ALI-CLE brochure cover page

Here’s the brochure and the full agenda and registration information for the upcoming ALI-CLE Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation Conference at the JW Marriott in New Orleans, February 1-3, 2024.

This is the long-running nationally-focused conference on all things eminent domain, takings, valuation, and related. We have three tracks, from which you can choose a la carte – Practice, Substantive, and Condemnation 101:

For over 40 years, we’ve been bringing eminent domain practitioners together to examine the latest issues, engage in healthy debate, and get the information they need to stay current in their practice. This year – our 41st – is THE perfect time to reunite with your eminent domain colleagues. There will be plentiful opportunities to meet and mingle with the faculty and other registrants – throughout the conference and at evening social events. Attendees come back year after year to make new friendships and renew

Continue Reading Here’s The Program For The 41st ALI-CLE Eminent Domain And Land Valuation Litigation Conference, Feb 1-3, 2024, New Orleans

HSBA 10-2023

Yesterday, during the Annual Meeting of the Hawaii State Bar Association, we participated in a program sponsored by the Real Property and Financial Services Section, “Inverse Condemnation & Paying for Disasters.”

As you can see above, we joined lawprofs Shelley Saxer and David Callies to share thoughts about inverse claims, and the difference between these property arguments and tort negligence claims.

Here are some of the key cases and materials which we mentioned (or should have):


Continue Reading Links And Materials From “Inverse Condemnation & Paying for Disasters”

KS_aerial
According to the County, this is an “industrial” use,
incompatible with “agricultural” zoning

Note: sorry, this is one of those longer posts, but the topic is a serious one, so we felt it needed more than our usual cursory treatment.

How Can That Be?

We’ve been somewhat reluctant to post too much on the legal aspects of the Maui wildfires (other than to comment on the first lawsuit), just because it still seems “too soon.” The focus should be on aiding the victims and helping those who want to rebuild to do so, and not on premature blamestorming (see also this), legal theories, and  the “opportunities” this disaster presents (see also this, this.and this).

But we did want to clear one thing up. There are a lot of stories (see here, here, and here, for example), about the State of

Continue Reading Can One Government Official Really Hold Up Necessary Water Uses? The Hawaii Public Water Trust In Action

Why is it, you ask, that the ALI-CLE Eminent Domain & Land Valuation Litigation Conference (scheduled next February 1-3, 2024, in New Orleans) is an event that seems to be growing in popularity and attendance. In recent years, we have standing room only in the Conference halls, and have sold out the hotel block. After all, this is a pretty niche area of law. So what gives?

When we were in Austin earlier this year, we thought it might be nice to try and answer that question. We asked Conference participants why they come, year-after-year (and in Austin, despite massive travel disruptions). Yes, it is the various venues (Nashville, Austin, Scottsdale, Palm Springs, to name a few recent locations), and yes, it is the excellent and useful programming.

But as we suspected it is more than that. As the above video notes

Continue Reading ALI-CLE’s Eminent Domain & Land Valuation Litigation Conference (Feb 1-3, 2024, New Orleans): Why Attend? Here’s Why.

Screenshot 2023-08-26 at 10-33-05 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference

Heads-up: the registration page for the 20th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, October 26-27, 2023, at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia, is now up.

Early registration is a good thing because space is limited, especially at the Wren Building banquet on the 26th, at which the 2023 B-K Property Rights Prize will be presented to Prof. Gregory Alexander.

So please don’t miss out.

2022 BK plaque
The Property Rights Hall of Fame (second plaque)

If you are not already familiar with the Conference, it is (in our opinion) the best one-day event on property and property rights theory and practice. Expressly designed to bring together the legal academy and the practicing dirt law bar, the conference is where we discuss the burning property and property rights issues of the day. Here’s the 2023 Program:

  • Property and Propriety (or a Well-Ordered Society): A Tribute to Gregory S.


Continue Reading Register Now For The 20th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, Oct. 26-27, 2023

Screenshot 2023-08-23 at 16-13-54 To tackle highest housing costs in the country Hawaii's governor declares YIMBY martial law

Here’s an excellent report on a situation we’ve been following, the Hawaii governor’s proclamation of a housing emergency. In “To Tackle Highest Housing Costs in the Country, Hawaii’s Governor Declares YIMBY Martial Law,” Christian Britschgi at Reason writes:

Developers with a [Beyond Barriers] working group [what we cheekily referred to as the “Privy Council”]–certified project wouldn’t have to comply with normal zoning restrictions. They wouldn’t have to go through Hawaii’s cumbersome environmental review process (which can add months or years to a project’s approval). They could avoid historic preservation regulations, and get relief from normal impact fees and taxes. They could also skip the need to get approval from the state’s Land Use Commission—a duplicative zoning body.

