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City of Cincinnati
Law Department
Real Estate Services
Elements of the Acquisition Process
• Planning• Communications• Plans• Titles• Appraisals• Negotiations• Relocation• Eminent Domain
• Property Management
PLANNING FOR REAL ESTATE
ACQUISTION PROJECT
Identifying Project Parcel Numbers
Every Auditor Parcel number should not necessarily have a separate project parcel number
•Common Ownership
•Contiguous
•Is there unity of use
Takes defined and areas calculated
Review Alignments for Impact to Real Estate
Is access maintained to the property?
What is the impact on parking and structures?
Is the damage to residue minimized?
Are all site improvements within take area accurately depicted on plans?
Are improvements to be replaced or purchased?
Materials to be used in replacement?
Are there Relocation issues?
Specifications for Right-of-way and Construction Plans for Appraisal and
Negotiations
Right-of-way PlansIdentify Project Parcel numbers, and type of take
Identify Auditor’s Parcel number & property lines
Identify PRO (Present Road Occupancy)
Identify property owner and street number for major structure
Take areas in relation to major structures and site improvements (e.g. driveways and walks)
CAD or CAGIS file depicting easement lines or polygons in addition to paper copy
Drawing and revision dates
Identify all structures
Property lines and Auditor parcels identified
Show all improvements in take area
Indicated improvements in take area NOT disturbed
Note items to be replaced in kind or at project cost.
Describe specifications (materials) of items disturbed and replacement
Cross sections
Depth of pipe/manholes
Proposed structures of facilities
Change in grade or elevation
Depict surface or above surface items including specifications
Existing utilities and known easements within the take area
Drawing and revision dates
Construction Plans
Project Summary Table
Identify Project parcel numberPresent owner
Auditor’s Parcel Number
Type of takes
Take area
Paper and digital (excel or word) copy
Letter of TransmittalProject Name, Phase and any State of Federal reference
Reference current and any prior RLS#
Project funding type (Federal, State, City) and project number
Summary of project purpose and scope
Duration of temporary takes
Identify any relocation issues
Prepare and send RLS to City Solicitor
(Copying Real Estate Manager Tom Klumb)
Identify Services
Appraisal, Negotiation, Title, Resolution and/or Relocation
Reference any prior RLS or Previous Project Phase
Include (paper copy) of Project summary Table & Letter of Transmittal
Delivery of Project to Real Estate
Set Appointment with Chief Appraiser (Pat Gallagher) to present the project
Deliver three sets of right-of-way and construction plans, summary table, and letter of transmittal
Give project overview and discuss project with Real Estate Staff
Deliver electronic copies of summary and right-of-way lines
Deliver RLS
Planning Meeting
State and Federally funded projects require additional planning meeting with Project Engineer, Real Estate Staff, Contract Appraiser and Review appraiser.
Review of Plans in office
Field review of project
REQUIREMENTS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL CLEARANCE
The environmental clearance on any part-takes, full-takes, and permanent easements should be processed as soon as the project engineer has determined those limits. An environmental site assessment is also required for temporary easements if excavation is to be performed.
ACQUISITION PROCESS• Project engineer meets with Real Estate Manager and Chief Appraiser to deliver plans and review the project
• Real Estate will order titles (2-4 weeks)
•Full take and permanent easements – full title reports
•Temporary Easement – ownership checks
• Real Estate will simultaneously order appraisals from contract fee appraiser (4-6 weeks)
• Real Estate will review completed appraisals (2 weeks)
• Parcels will be assigned to a negotiator
• Negotiator will make an offer to the owner and initiate negotiations, establishing good faith negotiations (10-12 weeks)
• Owner signs a contract or Negotiator sends a final offer letter
PROCESSING OF CONTRACT
1) The property owner, the negotiator, the Real Estate Manager and Assistant City Solicitor will sign the “Request for Acceptance of Contract for Conveyance of Real Estate Offer,” hereafter referred to as “contract.” The contract will be forwarded to the appropriate department for approval and signature.
2) The project engineer will review the contract against the plans and descriptions. The department designee will sign the contract and forward to the Department’s accounting section.
3) The department’s accounting section will transmit the contract to Finance accompanied by Form 9 (Certification of Funds).
