2019

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One should never be surprised, we suppose, when the Supreme Court denies a cert petition due to the daunting statistics, but we really thought that maybe the third time was a charm for the quick-take-by-preliminary-injunction issue, and that the Givens petition had a real chance. The petition was strong, the issue (in our opinion) was compelling: can private pipeline companies obtain immediate precondemnation possession of land and start construction of a pipeline even though the Natural Gas Act delegates to them only the straight-takings power?  

Alas no, the Court today issued an Order declining to review the case (and gazillions of others). The circuit split is the Seventh vs everyone else, but apparently the Supreme Court is more interested in ensuring the circuits are consistent than it is about separation of powers issues, and making sure that the “despotic power” is wielded carefully, especially when it is private for-profit

Continue Reading Cert Denied (Again) In Quick-Take-By-Injunction Pipeline Case

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Here is a transcript of the remarks I delivered today at the 2019 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. I was honored to join lawprof Henry Smith and Florida Supreme Court Justice (ret.) Ken Bell (who authored the Florida court’s opinion in Stop the Beach Renourishment which was challenged in SCOTUS as a “judicial taking”) to speak about “Public Resources and Private Rights” (moderated by Professor Katherine Mims Crocker). After paying our respects to 2019 B-K Prize winner Professor Steven Eagle, we each addressed some part of the question.

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The New New Property

As always, I bring to you tidings of “aloha” from the state where the legislature thought it was a going to reduce the price of residential housing by taking fee simple interests from “A” and giving them to “B,” the leaseholders

Where now, the median price for a single-family, two bedroom, one bath

Continue Reading 2019 Brigham-Kanner Conference: The New New Property – Public Resources And Private Rights

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Today’s the kickoff events for William and Mary Law School’s Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. We started the day with eminent domain and property law attorneys speaking about the practice of law (pictured above, Justin Hodge (TX) and Christian Torgrimson (GA)).

Toronto’s Shane Rayman and I spoke about international and comparative property and eminent domain (expropriation) and how even though our way of approaching cases may be different, the goals are the same: justice and fair treatment for our clients. And what we can learn about our own cases by looking at how other jurisdictions do it. 

In that vein, here are the links to the cases we (and others) mentioned:


Continue Reading 2019 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Kickoff

With the 2019 edition of the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference (and award of the B-K Prize to Professor Steven Eagle) to get underway later this week, it is also publication time for the latest issue of the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Journal

This edition focuses on the “Federalism Dimension of Constitutional Property,” and we contributed a short essay, “Emerging Issues in Property Law.”  (And yes, this essay was part of my talk at an academic conference, so used the word “normative.”)

Thomas, Emerging Issues in Property Law, 8 Brigham-Kanner Prop. Rts. J. 113 (2019) 

Continue Reading New Article: Emerging Issues in Property Law (Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Journal)

This one is a break from our usual programming because it involves … insurance law. Specifically the law of “bad faith.”

We highlight the case because we represent the prevailing petitioner. (See, we don’t just do property appeals.) And come on, everyone should be interested in insurance law. Especially the law of how health insurers behave, because when you are ill, it is the worst time to be dealing with questions of coverage, claims, and the like; but that’s often when you do have to deal with these questions.

We won’t trouble you with all of the details of the Hawaii Supreme Court’s unanimous opinion in Adams v. Haw. Med. Service Ass’n, No. SCWC-15-396 (Sep. 30, 2019), but if you have health insurance or have ever dealt with an insurer (and who hasn’t?), you might find this interesting and useful. Our research shows this case to be the first

Continue Reading HAWSCT: Insurer’s Duty Of Good Faith Claims Processing Covers Its Conduct Before Submission Of A Claim

Philly

You recall the property law trope that publicly-owned land isn’t generally subject to claims of adverse possession, at least when the government owns the land in its public capacity? 

Well, like a lot of things, that rule isn’t ironclad. At least not in Pennsylvania, where the Commonwealth’s Supreme Court (Eastern District) just held, in City of Philadelphia v. Galdo, No. J-46-2019 (Sep. 26, 2019), that Philadelphia was “not immune from a claim of adverse possession” because “the property was not devoted to public use during the twenty-one year prescriptive period.” Slip op. at 1. 

