leasedfee
Member
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2007
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Colorado
It's all about property rights. What you get or don't get, and the productivity or "utility" to use an economist term that it generates. From there we start looking at cash flows. Thus, get a copy of a title commitment (aka preliminary title policy) that the title company will issue upon closing (becoming the "title policy"). Make sure everyone is in agreement that these are the property rights that will be transferred at the closing table. . . . An appraiser familiar with eminent domain can help you with the permanent easement questions. Yes, land can be valued seperately; the question up in the air for you (pun not intended) is the land to be valued encumbered or unencumbered by the easement, and/or leased fee with the existing lease? Even if you don't get an eminent domain appraiser to give you value, he or she could help you break apart the pieces and figure out what is what, and what is not what. . . . for example, take into consideration that an exclusive vs. non-exclusive conveyance clause in a permanent easement may have an impact on value to the remainder. Other questions is it an easement in gross or specifically carved out (and potentially creating an uneconomic remainder).