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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR King
DATE TYPED 03/10/05 HB 816/a HENRC/a HTRC
SHORT TITLE Clarify Land Conservation Incentives Act
SB
ANALYST Padilla-Jackson
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
Subsequent
Years Impact
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
NFI
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Energy, Minerals & Natural Resources Department (EMNRD)
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HENRC Amendment
The House Energy and Natural Resources Committee (HENRC) amended House Bill 816. The
amendment replaces the existing Section E with a slightly more defined version, stating that no
land or interest for which a credit has been claimed can be transferred to a third party without
prior written notice from the transferor to the person claiming the credit (or to that person’s suc-
cessor), adding the part about the successor. The amendment also defines “prior written notice”
to mean a written document sent first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, to the last
known address of the recipient thirty day in advance of the transfer.
Lastly, the amendment strikes Section F entirely, which would require that a conveyance be con-
ducted by a licensed broker or real estate salesperson.
Synopsis of HTRC Amendments
The House Taxation and Revenue Committee amended House Bill 816. The first amendment
would strike the HENRC amendment above, in its entirety. The second amendment would re-
place Section E with a new section further clarifying the statement referring to a person’s succes-
sor. The HTRC amendment replaces the reference to the person’s successor with “the current
pg_0002
House Bill 816/a HENRC/a HTRC -- Page 2
owner of record with regard to the remaining interest, if the person claiming the tax credit has
transferred a remaining interest in real property subject to the tax credit.”
The amendment would also strikes Section F, which would require that a conveyance be con-
ducted by a licensed broker or real estate salesperson.
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 816 clarifies portions of the Land Conservation Incentives Act (LCIA). The bill ex-
pands the definition of “interest in real property” to include “partial interest, mineral interest, re-
mainder interest, future or other interest or right in real property”. It changes the definition of
“land”, removing “rights of way, easements, privileges, and all other rights or interests of a land
or description relating to or connected with a real property” and includes “an interest in real
property”.
Lastly, the bill adds the following requirements to the act:
D.
An outside party cannot have an enforcement right pertaining to a conveyance made pur-
suant to the LCIA
E.
No land or interest in real property may be transferred to a third party without prior no-
tice and written consent of the person claiming a tax credit
F.
A conveyance pursuant to the LCIA shall be conducted by a licensed broker or real estate
salesperson
There is no effective date provided for this bill.
Significant Issues
EMNRD provided the following comments:
The LCIA allows a tax credit for the donation of land for conservation purpose to a qualified
agency. The tax credit is 50 percent of the appraised value of the donation, up to a maximum of
$100,000. The three additional requirements go beyond the purpose of the LCIA, which is to
provide incentives for conservation donations of property. Paragraph D directly conflicts with
the Land Use Easement Act, which allows third-party enforcement of easements when agreed to
by both parties. Efforts to prohibit third-party enforcement of easements would be better if di-
rected at this statute and not the LCIA.
Well-written conservation easements will state that a third party will accept and enforce the
easement when the original grantee ceases to exist or is no longer able to enforce the easement.
This event could be decades into the future and a specific entity usually cannot be identified.
Paragraph E would require the third party to be identified and agreed upon by the grantor and
grantee, which may not be possible. What happens if the donor refuses to consent to a transfer
and the original grantee is dead or has ceased to exist. The donor should not be able to direct
what happens to the interest he has sold or otherwise transferred. Also, this requirement of con-
sent to transfer would be unnecessary for grantors of full-fee donations, who have relinquished
all interest in the property.
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House Bill 816/a HENRC/a HTRC -- Page 3
Paragraph F would be a first for property law, by requiring all LCIA conveyances to be brokered
by a licensed realty agent. Section 47-1-4 of NM Property Law guarantees a right of convey-
ance, and does not require the services of a realty agent in transactions between a willing grantor
and willing grantee.
Therefore, these three additional paragraphs are more appropriate amendments to New Mexico
Property Law and the Land Use Easement Act. Conveyances under the LCIA are only a minor
subset of all conservation land conveyances in the state.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
According to TRD, there are no fiscal impacts associated with the original bill, or the bill as
amended by HENRC or HTRC.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
No significant administrative impact to the TRD.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
TRD provided the following issue:
Section 1 of the bill amends the definitions of “interest in real property” and “land”. Section 3 of
the bill retains language from the 2003 law, which refers to “land or an interest in land”. “Inter-
est in land” is not a defined term. However, “land” is defined to include “an interest in real
property”, Section 1, p. 2, lines 6-7, so the reference to “an interest in land” is redundant. In ad-
dition, the reference is inconsistent with another provision added by the bill, which refers to
“land or an interest in real property.” Section 3, p. 4, line 16. TRD suggest deleting the phrase
“or an interest in land” in Section 3, page 3, line 25 or change the phrase to “or an interest in real
property”.
OPJ/yr:lg