Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
-
- William & Mary Law School (9)
- University of Michigan Law School (8)
- University of Miami Law School (7)
- Nova Southeastern University (6)
- Selected Works (6)
-
- West Virginia University (6)
- University of Colorado Law School (5)
- University of Kentucky (4)
- Cornell University Law School (3)
- University of Richmond (3)
- Golden Gate University School of Law (2)
- American University Washington College of Law (1)
- Columbia Law School (1)
- Northwestern Pritzker School of Law (1)
- Seattle University School of Law (1)
- University of Florida Levin College of Law (1)
- University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law (1)
- University of Oklahoma College of Law (1)
- University of South Carolina (1)
- University of Southern Maine (1)
- University of Washington School of Law (1)
- Washington and Lee University School of Law (1)
- Publication Year
- Publication
-
- Articles (9)
- Faculty Scholarship (7)
- Michigan Law Review (6)
- West Virginia Law Review (6)
- William & Mary Annual Tax Conference (5)
-
- Kentucky Law Journal (4)
- Cornell Law Faculty Publications (3)
- Community-Owned Forests: Possibilities, Experiences, and Lessons Learned (June 16-19) (2)
- Faculty Publications (2)
- Ronald H. Rosenberg (2)
- Sara C. Bronin (2)
- University of Richmond Law Review (2)
- William & Mary Law Review (2)
- American Indian Law Review (1)
- Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals (1)
- Golden Gate University Law Review (1)
- Jesse Carter Opinions (1)
- Law Faculty Publications (1)
- Maine Collection (1)
- Martha W. Jordan (1)
- Maryland Law Review (1)
- Michael A Wolf (1)
- Northwestern University Law Review (1)
- Regulatory Takings and Resources: What Are the Constitutional Limits? (Summer Conference, June 13-15) (1)
- Seattle University Law Review (1)
- South Carolina Law Review (1)
- The Future of Natural Resources Law and Policy (Summer Conference, June 6-8) (1)
- UF Law Faculty Publications (1)
- Washington Law Review (1)
- Washington and Lee Law Review (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 70
Full-Text Articles in Law
Conservation Easements As A Tool For Nature Protection, William Snape
Conservation Easements As A Tool For Nature Protection, William Snape
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
No abstract provided.
Historic Preservation Easements: A Proposal For Ohio, Ronald H. Rosenberg, Pamela G. Jacobstein
Historic Preservation Easements: A Proposal For Ohio, Ronald H. Rosenberg, Pamela G. Jacobstein
Ronald H. Rosenberg
No abstract provided.
Fixing A Broken Common Law -- Has The Property Law Of Easements And Covenants Been Reformed By A Restatement, Ronald H. Rosenberg
Fixing A Broken Common Law -- Has The Property Law Of Easements And Covenants Been Reformed By A Restatement, Ronald H. Rosenberg
Ronald H. Rosenberg
No abstract provided.
Climate Change Challenges For Land Conservation: Rethinking Conservation Easements, Strategies, And Tools, Jessica Owley, Federico Cheever, Adena R. Rissman, M. Rebecca Shaw, Barton H. Thompson Jr., W. William Weeks
Climate Change Challenges For Land Conservation: Rethinking Conservation Easements, Strategies, And Tools, Jessica Owley, Federico Cheever, Adena R. Rissman, M. Rebecca Shaw, Barton H. Thompson Jr., W. William Weeks
Articles
No abstract provided.
Shirley We Can Figure This Out: The Continued Confusion Surrounding Prescriptive Easement, Ethan B. Clark
Shirley We Can Figure This Out: The Continued Confusion Surrounding Prescriptive Easement, Ethan B. Clark
South Carolina Law Review
No abstract provided.
Exploiting Conservation Lands: Can Hydrofracking Be Consistent With Conservation Easements, Jessica Owley, Collin Doane
Exploiting Conservation Lands: Can Hydrofracking Be Consistent With Conservation Easements, Jessica Owley, Collin Doane
Articles
No abstract provided.
