Here’s a follow-up to our recent post about the U. Hawaii Law Review article authored by lawprof David Callies which summarizes the land use and property decisions of the Hawaii Supreme Court during the tenure of now-retired Chief Justice Ronald Moon. You know, the article setting out the stunning success rates of certain parties in the court, which chides the Justices for their often-lengthy opinions, and labels the Moon Court’s record on property rights “appalling.” Download the article here.

Today’s Honolulu Star-Advertiser has a follow-up interview with Professor Callies, most of which is behind a paywall. But if you don’t have an e-subscription (a real deal for those with mainland zip codes, by the way), here are the choice parts:

  • “Callies says he isn’t against planning in general, but thinks there must be legitimate police powers involved for the right of development to be abrogated.”
  • QUESTION: A recent


Continue Reading More From U.H. Lawprof On 1993-2010 HAWSCT’s “Appalling” Record On Property Rights

You know how we’re always saying that certain parties have an enviable record of success in the Hawaii Supreme Court? Well, now the statistics are official.

The latest edition of the University of Hawaii Law Review published an article by lawprof David Callies summarzing the decisions of the court during the tenure of now-retired Chief Justice Ronald Moon. The article sets forth the stark numbers (83% win rate, 65% reversal of the intermediate appellate court), and contains a sharp comment about the often-lengthy nature of the court’s opinions:

Second, the Moon Court decided some of thestate’s most important property and related environmental and Native Hawaiianrights cases in favor of the various non-governmental organizations bringingthem (Sierra Club, Earthjustice, Hawaii’s Thousand Friends, and the NativeHawaiian Legal Corporation) approximately eighty-two percent of the time,sixty-five percent of which reversed the Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA).Third, the court increasingly rendered lengthy opinions, many triple the

Continue Reading U.H. Lawprof: HAWSCT’s 1993-2010 Record On Private Property Rights “Appalling”

Join us on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 1:30 p.m. Eastern (12:30 CT, 11:30 a.m. MT, 10:30 a.m. PT, 7:30 a.m. HT) for “Thinking Out Loud – Property Rights After Natural Disasters,” a free teleconference presented by the Condemnation Zoning and Land Use Committee of the ABA’s Litigation Section. There’s no cost to register, and you do not need to be an ABA or Litigation Section member to participate.

Here’s the program description:

Over one-half of the people in the United States live within 50 miles of the coastline. Hurricanes and similar types of natural disasters have caused billions of dollars in damage in recent years, particularly in coastal communities, and some scientists warn that global warming and rising sea levels will increase the frequency or severity of these types of natural disasters. Private property rights in the wake of natural disasters are an important issue not

Continue Reading Free Teleseminar: Property Rights After Natural Disasters

That was quick. As we predicted (and urged), the Hawaii Supreme Court today without comment rejected the County of Maui’s application for a writ of certiorari, which asked the court to review the Intermediate Court of Appeals decision in in Leone v. County of Maui, No 29692 (June 22, 2012) (Supreme Court order here).

[Practice sidebar: Hawaii has one intermediate appellate court (so we don’t have lower court “splits,” and under Hawaii appellate procedure, the Supreme Court may “accept” or “reject” an “application” for cert based on whether the ICA “gravely erred.”]

In Leone, the ICA held that property owners alleging a Lucas regulatory taking are not required to seek an amendment to the Community Plan (in Maui County, the CP is like a General Plan in other jurisdictions) in order to ripen their takings claims. A CP amendment is a legislative act, and plaintiffs are

Continue Reading HAWSCT Rejects County’s Argument That Property Owner Must Change The Law To Ripen Takings Claim

We’ve talked California raisins before, but the latest is about oysters. Specifically, an oyster farm in a Marin County National Seashore, the Drakes Bay Oyster Company.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar visited the place a couple of weeks ago to see if he would be willing to extend the farm’s existing license, which has been in place for decades. No deal, he concluded, despite lobbying efforts on the owner’s behalf by powerful U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein. He ordered the farm to shut down in 90 days. 

When that failed, the next step was federal court, and earlier this week the oyster farmer sued in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. Here’s the complaint, if you want to read the details. The claims center on federal environmental laws and the Administrative Procedures Act, but yes, there’s the obligatory takings claim, alleging that the order to cease operations was a taking

Continue Reading What’s The Beef In California Oyster Dispute?

