2023

Screenshot 2023-02-21 at 09-24-48 Search - Supreme Court of the United States

Most of the time these days, we’re rooting for cert granted. That comes, naturally, from our work pushing cases and issues up to the Supreme Court, looking to correct lower court errors and in the process make some good law. And that usually entails being on the “petitioner” side of things. Cases like Sackett, Wilkins, and Tyler, for example.

But not always. In Financial Oversight & Management Board for Puerto Rico v. Cooperative de Ahorro y Credito Abraham Rosa, No. 22-367, we were on the “respondent” side of things, advocating for a “cert denied” because there, the First Circuit had reached what we think was the right result for the right reasons. As we noted in this post, the First Circuit correctly held that the “Fifth Amendment precludes the impairment or discharge of prepetition claims for just compensation in Title III bankruptcy.”

In short, just

Continue Reading Cert Denied In Self-Executing Just Compensation Case

There’s not a lot new to report in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit’s opinion in Kreuziger v Milwaukee County, No. 22-2489 (Feb. 13, 2023). But there’s a bit of old that make it worth posting.

The issue the court considered was whether riparian property owners have any protectable interest in the level of the water which their property abuts. After the County demolished a long-standing dam on the Milwaukee River resulting in a four-foot lowering of the water next to Kreuziger’s upriver property, he sued for a taking. Slip op. at 3 (“The lower surface level of the river exposed a ten-foot strip of marshy land between Kreuziger’s seawall and the water’s edge that had previously been submerged.”).

You probably already understand the general rule in these situations: riparian owners have no compensable property interest in any particular water level, as long as the waterway

Continue Reading CA7: Riparian Owner Has No Property Right In Water Level On Navigable River

Here’s the latest SCOTUS cert petition, filed by our law firm colleagues Dave Breemer and Deborah LaFetra. Because this is one of ours, we won’t be commenting, but leave it to you to digest it yourself.

Here’s the Question Presented:

Frank and Rachel Revere and David and Judith Kagan (Owners) own a duplex in Los Angeles, California, as tenants in common. The Reveres live in one unit. In 2019, the Reveres applied to the City to displace a month-to-month tenant in the other unit, so they could move in their own family members. The City denied the request, concluding the tenant was protected from eviction for a family move-in under Los Angeles’ Rent Stabilization Ordinance. The Owners sued, alleging the City’s decision forced them to suffer a physical taking of their property.

The question presented is:

Whether a law that bars termination of a tenancy, and compels the occupation

Continue Reading New Takings Cert Petition: Yee v. Escondido And Physical Occupations

As we wrote up here, national zoning and planning expert Nolan Gray joined our U. Hawaii Land Use class (and the public) last week for a talk about whether zoning is an impediment to affordable housing in Hawaii.

Thank you to Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for recording the talk, as well as making Mr. Gray’s appearance in our classroom possible. See Grassroot’s summary of his presentation here.

If you’d prefer to just listen, try this.

Continue Reading Video: “Are Zoning Laws the Cause of Hawaii’s Housing Crisis?” With Nolan Gray

PXL_20230216_040131899.PANO
The session was recorded.
Here’s the video and audio
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Earlier this week, planner M. Nolan Gray, author of the new book, “Arbitrary Lines: How Zoning Broke the American City and How to Fix It” (Island Press 2022) joined our Land Use class at the University of Hawaii Law School to talk about zoning and housing.

The title of his talk was “Are zoning laws the cause of Hawaii’s housing crisis?” The subject matter is important, and the public was invited to join us. As you can see, there was a lot of interest in this critical topic and turnout was excellent. 

Thank you to the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for their sponsorship of the event, and for generously getting Mr. Gray to Honolulu for his in-person appearance. It was also nice to have refreshments following class, and a chance to “talk story” (as we

Continue Reading A National Zoning Expert Pays A Visit To The L580 Land Use Class At U. Hawaii

Shaka
We thought this fellow has “authority over all fish.”

By statute (the Magnuson-Stevens Act), the feds claim the sovereign right to exclusive fishery management and “authority over all fish” in the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone, a zone “extending 200 nautical miles from the baseline[.]”

The question facing the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Fisherman’s Finest, Inc. v. United States, No. 21-2326 (Feb. 8, 2023) was whether having licensed via regulation quota-based access to, and commercial fishing in, the EEZ in the Bering Sea, the ability of licensees to continue to fish at previous levels was a compensable property right.

The regs are quite complex — see pages 4-6 of the slip opinion for the court’s summary of the regulatory-speak requirements and limitations — and dictate the type and amount of fish which may be caught, and the type of vessel that may be employed in

Continue Reading CAFED: Commercial Fishing In The U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone Is A Govt-Granted Privilege, Not A Property Right

LUI

Here are the opinions that we spoke about this afternoon at the Land Use Institute on “The Use of Eminent Domain for Redevelopment & Economic Development Projects.”

