“Nobody’s gonna remember how long it took. They’re only gonna look and see that it was done.”

     – New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, on the use of
            eminent domain to build a basketball arena in Brooklyn

Battle for Brooklyn film poster

Earlier this year, at the annual ALI-ABA Eminent Domain law conference, filmmakers Michael Galinsky, Suki Hawley, and David Beilinson screened a rough cut of their documentary about the Atlantic Yards case, Battle for Brooklyn.

At the conference, we interviewed Mr. Galinsky after the showing, but wanted to wait for the film to be finalized before releasing a review. The film is now on the festival circuit and it looks like it is heading to general release in the near future so it’s time for us to actually let you know what we think about it.

If you have been following the many lawsuits and appellate opinions which the project generated

Continue Reading Movie Review: Battle For Brooklyn

Responding to the recent post on the New York Court of Appeals’ decision in Uptown Properties, George Mason U. lawprof Steven Eagle writes with his thoughts on the concurring opinion by Judge Smith that caused us some dissonance.

Here, with a little editing for layout, are Professor Eagle’s comments:

In your blog for May 20, you express confusion over Judge Smith’s concurring opinion in Uptown Properties. You ask:

Judge Smith, bless him, had the courage to be the lone dissenting voice in Goldstein, although we’ve never quite figured out how the the public use clause in the New York Constitution can provide more protection than the Fifth Amendment’s Public Use Clause as interpreted in Kelo, but at the same time allow a “blight” standard that is so deferential to the agency’s determination of blight that it renders judicial review meaningless. Is he arguing that because

Continue Reading Professor Eagle Clears Up Our Confusion

Hartman

Update: a follow up from lawprof Steve Eagle  here.

Thanks to colleague Dwight Merriam for pointing out a recent decision that we missed from the Court of Appeals, New York’s highest court. In Uptown Holdings, LLC v. City of New York, 2011 NY Slip Op 01071 (Feb. 17, 2011), the court sua sponte dismissed the appeal because “no substantial constitutional question is directly involved.” We’ve been following the case, in which the Appellate Division held that the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development validly condemned property, upholding the taking against a due process and a public use challenge, because Kelo does not require a taking to be part of a comprehensive plan.

Judge Smith concurred in a short statement:

Smith, J. (concurring): I agree that no substantial constitutional issue is presented, because, as the concurring opinion in the Appellate Division points out, this case is controlled

Continue Reading Now I’m “Frightened And Confused” – New York Eminent Domain Law May Provide More Protection Than The Fifth Amendment, Unless There Is Blight?

Honolulu attorney Jay Fidell (who also produces Think Tech Hawaii) writes a regular column in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. This week, he focuses on eminent domain in “Governor must insure wind farm moves forward,” where he writes about the proposed wind farm on Molokai, and urges the state to use eminent domain aggressively to take the needed land:

When Abercrombie threatened eminent domain against Molokai Ranch, he unleashed the genie, and the possibility of condemnation is now in play. He gave us a glimpse of a powerful solution to our energy security predicament, and we can’t let it pass.

In our state of islands, land is scarce, and NIMBY is in every back yard. Large landowners want to hold on to their land in hopes of appreciation and because it’s so difficult to find other parcels. So they refuse to sell.

Hawaii has traditionally been reluctant to

Continue Reading “Make Eminent Domain Imminent” – Fidell On Wind Power

As we’ve mentioned here before, the City & County of Honolulu has given the green light to a new public railway, described as “a 20-mile elevated rail line that will connect West O`ahu with downtown Honolulu and Ala Moana Center. The system features electric, steel-wheel trains capable of carrying more than 300 passengers each. Trains can carry more than 8,000 passengers per hour in each direction.”

This evening, I spoke to the Waikiki Rotary about some of the legal issues that the rail project will involve, including eminent domain, environmental questions, and the relationship between the newly-created Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transit (HART), an agency within city government to oversee the project.

Here are some links on the topics I spoke about:


Continue Reading All Aboard? Honolulu Rail Is Coming

What we are reading today:

  • Should the Courts Help Los Angeles Commit Fiscal Suicide? – Gideon Kanner’s takedown of the recent California Court of Appeal decision in City of Los Angeles v. Superior Court, No. B225082 (Apr. 12, 2011), which held that in order to make out a claim for inequitable precondemnation activities, the city must actually have filed (or be contemplating filing) an eminent domain action. Because it hadn’t, the property owner could not get summary judgment on the Klopping claim. But as one colleague noted, if the city was not buying up these properties around LAX for a public purpose, just what was it doing? Also worth reading is Brad Kuhn‘s summary and analysis of the case here.