Fixing A Broken Common Law -- Has The Property Law Of Easements And Covenants Been Reformed By A Restatement, Ronald H. Rosenberg
Fixing A Broken Common Law -- Has The Property Law Of Easements And Covenants Been Reformed By A Restatement, Ronald H. Rosenberg
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Enhancing Conservation Options: An Argument For Statutory Recognition Of Options To Purchase Conservation Easements (Opces), Federico Cheever, Jessica Owley
Enhancing Conservation Options: An Argument For Statutory Recognition Of Options To Purchase Conservation Easements (Opces), Federico Cheever, Jessica Owley
Articles
Land conservation transactions have been the most active component of the conservation movement in the United States for the past three decades. Conservation organizations have acquired property rights-mostly conservation easements-to protect roughly 40 million acres of land nationwide. However, climate change threatens this vast edifice. Climate change means that the resources that land conservation transactions were intended to protect may not persist on the land protected. Options to purchase conservation easements ("OPCEs") have long played a modest but important role in conservation law practice. In the world climate change is creating, with its substantial uncertainties and shifting windows of opportunity, …
Easier Easements: A New Path For Conservation Easement Deduction Valuation, Nicholas Carson
Easier Easements: A New Path For Conservation Easement Deduction Valuation, Nicholas Carson
Northwestern University Law Review
Conservation easements, a valuable tool in the conservationist’s toolbox, have grown increasingly popular since the 1980s, when Congress introduced changes to the federal tax code making easement donations more financially attractive. And with deductions reaching hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of dollars, conservation easement deductions are big business. However, expanded incentives and loosened regulations invite abuse, especially when the tax implications are large and donated easements are hard to value. Valuation of real estate remains an inexact science, dependent on inconsistent appraisal methods and subjectivity. Conservation easements can be even more difficult to value than other easements because, by …
Conservation Easements And The "Term Creep" Problem, Michael Allan Wolf
Conservation Easements And The "Term Creep" Problem, Michael Allan Wolf
Michael A Wolf
This Essay first discusses the “term creep” problem that has long plagued the Anglo-American common law of real property, that is, the tendency of common law courts (and in turn commentators and legislators) to use the same label to describe two or more conceptually discrete, though related, concepts. The confusion between easements of the “traditional” and “conservation” varieties is just one in a long line of situations in which the decision to allow often significantly dissimilar concepts to share the same name has led to unfortunate consequences. The second part of the Essay explains the substantive nature of the hybrids …
Conservation Easements And The "Term Creep" Problem, Michael Allan Wolf
Conservation Easements And The "Term Creep" Problem, Michael Allan Wolf
UF Law Faculty Publications
This Essay first discusses the “term creep” problem that has long plagued the Anglo-American common law of real property, that is, the tendency of common law courts (and in turn commentators and legislators) to use the same label to describe two or more conceptually discrete, though related, concepts. The confusion between easements of the “traditional” and “conservation” varieties is just one in a long line of situations in which the decision to allow often significantly dissimilar concepts to share the same name has led to unfortunate consequences. The second part of the Essay explains the substantive nature of the hybrids …
Some Pluralism About Pluralism: A Comment On Hanoch Dagan's "Pluralism And Perfectionism In Private Law", Jedediah S. Purdy
Some Pluralism About Pluralism: A Comment On Hanoch Dagan's "Pluralism And Perfectionism In Private Law", Jedediah S. Purdy
Faculty Scholarship
Hanoch Dagan is among “those who think it advantageous to get as much ethics into the law as they can,” in the phrase of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. His pluralism is a perfectionism for polytheists: There are many human goods, and each has its domain, including some portion of the law of property. Depending on where we stand on the property landscape at any time, we may be community-minded sharers, devoted romantics in marriage, or coolly rational market actors, and the local property law will smooth each of these paths for us. Property law is built on the design of …
Changing Property In A Changing World: A Call For The End Of Perpetual Conservation Easements, Jessica Owley
Changing Property In A Changing World: A Call For The End Of Perpetual Conservation Easements, Jessica Owley
Articles
No abstract provided.
Distributed Graduate Seminars: An Interdisciplinary Approach To Studying Land Conservation, Jessica Owley, Adena R. Rissman
Distributed Graduate Seminars: An Interdisciplinary Approach To Studying Land Conservation, Jessica Owley, Adena R. Rissman
Articles
No abstract provided.
Conservation Easements At The Climate Change Crossroads, Jessica Owley
Conservation Easements At The Climate Change Crossroads, Jessica Owley
Articles
No abstract provided.
