The Court has already started loading up next Term’s property rights docket, with last week’s grant of this cert petition.

Before we go further, a disclosure: our law firm colleague Deborah La Fetra filed an amicus brief urging the Court to grant review. Thus, we’re not going to be taking a deep dive into the issues, but will leave that to others. Luckily, lawprof Ilya Somin (as is often the case) beat us to the punch, analyzing the issues in “Supreme Court Decides to Hear Important Asset Forfeiture Procedural Property Rights Case” at the Volokh Conspiracy. Check it out.

Here’s the Question Presented:

In determining whether the Due Process Clause requires a state or local government to provide a post seizure probable cause hearing prior to a statutory judicial forfeiture proceeding and, if so, when such a hearing must take place, should district courts apply

Continue Reading SCOTUS To Weigh In On Due Process In Civil Forfeiture

Take a deep dive into the arguments and amicus briefs

This Wednesday, April 26, 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Tyler v. Hennepin County, No. 22-166, our law firm’s case which argues that Hennepin County’s keeping the excess value in Ms. Tyler’s home over what she owed in property taxes and fees, is an uncompensated taking of private property, and also violates the Excessive Fines Clause.

Here are links to programs, summaries, and events to help you understand the arguments and issues, as well as registration for post-argument analysis:


Continue Reading Get Ready For SCOTUS Takings Arguments (Wednesday, April 26, 2023)

In what the court termed a “matter of first impression,” slip op. at 5, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held in Beaver Street Investments, LLC v. Summit County, No. 22-3600 (Apr. 21, 2023), that the statute of limitations in a § 1983 takings claim for a local government’s alleged home equity theft (for more on that issue, see here) began to run when the period when a homeowner can redeem a foreclosure ended, and not when (as the government argued) the government made the decision to acquire the home (the final adjudication of foreclosure).

As the majority noted:

The dispositive issue in this appeal is what constituted the “act of taking.” See id. In other words, the Court must determine when, as a matter of law, the County took BSI’s property without paying for it. See id. The County argues that

Continue Reading CA6: Taking Occurs, And Statute Of Limitations Begins To Run, When Foreclosure Redemption Period Expires And Not Before

HAWSCT-1

Update: the court has rescheduled the arguments to June 22, 2023, at 10 a.m.

The Hawaii Supreme Court has scheduled oral arguments in an important eminent domain case about severance damages for the Honolulu Rail Authority’s condemnation of land in Honolulu for one of its stations (assuming, of course, that the under-construction rail line actually gets past downtown, or simply stops where its historic predecessor, the Oahu Railway terminated more than a century ago).

Here’s the details and the court’s description of the issues (scroll to the bottom), from the Hawaii Judiciary’s web site.

[Barista’s note: we won’t be commenting on this one in detail, because this was our case when we were in private practice.]

Thursday May 18, 2023 – 10 a.m.

NOS.

SCAP-22-0000335 (Consolidated with Nos. SCAP-22-0000336,
SCAP-22-0000337, SCAP-22-0000338, SCAP-22-0000340,
SCAP-22-0000341, SCAP-22-0000343 SCAP-22-0000344,
SCAP-22-0000345, AND SCAP-22-0000352)

SCAP-22-0000335, SCAP-22-0000336, SCAP-22-0000337,
SCAP-22-0000340, SCAP-22-0000341, SCAP-22-0000343,
SCAP-22-0000344, AND SCAP-22-0000345


Continue Reading Hawaii Supreme Court To Hear Major Severance Damages Appeal In Rail Takings Cases

Screenshot 2023-04-11 at 20-42-01 Deep Dive and Amicus Review Tyler v. Hennepin County

Here at our law firm, we’re getting ready as one of our colleagues prepares to argue the Supreme Court’s next takings case in a couple of weeks. Yes, this is what we’ve alternatively called the “home equity theft” or the “keep the change” case where government seizes property to satisfy the owner’s tax debt, and after liquidation of the property and satisfaction of the debt, keeps any excess equity instead of returning the balance to the (former) homeowner.

The case is Tyler v. Hennepin County, No. 22-166, and it’s set for argument on the last day of this term’s argument calendar, Wednesday, April 26, 2023.

In the meantime you should check out the parties’ merits briefs and the beaucoup amici briefs (mostly filed in support of the property owner) on the Court’s docket.

But you should also see what others have to say, and how they are

Continue Reading Tyler v. Hennepin County Previews: Get Yourself Prepared For The Next SCOTUS Takings Arguments

Alex Boone note

Check this out, a new student-authored note from William and Mary third-year law student Alex Boone, “The Tide’s Coming In: A New Case for Beachfront Property Rights in South Carolina,” 47 Wm. & Mary Envtl. L. & Pol’y Rev. 383 (2023).

