Keep out

We haven’t had time to read it in detail yet, but here’s the slip opinion in a case we have been following for a long time, Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, No. 20-107 (June 23, 2021).

Writing for a six-Justice majority (no one went wobbly!), Chief Justice Roberts concluded that California’s labor regulations, which require that an owner of agricultural property allow union labor organizers to enter the property to access potential union members, is a per se taking.

Robustly reaffirming the rule that a physical invasion is a categorical taking, the majority concluded:

The upshot of this line of precedent is that government-authorized invasions of property—whether by plane, boat, cable, or beachcomber—are physical takings requiring just compensation. As in those cases, the government here has appropriated a right of access to the growers’ property, allowing union organizers to traverse it at will for three hours a day, 120

Continue Reading Well, You Really Can Say “Keep Out” In California (Cedar Point – A Per Se Taking)

The facts that compelled the U.S. Court of Appeal to conclude as it did in Yawn v. Dorchester County, No. 20-1584 (June 11, 2011) are pretty straightforward.

In response to a threatened public health viral crisis (no, not COVID, but Zika [remember that one?]), the county decided to spray insecticide. Some areas could not be reached by truck, so it was decided that aerial delivery was the way to go. The county put out press releases, and called local beekeepers to allow them to cover their hives (the insecticide, you see, doesn’t discriminate between mosquitos and bees, and is equally fatal to the latter unless the hive is covered). The pilot even testified that he had a map of the location of beehives, and that he turned off the sprayers as he approached those areas.

But Yawn, a beekeeper, did not get the warnings. The result: lots

Continue Reading CA4: No Taking When Aerial Pesticide Spray Killed Bees … But Not Why You Think

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A short, land-usey one today, from the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In Styller v. Zoning Board of Appeals, No. SJC-12901 (June 7, 2021), the court held that the plaintiff’s “occasional” use of a home to rent to others short-term is not a legal primary use of property in a “single residence’ zoning district.

The facts were not in dispute:

  • 5,000 sf, five bedroom, single-family home, three acres of land
  • “single-residence” zoning district
  • owner rented premises 13 times, totaling 65 days
  • rentals were between 2 and 15 days
  • most were 5 days or less
  • use during the rentals: reunions, board meetings, business retreats,

The town cited the owner, and the Land Court agreed that these uses were illegal “additional” uses because they constituted unauthorized use either as a boarding house or a tourist home. 

The owner appealed, and the SJC took over the case. The owner argued that these uses

Continue Reading Euclid Lives! Mass SJC: “Short-Term” Rental Is Not A Permissible Primary Use In A Residential Zone Because Not Of “Residential Character”

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A short, land-usey one today, from the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. In Styller v. Zoning Board of Appeals, No. SJC-12901 (June 7, 2021), the court held that the plaintiff’s “occasional” use of a home to rent to others short-term is not a legal primary use of property in a “single residence’ zoning district.

The facts were not in dispute:

  • 5,000 sf, five bedroom, single-family home, three acres of land
  • “single-residence” zoning district
  • owner rented premises 13 times, totaling 65 days
  • rentals were between 2 and 15 days
  • most were 5 days or less
  • use during the rentals: reunions, board meetings, business retreats,

The town cited the owner, and the Land Court agreed that these uses were illegal “additional” uses because they constituted unauthorized use either as a boarding house or a tourist home. 

The owner appealed, and the SJC took over the case. The owner argued that these uses

Continue Reading Euclid Lives! Mass SJC: “Short-Term” Rentals Is Not A Permissible Primary Use In A Residential Zone Because Not Of “Residential Character”

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The New Mexico Supreme Court

In what amounts to an advisory opinion, in State of New Mexico v. Wilson, No. S-1-SC-3850 (June 7, 2021), the New Mexico Supreme Court (courthouse pictured above) concluded that the State’s public health orders that impose “restrictions on business operations regarding occupancy limits and closures cannot support a claim for a regulatory taking requiring compensation[,]” either under the New Mexico Constitution or under New Mexico’s statutes.

We just published an article in the William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal about the subject of “coronavirus takings,” so naturally we’re intrigued by what the New Mexico court has to say. If you are also interested, read on.

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This case is in the Supreme Court as a result of the State’s petition, asking the court to weigh in after 14 separate lawsuits were filed by business owners and others challenging the state’s orders that “restricted mass

Continue Reading NM Supreme Court’s Advisory Opinion: COVID Orders “cannot support a claim for a regulatory taking” – Health Measures Are “Background Principles”

Title page

Wondering about so-called “covid takings” such as business lockdowns, seizures, commandeerings, eviction moratoria, and whether these might be takings?

If so, check out our latest article, Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening the Economic Curve, just published in the latest issue of the William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal.

Here’s the Intro to the article:

Desperate times may breed desperate measures, but when do desperate measures undertaken as a response to an emergency trigger the Fifth Amendment’s requirement that the government provide just compensation when it takes private property for public use? The answer to that question has commonly been posed as a choice between the “police power”—a sovereign government’s power to regulate property’s use in order to further the public health, safety, and welfare —and the eminent domain power, the authority to seize private property for public use with the corresponding requirement to pay compensation. But that should not be the question. After all, emergencies do not increase government power, nor do they necessarily alter constitutional rights, and an invocation of police power by itself does not solve the compensation question, but is merely the predicate issue: all government actions must be for the public health, safety, or welfare, in the same way that an exercise of eminent domain power must be for a public use.

