conclusion

The bottom line is this: the record establishes that Champions is entitled to a deduction in the proper amount. Because it upheld the Commissioner’s disallowance of the deduction, the Tax Court did not address the proper amount, and we express no opinion on it. That will be an issue for the Tax Court on remand.

The Tax Court’s decision is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

GRANT, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:

I join the majority in holding that Champions should receive a deduction for donating its easement for conservation purposes. See I.R.C. § 170(h)(1)(C). The easement preserves an “open space” for the public’s “scenic enjoyment,” and “will yield a significant public benefit.” Id. § 170(h)(4)(A)(iii). Two publicly accessible rivers cut through and around the easement—providing views of the grassy golf course, trees, and shrubbery that are far more scenic than views of the developed properties downstream.

But I must part ways with the majority’s decision to reach an issue not argued below and with its separate conclusion that the easement is necessarily a “relatively natural habitat.” Id. § 170(h)(4)(A)(ii).

First, I would not reach Champions’ new argument that the governing statute and regulation conflict. “As a general rule, a taxpayer may not address an issue on appeal which it has not first presented to the Tax Court.” Grant v. Comm’r, 103 F.3d 948, 952 (11th Cir. 1996).

To be sure, our cases have also “identified certain exceptional circumstances” where it might be appropriate to use our discretion and “deviate from this rule of practice.”  Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Fernandez, 741 F.2d 355, 360 (11th Cir. 1984).

Yet the majority opinion leapfrogs any consideration of our normal rule or its exceptions; instead, the opinion gets right to the merits of an argument first raised on appeal. Doing so signals that we are not terribly committed to the requirement that parties raise arguments below.  That message gets amplified by the fact that we have no compelling reason to decide Champions’ new argument: the opinion already hands Champions the win.

We should not use our discretion to deviate from ordinary practice here.

Second, in my view, Champions’ easement might not be a “relatively natural habitat.” I.R.C. § 170(h)(4)(A)(ii).

The man-made golf course takes up more than 80 percent of the easement.

In making the course, Champions used non-native grasses, one of which requires the use of large fans to keep it cool in the hot Georgia sun. And to maintain the course, Champions pumps anywhere from 70,000 to 600,000 gallons of water a day out of the Little River.

Champions also coats its golf course with chemicals—including fungicide, herbicide, insecticide, algaecide, and fertilizer.

To apply these potent chemicals, Champions’ staff members sometimes need gloves and respirators. The chemicals not only artificially change the habitat, but do so in ways that pose what the tax court called “environmental hazards.”

In fact, Champions designed the golf course to drain into nearby ponds, creeks, and otherwise undisturbed wetlands.

The golf course drains toward the knotweed (a rare plant that Champions says is protected by the easement), and as the majority itself recognizes, “the knotweed thus may suffer harm from the chemicals used on the course.” Maj. Op. at 14.

Although the majority finds comfort in Champions’ pledge to follow the golf industry’s best environmental practices, we have little information about what those practices are, or how they stack up to other standards.

And those standards, whatever they are, hardly define the boundary between easements that can and cannot qualify for a deduction under federal law.

Ultimately, the majority is willing to look past the easement’s unnatural features because of the birds and squirrels living there. The argument has some force, especially because it does appear that the tax court overlooked evidence about the prevalence of these species. But the presence of animals cannot hide that a lot of the easement is highly developed and at least somewhat hazardous to certain species.

And no matter how many animals live on the Champions easement, the reality remains the same: with the chemicals, imported grasses, large fans, artificial drainage, and water pumping, it is not at all clear that the easement amounts to a “relatively natural habitat.” I do not mean to say that a golf course could never qualify; it’s simply not clear that this one does.

As thorny as this “natural habitat” question is, we could spare ourselves the trouble of solving it. After all, we could limit our decision to holding that the easement qualifies for a deduction as an open, scenic space. That is the course I would take. I therefore concur in part and respectfully dissent in part.