Solar Rights For Texas Property Owners, Sara C. Bronin
Solar Rights For Texas Property Owners, Sara C. Bronin
Sara C. Bronin
In response to Jamie France's note, A Proposed Solar Access Law for the State of Texas, Professor Bronin urges future commentators to focus on three additional areas of inquiry related to proposed solar rights regimes. Bronin argues that such proposals would be strengthened by discussion of potential legal challenges to the proposals, related political issues, and renewable energy microgrids. Ms. France’s proposal for the State of Texas includes the elimination of preexisting private property restrictions that negatively affect solar access. Bronin argues that this proposal would be strengthened by a discussion of potential challenges under federal and state takings clauses. …
Tax Notes Article, Stephen J. Small
Tax Notes Article, Stephen J. Small
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Conservation Easement Appraisal Rules And Questions, Stephen J. Small
Conservation Easement Appraisal Rules And Questions, Stephen J. Small
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Some Points Re Perpetuity - Code And Regulations
Some Points Re Perpetuity - Code And Regulations
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Conservation Easements, Appraisals Thereof, And Form 8283 - The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly, Stephen J. Small
Conservation Easements, Appraisals Thereof, And Form 8283 - The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly, Stephen J. Small
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Co-Use Of Compatible Private Easements By Cable Television Franchisees Under The 1984 Cable Act: Federal Refinement Of An Established Right, Richard D. Harmon
Co-Use Of Compatible Private Easements By Cable Television Franchisees Under The 1984 Cable Act: Federal Refinement Of An Established Right, Richard D. Harmon
Golden Gate University Law Review
Before the Cable Act became law, a number of obstacles had retarded cable television's growth and development. One such obstacle involved private landowners, especially real estate developers and landlords. By the 1980s, many developers were attempting to physically exclude franchised cable television disseminators from their developments so that the resulting captive audience could be served, on an exclusive basis, by the developer or someone with whom the developer had contracted. These exclusionary practices represented a serious problem, since it is estimated that half of all new residential construction in the United States is now in the form of planned or …
Solar Rights For Texas Property Owners, Sara C. Bronin
Solar Rights For Texas Property Owners, Sara C. Bronin
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
In response to Jamie France's note, A Proposed Solar Access Law for the State of Texas, Professor Bronin urges future commentators to focus on three additional areas of inquiry related to proposed solar rights regimes. Bronin argues that such proposals would be strengthened by discussion of potential legal challenges to the proposals, related political issues, and renewable energy microgrids. Ms. France’s proposal for the State of Texas includes the elimination of preexisting private property restrictions that negatively affect solar access. Bronin argues that this proposal would be strengthened by a discussion of potential challenges under federal and state takings clauses. …
Solar Rights, Sara C. Bronin
Solar Rights, Sara C. Bronin
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
The rights to access and to harness the rays of the sun - solar rights - are extremely valuable. These rights can determine whether and how an individual can take advantage of the sun’s light, warmth, or energy, and they can have significant economic consequences. Accordingly, for at least two thousand years, people have attempted to assign solar rights in a fair and efficient manner. In the United States, attempts to assign solar rights have fallen short. A quarter century ago, numerous American legal scholars debated this deficiency. They agreed that this country lacked a coherent legal framework for the …
Slides: Groundwater Declines, Climate Change And Approaches To Adaptation, Katharine Jacobs
Slides: Groundwater Declines, Climate Change And Approaches To Adaptation, Katharine Jacobs
Western Water Law, Policy and Management: Ripples, Currents, and New Channels for Inquiry (Martz Summer Conference, June 3-5)
Presenter: Katharine Jacobs, Director of the Arizona Water Institute, University of Arizona
37 slides
An End-Run Around The Takings Clause? The Law And Economics Of Bivens Actions For Property Rights Violations, Arpan A. Sura
An End-Run Around The Takings Clause? The Law And Economics Of Bivens Actions For Property Rights Violations, Arpan A. Sura
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.
Solar Rights, Sara C. Bronin
Solar Rights, Sara C. Bronin
Sara C. Bronin
The rights to access and to harness the rays of the sun - solar rights - are extremely valuable. These rights can determine whether and how an individual can take advantage of the sun’s light, warmth, or energy, and they can have significant economic consequences. Accordingly, for at least two thousand years, people have attempted to assign solar rights in a fair and efficient manner. In the United States, attempts to assign solar rights have fallen short. A quarter century ago, numerous American legal scholars debated this deficiency. They agreed that this country lacked a coherent legal framework for the …
The Growing Influence Of Tort And Property Law On Natural Resources Law: Case Studies Of Coal Bed Methane Development And Geologic Carbon Sequestration, Alexandra B. Klass
The Growing Influence Of Tort And Property Law On Natural Resources Law: Case Studies Of Coal Bed Methane Development And Geologic Carbon Sequestration, Alexandra B. Klass
The Future of Natural Resources Law and Policy (Summer Conference, June 6-8)
19 pages.
"Alexandra B. Klass, Associate Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School"
Repairing Facade Easements: Is This The Gift That Launched A Thousand Deductions?, Martha Jordan
Repairing Facade Easements: Is This The Gift That Launched A Thousand Deductions?, Martha Jordan
Martha W. Jordan
This article explores the impact of such a covenant on the characterization for tax purposes of expenditures to maintain the facade. In particular this article explores the following question: Given that the charitable easement holder owns a nonpossessory interest in the facade, which imposes on the charity an obligation to repair and maintain the facade and entitles it to benefit from increases in the value of the facade, is a donor's assumption of the charity's obligation to repair the facade an additional charitable contribution to the charity? If a donor gratuitously makes improvements to property owned outright by a charity, …
Real Estate Law, Paul H. Davenport, Lindsey H. Dobbs
Real Estate Law, Paul H. Davenport, Lindsey H. Dobbs
University of Richmond Law Review
This article surveys significant cases concerning real property law decided by the Supreme Court of Virginia between the spring of 2004 and the spring of 2006. This article also details significant legislative changes flowing from the 2005 and 2006 Virginia General Assembly sessions.