Thanks for joining in.Continue Reading Cases And Links From Today’s Land Use Institute Session: “The Use of Eminent Domain for Redevelopment & Economic Development Projects”

Screenshot 2023-02-13 at 15-12-42 The Illusory Promise of General Property Law

Check this out, a new piece by lawprof Molly Brady, “The Illusory Promise of General Property Law,” 132 Yale. L.J.F. (2023 forthcoming).

If the title alone isn’t enough to grab you, here’s the abstract:

In The Fourth Amendment and General Law, Danielle D’Onfro and Daniel Epps endorse an approach to the Fourth Amendment that defines the scope of protection largely by reference to “general property law”—uniform principles of trespass, abandonment, and so forth—discerned from and informed by the customs and rules of multiple jurisdictions. While their approach attractively reasons from useful common-law and private-law concepts, the specific general-law model they outline has both unresolved internal puzzles and unaddressed external effects.

In this Response, I probe this vision of “general law,” which has the potential to be more open-ended and unconstrained than the general law as it has previously been understood. Even if it did more closely resemble traditional general law, a court’s resort to making general law in a particular context is typically justified by some federal interest or power meriting the application of uniform rules. The authors do not satisfactorily explain that need here, especially given traditional deference to positive state law—and the desirability of some variation reflecting local conditions and expertise—in matters involving property questions in other areas of constitutional law. Further, in justifying reliance on the general law, the authors over-sell its determinacy and stability vis-à-vis existing Fourth Amendment law, which assesses whether an individual’s “reasonable expectations of privacy” have been violated. Given the vagaries of some common-law standards and the breadth of the sources of general law, courts will still be faced with unclear choices within and among them. The general-law approach does not offer guidance on resolving these conflicts and uncertainties, dooming it to the same indeterminacy.

To illustrate with specific examples, I turn to a doctrinal area where the pitfalls of general law—and specifically, general property law—can already be observed: in recent decisions under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Decisions interpreting the Takings Clause traditionally “emphasiz[ed] the role of nonconstitutional state property law in defining both what counts as constitutional property and in measuring whether a taking has occurred.” The presumption of deference to state-specific property principles was grounded in a belief that property is an inherently local matter and that different states might opt to recognize and regulate property interests differently. However, two Supreme Court decisions within the last five years—Murr v. Wisconsin and Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid—have unsettled that longstanding tradition with troubling effects. Takings law also teaches that decisions by courts in federal constitutional cases can influence the direction of nonconstitutional state private law, even though that result is not compelled.

There is an approach that would carry some of the benefits of the general-law model while leaving most of the development of property law to the states. In articles covering the Due Process and Takings clauses, Thomas Merrill has advocated for a “patterning definition” of constitutional property—a set of federal criteria that are met (or not) by the characteristics an interest has under nonconstitutional state law. The idea behind patterning is to provide a baseline, uniform constitutional standard across the states—one of the key purported advantages of the general-law model over the positive-law one—without having courts make a confusing national law of property specific for federal purposes. While private law can helpfully frame and elucidate Fourth Amendment problems, the general-law model offers limited promise for the development of Fourth Amendment doctrine while posing unwarranted risks for the viability of variable state property law.

Get it from SSRN here

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Continue Reading New Article: Maureeen Brady, “The Illusory Promise of General Property Law”

“But we had to eat.”

So begins the Washington Supreme Court’s opinion in Washington Food Industry Ass’n v. City of Seattle, No. 99771-3 (Feb. 9, 2023), wherein the court held that a takings challenge to Seattle’s ordinance requiring Co-19 combat pay for food delivery workers may proceed. 

There’s a lot in the opinion about the crisis and the early days of the response. And about the various claims brought by the WFIA challenging the city’s ordinance, including a statutory claim under Washington law (this is a prohibited tax or fee on groceries), equal protection, takings, contracts clause, section 1983, a “police power” claim, and a privileges and immunities claim.

The opinion is long (39 pages, plus concurring opinions and dissents, adding up to 67 pages), so here’s your scorecard:

I. The chapter 82.84 RCW claim is dismissed; we affirm.
II. The equal protection claim is dismissed; we reverse.
III.

Continue Reading Seattle’s Hazard Pay For Food Delivery Gig Workers Might Be A Penn Central Taking

Screenshot 2022-11-25 at 20-00-33 Land Use Management and Control William S. Richardson School of LawThe Registrar would not accept our suggestion
to change
the course description to “Dirt Law”

This spring, starting mid-January we’ve been back in a law classroom, this time at one of our law almae matres, the University of Hawaii School of Law in Honolulu.

The course is Land Use Management and Control, and we meet twice a week to earn either 3 or 4 credits (depending on how big a final paper the students want to write).

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Hey, we know that fellow…

For Hawaii law students this is an essential course whether or not they intend to become dirt lawyers after graduation. Because land use law and policy cuts across almost all other areas of practice in the 808 (being a small place where land is a scarce commodity, property plays an oversize part in shaping policy, politics, and law), every law student should be taking the class. 

Continue Reading Land Use, Hawaii Style: We’re Underway With Law 580 (Land Use) At The University Of Hawaii