2016

Here’s one we’ve been meaning to post up for a while. Not because it isn’t an important decision, but because other things intervened. 

In State of West Virginia ex rel. West Virginia Dep’t of Transportation v. Burnside, No. 15-1112 (June 13, 2016), the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia held that under the statutory quick-take scheme, the condemnor has the total discretion to determine the amount of the deposit, an estimate of just compensation. In that case, the DOT took land formerly occupied by a service station, which needed some environmental clean up due to old gas and oil storage tanks buried on the land.

The DOT calculated the deposit supporting the quick-take by adding up the overall value of the land, the severance damages to the remainder, and the value of the fixtures and the temporary construction easement, and then subtracting the cost of the clean up which

Continue Reading W Virginia: Govt, Not Judge, Gets To Determine Quick-Take Deposit

Kauaipark

Here’s the latest in that case we told you about a couple of months ago, a published ruling in an eminent domain case from the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals. We wrote that in our view, the court got it really wrong on one of the three issues in the case, whether two parcels which the condemnee alleged he used together could be considered the “larger tract” for purposes of severance damages.

The case involves three parcels on Kauai — one of which is owned by a fellow who has been a thorn in the County’s side — which were condemned by the County for the expansion of a public beach park. The County was taking Parcels 49, 33, and 34. Sheehan owned 49, and HRH, a corporation, owned 33 and 34. Sheehan asserted his use of Parcel 49 stretched across 33, 34, and Area 51 — a portion of

Continue Reading Hawaii Supreme Court Amicus Brief: In Eminent Domain, Parcels Need Not Abut In Order To Be Considered Part Of A Larger Tract

Apparently (if the level of media coverage is any measure), the question of public access to beaches is a big thing in Maine:

This question has also already resulted in a couple of decisions which we’ve covered:

And here’s the latest, an opinion from the Maine Supreme Judicial Court, Cedar Beach/Cedar Island Supporters, Inc. v. Gables Real Estate LLC, No.

Continue Reading Maine Supreme Court Considers Public Prescriptive Easements For Beach Access

Another flooding case, this time from the Indiana Court of Appeals.

In Birge v. Town of Linden, No. 54A01-1509-PL-1495 (July 25, 2016), the court considered a pure legal question (the issue was up on appeal after the trial court dismissed for failure to state a claim): does governmental immunity under the state tort claims act apply to inverse condemnation cases? The court held no, “to the extent the trial court concluded that immunity under the ITCA would bar the Birges’ claim for inverse condemnation, the trial court erred.” Slip op. at 10. The town may be entitled to immunity for flooding which it was alleged to have caused, but that immunity “will extend only to tort claims brought under the ITCA.” Slip op. at 11.

More about the case in this story: “Farmers win reversal in drainage appeal against town” from the Indiana Lawyer

Birge v.

Continue Reading Indiana App: No Gov’t Immunity For Inverse Condemnation

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Yesterday came the news I’ve been dreading, but was hoping might never arrive. Congressman K. Mark Takai lost his final fight, a battle with pancreatic cancer.

I am devastated. He was not only a client, but one of the rare people in public life who actually showed political courage to do the right thing when literally not one of his colleagues had the guts to join him. He was one of the plaintiffs in the Hawaii reapportionment case, something we got a lot of behind-the-scenes attaboys about from his fellow politicians, but only Takai signed on the dotted line.

This was the litigation spurred by the fact that Hawaii does not count resident active duty military members and their families in its reapportionment population. Yes, we gladly accept the billions of dollars which their presence inject into the Hawaii economy, but count them as “residents” who are

Continue Reading Taps For A Good Man, K. Mark Takai

Today, in a case we’ve been following (because we filed a brief in support of the property owner), the California Supreme Court in a unanimous opinion essentially rewrote California’s precondemnation entry statute to give the government a pass.

The court assumed that entries which exceed the relatively minor entries contemplated by its prior decisions are takings (they are physical occupations, after all), but held that the burden is on the landowner to sue for inverse condemnation, and that the California Constitution doesn’t require a predeprivation process or payment of just compensation. 