5) The Real Estate Division then concurrently carries out the following items:
a. The negotiator receives notice that the contract has been fully executed and sends one fully certified contract to the property owner.
b. The Real Estate Division sends a memo to the appropriate department requesting a check. The department prepares and processes the voucher in accordance with the applicable agreement (Form 9) and acceptable procedures.
c. The negotiator requests an updated title to check for tax liens or assessments and writes to the mortgage company requesting that they execute a mortgage consent or partial release.
6) After the check is cut and sent to the Real Estate Division, the negotiator closes on the property.
Finance will sign the contract certifying that funds are available and will transmit the contract the City Manager for execution.
4) The City Manager will return the executed contract to the Real Estate Division.
Dept meets w/ RE to discuss
project
RE requests a check from the
department
RE holds closing with the owner
RE records the
permanent easement or deed
RE orders appraisals and titles
RE reviews appraisals
RE contacts owner to make
offer
RE routes contract for signatures & certification
Owner signs
contract
RE negotiates w/owner
RE sends final offer letter to owner
RE refers to Law for approp.*
*The department should request a resolution and ordinance prior to sending the project to Real Estate to avoid unnecessary delays a th end of the process.
REAL ESTATE PROCESS
RE request a check from
the department
EMINENT DOMAIN IN GENERAL:
- City’s right to acquire for public purpose
- Right found in 5th Amendment to US Constitution and Article I Section 19 of Ohio State Constitution
- City unable to come to agreement with owner
- Before filing, City must:
- negotiate in good faith
- offer fair market value
- pass Resolution and serve Resolution
- pass Ordinance
RESOLUTION
- RLS to Law Requesting the Resolution
- All parcels that have not been closed (Can be requested the time project is sent to Real Estate
- Metes and bounds legal descriptions in WORD
- Temporary takes must include the work to be performed
- Law prepares Resolution
- Original Resolution to department director
- Copy to project engineer
- Department in charge of the project transmits Resolution to City Council
APPROVAL OF RESOLUTION -Introduced to Council
- If project not already approved by the City Planning Commission, Resolution referred to the City Planning Commission
- Planning Commission recommends to Council on acquisitions for project
- Project engineer to provide staff for Commission with information needed for report and notification
- Project engineer attends Commission meeting
- After Commission’s recommendation, Resolution referred to Committee
- Committee recommends action to Council
- Staff attends the committee and council meetings
SERVICE OF RESOLUTION
- Law serves of the passed Resolution on the owner and all other parties with an interest in the property (ie. mortgage companies)
- Once notice is complete, Law notifies City Council by memo
ORDINANCE- Attorney who prepared the Resolution receives copy of the memo
- Parcels acquired since Resolution prepared not in the ordinance
- Parcels not acquired included in the ordinance
- Original ordinance to department director
- copy of ordinance to project engineer
- department in charge transmits ordinance to Council
COMPLAINT FOR APPROPRIATION
- After ordinance passed, negotiator prepares appropriation package
- Appropriation packages prepared when it’s clear that the owner will not voluntarily sell the property in question
- Appropriation package sent to Law’s litigation section to file complaint
- Quick-take
- road project
- deposit fair market value with the county clerk of courts
- memo to DOTE requesting check
- check attached to the appropriation package
EFFECT OF RECENT CASE LAW
- no effect on the City’s right to appropriate for infrastructure projects
- State legislature is reviewing proposed changes in the law
TRANSFERRING AND RECORDING DEEDS AND PLATS
- Property interests conveyed by deed or plat
- City acquires fee simple or easement
- “Transfer” and “record” are legal terms
- “Transfers” occur in Auditor’s office
- Auditor “transfers” a conveyed parcel from grantor to grantee - transfer occurs in Auditor’s records
- Transfer in records makes sure that current owner is billed for real estate taxes
- Auditor only transfers fee simple, not easements
- To have conveyance document placed of record
- the document first taken to Auditor
- Auditor either: 1) transfers the parcel, mark the document to show transfer; or 2) marks the document “TRANSFER NOT ECESSARY”.
- document then goes to Recorder’s office for recording
- Recorder won’t accept document conveying interest if no Auditor’s stamp
- Law transfers and records all non-MSD conveyance documents