Update: we removed the embedded video that was posted above, since CBS kept replacing it with other clips. Here’s a direct link to the video.

As our readers know, we follow with keen interest events in the People’s Republic of China (does anyone call it that, anymore?), especially those issues related to property and a budding system of private rights. Here’s the latest from CBS’s venerable 60 Minutes, about the housing and real estate markets there. If true, it’s scary stuff, especially when you consider we live in a global economy, with so much of our goods supplied by the PRC.

China has been nothing short of a financial miracle. In just 30 years, this state-controlled economy became the world’s second largest, deftly managed by government policies and decrees.

One sector the authorities concentrated on was real estate and construction. But that may have created the largest housing

Continue Reading 60 Minutes On China’s (Possible) Housing Bubble

The other shoe has dropped, and in “Environmental Lawyers Off Target With Criticism Of Callies,” U. Hawaii lawprof David Callies responds to and rebuts an earlier op-ed by the Director of the Sierra Club and an Earthjustice lawyer which criticized Professor Callies’ recently-published law review article (and follow-up interview) detailing the stunning success rates certain parties such as the Sierra Club and Earthjustice enjoyed in the Hawaii Supreme Court from 1993-2010.

In that article, Callies labeled the record of the court on property issues “appalling” (80% overall success rate, 65% of cases reversing the Intermediate Court of Appeals). As Callies said in an earlier presentation, “Ninety percent of the time, government and the private sector are wrong? Give me a break.” (Remember, this is the court that held “western concepts” of property law such as exclusivity “is not universally applicable in Hawaii.”)

The responsive

Continue Reading Enviro Lawyers Off Target With Criticism Of Callies, Says Callies

This one is not about takings, but this cert petition does relate to land and water, and come on, when the case involves Tombstone, Arizona calling out the federal government to a showdown — not at High Noon, but in the High Court — do you think we could have passed up the opportunity to post it? No way, hombre.

Here are the Questions Presented. It’s one of those QP’s with a short introduction which lays out the facts, so we won’t repeat them here:

Most fundamentally, this petition asks whether a state has any right to exist under the Tenth Amendment. Under the authority of a State of Emergency declared by the Governor of Arizona, the historic City of Tombstone sought to freely restore its municipal water supply infrastructure inholdings, located within Arizona’s Coronado National Forest, after they were destroyed by a natural disaster. Even though the City faced

Continue Reading New Cert Petition: Tombstone v. United States

In Midwest Materials, Inc. v. Wilson, No. 84A04-1205-MI-258 (Feb. 27, 2013), the Indiana Court of Appeals held that Midwest did not suffer a taking for the loss of its property during the time a requirement that it provide water service to neighboring residences as a condition of a “special exception” needed to build a “molecular methane gas processing unit” on its own property was in force. The trial court eventually struck down the condition, and Midwest then alleged it suffered a temporary taking under Indiana law (only) for the time in which the permit condition was in effect.

On the inverse condemnation claim, the trial court held that Midwest had not been deprived of use of its property, and the Court of Appeals affirmed under Indiana’s version of the multi-factor Penn Central test. “The trial court did not err when it concluded that the seventeen-month period from the time

Continue Reading Indiana App: No Temporary Taking In Seventeen-Month Loss Of Use

(We’re not sure who captured and posted the above video — wasn’t us — but to whomever did so, thank you.)

Earlier this week, our colleague Mark M. Murakami spoke at the University of Hawaii Law School on a panel about “The PLDC and Property Rights in Hawaii.” PLDC refers to the Public Land Development Corporation, a state agency created in 2011 to develop state-owned lands, primarily in concert with private entities. Since its formation, the PLDC has become highly controversial, and the Hawaii Senate recently voted to repeal it.

Joining Mark on the panel were Professor Shelley Saxer (Pepperdine); Marti Townsend, Executive Director of the Outdoor Circle; and Chris Lee, State House of Representatives member.