Anyone who practices land use law is familiar with the primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of administrative remedies doctrines. These rules require courts to either dismiss claims or abstain from exercising jurisdiction unless and until an administrative agency has first developed the record and passed on the issues. If you’ve got notice of the action you claim is wrong, you must challenge that decision and seek a contested case in the agency’s review process as a prerequisite to obtaining judicial review.

The latest case from the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, Dancil v. Arakawa, No. CAAP-11-001029 (Nov. 16, 2012), presents these issues in a familiar context: the County of Maui approved a coastal zone permit allowing a Halloween party to go forward in Lahaina, and someone was against it. After the County issued the permit, the objector did not appeal that decision up through the County’s administrative appeals process within

Continue Reading HAWICA: Third-Party Objector Must Seek Administrative Relief To Challenge Halloween Party

Believing that discretion was the better part of valor, we didn’t think there would be a challenge to the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals’ opinion in Leone v. County of Maui, No 29692 (June 22, 2012). But we were wrong, and the County of Maui is going all in. 

Update Dec. 12, 2012: cert rejected.

The County has filed a cert application (remember, under Hawaii appellate procedure we don’t “petition” for cert, we “apply”) arguing that a property owner faced with the County’s refusal to even process its request for a use permitted by zoning has an obligation to appeal that refusal up the County’s administrative chain. The reason for the refusal to even consider the request was that the proposed use, while permissible as of right under applicable zoning, was inconsistent with the Community Plan designation (the same as General Plans in most other places), so the

Continue Reading New HAWSCT Cert App: Williamson County Ripeness Requires Property Owner Change The Law

You can take the Justice out of the Court, but you apparently can’t take the Court out of the Justice. Retired Justice John Paul Stevens has added the “ninth vote” (his words, not ours) in Stop the Beach Renourishment, Inc. v. Florida Dep’t of Environmental Protection, No. 08-11 (June 17, 2010), the case is which the other eight Justices all agreed that the Florida Supreme Court had not changed the law, so there had been no “judicial taking.” Four Justices, however, opined that if a court declares that what was once an established right of private property no longer exists, it has taken that property in violation of the Takings Clause.

Justice Stevens sat that one out, recusing himself because news stories had noted his wife owned a beachfront condo in Ft. Lauderdale. But the lure of adding his reaction to Justice Scalia’s opinion has proven too much to

Continue Reading Justice Stevens, Recused In The “Stop The Beach Renourishment” Case, Weighs In On The “Stop The Beach Renourishment” Case

Check this out. A report from the Maui News that “Environmental court would be perfect fit here – judge.” Apparently, there is an effort to get the Judiciary or the Legislature to form another court with specialized jurisdiction, either formally like the Family Courts, or more likely on a less formalized basis like the “Drug Courts” that the circuit courts convene.

And who is recommending the formation of such a court? Why a judge from just such a court in Memphis, Tennessee:

“I’ve learned over the years that if you get them by the wallet, their hearts and minds follow,” Potter said to about 100 people at the Maui Arts & Cultural Center.

Potter said that an environmental court here is a perfect fit – and long overdue. There’s just so much to protect and balance in this delicate paradise, he said.

“The environment is everything here. It’s

Continue Reading Does Hawaii Need An “Environmental Court?” – Doesn’t It Already Have One?

This just in: in Leone v. County of Maui, No. 29696 (June 22, 2012), the Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals held that a plaintiff alleging a regulatory taking is not required to seek an amendment to a Community Plan in order to ripen her claim. A CP amendment is a legislative act, and plaintiffs are not required to try to change the law before they seeks just compensation. 

The trial court determined the plaintiffs’ regulatory takings claims were not ripe because they should have tried to change offending land use regulations which allegedly deprive their property of all economically beneficial uses. The trial court’s decision is available here.

Disclosure: we filed an amicus brief in the case in support of the property owner, arguing that Williamson County Regional Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172 (1985) does not require a takings plaintiff to

Continue Reading HAWICA: Plaintiff Need Not Change The Law To Ripen Takings Claim Under Williamson County