Fair enough. The Russian conquest of Poland is a good candidate.
Admittedly I know very little about this, but the quote indicates that Polish nobility could keep their property if they pledged their allegiance to Catherine, right? No such option was available to the German property owners during the Napoleonic conquest. Loyal or not, their property was taken.
And did the Russians have a full-time bureaucracy, with their own pre-printed forms, for the confiscation of conquered property? That detail seems particularly Napoleonic to me. I can't think of any equivalent in other nations at the time.