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Level 2
May 31, 2022
Question

Temporary Workspace Agreement - Consideration and Damage payments

  • May 31, 2022
  • 2 replies
  • 1 view

I live on the edge of a gas pipeline in Pennsylvania that will undergo repairs.  While the pipeline isn't on my property, they will need access a very small part of my land (.03 acre) for their equipment during the ~ 2 month pipeline repair.  They have provided me with a Temporary Workspace Agreement with 80% of the payment earmarked for 'damages' and 20% for 'consideration'. (They may need to cut down a few trees.)   They will not need use of my land after the repair is done.  I've looked here and it appears that I should report this as some sort of income, but I'd like confirmation. 

 

FYI - When I asked the pipeline rep about taxes (they sent a "Request for Taxpayer ID Number and Certification" form in the packet), his reply was "I believe the money will be tax free."  I provided him links to a few similar questions here noting it must be reported as income is some way, and asked for a formal source for his "I believe..." statement.  Again, I got 'I've done this for years... when others received statements at tax time and called him,  "I (the rep) called the company and told them it was tax free and they understood and made the correction."  That was pretty much his exact reply, mentioning that those were for much larger payments than mine.  So, is there a minimal amount that is / is not taxable?  For someone who does this work all the time, I feel he should KNOW definitively how these payments are looked at from the tax perspective.  The lack of definitive answers from them really irks me - I'm ready to decline my permission and/or ask for a higher payment!  Thanks for any advise.

2 replies

Level 15
May 31, 2022

The 20% consideration appears to be for the use of your land to store their equipment. in other words, it's rent and taxable. the other 80% see this link  

https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6138163 

Tucky512Author
Level 2
May 31, 2022

Ok, thanks - I see the abstract, but not the complete article.  "Payments for damages can be taxable as income, or can be nontaxable as a return of capital."  Basically, the damage payment is paid before the work starts.  I do not anticipate any true damage except for the trees they say they may need to cut down. (This slice of my property has nothing but trees, attached to ~ .5 acres of MORE trees between the house and the slice they want to use.)  But overall, I believe you that for the most part, at least some portion of the payment should be reported on taxes (and the rep is just lying to me).  Thanks

Level 15
May 31, 2022

It depends if you have actual damages.

 

To the extent their activities decrease your property value, the money is tax-free but you reduce your cost basis, which may increase your taxable capital gains when you sell.  You may also need a before and after appraisal to document the lost property value.  

 

If the activities do not reduce your property value (because the area affected is insignificant, because nobody would probably notice a few trees in the corner of the lot, and so on) then all the money is taxable.

Tucky512Author
Level 2
May 31, 2022

There really would be no damages - it is just a slice with a few trees at the back end of about .5 acre of trees behind my home.  They are paying both portions of these fees up front.  I can't see it decreasing my property value as 1) the loss of a few trees is negligible.  2) plus, the small substation / pipeline right of way where the construction will happen has been there longer than I have owned the home (28 yrs)... I can't see that replacing  a pipe that already exists harming the value.  (they aren't digging a new line, etc.)  Thanks - seems the pipeline rep if uninformed (willfully, I'm sure.)

Level 15
May 31, 2022

@Tucky512 wrote:

There really would be no damages - it is just a slice with a few trees at the back end of about .5 acre of trees behind my home.  They are paying both portions of these fees up front.  I can't see it decreasing my property value as 1) the loss of a few trees is negligible.  2) plus, the small substation / pipeline right of way where the construction will happen has been there longer than I have owned the home (28 yrs)... I can't see that replacing  a pipe that already exists harming the value.  (they aren't digging a new line, etc.)  Thanks - seems the pipeline rep if uninformed (willfully, I'm sure.)


Who knows what the utility rep knows about taxes.  If you were giving them a new property easement, that permanently decreases the value of your land, at least notionally, making the payment non-taxable, and the rep may be more used to dealing with that kind of payment.  Since you don't expect your property to lose value, you should plan on the entire payment being taxable.