There’s still time to register for tomorrow’s American Planning Association (Planning and Law Division)’s webinar, Fair Housing, Affordable Housing, and Local Planning and Zoning: Understanding the Obligations and Reducing Your Community’s Legal Risk. Here’s the description:

The Planning and Law Division of the American Planning Association is pleased to host the upcoming webcast Fair Housing, Affordable Housing, and Local Planning and Zoning: Understanding the Obligations and Reducing Your Community’s Legal Risk on Tuesday, November 25th from 2:00 to 3:30 PM EST. Registration is $20 for PLD members, $40 for nonmembers, and $45 for webinar registration plus a Planning and Law Division membership. Presented by Don Elliot of Clarion Associates and Brian Connolly of Otten, Johnson, Robinson, Neff & Ragonetti, this webcast explores the connection between local land use regulation and the federal Fair Housing Act.  

Register hereContinue Reading Upcoming APA Webinar On Affordable Housing

For those of you who couldn’t join us at the William & Mary Law School last month for the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference (see our report here), the law school has made videos of the four panel presentations available here

They’re high quality videos, so be prepared for big downloads, but the presentations are worth it. While they are all good, our favorite was the impromptu discussion/debate during the third panel, “Balancing Private Property and Community Rights,” featuring panelists Kames Burling (Pacific Legal Foundation), Professors Richard Epstein (NYU), Steven Eagle (Geo. Mason), Mark Poirer (Seton Hall), and James Stern (William & Mary). 

Continue Reading Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference – Panel Videos Now Available

To all who were able to join today’s ABA Section of Real Property, Trust and Estate’s Condemnation, Zoning and Land Use Committee’s call on the AIG takings trial, currently pending in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, thank you for participating. I’ve posted the entire talk (minus questions) above.

Here are the links to the stories, analysis, and materials I mentioned: 

  • The original complaint, first filed in the CFC in November 2011. 
  • Second Amended Complaint in the CFC case, along with Mr. Boies’ quote that this will be “an easy case to litigate.” We described the case as “audacious,” if only because it seeks $25 billion in just compensation. 
  • Professor Gideon Kanner’s (who has been following this case more closely than we have) first thoughts on the complaint. 
  • The CFC’s Opinion and Order granting in part and denying in part the United States’ motion to dismiss.  


Continue Reading Links From Today’s ABA Talk On The AIG Bailout Takings Case

Here’s what caught our eye today:

  • Last evening, we attended lawprof Gregory S. Alexander‘s talk at the U. Hawaii Law School, “Five Easy Pieces: Recurrent Themes in American Property Law.” You know it’s not a real academic talk until the speaker uses the words “normative” and “neologism,” and Professor Alexander did not disappoint. But seriously, it was a thought-provoking hour, focused on our favorite topic, property law. A video was made, and hopefully the law school will post it on line so you can watch. We’ll link to it when they do. 
  • Va. high court to look at Beach eminent domain appeal,” from the Hampton Roads newspaper, about a case which the Virginia Supreme Court just accepted. The case was triggered when the trial court refused to allow the jury to hear evidence of the DOT’s first appraisal and deposit, which was higher than its final appraisal


Continue Reading Thursday Round-Up: “Five Easy Pieces” Talk, Re-appraisals, Foie Gras Ban Lives, Kelo In China, Kelo Movie

If you are in the neighborhood on Wednesday, November 5, 2014 from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m., you may want to come by the University of Hawaii Law School to listen to the 2014 Distinguished Gifford Lecture in Real Property by Cornell lawprof Gregory S. Alexander, “Five Easy Pieces: Recurrent Themes in American Property Law.”

Details hereContinue Reading Real Property Lecture By Gregory Alexander At U.H. Law School Nov. 5, 2014: “Five Easy Pieces: Recurrent Themes in American Property Law”

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You can’t have rights without advocates.”

                              – Michael Berger

We’re at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia today for the 11th Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. As we’ve noted earlier, Michael Berger is this year’s B-K Prize honoree, for his career contributions to property law and his “scholarly work and accomplishments [which] affirm that property rights are fundamental to protecting individual and civil rights.”