The story is an excellent summary of the substance of the emergency proclamation, the support and objections it has received, and some prognostication (including ours):

Thomas says that

Continue Reading “YIMBY Martial Law” – More On Hawaii Gov’s Gordian Knot Cutting

Untitled Extract Pages

Two years ago, Owners’ Counsel of America endowed a scholarship in the name of its founder, property rights advocate and trial lawyer Toby Prince Brigham (1934-2021). The scholarship is for a second- or third- year law student to attend the annual three-day ALI-CLE Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation Conference (the upcoming Conference will be in New Orleans, Louisiana, February 1-3, 2024).

The Conference affords the Scholar an all-expenses-covered opportunity to meet and network with leading property rights and eminent domain lawyers from across the country, while also learning about property law and practice. 

Here’s the official description from OCA:  

In honor of Toby’s legacy of professionalism and achievement, in 2021 OCA established the Toby Prince Brigham OCA Scholarship to pay for all expenses of a second or third year law student to attend the ALI-CLE Eminent Domain conference and associated OCA events held annually in January. This unique

Continue Reading Owners’ Counsel Toby Prince Brigham Scholarship – Applications Being Accepted

Screenshot 2023-06-16 at 07-52-47 How Did Property Rights Fare at the Supreme Court What Happened in the 2022 Term and What's Next ALI CLE

Tomorrow, Wednesday, August 9, 2023 at 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. (Eastern Time), please join us for ALI-CLE’s web program, “How Did Property Rights Fare at the Supreme Court? What Happened in the 2022 Term and What’s Next.”

Here’s the course description:

This has been a blockbuster U.S. Supreme Court term for property law, with the Court deciding three major property cases: Tyler v. Hennepin County (government’s keeping the excess value when seizing and selling a home to satisfy a property tax debt is a taking), Wilkins v. United States (is the federal Quiet Title Act’s statute of limitations a jurisdictional bar?), and Sackett v. EPA (the scope of Clean Water Act wetlands jurisdiction). To gain a better understanding these opinions, the current state of takings and property law, and what these cases mean for your practice, join a distinguished panel of experts for this one-hour webcast. The faculty

Continue Reading Still Time To Join Us Wed Aug 9: ALI-CLE’s “How Did Property Rights Fare at the Supreme Court? What Happened in the 2022 Term and What’s Next”

PXL_20230426_222217568
(Tip for applicants: understanding the symbology of the
Law School’s logo will show you know the score.)

Here’s your chance to teach Property and Land Use in what might be most interesting venue on Planet Earth for those subjects: the University of Hawaii School of Law has put out a call for applications for a tenured lawprof (along with six other openings in other subjects):

The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, William S. Richardson School of Law seeks to fill up to seven tenured or tenure – track positions . For doctrinal faculty, we are seeking to fill positions in Constitutional Law (tenured or tenure – track) and Property /Land Use (tenured). We welcome candidates who, in addition to one of those two fields, have expertise in Administrative Law, Business and Commercial Law, Environmental Law, Family Law, Health Law, Intellectual Property, Labor and Employment Law, Native Hawaiian Law

Continue Reading Live The Dream! Teach Dirt Law In Hawaii: UH Law School Looking For Property & Land Use Lawprof

ExecOrder

The two-plus years under the declared Co-19 emergency surely have given Hawaii’s executive-branch officials a clear vision of how much easier they could get their agendas accomplished without all that pesky democracy.

Hawaii’s Sweeping Emergency Management Act: Governor is the “Sole Judge”

Hawaii’s Emergency Management Act gives state and county executives broad and nearly unreviewable authority to suspend a wide spectrum of the usual laws, regulations, and rules. As we wrote in Hoist The Yellow Flag and Spam® Up: The Separation of Powers Limitation on Hawaii’s Emergency Authority, 43 U. Hawaii L. Rev. 71 (2020), Hawaii’s Act confers among the nation’s most muscular and sweeping powers. For example, the governor is the “sole judge of the existence of the danger, threat, or circumstances giving rise to a declaration of a state of emergency.” The Act’s one limitation — the 60-day time limit on how long an

Continue Reading What If The Hawaii Governor’s Cutting Of The Gordian Land Use/Environmental Knot Actually Works?