This Article provides a roadmap for analyzing these questions, hoping that it will result in a more consistent approach for resolving claims for compensation that arise out of claims of emergencies. This Article analyzes the potential takings claims stemming from emergency measures, mostly under current takings doctrine. Which types of claims are likely to succeed or fail? In “normal” times, it is very difficult to win a regulatory takings claim for compensation. In the midst of emergencies—real or perceived—the courts are even more reluctant to provide a remedy, even when they should, and emergencies are a good time to make bad law, especially in takings law. Can a better case be made analytically for compensation?

Part I summarizes the economic “flattening the curve” principle that motivates takings claims for compensation. Part II sets out the prevailing three-factor Penn Central standard for how courts evaluate claims that a health, safety, or welfare measure “goes too far” and requires compensation as a taking, examining the character of the government action, the impact of the action on the owner, and the extent of the owner’s property rights. Deep criticism of the Penn Central standard is beyond the scope of this Article, and here, I accept it as the default takings test. But I argue that the government’s motivation and reason for its actions—generally reviewed under the “rational basis” standard—should not be a major question in takings claims. Rather, as this Article argues in Part III, the government’s emergency justifications should be considered as part of a necessity defense, not subject to the low bar of rational basis, but a more fact and evidence driven standard of “actual necessity.” Part IV attempts to apply these standards and examines the various ways that emergency actions can take property for public use: commandeerings, occupations of property, and restrictions on use. I do not conclude that the approach will result in more (or less) successful claims for compensation, merely a more straightforward method of evaluating emergency takings claims than the current disjointed analytical methods.

In sum, this article argues there is no blanket immunity from the requirement to provide just compensation when property is taken simply because the government claims to be acting in response to an emergency, even though its actions and reasons may satisfy the rational basis test. Instead, claims that the taking is not compensable because of the exigency of an emergency should only win the day if the government successfully shows that the measure was actually needed to avoid imminent danger posed by the property owner’s use and that the restriction on use was narrowly tailored to further that end.

One final word: the editors at the Bill of Rights Journal have been fantastic to work with to get this piece publication ready. Offering helpful comments, gently suggesting that certain parts are not working (but never insisting, and giving the author a lot of discretion), and getting the citations squared away: I could not have asked for more helpful editing. Congratulations on the publication of your latest issue. 

Thomas, Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening the Economic Curve, 29 Wm. & Mary Bill of Rights J. 1145 (2021)

Continue Reading New Law Review Article (Ours) – “Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening the Economic Curve,” 29 Wm. & Mary Bill of Rights J. 1145 (2021)

Screenshot_2021-05-15 18th Annual Brigham-Kanner Prize Recipient

Mark your calendars for September 30 – October 1, 2021, and join us at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia for the 18th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. It’s planned to be in-person, so when we mean “join us” we really mean join us.

This year the Conference will recognize the lifetime work of Professor Vicki Been (NYU Law) with the Brigham–Kanner Property Rights Prize. As noted in the Law School’s press release:

The Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize is named in honor of the lifetime contributions to property rights of Toby Prince Brigham, founding partner of Brigham Moore, LLP, and Gideon Kanner, professor of law emeritus at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. Brigham died earlier this month in Miami. A true legend in the law, he was esteemed by colleagues for the invaluable counsel, knowledge and skills he possessed and shared so generously. The prize

Continue Reading Mark Your Calendars: 2021 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, Williamsburg, Virginia, Sept 30-Oct 1 (in-person)

Check out the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s opinion in Harrison v. Montgomery County, No. 20-4-51 (May 11, 2021). It’s short, readable. And, most importantly, involves a subject that’s near and dear: takings, and the myriad potential traps that await an unsuspecting property owner making such a claim.

If you’ve ever asserted a takings claim, you know what we mean. The other side may argue you are too late (statute of limitations, for example), or too early (ripeness, in one form or another), or, remarkably, you are both too early and too late (yeah, that happens). Or simply that property questions are not worthy of the court (abstention). And these arguments are often not presented in a clear way — more like “here’s a bunch of reasons to throw this case out Judge, see which one you like” — and

Continue Reading Sixth Circuit Says No To Res Judicata As The Latest Williamson County Workaround

R.S. Radford’s most-recent article, Knick and the Elephant in the Courtroom: Who Cares Least About Property Rights? in the latest issue of the Texas A&M Journal of Property Law, should be next on your to-read list. 

Here’s the summary of the article:

Throughout the thirty-four-year history of Williamson County, one fact was taken for granted. Never directly mentioned but always looming in the background of two rounds of oral argument before the Supreme Court in Knick was the premise that relegating takings claims to state court made it less likely that property owners would prevail on those claims than if they could be filed in federal court in the first instance. This Article examines that premise and finds little support for it in the historical record.

Part I of this Article discusses Williamson County and highlights the logical, doctrinal, and procedural confusion associated with the opinion, both in its

Continue Reading New L Rev Article: Knick Won’t Mean Much Until Federal Courts Get Over “Strong Distate, If Not Outright Contempt” For Land Use Matters

What’s up with that (sorta) snarky headline, you ask? After all, isn’t the PennEast v. New Jersey case, heard yesterday by the Supreme Court, a real honest-to-goodness eminent domain case about a pipeline?

Doesn’t the transcript show terms like “in rem,” “takings,” “eminent” and “eminent domain” were used a whole lot? Aren’t a lot of the media reports saying this is a big eminent domain case (see here and here for example)?

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But read the transcript or a listen to the recording (stream above or download the mp3 here) and see what you think, eminent domain mavens.

If you are like us, you understand that the case isn’t going to tell us a lot about eminent domain generally, or about valuation, or the power to take (except in very limited circumstances). After all, the case asks whether the State of New Jersey – not some mere private landowner –

Continue Reading Listen (Or Read) As SCOTUS Hears Arguments In A (Sorta) Eminent Domain Case