The city owns a vacant lot which it acquired decades ago by eminent domain for “transit purposes.” Galdo later purchased the house across the street. The city never developed the property and the transit line was rerouted. Over time the city viewed the lot as surplus property, and “has not performed any maintenance, grass butting, grading, or landscaping.” Slip op. at 3. Predictably, the parcel attracted the usual nuisances: “prostitutes” and “derelicts,” trash, weeds, and the line. 

Galdo didn’t appreciate this, and over time he did things like clear the weeds, poured a concrete slab, parked vehicles, and built a fire pit and picnic area. But he didn’t pay taxes on the parcel, nor did he obtain permits for any of the work. Sounds a lot better than the blight of city ownership.

Eventually, the city wanted to sell the parcel. That fell through, but apparently the failed transaction brought Galdo’s improvements to the city’s attention, and after Galdo refused to comply with the city’s notices to remove the improvements, the city sued to eject him from the land. Galdo asserted in a counterclaim that title should be quieted in him, because he had adversely possessed the property for more than the 21 years which the Pennsylvania statute requires. “Galdo contended that he had been in continuous and exclusive possession of the Parcel without the City’s consent or authorization since September of 1989. He further asserted that the Parcel had not constituted a public use since 1976.” Slip op. at 5. 

The court tried the case, and ruled against Galdo. The court accepted the city’s claim that it was immune from adverse possession claims (meaning the evidence about Galdo’s uses was irrelevant) on two grounds, both tied to the exercise of eminent domain by which it had acquired the land. First, because the city had acquired the land as an agent of the Commonwealth, for its construction of a highway, it was not subject to adverse possession. Second, the fact the property was acquired for public use by eminent domain meant that it was devoted to public use and therefore also not subject to adverse possession (under Pennsylvania law, property devoted to public use cannot be adversely possessed). Slip op. at 6.

The appeals court disagreed, and concluded that municipalities do not enjoy “total immunity” from adverse possession claims. The court held that although the property may have been originally acquired for public use, that was a different question of whether it had used the property for the public during the prescriptive period. That, predictably, was not the end of it.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed, concluding that the city was not immune from Galdo’s claim for adverse possession. The point of adverse possession is to see that land doesn’t lie fallow, and to incentivize owners to make use of it, or risk losing it to those who do. As Howard Mansfield notes, “the quiet citizen must keep out of the way of the exuberantly active one.” And Mr. Galdo, it appears, has been exuberantly active and the city has not. Also known in Playground Law as “you snooze, you lose.”  As for the idea that a subject cannot run out the clock against the sovereign king, the court held that Philadelphia is a municipality, and only the Commonwealth is a sovereign. 

The exception to the rule that municipalities can have their property adversely possessed is if they are devoting the property to public use. The court agreed with the appeals court which concluded that although the parcel was undoubtedly acquired for public use initially, that public use appears to have “lapsed” when the transit line was rerouted. Slip op. at 17-18. The fact that the city viewed the parcel as surplus meant it was not using it. And, importantly, the city conceded that a public use can lapse or be abandoned. Citing the eminent domain code, the court held that in some circumstances, a condemnor may abandon the public use for which property is taken. 

The case turned on the city’s assertion that as long as it continued to hold the property for possible resale, it was using it for the public. Thus, it argued, everything else was not relevant:

On a more global scale, it is the City’s view that once it acquires property fora public use, it can retain that property in perpetuity without being subject to adverse possession claims so long as it does so for the putative purpose of resale, without any obligation to maintain such property and regardless of whether the land continues to function in its dedicated capacity.

Slip op. at 18. The court rejected the argument. The policy of active use of land trumps that, and there’s no authority for the idea that holding property for resale is a public use. Slip op. at 19 (“The reason necessitating the sale of the property is because the public use no longer exists. Absent the public use, a municipality’s holding of abandoned property, here for decades, offers no benefit to the public.”).

If remedying blight can be a public use (see, for example, Berman), then holding property that is or about to become blighted isn’t a public use:

Absent the public use, a municipality’s holding of abandoned property, here for decades, offers no benefit to the public. Under such circumstances, the public is not occupying the property in any way, no tax dollars are being received from the property, and the neighborhoods in which the dormant properties are located risk the threat of becoming blighted. This scenario constitutes the opposite of devoting property to a public use as the indefinite holding of abandoned municipal property is detrimental to those tax payers who own property nearby and to the community at large.

