09.LULHI It’s not too late to register to attend the Hawaii Land Use Law Conference, taking place January 15 and 16, 2009, in Honolulu. 

Items on the agenda include eminent domain, environmental law, transit-oriented development, subdivision requirements, and cultural impact statements. The program co-chairs are Professor David Callies and land use lawyer Ben Kudo.

This conference takes place only once every two years, so this is your last chance for a while to learn of the latest information and updates, and what issues are on the horizon.

I’m on the faculty, presenting a session on Emerging Water Issues: Coastal Zone Management Permits, and Hawaii’s Floodway, Floodplain and Coastal Inundation Zone Requirements.  The complete agenda and faculty listing is posted here.

Hope you can attend, and if you do, please stop by and say hello.Continue Reading Upcoming: Hawaii Land Use Law Conference

2008 saw no blockbuster court decisions on shoreline law, just a continuation of existing trends.

Setbacks

Shoreline setback are a “no build” zone on private beachfront property, measured from a “setback line.”  Hawaii state law establishes a minimum shoreline setback, and the four counties are allowed to establish their own (greater) setbackstandards. In 2008, Kauai enacted what one commentator described as the nation’s “most conservative” shoreline setback regulations (more here), continuing the trend of variable shoreline setbacks measured by historical erosion and accretion rates. For more, check out a U. Hawaii Law Review article on shoreline setbacks, published last year.

Public Access

Shoreline setback lines do not concern ownership, or the boundary between public beaches and private property. Theshoreline certification process under the state Coastal Zone Management Act is not supposed toaffect property rights or determine where the public may or may notaccess.  However, the two concepts continue to

Continue Reading 2008 Land Use In Review: Shoreline Law

Section 30010 of California’s Public Resource Code provides that the California Coastal Commission may grant a development permit that otherwise could not be granted in order to avoid a taking:

The Legislature hereby finds and declares that this division is not intended, and shall not be construed as authorizing the commission, port governing body, or local government acting pursuant to this division to exercise their power to grant or deny a permit in a manner which will take or damage private property for public use, without the payment of just compensation therefor. 

In a lengthy (51 page) opinion, the California District Court of Appeal (Sixth District) in McAllister v. California Coastal Comm’n, No. H031283 (Cal. Ct. App. Dec. 30, 2008) held that this statute requires the Coastal Commission to make specific findings that denying a coastal development permit would result in a taking. As summarized by the court:

The

Continue Reading Cal. Court of Appeals: No Record And No Findings By Coastal Commission = No Consideration

Some interesting items from around the land use law blogosphere:

  • A write up of an Eleventh Circuit (which covers Alabama, Florida, and Georgia) decision striking down as unconstitutional a municipal ordinance that prohibited national chain retail stores because it violates the dormant Commerce Clause.  This could be a very important case on the “big box” and “formula retail” issues. More from Georgia Zoning Blog.
  • Charley Foster has a series of posts about a reporter’s privilege to trespass on private property, and how it may relate to an ongoing controversy about the State of Hawaii Historical Preservation Division and native Hawaiian remains on a construction site on Kauai.  Start at Planet Kauai.

Continue Reading Land Use Law Round-up

Mark your calendars for Saturday, September 27, 2008.  Ka Huli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law at the University of Hawaii School of Law will be presenting a workshop “Hawaii State Historic Preservation Laws: Reclaiming the Past, Shaping the Future.” 

I will be speaking on “Background Principles and Paradigm Shifting: The Role of Property Rights in Historic Preservation Laws.”

The other speakers will be Dr. Kehau Abad, Oahu Island Burial Council; Dawn N.S. Chang, Kuiwalu; Prof. Carl C. Christensen, William S. Richardson School of Law; Dr. Thomas S. Dye, T.S. Dye and Associates; Moses Haia, Esq., Native Hawaiian Legal Corporation; Dr. Holly McEldowney, DLNR, Division of State Parks; Nancy McMahon, DLNR, Historic Preservation Division; Kai Markell, Office of Hawaiian Affairs; and William M. Tam, Esq., Alston Hunt Floyd & Ing. 

The keynote speaker will be Dr. Patrick Kirch, Departments of Anthropology and Integrative Biology, University of

Continue Reading Upcoming UH Law School Workshop on Preservation Laws

There is still time to sign up to attend an upcoming seminar, Coastal Engineering and Land Use Issues, in Honolulu.  It’s being held on Thursday, August 14, 2008, at at Hilton Waikiki Prince Kuhio Hotel.  My colleagues and fellow law bloggers Mark Murakami and Jesse Souki are among the faculty.  Topics on the agenda include: Development and Land Use Issues in the Special Management Area, Construction and Land Use Issues in the Shoreline Area, and Managed Retreat Through the Redevelopment Process.  Go here for more information including the complete agenda and faculty list, and registration information.  Continue Reading Coastal Land Use Law Seminar

My colleague Mark Murakami posted a link to a recent newspaper article about lateral beach access; that article spurred the Star-Bulletin editorial “State upholding public policy in Kahala beach access issue.”  It seems that vegetation growing on private property is moving — either on its own or with help — makai (towards the ocean), thus crowding onto the public beach.  The editorial rightly recognizes:

Sooner or later, vegetation and waves converge, preventing people frommoving laterally along public land, which law defines as the highestwash of waves at high tide during the highest surf season, “usuallyevidenced by the edge of vegetation or by the line of debris left bythe wash of the waves.”