ELEVENTH CIRCUIT GIVES DEVELOPERS A MULLIGAN: GOLF COURSES ELIGIBLE FOR CONSERVATION EASEMENT TAX DEDUCTIONS

In a lengthy opinion discussing the true value of protecting sixty-one threatened bird species, the elusive denseflower knotweed and the regionally declining southern fox squirrel, a panel of judges sitting on the federal 11th Circuit handed developers a win.

In Champions Retreat Golf Founders, LLC v. Commissioner of IRS, No. 18-14817 (11th Cir. May 13, 2020), a Georgia golf course prevailed in a saga that started in 2010 when it contributed a “conservation easement” to a Section 501(c)(3) organization that qualified as a land trust established for conservation purposes as defined in Section 170(h) of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”), including the protection of natural habitats across the country.

The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) recognizes these conservation easement deductions as provided in Section 170(h) of the Code and tax regulations at 26 C.F.R. § 1.170A-14.

At their core, conservation easement donations qualify as charitable deductions based upon the donation of the easement to a qualifying entity which protects the land from future development in perpetuity.

Under a three-part test, the IRS will only recognize a deduction “(A) of a qualified real property interest, (B) to a qualified organization, (C) [which is] exclusively for conservation purposes.” I.R.C. § 170(h)(1).

In Champions, the IRS Commissioner did not take issue with the first two prongs of the conservation easement test, but rather the case focused on whether the contribution of a conservation easement over a golf course and a small portion of undeveloped land adjacent to the course satisfied the requirement that the property be protected “exclusively for conservation purposes.”

The Code recognizes legitimate conservation purposes as those that promote:

i.  The preservation of land areas for outdoor recreation by, or the education of, the general public;

ii.  the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem

iii. the preservation of open space (including farmland and forest land) where such preservation is—

I.  for the scenic enjoyment of the general public, or

II. pursuant to a clearly delineated Federal, State, or local governmental conservation policy,

and will yield a significant public benefit, or

iv. the preservation of an historically important land area or certified historic structure.

I.R.C. § 170(h)(4)(A).

The panel dug down on whether the proposed conservation easement over roughly 348 acres met the requirement of preserving the property as a “natural habitat” or as open space providing scenic enjoyment of the general public.

The 11th Circuit panel of judges cut through most of the noise in the case by rejecting the Tax Court’s notion that

(A) because both of tax payers’ experts did not see the same bird, the bird could not qualify as threatened,

(B) the use of chemicals on the golf course would destroy the endangered denseflower knotweed, and

(C) the property could not be viewed as open space providing scenic enjoyment to the general public.

The 11th Circuit determined the proposed conservation easement would, despite past efforts by the IRS Commissioner to oppose the recognition of areas on or adjacent to golf courses as qualifying conservation easement property, easily have met all of the requirements for such an easement but for its use as a golf course.

Finding valuable conservation values and attributes in protecting the sixty-one bird species, southern fox squirrel and denseflower knotweed species, the appellate court found that the property qualified for purposes of the deduction under Section 170(h) of the Code.

All things being equal, the use of land subject to a proposed conservation easement covering a golf course is no longer fatal within the 11th Circuit (which includes Alabama, Florida, and Georgia).

A developer who owns land that might be a strong candidate for a conservation easement now has a green light (or a caution light, at worst) to contribute a conservation easement with respect to such property.

Eleventh Circuit: Conservation easement on golf course eligible for charitable deduction

May 13, 2020

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit today reversed the U.S. Tax Court in a case concerning a taxpayer’s claim for a charitable deduction for donating a conservation easement over property that included a private golf course and undeveloped land.

Summary

The taxpayer developed land along the Savannah River, north of Augusta, Georgia, into a private golf course and homesites. About 57 acres, consisting primarily of bottomland forests and wetlands, remained undeveloped. The land was home to “abundant species of birds … to the regionally declining southern fox squirrel, and to a rare plant species.” The land was not accessible to the public, but the property was readily observable to members of the public from the Savannah and Little Rivers.

