Our shut-in time has got us to thinking.

We’re all environmentalists now. This is the precautionary principle writ large. In a way, this is only part of a greater problem.

Welcome to the Twitterverse. We now have access to a vast amount of data — very often on a granular level — and this moves faster than the ability

Americans like to work

Americans are pretty wiling to give our elected leaders a lot of slack

playground Constitution has serious legs

Most don’t understand that their rights are, in normal time, highly restricted, at least in courts

takings lawyers are not really surprised as everyone else – we’re used to courts deferring to what may look like excessive and unwarranted assertions of governmental power. Unlike a lot of other litigation involving the government, representing property owners in eminent domain or takings cases

basic takings doctrine is really incoherent

we already

Continue Reading Things I’ve Learned (Am Learning) About #CoronavirusLaw

Last Friday, we had the good fortune to moderate a debate between two scholars — F.E. Guerra-Pujol and Ilya Somin — on the question of takings and emergencies (“COVID-19 & Property Rights: Do Government Actions in Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic Create Compensable Takings?“). This issue has resulted in a flurry of claims nationwide. See here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here, for example)

Note: the recording of that session will be available and when ready, we’ll post it here. 

Professor Guerra-Pujol has also written up some post-session thoughts on his blog, prior probablity. In “Property rights panel: a recap,” he summarizes his thoughts and those of Professor Somin. 

Rather than summarize his summary, we simply suggest you visit his blog and read it (it’s a quick read).

The entire discussion

Continue Reading A Good Time To Make Bad Law?

Here’s the latest complaint asserting that a state governor’s business shut-down order (under which certain businesses are deemed “essential,” while others not) is a taking, inter alia, that joins a growing list of similar lawsuits (see here, here, here, here, here and here).

This one is by licensed beauty professionals and has a slightly different flavor than other similar complaints, because the plaintiffs are alleging a specific property right in their licenses, raising the question of whether a state-granted or state-recognized license is a property interest that needs to be condemned if the government prohibits the licensee from actually using it. The plaintiffs argue a Lucas taking:

113. The regulatory actions taken by the Defendants have resulted in Plaintiffs being deprived of all economically beneficial or productive use of their property including, without limitation, their licenses, their leased property, and their business property, and

Continue Reading Another Federal Takings Complaint For Business Shut-Down Order (California)

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“The Cornfield” at Antietam

Two more complaints that challenge state-ordered shut-down orders as takings. The first from Maryland, the second from across the country in Nevada. These join an ever-growing list of such lawsuits. See here, here, here, here and here, for example.

We set out what we think about how these type of claims should be analyzed in this article (“Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening The Economic Curve“). And, we’ll be moderating a Federalist Society teleforum (open to the public!) next Friday on “COVID-19 & Property Rights: Do Government Actions in Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic Create Compensable Takings?” if you want to get in on the issue.

Of course, we shall keep following along. 

(What’s the deal with the photos you ask? Nothing, except the first is from the Antietam Battlefield on our last visit (the Maryland complaint is

Continue Reading Two More Complaints Challenging Shut-Down Orders As Takings (Md, Nev)

Please mark your calendars for Friday, May 15, 2020 at 2:30pm Eastern Time, for the teleforum sponsored by the Federalist Society’s Environmental Law & Property Rights Practice Group, “COVID-19 & Property Rights: Do Government Actions in Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic Create Compensable Takings?”  

The issue: how should courts evaluate the claims for compensation arising out of emergency measures? This question is on the front burner at the moment (and will continue to be because the courts will likely be confronted from these type of claims as the fallout continues). For example, here are some of the complaints that have been filed in courts around the nation: see here, here, here, here and here.  

Please join the program (public welcome). It will be a moderated discussion between two experts in the area, both of whom have been following the issue closely, and who have written

Continue Reading Join Us Next Friday, May 15 (2:30pm ET, 11:30am PT, 8:30am HT): FedSoc Teleforum: “COVID-19 & Property Rights: Do Government Actions in Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic Create Compensable Takings?”

How should courts evaluate the claims for compensation arising out of emergency measures (many of which we’ve already seen; see here, here, here, here and here, for example)?

Rather than think about it piecemeal, we decided to write it up in a more comprehensive fashion. Here’s the result, so far. Rather than summarize it, let’s just cut-and-paste the Introduction. The complete piece is posted on SSRN, if you want to read it. 

Desperate times may breed desperate measures, but when do desperate measures undertaken during emergencies trigger the Fifth Amendment’s requirement that the government provide just compensation when it takes private property for public use?[1] The answer to that question has commonly been posed as a choice between the “police power”—a sovereign government’s power to regulate and restrict property’s use in order to further the public health, safety, and welfare[2]—and the eminent domain power, the authority to seize private property for public use with the corresponding requirement to pay compensation.[3]

But that should not be the question. An invocation of police power does not answer the compensation question at all, 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. 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 where they should, and emergencies are a good time to make bad law, especially takings law. Emergencies do not increase government power, nor do they necessarily alter constitutional rights.[4] 

This article provides a roadmap for analyzing these questions, hoping that it will result in a more consistent approach to resolving claims for compensation that arise out of claims of emergencies—real or perceived. This article analyzes the potential takings claims stemming from emergency measures, mostly under current takings doctrine. What type of claims are likely to succeed or fail? 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.[5] Deep criticism of Penn Central is beyond the scope of this article, and I will not here do more than accept it as the “default”[6]  takings test. But I do 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, and 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 compensation simply because the government claims to be acting in response to an emergency, even though its reasons and actions 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 measure was narrowly tailored to further that end.