Here’s the Abstract:

Part I of this Note explores the scientific data as it relates to the impending consequences of climate change on South Carolina’s coast and will introduce the disastrous scenarios that are predicted to arise as a result of rising sea levels and the accelerating strength and severity of extreme weather events. Part II compares the effectiveness of various coastal resiliency tools and highlights the regulatory framework that prohibits their use by beachfront property owners. Part III explores the topic of regulatory takings and their indirect prophylactic nature of protecting citizens from regulatory overreach and offers a case for a South Carolina court to find

Continue Reading New Article: Alex Boone, “The Tide’s Coming In: A New Case for Beachfront Property Rights in South Carolina” (Wm & Mary Envt’ L & Pol’y Rev)

D Callies Retirement Celebration Invite 4-27-2023.f

Come join us on Thursday, April 27, 2023, from 5-7pm, downtown Honolulu, to celebrate the retirement of Professor David L. Callies from the University of Hawaii Law School.

Join U.H. Law School Dean Camille Nelson, Professor Callies’ colleagues, his students (present and former), the Hawaii legal community, and family and friends as we honor 43 years of scholarship, teaching, service, and practice.

Professor Callies is a prolific scholar and author, and has mentored generations of lawyers. Known especially for his work in property, land use, takings, administrative law, and state and local government law, he has also been presented with numerous awards including William and Mary’s Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize, and the Owner’s Counsel of America’s Crystal Eagle

Invitation and how to RSVP (or click below). Space is limited, so please let us know you are attending as soon as you can.

Details:

Thursday,

Continue Reading April 27, 2023, 5-7pm, Honolulu: Join Us To Celebrate The Work And Career Of Professor David Callies

Screenshot 2023-04-04 at 09-45-09 Information - Texas Eminent Domain Conference

If you are in the Austin area (or anywhere in Texas for that matter), please consider joining us April 13 and 14, 2023 for the 22d Annual Texas Eminent Domain Conference.

Two days of great programming and talking shop, plus a chance to connect and re-connect with friends and colleagues. And, of course, all the things Austin has to offer. Yes were were there not that long ago, but come on…Austin is a great conference venue, right?

We’re speaking about “National Eminent Domain and Takings Trends,” and the balance of the program is pretty darn good also (see here or below for the full agenda).

Registration ongoing, but space is filling up fast so don’t miss out.

See you there.

Agenda & Program, 22d Annual Texas Eminent Domain Conference (CLE Int’l), Austin, Apr. 13-14, 2023)

Continue Reading Join Us At The 22d Annual Texas Eminent Domain Conference, April 13-14, Austin

This just in: the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York has issued this Opinion & Order in the case which challenges New York City’s rendering “guaranty clauses” in commercial leases unenforceable due to the declared Co-19 emergency.

This is a case we’ve been following. Earlier, the Second Circuit vacated the district court’s dismissal of the case, holding that the city’s ordinance rendering forever unenforceable certain provisions in commercial leases:

A provision in a commercial lease or other rental agreement involving real property located within the city that provides for one or more natural persons who are not the tenant under such agreement to become, upon the occurrence of a default or other event, wholly or partially personally liable for payment of rent, utility expenses or taxes owed by the tenant under such agreement, or fees and charges relating to routine building maintenance owed by the

Continue Reading Bust A Deal, Face The Wheel: NYC Rendering Commercial Lease Guaranty Clauses Unenforceable For Co-19 Violates Contracts Clause

As most of you probably already know, there’s a demon lurking out there in takings claims. Not of the Levon Helm-narrated The Right Stuff variety, but maybe just as deadly in litigation.

That’s right, the too-early-or-too-late thing (or in some cases, the too-early-and-too-late argument). Getting caught between arguments that a takings claim isn’t ripe, and arguments that it is too late (statutes of limitation).

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit was dealing with the latter (a statute of limitations) in Epcon Homestead, LLC v. Town of Chapel Hill, No. 21-1713 (Mar. 20, 2023), but there are lessons in the case for the other side of the issue, ripeness.

The facts are pretty straightforward. If you are going to build at least five single-family units, the town’s zoning ordinance contains a requirement of “inclusionary zoning” (aka affordable housing; aka below-market units. Or if

Continue Reading CA4: Exactions Takings Claim Accrues When Owner Knows Of The Demand, Not When It Paid