Slip op. at 19. 

The court acknowledged that Galdo has a high factual burden (the city doesn’t need to have done all that much in the 21 years to preserve its ownership), but held that if he can meet the burden, the property is his. The court remanded for a trial. 

A final thought: might this case be one of be careful what you wish for? If he is successful as acquiring the title to the property from the city, one can see how the city might not just let this go, and that Galdo may have to do something about those unpermitted structures on the land, and start paying property taxes. You know, the usual things that owners of property are subject to. Code compliance can be a very burdensome thing, and the city can exact a lot of retribution for getting burned in this case and on the larger issue.  

City of Philadelphia v. Galdo, No. J-46-2019 (Pa. Sep. 26, 2019) 

Continue Reading A Different Form Of “Public Use” – City Land Subject To Adverse Possession Claim

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Reading through the opinion of the Supreme Court of the Philippines in City of Manila v. Roces Prieto, No. 221366 (Aug. 29, 2019), there is a lot there that will look familiar to U.S. lawyers, specifically U.S. eminent domain lawyers.

Viz.: It is up before the Court on a petition for certiorari, there was an effort to voluntarily acquire the properties, an “expropriation” lawsuit gets filed when that didn’t work, and the City deposited estimated compensation and sought a writ of immediate possession from the trial court. That court balked because the deposit amount didn’t comply with the requirements of the statute, but once the City fixed that problem, the court allowed immediate possession. Sounds very familiar. 

The takings were in furtherance of something called the Land-for-the-Landless program, which this article describes as a process by which “[t]hrough expropriation, the city government buys private properties that are then

Continue Reading Berman International – Philippines Supreme Court: Takings Must Undergo “Painstaking” Judicial Scrutiny

If you didn’t know takings, and just had to venture guess whether a court would ever conclude that the outlawing of “bump stocks” (a device which attaches to a semi-automatic rifle and makes it cycle really quickly so that it works somewhat like a fully-automatic rifle) was a taking, what would you say?

If you guessed no, you’d be right. And not because you read this blog every day and know that we’ve been down this path before with bump stocks. After all, some cases are not resolved in the mind, but in the heart and in the gut. The Court of Federal Claims’ decision in McCutchen v. United States, No. 18-1965C (Sep. 23, 2019), is one of them.

As we wrote about the earlier decision, as Justice Holmes famously noted, “‘the life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.’ And experience

Continue Reading One From The Gut: Outlawing “Bump Stocks” Not A Taking

Last week, along with Bob Grace, I (Robert (don’t-call-me-Bob) Thomas), was a guest on Clint Schumacher’s Eminent Domain Podcast. Stream it above, or download it here.

Clint and I had a wide-ranging discussion that centered on the recent trend of limiting short-term rentals, the legal pushback, and (of course) takings. We discussed the memorably-captioned Tiki Island case from Clint’s home state of Texas. Penn Central, naturally. Vested rights. Mrs. Murphy exceptions (although those deal with discrimination in rental housing). First Amendment stuff. The upcoming ALI-CLE Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation Conference in Nashville (Jan 23-25, 2020), at which both Clint and Bob are speaking. And The Castle (which might not only be our favorite eminent domain movie, but our favorite movie period). 

Check it out.

Not only is Clint presenting at our Ethics program in Nashville in January, he will — as he did

Continue Reading Latest Ep, Eminent Domain Podcast: Short-Term Rentals, Tiki Island, The Castle, Penn Central

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Chief Justice Marshall (L) and Professor Wythe (R) request the pleasure of your company at the 16th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference at the William & Mary Law School, in Williamsburg, Virginia, Thursday and Friday, October 3-4, 2019. Register here, and make your plans to join us. 

The Conference’s main event is the awarding of the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize to Professor Emeritus Steven J. Eagle, recognizing his lifetime of work and scholarship about property law and property rights. Here’s the official announcement:

The annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference is presented by the William & Mary Property Rights Project and is named in recognition of Toby Prince Brigham and Gideon Kanner for their lifetime contributions to private property rights. The conference is designed to bring together members of the bench, bar, and academia to explore recent developments in the law that affect property rights. The Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference began

Continue Reading Space Still Available: Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, Oct. 3-4, 2019