[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR426.14]

[Page 621-623]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
      CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF RECLAMATION, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 426--ACREAGE LIMITATION RULES AND REGULATIONS (Eff. 1-1-98)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 426.14  Involuntary acquisition of land.

    (a) Definitions for purposes of this section.
    Financial institution means a commercial bank or trust company, a 
private bank, an agency or branch of a foreign bank in the United 
States, a thrift institution, an insurance company, a loan or finance 
company, or the Farm Credit System.
    Involuntarily acquired land means land that is acquired through an 
involuntary foreclosure or similar involuntary process of law, 
conveyance in satisfaction of a debt (including, but not limited to, a 
mortgage, real estate contract or deed of trust), inheritance, or 
devise.
    (b) Ineligible excess land that is involuntarily acquired. 
Reclamation cannot make available irrigation water to land that was 
ineligible excess land before the new landowner involuntarily acquired 
it, unless:
    (1) The land becomes nonexcess in the new landowner's ownership; and
    (2) The deed to the land contains the 10-year covenant requiring 
Reclamation sale price approval, and that deed commences when the land 
becomes eligible to receive irrigation water.
    (3) If either of these conditions is not met, the land remains 
ineligible excess until sold to an eligible buyer at an approved price, 
and the seller places the 10-year covenant requiring Reclamation price 
approval, as specified in Sec. 426.12(i), in the deed transferring title 
to the land to the buyer.
    (c) Land that was held under a recordable contract and is acquired 
involuntarily. Reclamation can make available irrigation water to land 
held under a recordable contract that is involuntarily acquired under 
the terms of the recordable contract to the extent the land continues to 
be excess in his or her landholding, if the landowner:
    (1) Assumes the recordable contract; and
    (2) Executes an assumption agreement provided by Reclamation.
    (3) This land will remain eligible to receive irrigation water for 
the longer of 5 years from the date that the land was involuntarily 
acquired, or for the remainder of the recordable contract period. The 
sale of this land shall be under terms and conditions set forth in the 
recordable contract and must be satisfactory to and at a price approved 
by Reclamation.
    (d) Mortgaged land. Reclamation treats mortgaged land that changed 
from nonexcess status to excess status after the mortgage was recorded, 
and which is subsequently acquired by a lender through an involuntary 
foreclosure or similar process of law, or by a bona fide conveyance in 
satisfaction of a mortgage, in the following manner:
    (1) If the new landowner designates the land as excess in his or her 
holding, then:
    (i) The land is eligible to receive irrigation water for a period of 
5 years or until transferred to an eligible landowner, whichever occurs 
first;
    (ii) During the 5-year period Reclamation will charge a rate for 
irrigation water equal to the rate paid by the former owner, unless the 
land becomes subject to full-cost pricing through leasing; and

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    (iii) The land is eligible for sale at its fair market value without 
a deed covenant restricting its future sales price; or
    (2) If the new landowner is eligible to designate the land as 
nonexcess and he or she designates the land as nonexcess, the land will 
be treated in the same manner as any other nonexcess land and will be 
eligible for sale at its fair market value without a deed covenant 
restricting its future sales price.
    (e) Nonexcess land that becomes excess when acquired involuntarily. 
(1) Reclamation can make irrigation water available for a period of 5 
years to a landowner who involuntarily acquires land that becomes excess 
in the involuntarily acquiring landowner's holding provided the land was 
nonexcess to the previous owner and:
    (i) The acquiring landowner never previously held such land as 
ineligible excess land or under a recordable contract;
    (ii) The acquiring landholder is a financial institution; or
    (iii) The acquiring landowner previously held the land as ineligible 
excess or under a recordable contract and Sec. 426.12(g)(1), (3), or (4) 
applies.
    (2) The following will be applicable in situations that meet the 
criteria specified under paragraph (e)(1) of this section:
    (i) Reclamation will charge a rate for irrigation water delivered to 
such land equal to the rate paid by the former owner, except Reclamation 
will charge the full-cost rate if:
    (A) The land becomes subject to full-cost pricing through leasing; 
or
    (B) If the involuntarily acquired land is eligible to receive 
irrigation water only because Sec. 426.12(g)(3) applies and the deed 
covenant has not expired;
    (ii) The new landowner may not place such land under a recordable 
contract;
    (iii) The new landowner may request that Reclamation remove a deed 
covenant as provided in Sec. 426.12(i)(4), and may sell such land at any 
time without price approval and without the deed covenant. However, the 
deed covenant will not be removed and the terms of the deed covenant 
will be fully applied if the new landowner is the landowner who sold the 
land in question from excess status, except for:
    (A) Financial institutions; or
    (B) Landowners for which Sec. 426.12(g) (1) or (2) apply; and
    (iv) Such land will become ineligible to receive irrigation water 5 
years after it was acquired and will remain ineligible until sold to an 
eligible buyer or redesignated as provided for in paragraph (f) of this 
section.
    (f) Redesignation of excess land to nonexcess. Landholders who 
designate involuntarily acquired land as excess as provided for in 
paragraphs (d)(1) and (e)(1) of this section and want to redesignate the 
land as nonexcess, must utilize the redesignation process specified 
under Sec. 426.12(b)(2).
    (1) However, such redesignations will not be approved if the water 
rate specified in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) or (e)(2)(i) of this section is 
less than what would have been charged for water deliveries to the land 
in question if the landholder that involuntarily acquired the land had 
originally designated the land as nonexcess.
    (2) Such landholders may utilize the redesignation process, if they 
remit to Reclamation the difference between the rate paid and the rate 
that would have been paid, if the land had been designated as nonexcess 
when involuntarily acquired, for all irrigation water delivered to the 
land in question while the land was designated as excess.
    (g) Effect of involuntarily acquiring land subject to the 
discretionary provisions. A landowner does not automatically become 
subject to the discretionary provisions if the landowner acquires 
irrigation land involuntarily which was formerly subject to the 
discretionary provisions. However, a landholder that is subject to the 
prior law provisions will become subject to the discretionary provisions 
upon involuntarily acquiring land if:
    (1) The land is located in a district that is subject to the 
discretionary provisions;
    (2) The landholder in question will be the direct landowner of the 
land; and
    (3) The landholder in question declares the land as nonexcess.
    (h) Land acquired by inheritance or devise. If a landowner receives 
irrigation land through inheritance or devise, the 5-year eligibility 
period for receiving irrigation water on the newly acquired

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land per paragraphs (c)(3) and (e) of this section begins on the date of 
the previous landowner's death.