————-

[1] See Robert Higgs and Charlotte Twight, National Emergency and the Erosion of Private Property Rights, 6 Cato J. 747 (1987) (“Much of the reduction [of private property rights] occurred episodically, as governmental officials too control of economic affairs during national emergencies—mainly wars, depressions, and actual or threatened strikes in critical industries.”).

[2] “Police power” describes everything a sovereign government can do. It even might be said to encompass the eminent domain power. See Hawaii Housing Auth. v. Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229, 240 (1984) (“The [Fifth Amendment’s] ‘public use’ requirement is thus coterminous with the scope of a sovereign’s police powers.).

[3] See U.S. Const. amend. V. The Fifth Amendment conditions the federal government’s takings power. See Barron v. Baltimore, 32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 243 (1833) (noting a wharf owner’s argument that city’s diversion of water pursuant to its police power could support a Fifth Amendment claim, but holding that the Fifth Amendment only limited the actions of the national government). The Fourteenth Amendment extended the just compensation requirement to the states as part of due process of law. See Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. City of Chicago, 166 U.S. 226, 235 (1897).

[4] See Steven M. Silva, Closed for Business—Open for Litigation?, Nw. L. Rev. of Note (Apr. 29, 2020), https://blog.northwesternlaw.review/?p=1361 (“First, it must be recognized that the Constitution exists even in an emergency. The Constitution expressly permits some alterations to our ordinary system of rights during times of war—for example, the Third Amendment provides differing provisions for the quartering of soldiers in times of peace versus times of war—but those alterations are baked into the system, the Constitution does not disappear in war. And a pandemic is not even a war.”) (citing Home Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. Blaisdell, 290 U.S. 398, 425 (1934))..

[5] Penn Cent. Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104, 124-25 (1978).

[6] The Supreme Court has labeled Penn Central “default” test for regulatory takings. See Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 544 U.S. 528, 538-39 (2005).

Entire draft here

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Continue Reading New Article – Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening The Economic Curve

Two more complaints challenging covid shutdown orders as takings (inter alia). Add to the growing list. See here, here, here and here, for other similar complaints.

The first is from California. It asserts that ordering “nonessential” businesses to shut down is a taking. The complaint alleges that unless the shut down is for “(1) destroying a building in front of a fire so as to create a fire break, (2) destroying a diseased animal, (3) rotten fruit or (4) infected trees,” it is a taking. 

The second is from New Jersey. So rather than get into the details, we’re going to send you over to our NJ colleague Tony Della Pelle, who has some thoughts here (“NJ Shutdown Challenge – I Can’t Rent My Beach House!“). 

Will there be more of these? As we have said before, for sure. Fasten your

Continue Reading Two More Takings Complaints Challenging Shut-Down Orders

What do you think of when you think of south Florida? Beaches? Jai Alai? Cuba Libre? Crockett and Tubbs and a career in southern law enforcement

Well, it better not be dog racing. Because by an amendment to the Florida Constitution (Amendment 13), the people of Florida banned it. Well, wagering on dog racing, technically. You can, apparently, still race dogs just for dog s**t and giggles.

Well, after the ban, the inevitable takings claim arrived, like the tail wagging the dog. In this Order, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida, dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim. The court held the plaintiffs had standing, and the case was ripe and wasn’t barred by the 11th Amendment for some of the defendants. 

But naturally, we focused on the takings analysis. First, the court agreed with the

Continue Reading A Little Preview Of How Courts Are Going To Misapply Takings Analysis In Shutdown Cases – Federal Court: No Taking For Outlawing Dog Racing

On one hand, there’s a lot going on in the Maryland Court of Appeal’s opinion in Maryland Reclamation Assoc, Inc. v. Harford County, No. 52 (Apr. 24, 2020), a case we’ve been following. The opinion is a whopping 81 pages, and details facts that go back decades. On the other hand, the opinion doesn’t actually say a lot. 

But what it does say is a doozy.

Here’s your BLUF (Bottom Line(s) Up Front):

  • Maryland agencies have jurisdiction to consider and rule on state constitutional issues including takings. Apparently, this is not something the court adopted in this case, but is a long-standing practice in Maryland. Count us as very surprised that agencies have the power to adjudicate constitutional rights. Very, very surprised.  
  • A property owner must raise their Maryland Constitution takings claim and present it for adjudication to very agency accused of taking property without compensation. 
  • The property


Continue Reading Maryland Resurrects California’s Agins Rule: Owner Must Seek Agency Variance, Which If Granted, Means “owner no longer has a takings claim and the right to alternative relief in the form of just compensation”

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As any takings lawyer can tell you, ad hoc rules and non-exhaustive lists of “factors” a fact-finder considers can be seductive. After all, shouldn’t the outcome of a case turn on its particular facts? Who could argue with that?

The problem lies when those factors are applied in a way that seems more like one of the very bright-line rules that a list of factors is meant to avoid. For example, in the takings context, we see the “polestar” Penn Central ad hoc regulatory taking three-factor test being applied most consistently as a one-strike-and-your’re-out test that (almost invariably) means the property owner loses. In theory, it might make some sense, but in practice it has become more like a per se rule: you lose, property owner. That isn’t truly a “case-by-case” analysis. 

Now, in takings that may be by design — you at least can see why the Supreme Court

Continue Reading We’re All Ad Hoccers Now: SCOTUS Penn Centralizes The Clean Water Act (“From” Is Too Hard To Define, So Here’s A List Of Factors)