Screenshot 2023-08-26 at 10-33-05 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference

Heads-up: the registration page for the 20th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, October 26-27, 2023, at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia, is now up.

Early registration is a good thing because space is limited, especially at the Wren Building banquet on the 26th, at which the 2023 B-K Property Rights Prize will be presented to Prof. Gregory Alexander.

So please don’t miss out.

2022 BK plaque
The Property Rights Hall of Fame (second plaque)

If you are not already familiar with the Conference, it is (in our opinion) the best one-day event on property and property rights theory and practice. Expressly designed to bring together the legal academy and the practicing dirt law bar, the conference is where we discuss the burning property and property rights issues of the day. Here’s the 2023 Program:

  • Property and Propriety (or a Well-Ordered Society): A Tribute to Gregory S.


Continue Reading Register Now For The 20th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, Oct. 26-27, 2023

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The two-plus years under the declared Co-19 emergency surely have given Hawaii’s executive-branch officials a clear vision of how much easier they could get their agendas accomplished without all that pesky democracy.

Hawaii’s Sweeping Emergency Management Act: Governor is the “Sole Judge”

Hawaii’s Emergency Management Act gives state and county executives broad and nearly unreviewable authority to suspend a wide spectrum of the usual laws, regulations, and rules. As we wrote in Hoist The Yellow Flag and Spam® Up: The Separation of Powers Limitation on Hawaii’s Emergency Authority, 43 U. Hawaii L. Rev. 71 (2020), Hawaii’s Act confers among the nation’s most muscular and sweeping powers. For example, the governor is the “sole judge of the existence of the danger, threat, or circumstances giving rise to a declaration of a state of emergency.” The Act’s one limitation — the 60-day time limit on how long an

Continue Reading What If The Hawaii Governor’s Cutting Of The Gordian Land Use/Environmental Knot Actually Works?

The New York Appellate Division’s opinion in Huntley Power, LLC v. Town of Tonawanda, No. 22-011460 (June 9, 2023), is typically short (6 pages, including a dissent).

The town instituted eminent domain proceedings to take Huntley’s riverfront property, including an electric plant decommissioned in 2016, and water intake structures. The asserted public use is “revitalizing and redeveloping the former industrial property, which was a blight on the Town, and maintaining the critical raw water supply to significant industrial employers in the Town[.]” Slip op. at 2.

That was enough for the court to “reject reject petitioner’s contention that the condemnation will not serve a public use, benefit, or purpose[.]” Id. Rational basis, and so forth.

Nor was the condemnation “excessive,” because it allegedly took more than it needed.” There’s no obvious abuse — or at least any abuse that would qualify as an abuse of discretion. Slip op. at

Continue Reading NY App Div: OK To Condemn Blighted Property To Sell To Private Developer

A new cert petition to check out. We don’t need to explain it much, because the petition does a good job of it.

Here’s the Question Presented:

New York State redevelopment agency seized, via eminent domain, a large tract of real estate occupied by an existing building in downtown Brooklyn for redevelopment. The building, partially used for office space, included a useable basement of over 13,000 square feet, which had a government-issued certificate of occupancy. During eminent domain proceedings, the lower court ignored the certificate of occupancy’s determination of a usable basement as a valued property interest.

The question presented is:

1. Are government-issued attributes of private property (e.g., certificates of occupancy, building permits, business permits) entitled to constitutional protection under the Fifth Amendment when they are seized under the government’s eminent domain power, just as they are presently entitled to constitutional due process protection under the Fourteenth Amendment?

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Continue Reading New Just Comp Cert Petition: Is Due Process Property Just Compensation Property?

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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 2023-04-04 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

Remember that case from a couple of years back, where the Supreme Court, by a tantalizingly close vote, declined to grant a cert petition seeking review of an Illinois decision that preventing future blight was a sufficiently public use to support a redevelopment taking? 

A law student at Catholic U. law school recently made a presentation on the case and the issues as part of the Student Scholars Series, and the law school has kindly made the video available. More here.

We think it is fantastic both that law students are examining these issues, and that the law school encourages and promotes their work. It gives us comfort for the future of the profession, and the Dirt Law Bar.

Well done, Mr. Tocchio!Continue Reading Catholic U Law School Student Scholar: “Eychaner v. City of Chicago: Repercussions after The Supreme Court refuses to take up a Takings Clause Reconsideration”

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The International Right of Way Association‘s Real Estate Law Committee produces twice-a-year reports “which contain summaries of eminent domain decisions and legislation within the United States.”

And what is really nice is that they make the report available.

Here’s the latest.

We’re posting it here because we’re one of the co-authors. Hat tip to our co-authors Brad Kuhn, Jillian Friess Leivas, and Ajay Gajaria.

The report is short, and doesn’t contain a lot of fluff. Just what you wanted.Continue Reading IRWA’s Summary Of Major Eminent Domain Cases & Legislation (June-Dec 2022)

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The session was recorded.
Here’s the video and audio
.

Earlier this week, planner M. Nolan Gray, author of the new book, “Arbitrary Lines: How Zoning Broke the American City and How to Fix It” (Island Press 2022) joined our Land Use class at the University of Hawaii Law School to talk about zoning and housing.

The title of his talk was “Are zoning laws the cause of Hawaii’s housing crisis?” The subject matter is important, and the public was invited to join us. As you can see, there was a lot of interest in this critical topic and turnout was excellent. 

Thank you to the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii for their sponsorship of the event, and for generously getting Mr. Gray to Honolulu for his in-person appearance. It was also nice to have refreshments following class, and a chance to “talk story” (as we

Continue Reading A National Zoning Expert Pays A Visit To The L580 Land Use Class At U. Hawaii

LUI

Here are the opinions that we spoke about this afternoon at the Land Use Institute on “The Use of Eminent Domain for Redevelopment & Economic Development Projects.”

Thanks for joining in.Continue Reading Cases And Links From Today’s Land Use Institute Session: “The Use of Eminent Domain for Redevelopment & Economic Development Projects”