In 2010, the taxpayer contributed a conservation easement to a trust to hold and enforce the conservation easement and preserve natural habitats and environmentally sensitive areas. The easement covered 348 acres consisting of the undeveloped land and the golf course, including the driving range, but not including the golf course buildings and parking lot. The easement also did not include the homesites. The taxpayer claimed a charitable deduction of about $10 million for the contribution. The IRS disallowed the deduction, and the taxpayer petitioned the Tax Court which in 2018 upheld the disallowance of the deduction.

The taxpayer appealed, and today the Eleventh Circuit reversed, vacated, and remanded the Tax Court’s decision for a proper determination of the amount of the deduction.

The Eleventh Circuit stated that at issue was whether the taxpayer contributed the easement for “the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem” or for “the preservation of open space … for the scenic enjoyment of the general public [that] will yield a significant public benefit.”

As the appellate court explained, conservation easements across golf courses qualify for a deduction if they meet the otherwise-applicable standards:

The Code allows a deduction for an easement contributed for ‘the protection of a relatively natural habitat of fish, wildlife, or plants, or similar ecosystem.’ Under this provision and the implementing regulation, [the taxpayer] is entitled to a deduction if its easement includes habitat for ‘rare, endangered, or threatened species of animal, fish, or plants,’ or if the easement contributes to the ‘ecological viability’ of the adjacent national forest. These are the standards that apply despite the presence of a golf course on part of the property. The Code requires only a ‘relatively natural habitat . . . or similar ecosystem,’ not that the land itself be relatively natural.

KPMG observation

The treatment of a charitable contribution deduction for the donation of a conservation easement continues to be addressed by the courts. One issue has been whether the conservation purposes of the easement are protected in perpetuity.

See, for example, today’s Tax Court memorandum opinion  in Woodland Property Holdings, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2020-55 (May 13, 2020);

Judgment for IRS; conservation purpose underlying the easement found not to be “protected in perpetuity” as required by section 170(h)(5)(A)).

Why Did Judge Jill A. Pryor Recuse – After Oral Argument – in this $826 Million Dollar Ponzi Scheme?

Judge Jill Pryor apparently recused herself AFTER oral argument, however, apart from a footnote in the final 2-panel opinion, there is nothing on the docket to suggest Jill Pryor recused, either by order or notation on the docket.

Don’t Blink Too Fast Says Judge Tjoflat for the Eleventh Circuit

Petition for en banc rehearing granted by the Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in this criminal case. Judge Gerald “Glossing” Tjoflat authored the opinion(s) for the 3-panel.

2020

Judge intends to grant class action status to felon voting restoration lawsuit
The move would add potentially hundreds of thousands to the suit.

By News Service Of Florida on April 9, 2020

A federal judge has agreed to add potentially hundreds of thousands of people to a lawsuit challenging a Florida statute requiring felons to pay outstanding “legal financial obligations” to vote.

U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle issued an order Tuesday after saying last week he intended to grant class certification to plaintiffs, who allege that the 2019 law amounts to an unconstitutional “poll tax.”

The statute, passed by Republican lawmakers and signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, was aimed at implementing a 2018 constitutional amendment granting voting rights to felons who have completed their sentences.

The law requires felons to pay court-ordered “legal financial obligations,” including fees, fines and restitution, to be eligible to vote.

In the order Tuesday on class certification, Hinkle rejected Secretary of State Laurel Lee’s arguments that a broad expansion of plaintiffs was unnecessary.

“The plaintiffs’ Twenty-fourth Amendment and inability-to-pay claims turn on issues that can be properly resolved in a single action, once and for all. Class treatment is proper,” Hinkle wrote in the 18-page order, referring to the U.S. Constitution’s 24th Amendment barring poll taxes.

In an October preliminary injunction, Hinkle ruled that it is unconstitutional to deny the right to vote to felons who are “genuinely unable to pay” court-ordered fees, fines and restitution. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the injunction, which applied only to the 17 named plaintiffs in the case.

