Richard
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2000
- Messages
- 4,997
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Tractor
- International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
With some of the prior conversations about eminent domain, I’ve been wondering about how one might possibly defend against a developer that’s bent on getting your land one way or another.
Setup: I’ve attached a pic of our area and tried to put a rough outline on the land. You will see above the circled land, a decent sized cove. This is the last natural barrier between the developer & us, aside from one (otherwise unwilling) land owner who has admitted that if/when they get to him, he’ll have to sell because he moved here to get AWAY from that stuff. All the land between line & water is owned by TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority). The developer owns to about where the arrow is based on what I’m told, perhaps not that close.
General history: This is as best as I know, the largest single parcel in this area. Over the last 8/10 years there have been a multitude of people trying to buy it. My guess is they are all related.
Once, the adjacent county’s sheriff came to my father in law and said they wanted to buy it (the neighboring county??? Makes sense to me??) so they could put a firing range on it. I guess the neighboring county (Knox / Knoxville) couldn’t afford their own firing range, or perhaps even an INDOOR one? They need to buy primo land on a lake with a retirement community across the water for their firing range??? Ya right
Another couple times, they came & dickered on price
Time before last time, they came & wanted to buy our houses too. Hmm.. last I looked, “I” never had a for sale sign up... My price just went up STEEPLY.
Last time “they” came, they have a NEW buyer (sounds like Procter & Gamble commercial with a “new & improved buyer). This mystery buyer is from out of town, but he won’t want our houses this time. (this time??... was that a Freudian slip??) They were bending over BACKWARDS telling me what a fantastic neighbor this buyer would be. He wants to keep the land JUST as it is and will be our perfect neighbor.
Hmm... well if he wants to keep the land exactly like it is, why don’t we sell him a 2 acre lot for his house & save him all that money? How do they know he’ll be a great neighbor?
Ok, so I’m cynical as all get out with these people. I might add that THREE times they’ve been out to look at the land, I know in fact, they’ve been looking for the developer who’s on the other side of that cove, working our way. I merely suspect the other times have also been related.
Ok, so here’s my question now that you have a bit of perspective & idea of how much I trust them.
I won’t be surprised that they go for the eminent domain routing since increased tax dollars will be “for the greater good”. My father in law has in his hands, a plat map where 10 years ago they hired someone to look at how many lots THEY can develop on the land.
Does it seem reasonable that if a developer talks town hall into condeming your land so they can steal it to develop it, that if you already have a development plan in the works, HIS efforts might be neutralized?
Seems reasonable to me that town hall can’t use his development as an excuse if we have one already, that we’re working on??
(I might need to get it updated however)
Any thoughts if that might be a reasonable push back against them?
Setup: I’ve attached a pic of our area and tried to put a rough outline on the land. You will see above the circled land, a decent sized cove. This is the last natural barrier between the developer & us, aside from one (otherwise unwilling) land owner who has admitted that if/when they get to him, he’ll have to sell because he moved here to get AWAY from that stuff. All the land between line & water is owned by TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority). The developer owns to about where the arrow is based on what I’m told, perhaps not that close.
General history: This is as best as I know, the largest single parcel in this area. Over the last 8/10 years there have been a multitude of people trying to buy it. My guess is they are all related.
Once, the adjacent county’s sheriff came to my father in law and said they wanted to buy it (the neighboring county??? Makes sense to me??) so they could put a firing range on it. I guess the neighboring county (Knox / Knoxville) couldn’t afford their own firing range, or perhaps even an INDOOR one? They need to buy primo land on a lake with a retirement community across the water for their firing range??? Ya right
Another couple times, they came & dickered on price
Time before last time, they came & wanted to buy our houses too. Hmm.. last I looked, “I” never had a for sale sign up... My price just went up STEEPLY.
Last time “they” came, they have a NEW buyer (sounds like Procter & Gamble commercial with a “new & improved buyer). This mystery buyer is from out of town, but he won’t want our houses this time. (this time??... was that a Freudian slip??) They were bending over BACKWARDS telling me what a fantastic neighbor this buyer would be. He wants to keep the land JUST as it is and will be our perfect neighbor.
Hmm... well if he wants to keep the land exactly like it is, why don’t we sell him a 2 acre lot for his house & save him all that money? How do they know he’ll be a great neighbor?
Ok, so I’m cynical as all get out with these people. I might add that THREE times they’ve been out to look at the land, I know in fact, they’ve been looking for the developer who’s on the other side of that cove, working our way. I merely suspect the other times have also been related.
Ok, so here’s my question now that you have a bit of perspective & idea of how much I trust them.
I won’t be surprised that they go for the eminent domain routing since increased tax dollars will be “for the greater good”. My father in law has in his hands, a plat map where 10 years ago they hired someone to look at how many lots THEY can develop on the land.
Does it seem reasonable that if a developer talks town hall into condeming your land so they can steal it to develop it, that if you already have a development plan in the works, HIS efforts might be neutralized?
Seems reasonable to me that town hall can’t use his development as an excuse if we have one already, that we’re working on??
(I might need to get it updated however)
Any thoughts if that might be a reasonable push back against them?