Continue Reading Monday Round-Up

Little-pink-house

Little Pink House

, Jeff Benedict’s book about the Kelo v. City of New London case, looks like it is going to become a TV movie. According to this story in The Day (the New London paper):

Author Jeff Benedict has sold the rights to his book about the battle in New London over eminent domain to Lifetime. The network is gearing up to turn the piece into a TV movie.

Benedict said Wednesday that the contract hasn’t been signed, but all the terms have been agreed on and signing the papers is a formality at this point.

Details about the casting and where the movie will be shot weren’t being made public as of Wednesday.

Asked whether they might film “Little Pink House” in New London, Benedict says, “That, I have no idea. I highly doubt it. … I think it’d be really unusual.”

Our casting choices? Melissa Leo

Continue Reading Coming Attractions: Kelo’s Eminent Domain Fight Coming To TV

In what could be the final chapter of the Hawaii “land reform” process that started in the 1960’s, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that the City and County of Honolulu did not violate the Contracts Clause of the U.S. Constitution (U.S. Const. art. I, § 10) when it repudiated its agreement with condominium leaseholders to condemn the fee simple interests underlying their condominiums.

In Young v. City & County of Honolulu, No. 09-16034 (Mar. 22, 2011), the court concluded that in its agreements with the leaseholders, the City did not make an unconditional agreement to condemn, but rather the agreement was conditioned on the City Council first deteremining that the taking would further the public interest. Slip op. at 3387. Since the City Council had earlier made the determination that such takings were not in the public interest when it repealed the ordinance authorizing them, the court held that the City did not impair its obligations. 

Some background. The story begins long ago when the Hawaii legislature enacted the statute that was challenged and sustained in Hawaii Hous. Auth. v. Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229 (1984). Finding that the economic ills purportedly caused by the concentrated ownership of private single-family residential property in Hawaii would be bettered by individual land ownership, in Haw. Rev. Stat. ch 516 the legislature allowed homeowner/lessees to petition the Hawaii Housing Authority to exercise eminent domain on the homeowner’s behalf and condemn the fee simple interest underneath their homes from the lessor, and transfer it to the lessee upon payment of just compensation.

After that statute was upheld by the U.S.Supreme Court against a Fifth Amendment public use challenge in Midkiff, and under the Hawaii Constitution’s public use clause by the Hawaii Supreme Court in Hawaii Hous. Auth. v. Lyman, 68 Haw. 55, 704 P.2d 88 (1985), efforts were made to pass similar legislation affording condominium owners the same ability to force condemnation of their leasehold interests. 

At the state level, those efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, but the City & County of Honolulu eventually enacted a local version, codified as Hon. Rev. Ord. ch. 38. The ordinance relied on the same “anti-oligopoly” rationale as the Land Reform Act, and like the Land Reform Act, the ordinance was challenged under the public use clauses of the U.S. and Hawaii Constitutions. And, as in Midkiff and Lyman, those challenges were rejected by both federal (Richardson v. City and County of Honolulu, 124 F.3d 1150 (9th Cir. 1997)) and state courts (Richardson v. City and County of Honolulu, 76 Haw. 46, 868 P.2d 1193 (1994)).

Thus, under chapter 38, the owners of many Honolulu condominium projects were permitted to condemn and take the leasehold interests from their lessors. The way the process worked was that the condo owners applied to the city to “convert” (condemn) their leases, and entered into written contracts with the city in which the condo owners each agreed to pay the city $1,000, in return for which the city promised that after its acquisition of the lease, it would convey it to the condo owners. In these agreements, the City reserved its ability to condemn, and conditioned it upon a determination that the condemnation would further the public interest. Of course, the City Council virtually never determined that a condo condemnation would not further the public interest.

By 2005, however, public sentiment regarding eminent domain had turned, and the City Council repealed chapter 38. At the time of repeal, several condominium apartment owners had begun the process to condemn their leaseholds, had entered into contracts with the City, and claimed they were entitled to continue the process through to completion. In Young, the owners had received the city’s preliminary approvals, but final approval by the City Council was withheld because the council was already considering repealing Chapter 38. The ordinance repealing Chapter 38 eventually contained a provision allowing any conversion proceeding which has been approved by the City Council to be completed, but because the Young condo owners had not received council approval, the taking was denied.

