Check out the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s opinion in Howard v. Macomb County, No. 24-1655 (Mar. 28, 2025).

This is one of those post-Tyler cases asking whether the government satisfies the Fifth Amendment after it has taken someone’s home equity by satisfying the owner’s tax debt and then keeping the excess. Hold on, didn’t the unanimous Supreme Court in Tyler say no, that violates the Takings Clause?

Well yes. You remember the “render unto Caesar” thing, and the “bank robber giving back the money” thing. So there’s a taking without compensation — and thus a violation of the Takings Clause — the moment the government keeps what it is not supposed to keep. But Tyler also referred to an earlier case, Nelson v. City of New York, 352 U.S. 103 (1956), which has been read to get the government off the hook if it

Continue Reading CA6: Property Owner Needs To Exhaust State Remedies Before Filing Takings Claim

The question in today’s case is an old one: can you own wild animals?

In Texas Parks & Wildlife Dep’t v. RW Trophy Ranch, Ltd., No. 15-24-00112-CV (Apr. 10, 2025), the Texas Court of Appeals said no. At least not when that wild animal is a white-tailed deer.

Here are the facts. Generally, you can’t possess a white tailed deer in Texas. (We bet you can hunt ’em. But you can’t, like, domesticate them.) But there are exceptions to that general rule. One of these exceptions allows you to obtain a breeder permit, by which you can keep breeder deer in captivity for propagation purposes. The Ranch is such a deer breeding facility.

But white-tailed deer in Texas — and elsewhere — are susceptible to a disease that sounds truly horrible: Chronic Wasting Disease, “a type of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy[.]” Slip op. at 2. One of

Continue Reading Deer Me! No Property Interest In Deer, Even If You Possess Them

Check out the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit’s recent opinion in Knellinger v. Young, No. 23-1018 (Apr. 11, 2025). 

It’s worth reading because the court doesn’t fall into the common trap of concluding that although an owner need not exhaust administrative remedies before asserting a takings claim, he nonetheless doesn’t have “private property” because … he hasn’t exhausted administrative remedies to get his property returned. As the court summed it up:

[The owners] … argu[e] that they alleged facts sufficient to state a claim that Colorado took their property for public use without just compensation. We agree. Property owners who plausibly allege that Colorado has taken custody of their property under RUUPA, and used it for public purposes, need not file administrative claims with Colorado before they may sue for just compensation. The moment a state takes private property for public use without just compensation, a

Continue Reading CA10: Takings Clause Means Never Having To Administratively Ask To Get Your Property Back

These days, when we have cases where there’s tinkering with the terms of rental agreements, we most often see local governments using their police power to force property owners to rent their properties on a long-term (more than 30 days) basis.

But in Bigelow Arizona TX-344, LP v. Town of Addison, No. 05-23-00642-CV (Apr. 4, 2025), the Texas Court of Appeals was dealing with a town ordinance that went the other way: it redefined the definition of “hotel,” which had the effect of prohibiting an extended-stay hotel from continuing to rent 95% of its rooms on a long-term basis under a nearly 30-year old special use permit, and forced what had been long term stays to become short-term stays.

Why? The town’s “desire for motels and hotels to operate so that rooms are available for the Town’s tourists[.]” Slip op. at 3. Really? Read a bit further and you

Continue Reading Tex App Dismisses Penn Central Claim – But What’s It Doing Weighing The Facts?

Here’s the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit’s opinion in United Water Conservation District v. United States, No. 23-1602 (Apr. 2, 2025), which gets a bit metaphysical.

The District is responsible for a dam and canal that diverts water from the Santa Clara River in southern California. Under the authority of the Endangered Species Act, the NOAA required the District to leave more water in the river for steelhead trout habitat. Either that, or seek an incidental take permit allowing the District to “take” (i.e., kill) steelhead.

The District asserted this is a physical taking of its water rights, but the government said no, this is a regulatory taking. Why is this important? Because a physical takings claim is ripe right now, without any need to exhaust any avenues for administrative relief from the NOAA, But if this is a regulatory takings claim, it isn’t ready for judicial review until the NOAA has provided a final decision in the form of a yes or no on an incidental take permit. Which it has not done because the District hasn’t applied for an incidental take permit. The Court of Federal Claims agreed with the government, and the District appealed. 

