Mark your calendars for July 12, 2013 for our CLE teleconference on “Supreme Court Takings: A First Look at Koontz and Horne,” sponsored by the ABA’s State and Local Government Law Section. We’ll start at 1:00 pm ET (Noon CT, 11:00 am MT, 10:00 am PT, 7:00 am HT). Here’s the program description:

In the 2012term, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on two regulatory takings cases,Koontz v. St Johns River Water Management District, and Horne v. U.S.Department of Agriculture. Join our panel of legal scholars and expertpractitioners for the first analysis of these cases, and how the Court’srulings on land use exactions (Koontz), and jurisdiction (Horne) will impactyour practice.

We’ve assembled a great faculty with a mix of expert scholars and practitioners: Professor Michael McConnell (arguing counsel in Horne), Professor David Callies, W. Andrew Gowder, and

Continue Reading Upcoming ABA CLE: “Supreme Court Takings – A First Look At Koontz And Horne”

Hat tip to ABA State and Local Government Law colleague (and fellow U.H. Law School alum) Julie Tappendorf for the lead on a newly-published article: John M. Baker and Katherine M. Swenson, Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District: Trudging Through a Florida Wetland with Nine U.S. Supreme Court Justices, in the latest issue of the Zoning and Planning Law Report. Julie writes:

In the May 13, 2013 issue of West’s Zoning & Planning Law Report, John Baker and Katherine Swenson provide a compelling argument, or should I say six compelling arguments, for how the U.S. Supreme Court might decide the Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District case involving the denial of a wetlands permit.  For those of you who have been waiting 20 years for the Court to weigh in on another land use condition takings case (post Nollan-Dolan), or have been waiting since January

Continue Reading Predicting The Koontz Case: Six Possible Outcomes

Mark your calendars: on August 21, 2013, The Seminar Group is putting on the 2d Annual Eminent Domain and Condemnation Law Conference, in Honolulu (Hilton Waikiki Beach). Our Damon Key partner Mark M. Murakami is the Planning Chair, and the rest of the faculty is pretty good, too. 

We’ll be speaking at two of the sessions: “Honolulu Rail Litigation Update – EIS and Acquisitions,” and “The Evolving Process of Eminent Domain – Condemnation Update; Recent Court Decisions of Interest.”

These topics will also be covered:

  • Contractor Licensing Update
  • Planning Update – Development Near the Right of Way
  • Uniform Relocation Act Benefits
  • Rail Development and Property Valuation
  • Ethics in Eminent Domain: Obligations of Condemnor’s and Condemnee’s Counsel

More information here. Download the brochure here, or below.

Hope you can join us for another great program.

2d Annual Eminent Domain & Condemnation in Hawaii – Aug 21, 2013 – Honolulu Continue Reading Eminent Domain And Condemnation Law Conference (Honolulu, Aug. 21, 2013)

Cle-logoFor those of you attending the Virginia Eminent Domain Conference, here’s the expanded papers on “Tough Takings Questions: Regulatory Takings, Zoning Issues and Judicial Takings” and Public Use issues.

Use the password provided at the conference to open the pdf’s. It’s the same p/w for both. If you forgot the password, email me.

For those who did not attend, sorry folks, there are some benefits to coming to a conference! Y’all are going to have to wait for a bit — after a decent interval to allow the attendees to get their money’s worth, we’ll remove the password.

For more about the cases and books we discussed yesterday during my presentation on “Virginia’s Place in National Eminent Domain Trends, check these out:

  • Lingle v. Chevron, U.S.A., Inc., 544 U.S. 528 (2005) (gas station rent control, and the demise of the “substantially advance” test as a takings test).

     
    Continue Reading Materials From Today’s Virginia Eminent Domain Conference

    Here’s one to brighten your day, courtesy of the the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Flordia (that’s Tampa, to all you non-Floridians). In Hillcrest Property, LLP v. Pasco County, No. 8:10-cv-819-T-23TBM (Apr. 12, 2013), the court held the county’s “Right of Way Preservation Ordinance” that allows it to land bank for a future road corridors by means of an exaction (more details on the ordinance below), is “both coercive and confiscatory in nature and constitutionally offensive in both content and operation.” Slip op. at 4.

    We’ve seen this situation before — the government wants to build roads, but it either doesn’t have the money to buy or condemn the necessary property to do so, or it simply figures it can get it another way. The county had such plans, and designated future transportation corridors on its comprehensive plans. In 2005, the county adopted the

    Continue Reading Fla Fed Ct: Exaction Scheme Is “Constitutional Mischief” To Avoid “Nettlesome Payment of ‘Just Compensation’”

    Yesterday, we posted our thoughts on a recent article in Hawaii Business magazine about land use, environmental law, and the Hawaii Supreme Court.

