2007

I’ve posted discussion materials for the upcoming HSBA Natural Resources Section talk on the post-Rapanos landscape.  All documents are in pdf format.  Caution: a couple of files are large, and may take a while to download.

On Christmas Eve 2006, the Honolulu City Council approved a $4B+ “fixed guideway” mass transit system to run from somewhere in West Oahu to somewhere in town.  The nature of the system has not been selected (rail, busway, something else), nor has the route.  But in January 2007, a half-percent increase in the general excise tax became effective, the proceeds from which are earmarked for the transit system.  City officials say it’s a “go.”

I’ve made a few comments about the impact of a mass transit project on property owners (here, here, here, and here), but it is too early in the process to note any concrete legal developments.  I’ve included the fixed guideway story in 2006’s land use highlights, however, since I suspect the legal issues will loom larger and larger as the project — the largest public works project in Hawaii’s history — moves forward. 

      Continue Reading ▪ 2006 Land Use in Review: “Fixed Guideway” System Approved

The most recent case involving the long-standing controversy over the Waiahole Ditch, In re Water Use Permit Applications, ___ Haw. ___, 147 P.3 836 (Nov. 29, 2006) was not the usual blockbuster opinion or the latest in water rights, interim instream flow standards, and the public trust doctrine.  Indeed, it was an unsigned per curiam decision.  But I have included it within 2006’s highlights simply because it illustrates the new appellate procedures in Hawaii state courts. 

Until the new procedures which became effective in July 2006, Hawaii state court cases had a unique appellate track.  After a trial court entered judgment, all appeals were made to the Supreme Court of Hawaii, which then assigned cases to the Intermediate Court of Appeals.  If a litigant was not satisfied with the decision from the ICA, she could seek review in the Supreme Court by way of an application for a discretionary writ of certiorari.  Most cases, however, were not assigned from the Supreme Court to the ICA, and the high court routinely disposed of most appeals.  The “up-then-down” procedure was unwieldy and an anachronism, a leftover from the days before the legislature created the ICA, and all appeals were straight to the Supreme Court.  The procedure also was a factor in creating a backlog of appeals on the Supreme Court’s docket.

In July 2006, however, new jurisdictional statutes became effective, resulting in the ICA having primary appellate jurisdiction over all appeals, with the Supreme Court retaining discretionary certiorari review

Apparently, however, the drafters at the legislature did not catch all of the language regarding appellate jurisdiction scattered throughout the Hawaii Revised Statutes.  For example, the Water Code still states that appeals from contested case decisions by the Commission on Water Resource Management are made “directly to the supreme court.”

After CWRM issued (yet another) order in the contest over the water in the Waiahole Ditch in July 2006, a party noticed its appeal on August 11, 2006 with the Supreme Court, even though the new appellate structure had become effective the month before.  Understandable, for considering the plain language of the Water Code, what else should the litigant have done?

The Supreme Court ordered the case transferred to the ICA, holding that the legislature’s failure to amend the Water Code language was merely an oversight since it amended fifth-three other sections in the statute books relating to appellate jurisdiction, and that the legislature no doubt intended to amend the Water Code as well.  Lesson?  File all appeals with the ICA. 

It will be helpful after a few years under this system to see if the Supreme Court as a purely discretionary body experiences a shrinking of its docket, and a speedier process from filing to disposition.  It would be helpful to those of us who practice appellate law, for example, to establish criteria for when a decision by the ICA is “certworthy” and likely to be reviewed by the Supreme Court.  Hawaii has only one ICA, so there are no circuit or district “splits.”  If the Supreme Court is simply to be yet another level of appellate review for dissatisfied litigants without clear standards for when it would be worthwhile to seek review, why does anyone think this will significantly decrease the court’s workload?

    
Continue Reading ▪ 2006 Land Use in Review: New Appellate Track

The big story nationwide in property rights and eminent domain was, of course, the overwhelming negative reaction to 2005’s Kelo v. City of New London decision, which overflowed into 2006.  That reaction has manifested itself in three ways:

  • Taking up the Supreme Court’s suggestion that state law was the means to protect property from eminent

In September, the ABA Section on Litigation (Committee on Condemnation, Zoning and Land Use) published Law and Procedure of Eminent Domain in the 50 States, a state-by-state summary of each jurisdiction’s eminent domain laws and cases.  I authored the chapter on Hawaii.

Topics covered include who hasthe power to take, sources for condemnation authority

The “public trust” doctrine got a further boost in Kelly v. 1250 Oceanside Partners, 111 Haw. 205, 140 P.3d 985 (July 28, 2006). 

The public trust doctrine in its original form under Hawaii law was that the Crown or government owns title to all land below the high water mark, which is held in