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Did you know that in 2002, the voters of Florida adopted a “pregnant pig” amendment to the state’s constitution? Well, neither did we. The amendment, effective in 2008, makes it unlawful for “any person to confine a pig during pregnancy in an enclosure, or to tether a pig during pregnancy, on a firm in such a way that she is prevented from turning around freely.”

Farmer Basford’s pig farm used such “gestation crates,” and he was forced by the amendment to go out of business. He tried other things like peanut farming, but those didn’t work, so in 2010, he filed an inverse condemnation claim and a claim under Florida’s Bert Harris Act, arguing that the pig amendment deprived him of all economically viable use of his far. The trial court dismissed the Bert Harris Act claim, and after a trial, held that he was entitled to $505,000

Continue Reading Fla App: “Pregnant Pig” Constitutional Amendment Took Farmer’s Property

Here’s one for your civil procedure mavens. In TrinCo Investment Co. v. United States, No. 2012-5130 (July 18, 2013), the Federal Circuit reversed the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal for failure to state a claim of two California property owners’ takings lawsuit.

The case involved the federal government’s response to the “Iron Complex” fires in Northern California. According to the complaint, the Forest Service intentionally lit fires on the plaintiffs’ properties in order to reduce unburned timber which might fuel the Iron Complex fire. The Forest Service fires destroyed hundreds of acres of timber, valued at approximately $6.6 million. The plaintiffs claimed that the Iron Complex fire would not have burned their land, and sued in the CFC for compensation for the taking. The CFC dismissed, holding that it was not plausible under Rule 12(b)(6) that this was a taking, because the “doctrine of necessity” absolved the Forest Service

Continue Reading Fed Cir: Invoking “Doctrine Of “Necessity” Does Not Automatically Absolve Forest Service For Taking Of Timber

Here’s the latest from the Wisconsin Supreme Court. In Waller v. American Transmission Co., LLC, No. 2013AP805 (July 16, 2013), the court held that when a partial taking for an easement for transmission lines substantially impaired the economic viability of the remnant parcel, the condemnor is liable for taking the entire parcel.

Gideon Kanner summarizes the opinion in “When Must the Condemnor Take the Whole Parcel, Even Though it Wants to Take Only a Part of It?” (“So we won’t go through the whole megillah in anything resembling detail. But the court’s bottom line is clear: the condemnor — in this case a public utility seeking to take an easement — must take the entire larger parcel and pay for it when the owner so wishes and in the after condition the property, if subjected only to a partial taking, would wind up in an uneconomic condition.”).

Continue Reading Wisconsin: You Broke It, You Bought It

This really was a “blockbuster” Term for the Supreme Court and takings law: no less than three cases (and four, maybe five, if you expand it slightly to include property-owner favorable cases such as Lozman and last term’s Sackett), and as Gideon Kanner noted recently, the CLE sessions are flying fast and furiously.

Here’s another one, with a great angle: our ABA colleague Ed Thomas, President of the Natural Hazard Mitigation Association and the guy who knows just about everything there is to know about disaster preparedness, disaster response, and property rights, is speaking tonight (Tuesday, July 16, 2013, 7:00 pm MT) along with BYU lawprof Lisa Grow Sun, about the Supreme Court’s takings cases:

This session will explore the legal landscape for community development and hazard mitigation/climate adaptation. Specifically, there has been tremendous press coverage of many U.S. Supreme Court decisions this term. One

Continue Reading Today’s Free Webinar – Mitigation Options Affected by the Supreme Court in 2013: Koontz and Other Game Changers

Here’s one not to miss, not only because it’s free, but because it features our PLF colleague Paul Beard II, arguing and prevailing counsel in Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Mgm’t Dist., No. 11-1447 (June 25, 2013): on Wednesday, July 17, 2013, from 2:00 – 3:30 pm ET, Greenberg Traurig and PLF are sponsoring a live chat:

In Koontz, one of the most important Takings Clause cases in recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the doctrine of  unconstitutional conditions established in the Nollan and Dolan cases applies to all land use permit applications – even if the excessive condition leads to a permit denial, and even if the condition involves the payment of money rather than dedication of real property. This extension of Nollan/Dolan principles has far reaching implications for real estate, environmental, and other federal and state permitting actions. The significance and implications

Continue Reading Upcoming Live Chat: Koontz – How Far Has Nollan/Dolan Been Extended

On Wednesday, July 17, 2013, from 4:00 – 5:30 pm ET, I will be a panelist in the American Planning Association’s above-titled teleconference.  The session was put together by our ABA and OCA colleague Dwight Merriam, and in additon to Dwight and me, includes Professors David Callies (U. Hawaii) and Carol Brown (U. Richmond), John Baker, an attorney with Greene Espell in Minneapolis, and our ABA colleage and fellow U. Hawaii alum Julie Tappendorf.

Here’s the description of the program:

The U.S. Supreme Court ended its term with a decision that will change planning and regulation — but by how much, and will the change be for better or worse? Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District is the most important planning law case in nearly a decade, and already there is widespread disagreement about what it means.

A diverse panel of land use lawyers will examine

Continue Reading Upcoming Teleconference: Lessons from Koontz – Game Changer or Just a Little Rule Refinement?

Here’s one we’ve been meaning to post for a few days because it involves the nuts-and-bolts of eminent domain and inverse condemnation work — the calculation of just compensation and damages, and another victory for colleague Thor Hearne.

In a rails-to-trails taking case our of Florida, McCann Holdings, Ltd. v. United States, No. 07-4261 (June 27, 2013), the Court of Federal Claims awarded $3.1 milllion for the taking, which the government claimed was valued at only $825,000. 

We won’t walk through the entire case, but the court’s Opinion and Order is a very good roadmap for how to calculate severance damages in a partial taking of an easement.

Here’s more about the decision from the local paper.

McCann Holdings, Ltd. v. United States, No. 07-4261L (Fed. Cl. Jun 27, 2013)


Continue Reading CFC Provides Roadmap For Proving Damages And Just Compensation

Here’s the amicus brief filed today by Pacific Legal Foundation in Mehaffy v. United States, No. 12-1416 (cert. petition filed June 5, 2013).

That’s the case in which the Supreme Court is being asked to review to review the Federal Circuit’s unpublished opinion in which the court affirmed the Court of Federal Claims’ grant of summary judgment to the government, holding that Mehaffy failed the Penn Central test solely because he purchased the property alleged to have been taken after the governmentt adopted the Clean Water Act.

PLF has posted a more in-depth summary of the case and the arguments in its brief here.

The cert petition is posted here, and another amici brief urging the Court to grant the writ is posted here.

Brief Amicus Curiae of Pacific Legal Foundation in Support of Petitioner, Mehaffy v. United States, No. 12-…


Continue Reading One More Amicus Brief In “Investment-Backed Expectations” Case: Can’t Regulate Away Right To Compensation

Generally, we don’t plug seminars that might compete with our own, but in this case, we made an exception because the faculty for this one consists of three people we could just not go without hearing from.

On Thursday, July 11, 2013, Law Seminars International is sponsoring “Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District – Implications for Property Owners and Local Government,” featuring our Owners’ Counsel of America colleagues Michael Berger and Amy Brigham Boulris, and our favorite foil, lawprof John Echeverria, as they “assess the implications of this important decision and provide practical guidance for both defending and pursuing regulatory takings claims.”

Here’s what we suggest: participate in their program on July 11, then tune into ours (which features both Koontz and Horne) the following day. Continue Reading Koontz Teleconference – July 11, 2013