2013

Here’s a follow-up to our recent post about the U. Hawaii Law Review article authored by lawprof David Callies which summarizes the land use and property decisions of the Hawaii Supreme Court during the tenure of now-retired Chief Justice Ronald Moon. You know, the article setting out the stunning success rates of certain parties in the court, which chides the Justices for their often-lengthy opinions, and labels the Moon Court’s record on property rights “appalling.” Download the article here.

Today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser has a follow-up interview with Professor Callies, most of which is behind a paywall. But if you don’t have an e-subscription (a real deal for those with mainland zip codes, by the way), here are the choice parts:

  • “Callies says he isn’t against planning in general, but thinks there must be legitimate police powers involved for the right of development to be abrogated.”
  • QUESTION: A recent


Continue Reading More From U.H. Lawprof On 1993-2010 HAWSCT’s “Appalling” Record On Property Rights

Here’s the petitioners’ merits brief in Horne v. United States Dep’t of Agriculture, No. 12-122 (cert. granted. Nov. 20, 2012).

That’s the case in which the Court is reviewing Horne v. United States Dep’t of Agriculture, 673 F.3d 1071 (9th Cir. 2011), in which the Ninth Circuit concluded a takings claim raised as a defense by raisin farmers who qualified as “raisin handlers” under federal regulations and thus were required to “reserve” (donate) 47% of their crop to the government, was not ripe because the farmers could seek just compensation in a Tucker Act claim in the Court of Federal Claims. For the 2003 and 2004 crop years, the USDA government brought an enforcement action against the farmers, seeking to recover the monetary value of raisins they did not turn over to the government.

The Ninth Circuit dismissed the takings claim for lack of jurisdiction, effectively telling the

Continue Reading Can A Property Owner Raise A Takings Defense? – Petitioners’ Brief In California Raisin Case

Here’s the preview of next week’s U.S. Supreme Court arguments in Koontz v. St Johns River Water Mgmt Dist., No. 11-1447 (cert. granted Oct. 5, 2012). That’s the case in which the Court will be addressing whether the “essential nexus” and “rough proportionality” standards of Nollan and Dolan are applicable only to exactions for land, or whether they are generally-applicable tests for all exactions.

In Wetlands regulation at heart of Fla. property rights dispute, Greenwire‘s Lawrence Hurley writes:

In late 1993 and early 1994, Coy Koontz Sr. applied for two permits from a Florida agency as he sought to build on wetlands he owned just east of Orlando.

Today, Koontz has been dead for 13 years, his family no longer owns the property and the permits have long been approved. And yet a legal dispute about the permitting process is about to be argued at the Supreme

Continue Reading Koontz Preview: Request For Exaction Is Not A “Suggestion,” But A “Velvet-Covered Hammer”

How, as an appellant, do you know you are in trouble? When an opinion starts like this, that’s how:

Although a residential subdivision proposed for construction in a bucolic Rhode Island town never saw the light of day, its ghost continues to haunt the parties. But apparitions rarely have substance, and this one is no exception. After careful consideration of the plaintiff’s complaint and the district court’s order of dismissal, we lay the ghost to rest.

The remainder of the opinion in Marek v. Rhode Island, No. 12-1460 (1st Cir. Dec. 27, 2012)  deals with whether a property owner suffered a taking when the State of Rhode Island and other parties granted a permit and approved construction by a neighboring owner of a road that allegedly encroached on the plaintiff’s land.

Among other arguments (as far as we can tell), the plaintiff raised a takings claim in federal court

Continue Reading First Circuit: Inverse Condemnation Claim In State Court An “Adequate Procedural Pathway” To Compensation

Earlier, we posted the opinion of New York’s Appellate Division in New York Central Lines, LLC v. State of New York, No. 2011-03494 (Dec. 19, 2012), in which the court determined how to value a rail corridor when it is taken by eminent domain.