The vibe of the government’s argument has always been that were the California Supreme Court to affirm the ruling by the Court of Appeals — that as takings, these entries themselves are subject to the protections of the eminent domain process — the sky was going to fall. It would just be so bloody inconvenient for condemnors.

Continue Reading California Supreme Court Rewrites Eminent Domain Entry Statutes To Give Government A Free Pass

Like many high-profile cases, the legal challenge to the actions of the State Office of Elections tracks two threads. On one hand, the Office’s travails are well known and frequently reported. The public understands only too well the difficulties the Office encountered when it failed to print enough ballots, and had other problems in recent Hawaii elections. The media reports in the wake of the disastrous oral argument (from the Office’s perspective) focused on how upset the Justices seemed to be with the way the Office approached the situation, and its arguments in the case. We had a similar view when we wrote, “After A Judicial Feeding Frenzy, The Hawaii Supreme Court Searches For Rules To Fix The Office Of Elections.” 

On the other hand, judicial opinions (particularly by a unanimous court) tend to focus on the legal nuances which a case presents, by detailing things like

Continue Reading Hawaii Supreme Court: Some Office Of Election Ballot Practices Are “Rules,” Some Maybe Not

We’re not going to go into much detail about the Court of Federal Claims’ ruling in Katzin v. United States, No. 12-384L (July 15, 2016): (1) it’s long (44 single-spaced pages), (2) it’s a post-trial ruling and not from an appellate court, and (3) we’re busy today.

But we still recommend you read it, eventually, because it looks like a fascinating case. Here’s the CFC’s ruling, to start:

This post-trial opinion addresses claims by plaintiffs Dr. Richard Lewis Katzin (“Dr. Katzin”), Mary Beth Katzin Simon (“Ms. Katzin”), and Rose Marie Kjeldsen Winters (“Ms. Winters”) that the United States (the “government”) interfered with their ownership rights to a parcel of land (“Parcel 4”) which overlooks the Atlantic Ocean on Culebra Island, Puerto Rico, and that the interference effected a taking in contravention of the Fifth Amendment.

. . . .

This case raises factual questions of property ownership that

Continue Reading Pirate Of The Carribean: Govt Claiming Ownership And Clouding Title Is A Physical Taking

Here’s what we’re reading today:

  • Property Rights to Surf Breaks” – A topic near and dear, obviously. From the Property and Environment Research Center. (Yes, the article is from 2010. But it’s new to us.) “Overall, Kaffine finds that at higher quality surf breaks, locals engage in more attempts to restrict entry by nonlocals, resulting in more secure property rights at such locations. The possibility that the private creation of property rights would be more likely to emerge for more valuable resources was first suggested by Harold Demsetz (1967).” Check it out. 
  • US economy less competitive, and it is the legal system’s fault: Expert” – From CNBC, a report concluding that “‘The quality of the legal system in the United States has declined in the sense that it no longer delivers the rule of law or protection of private property like it once did,’


Continue Reading Monday Reading List: Property Rights In Space, In The Surf, And Elsewhere

Civil procedure fans, rejoice. Here’s one to take you to the weekend.

We say that because although Laroe Estates, Inc. v. Town of Chester, No. 15-1086 (July 6, 2016), was a regulatory takings case, the issue — whether a third party could intervene — was not really dependent on the underlying Fifth Amendment claim. In that case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that an intervenor need not show standing in order to intervene; it only needs to meet the requirements for as-of-right or permissive intervention under the federal rules of civil procedure. The rules that in order to intervene, an intervenor only have an interest at stake in the litigation, and need not have a vested “property interest” under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.   

Sherman asserted a regulatory takings case against the town in federal court. After a visit to the Second circuit

Continue Reading 2d Cir: Circuit Split? Meh. You Don’t Need Standing (Or A Property Interest) To Intervene In A Takings Case