When the City refused to condemn, several condo owners sued, alleging that the City had bound itself to take the leaseholds, and that its repeal of Chapter 38 violated the Contracts Clause. The District Court dismissed because the City-condo owner contracts were void under the reserved powers doctrine (the government cannot contract away an essential sovereign power, like eminent domain) (378 F. Supp. 2d 1249), but the Ninth Circuit held the contracts were valid and did not violate the reserved powers doctrine, and sent the case back for a determination of the merits. Matsuda v. City & County of Honolulu, 512 F.3d 1148 (9th Cir. 2008.

On remand, the District Court again ruled against the condo owners, concluding that the City did everything it agreed to do. The Ninth Circuit affirmed. While the standard of review when a government is using its regulatory powers to impair contracts to which it is a party is somewhat high, the court concluded the City’s repeal of Chapter 38, and its subsequent refusal to further process the condo condemnations was not an “impairment” of the contract, because the City did not agree to condemn the leaseholds without first making an inquiry into whether the takings would serve a public purpose. 

The City’s repeal of Chapter 38 was its determination that the condo coversion takings no longer did. See slip op. at 3888 (“Contrary to the Lessees’ contention, this ordinance did not legislate aay the City’s contractual obligations. Rather, the Repeal Ordinance simply reflects the City Council’s judgment that no further condemnations under chapter 38 — including condemnation of Lessees’ property — would promote the public interest. The Agreements explicitly contemplate that the City Council might make such a determination, and there is nothing in the record to suggest that the Council did so in bad faith or without due care.”) (footnote omitted).

Two lessons from this case. First, public sentiment — and the legislative bodies that reflect that sentiment — are a sometimes fickle thing. There was nothing about these condemnations that made them any different in kind from the thousands of condemnations that had taken place under Chapter 38, all of which were determined to be “for public use,” except that they were not finished before the City repealed Chapter 38. What the government claims will serve a public purpose today may not tomorrow. Second, courts will strive hard to avoid enforcing the Contracts Clause, and it’s a rare case in which the government will be found to have violated it. Caveat emptor when contracting with the government; it’s not your usual contracting party, since it has the power to alter its own obligations by its regulatory powers, and there is little a court will do to stop it.

Here’s the opinion:

Young v Honolulu, 09-16034 (9th Cir 3/22/2011)
Continue Reading 9th Circuit: City Did Not Impair Its Contract To Condemn

We admit that our reaction to the latest volley in the redevelopment fight in California, the State Controller’s report with “Analysis of Administrative, Financial, and Reporting Practices” of 18 selected redevelopment agencies (available here and below), has been much like that of Captain Renault when he discovered there was gambling at Rick’s.

In his press release announcing the report, the Controller notes:

  • There is “no reliable means to measure the impact of redevelopment activity on job growth because [redevelopment agencies] either do not track them or their methodologies lack uniformity and are often arbitrary.”
  • The report “exposes the difficulty of holding [redevelopment agencies] accountable for their funding decisions when existing legal standards are so loose that any area can be deemed ‘blighted.'”
  • “The report also identified several missed payments to school districts and widespread accounting and reporting deficiencies, questionable payroll practices, substandard audits, faulty loans, and inappropriate use of affordable


Continue Reading California Redevelopment Agencies Have No Standards? I’m Shocked, I Tell You, Shocked!

The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has issued yet another opinion about the redevelopment taking of Skyland Shopping Center.

DeSilva v. District of Columbia, No. 10-CV-1069 (Feb. 24, 2011) is not a compelling opinion, nor even a very interesting read; but it is worth a few minutes of your time since it is the tail end of a long-running tale, and what seems to be the end game in a situation that has resulted in at least five other opinions:  Rumber v. District of Columbia, 487 F.3d 941 (D.C. Cir. 2007); Franco v. National Capital Revitalization Comm’n, 930 A.2d 160 (D.C. 2007); Franco v. District of Columbia, 3 A.3d 300 (D.C. 2010); and Rumber v. District of Columbia, No. 09-7035 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 26, 2010) (per curiam); and Oh v. National Capital Revitalization Corp., 7 A.3d 997 (D.C. 2010).Continue Reading DC Ct App: Final Chapter In The Skyland Condemnations?