The list of past recipients is an All-Star roster of property scholars and jurists, including lawprofs Frank Michelman, Richard Epstein, James Ely, Carol Rose, Thomas Merrill, and Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor (the latter perhaps more for where she ended up in her Supreme Court career than where she started). See the plaque on the Law School’s wall for the complete list of

Continue Reading 2014 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Report: Honoring Michael Berger

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If you haven’t already, please mark you calendars: the agendas and faculty lists for the February 5-7, 2015 ALI-CLE eminent domain programs in San Francisco have been finalized. Registration is ongoing, and there’s even a few more days left for the early registration discount. Substantial group discounts are also available. 

We’re talking, of course, about Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation (the “masters” program, now in its 32nd year), and Condemnation 101: How to Prepare and Present an Eminent Domain Case (the boot camp or refesher course on eminent domain fundamentals).  We’re the co-Planning Chair of the Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation program along with Joe Waldo, and we think we’ve assembled an exciting agenda, presented by a faculty comprised of the nation’s best-of-the-best in our field of law.

Some highlights:

  • Eminent Domain National Law Update – Amy Brigham Boulris, Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart, P.A.,


Continue Reading ALI-CLE 2015 Eminent Domain and Land Valuation Litigation & Condemnation 101 Agendas And Faculty Announced

Mark your calendars for Friday, October 24, 2014, the date of the Hawaii Bar Association Convention, in Honolulu. As noted here, the HSBA’s Appellate Law Section is sponsoring a three-hour session featuring the Chief Justice of the Hawaii Supreme Court, the Chief Judge of the Intermediate Court of Appeals, other justices and judges, and appellate practitioners with insider views of the appellate courts. 

If that’s not enough to get you there, you can fulfill your entire CLE yearly requirement in one session, also. A must-attend for you appellate nerds (or anyone else interested in how the common law develops in our fair jurisdiction). 

More on the program from Rebecca Copeland’s Record on Appeal blog, including registration information. 

Continue Reading Appellate Practice CLE At Hawaii Bar Convention

If that title doesn’t grab you, nothing will. Here’s the description of an upcoming program from the American Planning Association that looks awfully interesting:  

The Planning and Law Division of the American Planning Association is pleased to host the upcoming webcast Sex, Guns & Drugs:  Planning for Controversial Land Useson Wednesday, October 22nd from 1:00 to 2:30 PM CST. Registration is $20 for PLD members, $40 for nonmembers, and $45 for webinar registration plus a Planning and Law Division membership. Presented by Daniel J. Bolin and Gregory W. Jones of Ancel Glink, this webcast will explore if and where controversial businesses belong in communities.

The U.S. Constitution guarantees freedom of expression, freedom of religion, and the right to bear arms. But it’s not that simple. Businesses that rely on these constitutional guarantees continue to generate controversy in communities across the country. To compound matters, state legislatures from Arizona to Massachusetts have been busy granting new — and in many cases, previously unheard of — rights to marijuana and firearm retailers.This has rapidly drawn planners and zoning practitioners into the debate over how these businesses best fit into their communities, and whether their communities are legally obligated to accommodate these uses in the first place. Spend an hour learning about the issues and regulatory strategies from around the country. 

Webcast—Sex, Guns & Drugs:  Planning for Controversial Land Uses

October 22, 2014

1:00 – 2:30 PM CST

More information here

, including registration. 
Continue Reading Upcoming Webcast: “Sex, Guns, And Drugs: Planning For Controversial Land Uses”

A reminder: the 11th annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference is coming up on October 30-31, 2014, at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia. As we noted earlier, Michael Berger will receive the Brigham-Kanner Prize, so this one is special – he’s the first practitioner to receive the Prize.

More here, from W&M, including agenda and registration information. Here’s the flyer.

We’re going – hope to see you there. 

11th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference – Oct 30-31, 2014 – Michael Berger

Continue Reading October 30-31, 2014: Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference @ William & Mary Law