In the event you don’t want to view the entire session, we’ve put Mark’s remarks and his responses to audience questions in a separate (high-quality) audio file, which you can steam or

Continue Reading Podcast And Video: The PLDC And Property Rights In Hawaii – A Panel Discussion

A quick one. An op-ed from yesterday’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser by the newly-appointed Director of Honolulu’s Department of Planning and Permitting. In “City followed law in issuing Hao Street development permit,” he makes some good points in this piece about building permits for two single-family homes in east Honolulu, points we don’t usually see being made by government officials. Unfortunately, its mostly behind a firewall (come on, you should subscribe to Hawaii’s paper of record), but here are the most interesting bits:

Building and grading permits are ministerial, meaning the city cannot lawfully deny them if the plans meet applicable codes. Residents may object to new homes being built in their neighborhood, but the owner is allowed by right to do so under the law.

For example, assume your lifetime dream is to build a family home. You then purchase a property zoned for residential use; however, your neighbors

Continue Reading HNL Planning Director: “Public, Along With Private Property Rights, Are Our Top Priority” In Building Permit Review

Here are the links to the materials and briefs from the Supreme Court’s three taking cases which we are discussing at today’s teleconference sponsored by the ABA’s Section on Litigation’s Environmental Litigation Commitee and the Condemnation, Zoning, and Land Use Committee. 

Post-telecon note: thanks to everyone for joining us. I will be posting up the briefs in the Big Oak case now pending in the Court of Federal Claims that Rob Meltz mentioned in his “what’s next” talk about Arkansas Game. Update: here are the Big Oak briefs.Continue Reading Links And Materials From Today’s ABA Takings Teleconference

Did we say free? (If you are an ABA member, that is.)

Join us for a teleconference jointly sponsored by the ABA’s Section on Litigation’s Environmental Litigation Commitee and the Condemnation, Zoning, and Land Use Committee to discuss the latest and greatest in takings law, specifically the three cases the U.S. Supreme Court is ruling on this Term.

Moderated by Dwight Merriam (Robinson & Cole, Hartford), panelists include me, Amy Bourlris (Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart, Miami, Professor Steven Eagle (George Mason School of Law, Arlington), and Robert Meltz (Attorney-Adviser, American Law Division, Congressional Research Service, Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown Law, Washington)

Date: Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Time: Noon – 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time

Register here.

More information here. See you there. Come with your questions or comments.
Continue Reading Still Time To Join Us Tomorrow For ABA Takings Roundable (Free!)

Having recently attended the 7th International Conference of the Academic Association on Planning, Law, and Property Rights in Portland, Oregon, we offer this irreverent view of that city’s culture, “Insufferable Portland,” by Mark Hemingway at the Weekly Standard. The landscape he portrays should be familiar to anyone who knows Portland, Berkeley, the Upper West Side, Santa Monica, Boulder, Chapel Hill, or Ann Arbor. Some highlights:

Case in point: One of the most commented-on sketches from the show [Portlandia] is a scene from the first episode in which Armisen and Brownstein are sitting in a restaurant. After asking their waitress a series of absurd questions about whether the chicken they are about to eat is local​—​”the chicken is a heritage breed, woodland raised chicken that’s been fed a diet of sheep’s milk, soy, and hazelnuts. .  .  . His name was Colin, here are his papers”​—​the couple ends

Continue Reading Portland: Planning Utopia Or Hipster Paradise?

On Tuesday, February 26, 2013 from 7:15 – 8:309 p.m. in Classroom #2, the University of Hawaii Law School is sponsoring a talk about “The PLDC and Property Rights in Hawaii,” which will feature our Damon Key colleague Mark M. Murakami.

PLDC refers to the Public Land Development Corporation, a state agency created in 2011 to develop state-owned lands, primarily in concert with private entities. As Honolulu Civil Beat‘s information page on PLDC notes:

The corporation has broad powers for entering into private partnerships and establishing its own governing objectives and policies. It also is tasked with identifying state lands under DLNR that are suitable for development. The Board of Land and Natural Resources must approve all land transfers.

The corporation, with the approval of the governor, can also issue revenue bonds for constructing, acquiring and renovating public facilities, as well as for the acquisition

Continue Reading Upcoming Event: The PLDC and Property Rights in Hawaii