The Federal Circuit saw the difference between physical and regulatory takings thusly:

Regulatory takings differ from physical takings in that, instead of asking “whether the government has physically taken property for itself or someone else—by whatever means,” the question is whether the government “has instead restricted a property owner’s ability to use his own property.” Id. (citing Tahoe-Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Reg’l Plan. Agency, 535 U.S. 302, 321–23 (2002)). “While there is no ‘set formula’ for evaluating regulatory takings claims, courts typically consider whether the restriction has risen to the level of a compensable taking under the multi-factor balancing test articulated in Penn Central, 438 U.S. at 124.” Casitas I, 543 F.3d at 1289; see Tahoe-Sierra, 535 U.S. at 322 n.17 (“When, however, the owner contends a taking has occurred because a law or regulation imposes restrictions so severe that they are tantamount to a condemnation or appropriation, the predicate of a taking is not self-evident, and the analysis is more complex.”).

Slip op. at 7.

The Federal Circuit concluded that the District has a property right in the use of water it diverts. But it rejected the District’s argument that NOAA’s order to not divert as much water as it had been diverting and instead leave it in the river is the same as the government seizing the water. Not so, held the court. This is merely a restriction on the District’s use.

But what about that earlier case in which the Federal Circuit held that the government requiring another water rights owner to put water into a fish ladder was a physical taking?  See Casitas Municipal Water Dist. v. United States, 543 F.3d 1276 (Fed. Cir. (2008). Nope. The difference is that in Casitas, the water district already had diverted the water from the river into its own system and the government ordered it to redirect the already-appropriated water to the fish ladder. Whereas here, the water district was merely ordered to not divert it and leave it in the river for the fish.

The Federal Circuit also distinguished a a Supreme Court case which held that the government’s stopping the water flow to the plaintiff’s mill was a physical appropriation. By contrast, here, the government had not “completely cut off [the District’s] access to the water or cause it to return any volume of water it had previously diverted to its possession[.]” Slip op. at 10. “In fact, [the District] alleges that [NOAA], at most, required more water to stay in the Santa Clara River.” Id.

The District argued the court shouldn’t view this so hyper-technically: we had the right to X amount of water before, and due to the government’s restrictions has X-minus amount now. We think that makes a lot of sense. 

But let’s put that aside for the moment and get to what we see as the more fundamental issue. Should there be a difference between a physical claim and a regulatory claim such that they should be subject to different ripeness requirements?

The idea that there’s a meaningful (or as the Federal Circuit says, “material”) difference between a physical takings theory and a regulatory takings theory is difficult for us to wrap our mind around. There’s but a single cause of action to describe the situation where an owner claims some action by the government has the same effect on property as would an exercise of eminent domain (aka inverse condemnation, regulatory taking, de facto taking). See Yee v. City of Escondido, 503 U.S. 519, 534-35 (1992) (“Petitioners’ arguments that the ordinance constitutes a taking in two different ways, by physical occupation and by regulation, are not separate claims. They are, rather, separate arguments in support of a single claim—that the ordinance effects an unconstitutional taking.”).

Reminds us of that perhaps-apocryphal story about LBJ getting into the “wrong” helicopter. They’re all de facto takings, son. After all, in eminent domain the taking of a nonpossessory easement is treated exactly the same way as a taking of the fee simple interest.

Nonetheless, the Federal Circuit thinks there’s a big difference. But what’s the difference between having a right to divert water, and a right to water already diverted? We can’t see a whole lot. But here’s the court’s thinking:

The Supreme Court precedent that United relies upon, however, does not acknowledge any distinction between physical and regulatory takings. That is presumably because it was not until 1978, decades after the decisions in International Paper, Gerlach, and Dugan, that the Court, in Penn Central, “clarified [ ] the test for how far was ‘too far’” for a regulation to be recognized as a taking. Horne v. Dep’t of Agric., 576 U.S. 350, 360 (2015). It may also be because the alleged takings in those cases did not arise from a regulation, as it clearly does here under the ESA. Moreover, Gerlach and Dugan involve riparian water rights, not appropriative water rights as here. The difference between the two is meaningful in the context of this case because riparian rights exist by virtue of land ownership and, therefore, their acquisition by the landowner does not depend on any physical acts of diversion and beneficial use of water as is required for appropriative water rights. See Colorado, 459 U.S. at 179, n.4 (“Appropriative rights do not depend on land ownership and are acquired and maintained by actual use. Riparian rights, in contrast, originate from land ownership and remain vested even if unexercised.”). Unlike the riparian-rights holders in Gerlach and Dugan, therefore, the appropriative-rights holder here needed to have physically diverted water for its property right to vest and thus become subject to a physical taking, as in Casitas. For at least those reasons, the Supreme Court precedent and related cases United cites are consistent with our decision here.

