Apologize in advance for the length.
I don’t think this is a moot discussion and I see Bill’s points as salient. I think everyone has made some bona fide points.
This issue is a hot one for me as I am in regular disputes because two appraisals are not based on the same premise of who owns what and for how long. A lot of property in my area is in some form of divided ownership. Right now, I am considering whether to go to battle against a land appraisal, where there are 30 years remaining on a 50-year lease – and the appraiser used direct sales comparison to find the market value of the “fee simple encumbered by the leases in place.” Well, the appraised interest in not the encumbered interest, but it should have been. The capitalized land rent, which is VERY secure should come to 50% to 100% more than the appraiser’s fee simple absolute value of the land by sales comparison, even before you start to look at the 30-year reversion.
One of the recurring problems I see in explaining and understanding things is the way appraisal literature casts things in an ‘either-or’ light, when in fact the relationship is set-and-subset. ‘Either-or’ is simpler to understand, but usually inaccurate.
When I took property law, it was fee simple absolute and fee simple conditional – the latter being a group of subsets of the former. One of the problems with using ‘slang’ like fee simple and leased fee is that it distorts the fact that both estates are "fee simple," but one is fee simple absolute (FSA) and the other fee simple is not absolute because it is subject to conditions (lease encumbrances). It is not
either fee simple
or something else. There is always an underlying fee ownership (and let’s not get into timeshare projects, yet).
Paul, I would like to hear more about the reason why there would be lawsuits with deeds identifying fee simple. I too have seen shopping centers, hotels and other investment property sold on deeds that say fee simple absolute – between corporations with armies of lawyers and even where law firms were parties to the sale and signatories to the deed. The buyer is obtaining the FSA, just that the absoluteness is conditional on leases and easements. If the deed said that the buyer was only paying for the “leased fee” (depending on how you want to define that), why wouldn’t the space revert to the seller when the lease expires.
Once the “bundle” of rights is split up, the fee simple estate no longer exists.
While I agree with most of your analysis, Paul, and enjoy your excellent command of language, I would not put it this way - assuming fee simple estate means fee simple absolute. By way of crude analogy, if a building is painted white and you paint over that with a coat of green, the white coat does not “cease to exist.” Eventually, the green wears off and the white is revealed again. So to with a fully-leased property, eventually the encumbrance wears off and the underlying coat of fee simple absolute is revealed again. No matter how many times you exercise the option to put another coat of green on there, the white paint is still underneath. Leased interests do not replace fee simple absolute. They more just lay over it and obfuscate it.
The one that winds my cork is this.
Use of market rent reflects fee simple interest.
Here’s what I mean. A guy has “identical” buildings to sell. Building 1 is fully rented at exactly market rent for a long term to a perfect tenant. The market and building NOI are exactly $100k, the market (leased fee) cap rate for these properties is 10% and the value is thus, $1M. Building 2 has just become vacant. Based on the principle of substitution, what “prudent” investor who is willing to pay the same price for the secure and stabilized 100k income stream of building 1 and the more speculative prospect empty building 2 and its delayed benefits. So, I keep wondering if the other shoe has to drop, but the idea that the "fee simple" value of building 2 is market rent capitalized doesn't seem to work.