As we noted in this post, the recent U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit decision in Severance v. Patterson, No. 07-20409 (Apr. 23, 2009) is garnering a lot of commentary for the dissenting judge’s opening ad hominem and the majority’s terse response. Earlier, we summarized the substantive issues in the case, which involve the Fourth Amendment’s seizure requirements in a takings-esque fact pattern — which are, ultimately, more interesting that this distraction — but wanted to comment briefly.
The case involves a Texas property owner — but (quelle horreur!) a resident of California — who seeks to prevent Texas officials from enforcing a Texas statute regulating beachfront ownership because it would either take her property without just compensation, or is an unconstitutional seizure (or both). The Fifth Circuit affirmed the dismissal of her takings claim as unripe for federal review under Williamson County