In a brief opposing the request for class certification, Lee’s lawyers wrote in October that identification of felons who can’t afford to pay financial obligations “is problematic, ill defined, and requires hundreds of thousands (up to as many as one million) of determinations regarding which former felons are ‘genuinely unable to pay’ their outstanding financial obligations.”

But Hinkle’s order Tuesday rejected the argument.

The relief likely to be granted, if the plaintiffs prevail in the case, “is not a felon-by-felon determination in this court of inability to pay but instead an injunction requiring the secretary to put in place a system under which felons are not precluded from voting based only on inability to pay,” Hinkle wrote.

The state lacks a uniform or consistent method of applying the 2019 law, with some records incomplete and others having discrepancies, according to court documents. Hinkle called the process “an administrative nightmare” during an October hearing.

The federal judge on Tuesday also disagreed with Lee’s contention that it is unknown who will be affected by the court’s decision. Hinkle said “the proposed class and subclass” — felons who owe financial obligations, and felons who cannot afford to pay outstanding financial obligations — are “sufficiently ascertainable.”

“The state’s records of financial obligations are a mess — that is one of the plaintiffs’ other complaints — but the secretary should hardly be heard to complain that it is impossible to figure out who has an unpaid financial obligation,” Hinkle wrote.

Also, the court will likely not decide which members of the “inability-to-pay subclass” are those who are genuinely unable to pay, but rather “those who assert genuine inability to pay,” the judge added.

Hinkle rejected Lee’s argument that class certification was unnecessary because the state would abide by a ruling about whether the law amounts to an unconstitutional poll tax.

Class treatment “adds a layer of complexity to any litigation,” the judge acknowledged.

“Here, though, the secretary’s promise to abide by any ruling is not enough,” he wrote.

Hinkle noted that, following his October preliminary injunction, Lee’s office advised county supervisors of elections that the judge’s ruling only applied to the 17 plaintiffs in the case.

“The March 2020 elections went forward on that basis — without any statewide effort to conform to the U.S. Constitution as interpreted by both this court and the 11th Circuit,” Hinkle scolded. “Class members can hardly be faulted for asserting that, if the ruling on the merits ultimately is that they have a constitutional right to vote, the right should be recognized in an enforceable decision.”

In reaching his decision about class certification, Hinkle pointed to an analysis by University of Florida political-science professor Daniel Smith, who found that, in the 58 counties for which he had data, more than 430,000 felons would be ineligible to vote solely because they had outstanding financial obligations.

Smith’s number “was conservative” because it did not include felons with federal or out-of-state convictions, Hinkle noted.

Hinkle also relied on a report by the Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers showing that 22 percent of fines and fees assessed in the state were at risk of non-collection because of indigency.

The two reports “show that many thousands of felons are unable to pay their relevant financial obligations because of indigency,” Hinkle wrote Tuesday.

“Still others are unable to pay because the amount owed is out of reach even for a person who is not indigent,” he added.

Tuesday’s ruling is the latest blow to DeSantis, a Harvard Law School graduate who has fiercely defended the state law but has been thwarted repeatedly by Hinkle and the Atlanta-based appeals court.

For example, Hinkle recently chided the state for failing to come up with a process to determine whether felons have outstanding legal obligations, as he ordered the state to do in his October injunction. Hinkle told the state to come up with a plan before a two-week trial begins on April 27.

“If you don’t have a position in place by the time of trial, and I decide that it is a constitutional right — and if you read the 11th Circuit decision, you probably don’t want to bet against that — the answer’s not going to be, oh, start working on this. If the state is not going to fix it, I will,” the federal judge admonished on March 26.

During a hearing Wednesday, Hinkle and lawyers representing both sides tested the federal court system’s video-conferencing platform, which the judge intends to use for the trial because of the novel coronavirus.

Members of the public will be able to listen to the hearing by telephone. Hinkle said people who want to watch the trial may contact the federal court in Tallahassee, where they will be allowed to watch a video of the proceedings from one of the courtrooms.

As Anticipated, 11th Circuit Hurriedly Issue a Federal Tax Case Opinion Which Will Save Judge Jill Pryor from Financial Ruin
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