    In “‘Let ‘Em Eat Cake’ Comes to Hawaii, Professor Gideon Kanner has added his thought on the article. He comments on the article’s conclusion that “[i]f we don’t like the [environmental] laws anymore, we can elect officials to change them.” by writing:

    Hawaii Business magazine have never heard about the principle that statutes have to be constitutional? Would they make the same argument in the case of overreaching criminal laws? Racial segregation laws? Laws impairing the exercise of the First Amendment?

    Moreover, under the “reasoning” of these idiots, no law need be constitutional because if the legislature disregards a provision of the Bill of Rights, we can tell the complaining citizens to be better electors next time and to elect more constitutionally sensitive representatives.

    Lord in heaven! Is there no limit to these guys’ stupidity? Evidently not.

    Read his entire commentary here. By the way, before you are tempted to dismiss Professor Kanner as an outlander (yes, Justice Scalia really did call out-of-staters “outlanders” in a recent oral argument), his ties to Hawaii and his knowledge of our ways go way, way back.
    Continue Reading Strong Letter To Follow…

    In “Why big development is so difficult in Hawaii,” Hawaii Business magazine tackles an issue first raised by U. Hawaii lawprof David Callies in recently-published law review article (and follow-up interview), where he labeled the record of the 1993-2010 Hawaii Supreme Court on property issues “appalling” (80% overall success rate for environmental and native Hawaiian litigants, 65% of cases reversing the Intermediate Court of Appeals). As Callies said in an earlier presentation, “ninety percent of the time, government and the private sector are wrong? Give me a break.” (Remember, this is the court that concluded that “western concepts” of property law such as exclusivity are “not universally applicable in Hawaii.”)

    Callies’ conclusions sparked reaction from his academic colleague environmental lawprof Denise Antolini, who defended the court’s environmental jurisprudence in an article on the grounds that it wasn’t so much focused on outcome, but on process.

    Continue Reading Hawaii Business Mag Story Misses The Big Issue On Development, Environmental Law, And Land Use

    Hat tip to Dean Patty Salkin’s Law of the Land blog for bringing this case to our attention. We don’t have much to add to her comprehensive write up of the Georgia Supreme Court’s opinion in City of Suwanee v. Settles Bridge Farm, LLC, No. S12A1599 (Feb. 18, 2013), a case holding that a regulatory takings case was not ripe because the property owner had not exhausted available administrative remedies. But we do have one thought that she didn’t cover, so bear with us while we set the stage.

    Settles Bridge obtained city approvals for a residential subdivision. Shortly thereafter, however, it sold the property to Notre Dame Academy, which, under the existing residential zoning could build a school on the site as a matter of right, and “Settles Bridge abandoned its subdivision plan.” Upon learning of the sale, the city first adopted a building permit moratorium, and followed

    Continue Reading ‘SUP, Georgia? Takings Case Not Ripe Because Property Owner Hasn’t Applied For A Permit It Doesn’t Want

    Update: we removed the embedded video that was posted above, since CBS kept replacing it with other clips. Here’s a direct link to the video.

    As our readers know, we follow with keen interest events in the People’s Republic of China (does anyone call it that, anymore?), especially those issues related to property and a budding system of private rights. Here’s the latest from CBS’s venerable 60 Minutes, about the housing and real estate markets there. If true, it’s scary stuff, especially when you consider we live in a global economy, with so much of our goods supplied by the PRC.

    China has been nothing short of a financial miracle. In just 30 years, this state-controlled economy became the world’s second largest, deftly managed by government policies and decrees.

    One sector the authorities concentrated on was real estate and construction. But that may have created the largest housing

    Continue Reading 60 Minutes On China’s (Possible) Housing Bubble

    In Midwest Materials, Inc. v. Wilson, No. 84A04-1205-MI-258 (Feb. 27, 2013), the Indiana Court of Appeals held that Midwest did not suffer a taking for the loss of its property during the time a requirement that it provide water service to neighboring residences as a condition of a “special exception” needed to build a “molecular methane gas processing unit” on its own property was in force. The trial court eventually struck down the condition, and Midwest then alleged it suffered a temporary taking under Indiana law (only) for the time in which the permit condition was in effect.

    On the inverse condemnation claim, the trial court held that Midwest had not been deprived of use of its property, and the Court of Appeals affirmed under Indiana’s version of the multi-factor Penn Central test. “The trial court did not err when it concluded that the seventeen-month period from the time

    Continue Reading Indiana App: No Temporary Taking In Seventeen-Month Loss Of Use