With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". Ranch Co., No. 968C252, 1996 Colo. LEXIS 874 (Colo. Sept. 3, 1996), the court of appeals upheld a trial court's imposition of a "compromise" between competing landowners subject to an easement. Id. at 817-18. There, both the plaintiff and the defendant shared a road that ran along a common property line. The plaintiff planned to subdivide his property for residential development; the defendant operated a cattle ranch. Over the plaintiff's objections, the defendant sought to gate the shared road at both ends. As a solution, the trial court ordered the plaintiff to install cattle guards, while also ordering that if the defendant needed to move the cattle guards at a later date, the defendant would bear those costs. Id. at 816; see also Schold v. Sawyer, 944 P.2d 683, 685 (Colo.App.1997) (<HOLDING>). An equitable solution maximizes the usage

A: holding that when determining the proper amount for a burdened property that was purchased in a package only two methods suggest themselves as arguably appropriate 1 a determination of the fair market value of the  property burdened by the right of first refusal or 2 a determination of the portion of the  purchase price which based on the percentage of the fair market value of the entire package represented by the  property burdened by the right of first refusal should be allocated to the  property burdened by the right of first refusal
B: holding that the bankruptcy code does not interfere with criminal sentencing schemes
C: recognizing enforceability of right of first refusal when burdened property is part of integrated transaction with sale of unburdened property
D: holding the burdened estates erection of cattle guards permissible when they do not unreasonably interfere with the right of way
D.