As I detailed in this post, the above is a correct statement of law; unlike jurisdictions that define the public-private boundary on beaches as the mean high water mark, Hawaii law says all beaches are

Continue Reading Shoreline Boundaries And Shoreline Setbacks

The property owner has filed a Petition for Rehearing asking the California Court of Appeal (2d District)to reconsider its decision in Charles A. Pratt Constr. Co., Inc. v. Cal. Coastal Comm’n,No. B190122 (May 8, 2008).  In that case, the court held the property owner’s right to develop was not vested, and that atakings claim was not ripe since the owner could submit other plans fordevelopment.  The Land Use Law Blog details the case and provides commentary in “The Development Blues: Property Lies Undeveloped for 30 Years and Counting.”

The opinion’s opening paragraphs took a literary approach to the issue, citing “September Song,” Einstein, and Heraclitus.  The Petition responds with flourishes of its own, quoting Stephen Hawking’s “A Brief History of Time,” and Jim Croce’s “Time in a Bottle,” arguing that the opinion overlooked or misstated the facts of the case

Continue Reading Petition for Rehearing in Pratt Construction v. Cal. Coastal Comm’n

Two recent U. Hawaii Law Review articles worth mentioning.  Although neither is available free on the web, they can be obtained through legal research services such as Westlaw or Lexis, or through the U. Hawaii Law Review.  If you don’t have a UHLR subscription, you should. It’s only $30 per year for US addresses.

Water Regulation, Land Use and the Environment
David L. Callies and Calvert G. Chipchase; 30 U. Haw. L. Rev. 49 (Winter 2007)

In this article, the authors assert that the “public trust” doctrine, as misconstrued by the Hawaii Supreme Court, has distorted water law and the land use process:

Problems arise in the planning process when water and non-economic uses of water are given a sacrosanct status that abjures private use for the benefit of “the public.” This is increasingly happening under flawed interpretations of the public trust doctrine.

p. 49 (citing In re Water Use Permit Applications (Waiahole), 84 Haw. 97, 9 P.3d 409 (2000); In re Water Use Permit Applications, 105 Haw. 1, 93 P.3d 643 (2004); In re Water Use Permit Applications, 113 Haw. 52, 147 P.3d 836 (2006)). The article continues:

Many courts have forgotten that the jus privatem is as much a part of the public trust doctrine as the jus publicum. Certainly water should be available for future use, but is also should be readily available for current use. When the balance between current private and abstract or future public needs is distorted, water use and availability of water becomes the primary, or even sole, consideration in the process. This leads to the preservation of water for such uses as “minimum stream flows” and non-beneficial use by selected segments of the public and, ultimately, an elitist, communitarian regime that bears no relationship to either traditional notions of water rights or constitutionally protected rights in property.

Id

. The authors analyze the multi-layered land use planning laws in Hawaii, the state Water Code (Haw. Rev. Stat. ch. 174C), and the Hawaii Supreme Court’s extension of the public trust doctrine beyond navigation and commerce to the promotion of reasonable and beneficial use of water resources in Waiahole.  p. 70.  The article also discusses how Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico regulate their water resources, and what lessons these jurisdictions may provide for Hawaii.  pp. 77-92.

More Than a Line in the Sand: Defining the Shoreline in Hawai’i After Diamond v. State
Simeon L. Vance and Richard J. Wallsgrove; 29 U. Haw. L. Rev. 521 (Summer 2007)

In this article, the authors analyze the differences in the various definitions of the “shoreline” under Hawaii law, and the Hawaii Supreme Court decision in Diamond v. State, 112 Haw. 161, 145 P.3d 704 (2006) .  As detailed in this post about the Diamond case, the term “shoreline” is used to define both the boundary between public and private property as well as the baseline for measuring the shoreline setback (a no-build zone on beachfront property).

The difference between a  certified shoreline  and a  seaward boundary line  has become a confusing and potentially divisive issue. Confusion is predictable because the definition of  shoreline  for certification purposes is essentially identical to the definition Hawai’i courts have used to determine property boundary lines. Despite their similarity, however, the two lines  are not necessarily the same because their purposes, the impacts and the processes for determining these  lines’ are uniquely and significantly different.

The most critical of these differences is that shoreline certifications are not designed to determine ownership.  Instead, the line of ownership dividing public and private coastal property is the seaward boundary. Markedly different from the shoreline certification process outlined above, determinations of seaward boundary lines often take the form of quiet title actions, eminent domain actions, or land court petition actions.  The state’s responsibility to uphold the public trust and preserve its interest in property triggers the need for  a more rigorous and cautious approach.  In these situations, the state does not rely on shoreline certifications, but conducts its own survey in recognition of the “importance of lateral [shoreline] access over state-owned lands for recreation, native gathering practices and other purposes.”

p. 532 (footnotes omitted).  The article is a good introduction to Hawaii’s unique approach to shoreline law, and a worthy read.  And I’m not just saying that because it cites several posts from this blog as authority (See, e.g., notes 92, 146, 179, and 180, and accompanying text).
Continue Reading Two Recent Law Review Articles (Water Law and Shoreline Issues)

To all those who attended today’s seminar, thank you.  Here are the links to the cases I mentioned.  From the morning session on Case Law Update:

  • Franco – District of Columbia Court of Appeals – allegations of pretext cannot be summarily dismissed
  • Goldstein v. Pataki – Second Circuit – government’s claim of public use trump claims of pretext – cert. petition filed March 31, 2008
  • Brescia – shoreline setback and equitable estoppel – HAWSCT holds you gotta get your “official assurances” from the right party
  • Private agreements and public process – development and settlement agreements not a substitute for zoning process

From the afternoon session

Continue Reading Cases and Links From Today’s Seminar