The court’s opinion was somewhat cryptic, so we thought we would post the briefs to help understand the arguments better. If this is your game, check them out:

These briefs come to us by way of Jonathan Houghton, counsel for the prevailing property owner. Jonathan is the partner of our Owners’ Counsel of America colleague Mike Rikon. Two more kudos: Jonathan recently became a named partner of the firm, which has recently moved back into its permanent offices in Manhattan after being displaced by Hurricane Sandy. Congratulations on all Continue Reading Briefs In NY Rail Corridor Valuation Case

You know how we’re always saying that certain parties have an enviable record of success in the Hawaii Supreme Court? Well, now the statistics are official.

The latest edition of the University of Hawaii Law Review published an article by lawprof David Callies summarzing the decisions of the court during the tenure of now-retired Chief Justice Ronald Moon. The article sets forth the stark numbers (83% win rate, 65% reversal of the intermediate appellate court), and contains a sharp comment about the often-lengthy nature of the court’s opinions:

Second, the Moon Court decided some of thestate’s most important property and related environmental and Native Hawaiianrights cases in favor of the various non-governmental organizations bringingthem (Sierra Club, Earthjustice, Hawaii’s Thousand Friends, and the NativeHawaiian Legal Corporation) approximately eighty-two percent of the time,sixty-five percent of which reversed the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA).Third, the court increasingly rendered lengthy opinions, many triple the

Continue Reading U.H. Lawprof: HAWSCT’s 1993-2010 Record On Private Property Rights “Appalling”

A quick one from colleague Christopher Dillon. In How to buy in China, Christopher provides a primer on how to buy a home in the People’s Republic. Tip: it isn’t cheap. He reminds us:

In China all urban land is owned by the state, while rural land is owned by collectives. Private ownership of land is forbidden, and urban land used for housing is leased from the state for a 70-year term. When you buy a home in China, you purchase the structure and the remainder of the land lease.

Just in case you are thinking of doing a “Depardieu.” You know, the Russian actor.Continue Reading Buying Property In China

Here’s petitioner’s reply brief in Koontz v. St Johns River Water Mgmt Dist., No. 11-1447 (cert. granted Oct. 5, 2012), which responds to the Water Management District’s merits brief.

In that case, the U.S. Supreme Court will address whether the “essential nexus” and “rough proportionality” standards of Nollan and Dolan are applicable only to exactions for land, or whether they are generally-applicable tests for all exactions.

Among other things, the reply addresses the argument made by the District and its amici that Nollan and Dolan aren’t really “takings” cases, but involve due process or equal protection:

Due process and equal protection claims are also inapt. A due process claim questions whether the exaction serves some legitimate purpose, and an equal protection claim asks whether the exaction is applied equally to similarly situated individuals. But neither claim addresses whether a particular individual has been targeted to bear a public

Continue Reading Reply Brief In Koontz: Money Is Property

…the Supreme Court’s opinion, isssued today, in Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist. v. NRDC, No. 11-460 (Jan. 8, 2013), in which the Court held that “the flow of water from an improved portion of a navigable waterway into an unimproved portion of the very same waterway does not qualify as a discharge of pollutants under the [Clean Water Act]”

We’d summarize the case, but that would take longer than you reading the five-page opinion.

More here from Greenwire’s Lawrence Hurley.Continue Reading Blink And You’ll Miss…

One for you just compensation mavens. In City of Wichita v. Denton, No. 97952 (Kan. Jan. 4, 2013), the Kansas Supreme Court held that the city owed no compensation for the value of a billboard or the advertising income it produced for its owner when the city condemned the land on which the billboard was located. The court concluded that as a matter of law, the billboard was the personal property of its owner, not part of the taken land, and thus not a compensable item, and evidence of its value must be withheld from the jury.

The court started with the “undivided fee” rule (aka the “unit rule”), under which the court values the property taken as if it were owned by a single entity, even though it is not (more on that here).

Because the current case is an appeal from the valuation stage of the

Continue Reading Kansas: Billboard Is Personal Property, Not Compensable