Here’s what we’re reading this Friday:


Continue Reading Friday Round-Up: Murr Arguments, Exactions Cert Petition, Houston “Zoning”

Here’s the cert petition, docketed yesterday, in a case we’ve been following on legislatively-imposed permit exactions, an issue in dire need of Supreme Court resolution. 

Here’s the Question Presented:

A City of West Hollywood ordinance requires that builders of a proposed 11-unit condominium pay a $540,393.28 “affordable housing fee” to subsidize the construction of low-cost housing elsewhere in the City. The ordinance imposes the fee automatically as a condition on the approval of a building permit, without any requirement that the City show that the project
creates a need for low-cost housing.

The question presented is: 

Whether a legislatively mandated permit condition is subject to scrutiny under the unconstitutional conditions doctrine as set out in Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District, 133 S. Ct. 2586 (2013); Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U.S. 374 (1994); and Nollan v. California Coastal Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987).

Stay tuned, folks. 

Petition for

Continue Reading New Cert Petition: Are Legislatively-Imposed Permit Conditions Subject To Nexus/Proportionality?

2010-03-19 13.36.36
No, this isn’t the Supreme Court, it’s Graceland,
purchased by Elvis in March 1957.

(We’re just checking whether you are paying attention.) 

Appellate oral argument, as they say, is supposed to be a “conversation” between the bench and counsel. But the overall impression we were left with after reviewing the transcript of yesterday’s Supreme Court oral arguments in Murr v. Wisconsin, the case about the “larger parcel” or “denominator” in regulatory takings cases, was that just about everyone in the courtroom was talking on different wavelengths. 

Don’t get us wrong — arguing counsel for all the parties and amicus did a pretty good job, in our view. They are advocates, after all, and their job is to champion their clients’ position, not to solve the Court’s confusion, and problems that appear entirely self-inflicted.

Two of the parties (the Murrs and the State of Wisconsin) urged the Court to adopt

Continue Reading Affirmed By An Equally Confused Court? Some Thoughts On The Oral Arguments In The “Larger Parcel” Case

As takings mavens are no doubt already aware, next Monday, the 8-Justice Supreme Court will hear arguments in Murr v. Wisconsin, the regulatory takings case which asks whether the county can avoid application of the Lucas wipeout standard on one parcel by taking advantage of the fact that the plaintiffs also own the adjacent parcel. Thus, the county argues, both parcels should be combined to determine how the regulation has impacted the property. 

Others have done a better job at previewing the issues than we could hope to (see SCOTUSblog, the National Constitution Center, and the Federalist Society), so we won’t do a big summary here, but will limit ourselves to pointing out what we think will be the key areas of contention. Go read the voluminous briefing as well. And with the Court one-Justice-down for this case, we’re certainly not going to even venture

Continue Reading SCOTUS Argument Preview: Does Fee Simple Absolute Mean Anything? The “Larger Parcel” Issue In Regulatory Takings

Here’s what we’re reading this Monday:

  • Preview of SCOTUS oral arguments in Murr v. Wisconsin. This is the “larger parcel” case which will be heard next Monday, March 20. The Cato Institute is having a session on it at its DC facility, “Rethinking Regulatory Takings.” If you can’t be there in-person, it will be live streamed. More here. We’ll have our own preview later this week. 
  • Our colleagues at the Massachusetts Land Use Monitor comes this report (“Regulatory Taking, Anyone?“) about a recent jury verdict which concluded that denial of a variance resulted in a loss of all beneficial use of property. And you know what that means, don’t you? 
  • Professor Ilya Somin writes about the “Potential pitfalls of building Trump’s Great Wall of eminent domain” in the Washington Post
  • Professor Gerald S. Dickinson adds his thoughts on the Wall:


Continue Reading Monday Links: Murr SCOTUS Preview, Mass. Reg Takings Verdict, Great Wall Of America, Train Takings

Can there be a more “Florida” name for a municipality than “Sunny Isles Beach?” Opinion may differ of course, but we think this one may take the prize.

That diversion aside, here’s today’s case. In City of Sunny Isles Beach v. Cavalry Corp., No. 3D15-1420 (Jan. 25, 2017), the Florida District Court of Appeal affirmed an eminent domain judgment and an award of just compensation, concluding that the trial court was within its discretion when it allowed the landowner to present evidence of “conceptual” site plans to establish the property’s highest and best use.

The city took property for a bridge, and “[f]or all the years since the current owner acquired title to the property and before, there has been no effort by an owner to develop the canal property.” Slip op. at 3. But at trial, the owner “contended at trial, based upon conceptual site plans prepared by one of its

Continue Reading Fla App: Highest And Best Use Doesn’t Require Owner Have More Than “Conceptual Plans”

Drone technology — those pesky little flying machines that invade your privacy — has opened up a new dimension that previously was available only to real-life pilots and those with airplanes or helicopters. 

As with most new things, there’s bound to be rules, even if those rules may be playing catch-up to reality. On Monday, March 13, 2017 (12:30pm ET), a American Planning Association Planning and Law Division webinar aims to answer the questions you might have about how the ability to easily view ourselves and our property from low-altitude orbit is being dealt with by the law:

The educational objective of this course is to discuss the implications of emerging drone technology on city and town planning. Featuring specialists in the fields of law, urban design, and policymaking, this webinar will examine federal and local legislation pertaining to unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). Drone operations raise several concerns for the

Continue Reading Upcoming Webinar – Drone Technology: Implications on Policymaking and Design of the Built Environment

Here’s an article, recently published by the Urban Lawyer (the law review produced by our ABA section, the Section of State and Local Government Law), with our take on the most interesting and important eminent domain and takings rulings from the past year. 

Many of the cases discussed will be familiar to regular readers, but here it is in one place, and in print. 

Recent Developments in Eminent Domain, 48 Urb. Lawyer 939 (2016)

Continue Reading New Article: Recent Developments In Eminent Domain

This year, the University of Hawaii Law Review is devoting one of its issues to a symposium on issues related to the sharing economy

On Friday, February 17, 2017, the law review is sponsoring a series of presentations from 9:00 am – 4:30 pm at the law school (lunch included if you RSVP ahead of time), followed by a reception in downtown Honolulu.

Presenters include national experts such as Professor Stephen Miller (who is also the founding Chair of the ABA State and Local Government Law Section’s Sharing Economy Committee), Christina Sandefur of the Goldwater Institute, local players such as Michael Formby, the Director of Transportation Services for the City and County of Honolulu and Greg Kugle of my law firm, and industry insiders such as Timothy Burr Jr., Senior Public Policy Manager for Lyft. 

The day will see presentations on Housing, Transportation, and Discrimination, as

Continue Reading U. Hawaii Law Review Sharing Economy Symposium (Feb. 17, 2017)