Slip op. at 12.

United Water Conservation Dist. v. United States, No. 23-1602 (Fed. Cir. Apr. 2, 2025)

Continue Reading CAFED: Sleeping With The Fishes – Requiring Water To Stay In River Is A Regulatory, Not Physical, Taking

Kudos to whomever added the Wilhelm Scream

In trial court litigation, the “final judgment” is a milestone. That’s when your window to an appeal starts, that’s when it is truly done in a trial court. If you are one of the parties or lawyers in the trial court, that’s when you can respond to the question “did you win?” truly with a “yes” or “no.”

And that little voice in our head keeps reminding us that until final judgment, in the (perhaps apocryphal) words of Yogi Berra, “it ain’t over ’til its over.” Yes, you might win a partial summary judgment. Or that motion gets denied. Or the court decides that yes, the court has jurisdiction. Or whatever. All that stuff is mostly interlocutory and therefore subject to revision, revocation, or reconsideration. Or in the case of subject-matter jurisdiction, something that can come back to bit a plaintiff

Continue Reading CAFED: It Ain’t Over Til It’s Over – CFC Free To Revisit Seven-Year-Past Denial Of Motion To Dismiss

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following closely (and disclosure: our firm filed an amicus brief in the Texas Supreme Court).

First, the bottom line: in The Commons at Lake Houston, Ltd. v. City of Houston, No. 23-0474 (Mar. 21, 2025), the Texas Supreme Court held that merely because a regulation is a justified exercise of police power does not insulate it from a claim that it goes too far and is also a taking requiring compensation. 

The Texas Court of Appeals held that the city could not be liable for a taking for an ordinance that limited development and use within the city’s 100-and-500-year floodplains because the ordinance was a valid exercise of police power and otherwise survived the rational basis test.

As we wrote here, that seems like utter nonsense to say that a valid police power reason categorically insulates a government action

Continue Reading Breaking: Texas Takings Law Enters The 20th Century!

CornercrossingThe opinion gets that diagrams are good. 

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following

A case that should end up in Property casebooks (it will almost certainly make an appearance in our William and Mary Eminent Domain and Property Rights course in the fall).

Dirt lawyers know the “ad coelum” doctrine (owner owns airspace, and down to Hades) has a lot of practical challenges in the modern world. The Supreme Court decided a while back in United States v. Causby, 328 U.S. 256 (1946) that no, it isn’t violating the surface owner’s property rights for aircraft to fly high up. In the modern world, the owner can’t reasonably expect to be compensated for invasions into the coelum, except when the invasion is down fairly low, and likely to cause a problem on the surface. The doctrine has some continuing vitality, especially in that all-to-frequent

Continue Reading CA10 On Causby, Open Range, And Corner Crossings: Owners Have A Right To Exclude, But Not If Doing So Fully Encloses Public Lands

Virginia eminent domain 2025

Virginians: now is a good time to register for the Virginia Eminent Domain Conference, May 8-9, 2025, at the Kingsmill Resort in Williamsburg.

We have spoken and attended the Conference in past editions, and can report that it is excellent. We’re looking forward to joining friends and colleagues again in The Burg in the spring. Check out the faculty and agenda, and then register and reserve your spot.

We’ll see you there.Continue Reading Virginia Eminent Domain Conference: May 8-9, 2025, Williamsburg

TX Em Domain 2025 Austin

Texans: now is a good time to register for the 24th Annual Texas Eminent Domain Superconference, March 27-28, 2025, at the Austin Country Club in Austin.

We spoke at the Conference a couple of years agolast year and in other editions, and can report that it is excellent. Check out the faculty and agenda, and then register and reserve your spot.Continue Reading Texas Eminent Domain Conference – Austin, March 27-28, 2025