(file photo: Wintergreen Resort)

Virginia’s Wintergreen Resort Settles Conservation Lawsuit

Samuel Miller, VA – Several sources are reporting that Virginia’s troubled Wintergreen ski area has settled a dispute with the state Department of Taxation as the resort has been rumored to be undergoing a “strategic reorganization” after cutting its work force in February.

According to an article written by Lisa Provence in the Charlottesville newspaper The Hook, Wintergreen got into hot water when the state dug deeper into a conservation easement granted on 1,422 acres of the resort’s property known as Crawford’s Knob. In 2008 the resort placed the acreage under a conservation easement and received a hefty tax credit.

(file photo: Wintergreen Resort)
(file photo: Wintergreen Resort)

Property is often described a set of sticks in a bundle, each stick representing a particular right. Those sticks include the right to exclude others, right to possess, right to transfer, and many others. Generally speaking, an easement is the right to use another’s property for a limited purpose. In simplest terms, an easement is the means by which an owner can transfer one of those sticks.

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In the case of a conservation easement, the property owner agrees to the permanent removal of its right to develop the property. As a result, one of the most valuable sticks is removed from the bundle, greatly reducing the value of the property. The easement runs with the land and binds all future owners of the property.

Essentially, in exchange for agreeing to permanently bar the prospect of development, the owner receives a tax break. Technically, the value of the property is severely diminished without the right to develop it, so the property’s assessed value is lowered, resulting in a far lower property tax bill.

In Wintergreen’s case, the state alleged that the resort’s 2008 valuation of the property at $11.5M was too high. That appraisal resulted in a $4.6M tax credit to the resort. When an appraiser hired by the state valued the property in 2011, he found the property to be worth only $3.5M. Of course, some decline in value would be expected given the collapse of the real estate market during the current recession. However, the numbers were quite far apart.

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The parties agreed to settle the matter, but the terms of that settlement remain confidential. However, according to Ms. Provence’s article, the terms were favorable to the resort.

Author David B. Cronheim, Esq. is the Chief Legal Correspondent for First Tracks!! Online, an attorney at Norris, McLaughlin & Marcus, PA in Bridgewater, N.J., and author of the ski law blog – Ski, Esq. Please feel free to contact the author at DBCronheim@nmmlaw.com.

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