IMG_2947
Some of the Land Use Institute faculty, including (front row left), Planning Chair Frank Schnidman and Planning Co-Chair Patty Salkin

Last Friday at the 32nd Annual Land Use Institute in Detroit, I was honored to moderate a freewheeling discussion by a panel of takings experts, Professor Steven Eagle, Minnesota lawyer Howard Roston, and Michigan’s own Alan Ackerman on “Takings, Eminent Domain, and Vested Rights.”

Here are the cases and other materials we discussed, as well as a few others which we did not have time to cover (but wish we could have):


Continue Reading Cases And Materials From The Takings And Eminent Domain Session At The Land Use Institute

20180419_150416_HDR

We’re in Detroit the rest of the week at the Mercy Law School for the venerable Land Use Institute, now in its 32nd iteration.

Planning Chair Frank Schnidman has assembled a great faculty including out Detroit colleague Alan Ackerman (above, talking about takings liability for flooding), and we’ll be spending the time talking inverse condemnation, public trust, planning law, homelessness, autonomous vehicles, affordable housing, RULIPA, and similar topics. We’ll be presenting on “Eminent Domain, Vested Rights, and Regulatory Takings,” “Client Representation: Developer, Government, and Citizens Groups,” and “Federal Laws Affecting Local Land Use Decision Making.” 

If you are here with us in Detroit, stop by and say hello. If you aren’t here, shame on you! This is one of the best and most affordable tuition deals in CLE.

But all kidding aside, if you are not in Detroit now, be sure to calendar these

Continue Reading Land Use Institute – Detroit

Here’s a bit passed on to us from a colleague who reads USA Today. Leading off “Justice Gorsuch confirms conservatives’ hopes, liberals’ fears in first year on Supreme Court,” is this snippet, which points out a Just Compensation case in which we represented the (denied) petitioner:

WASHINGTON – Neil Gorsuch had been a member of the Supreme Court for exactly 11 weeks when he made clear in a single day what type of justice he would be.

The court struck down an Arkansas law that treated same-sex couples differently than opposite-sex couples on their children’s birth certificates. Gorsuch dissented. 

The court refused to consider a challenge to the Department of Veterans Affairs’ system for evaluating disability claims. Gorsuch dissented.

The court declined to hear a challenge to a California law limiting who can carry a concealed gun in public. Gorsuch dissented.

And the court turned aside a challenge to the meager sum Mississippi paid when it converted a former landowner’s property into a park. Gorsuch said the justices should hear a similar case “at its next opportunity.”

Thus it was that on the last day of its 2016-17 term — as the court addressed gay rights, government power, gun ownership and government takings — Neil McGill Gorsuch announced to the legal world that he would not go along to get along.

“He came to the court more ready to jump into the deep end than a lot of recent nominees,” says Jonathan Adler, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law.

Here’s why

we thought the denial of cert in that case (and others) wasn’t necessarily a bad sign.
Continue Reading USA Today Notes Just Comp An Area Where Justice Gorsuch “Jumping Into The Deep End”

When the city condemned a portion of CED’s property back in 2012 for a highway project (replacing an intersection with a roundabout), the city’s appraiser testified that the taking did not confer any “special benefits” to CED’s remainder parcel. Eventually, CED and the city settled the case and the city paid agreed-upon compensation and severance damages. 

Flash forward a few years, and to help fund the roundabout project, the city adopted a special assessment and tagged CED and other nearby landowners. Based on its street frontage, the city charged CED a total of $40k, asserting that CED’s parcel had specially benefited from the improvement project by, among other things, “a substantial increase in accessibility, which includes safer, lower cost, and short travel time for customer, deliveries and employees. These special benefits are different in kind that those enjoyed by the public for through traffic.” The city acknowledged there were also

Continue Reading Wisconsin: “Special Benefits” In Eminent Domain Means “Uncommon Advantage,” But Only Regarding Market Value

Space is filling up, but there’s still time to join us later this month in Detroit for the 32nd Annual Land Use Institute (April-19-20). 

We’ll let program Planning Chair Frank Schnidman explain all the reasons why, and we’ll add only these points: (1) it’s a very good program that won’t take much of your time (fly in for the Thursday afternoon program, stay a night, fly home on Friday evening); (2) Detroit is the place to be these days; and (3) it’s one of the best deals in CLE credits, with tuition as low as $400.

2018 Land Use Institute Brochure Detroit 5 2018

Continue Reading There’s Still Time To Join Us In Detroit: 32d Annual Land Use Institute

Here’s the cert petition in a case we’ve been following out of the Tenth Circuit involving an attempt by a private utility company to take property which is now partly tribal land.

In Public Service Co. of New Mexico v. Barboan, 857 F.3d 1101 (10th Cir. 2017), there wasn’t a question that a federal statute prohibited a utility company from taking “tribal land.” The big issue was what land fell within that definition. 

The Navajo Nation owns undivided fractional interests in two parcels which a utility claimed it needed for a electric transmission line. The land earlier had been “allotted” to individual owners, who are treated like fee owners except for certain restrictions on alienation. This land is no long tribal land or part of any reservation, and under a federal statute, allotted land is subject to an exercise of eminent domain:

Lands allotted in severalty to Indians

Continue Reading Cert Petition: Is Land Only Partly Owned By A Tribe Immune From Eminent Domain?

Here’s what we’re reading this Thursday:

Cert(s) Denied

California Wildfires and Inverse Condemnation


Continue Reading Thursday Round Up: Cert(s) Denied, Cal Wildfires, City-to-City Takings, Other Stuff

We always were glad biology prevented us from hearing what others were thinking. Because if we were able to know what people really thought, we might not like each other very much. 

Well, the internet — Twitter in particular — has broken through the biology and given us that opportunity, all in 160+ characters. The crazy is strong with this one.

But you can learn stuff on Twitter. Stuff like the author of the Con Law treatise you used in law school is kinda … out there, for example. 

But despite Twitter’s notoriously low signal-to-noise ratio, Sheldon Gilbert, an attorney with the Institute for Justice, is someone you really should follow on Twitter. Sheldon’s tweets with the hashtag #courtinghistory are gems which make wading into the Twitter swamp worthwhile. In a series of tweets, he walks through some of the most important and interesting Supreme Court cases, focusing on

Continue Reading On This Day: Midkiff SCOTUS Arguments, Tweeted

IMG_3082

This fall, I’ll be teaching a new course at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia.

Here’s the description of Property Rights: Law and Theory (Law 608) from the course catalog:

Property rights and property theory have been essential components of Anglo-American law for centuries, and the protection of the right of private property ownership is one of the foundations on which the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the post-Civil War Amendments are built. In more recent times, however, property law has taken on a new role, and has been viewed differently than in the past, especially in light of the development of environmental law and the evolving concept of public trust.

Property Rights Law and Theory will focus on the history, policy, and, to some extent, the politics of property law, property rights, and related legal topics. We will examine how the right of

Continue Reading The Paper Chase Is On!