Here’s the amicus brief filed today on behalf of the International Municipal Lawyers Association in Horne v. United States Dep’t of Agriculture, No. 12-123 (cert. granted Nov. 20, 2012). The brief argues:
Petitioners have needlessly complicated the vindication of their asserted rights under the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment by failing to file a straightforward claim for just compensation in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. Petitioners have long participated in the raisin industry marketing program which they now believe results in a taking. Thus, they could easily have filed a claim for just compensation in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims based on this asserted taking. Instead, petitioners decided to disregard federal law requiring that they participate in the program and now seek to invoke the Takings Clause to defend against the sanctions imposed as a result of their illegal action.
This effort should fail for three independent reasons. First, because the purpose of the Takings Clause is to provide compensation for takings, rather to stop takings from occurring, it would contradict the purpose and function of the Takings Clause to allow a party who has defied federal law and thereby blocked implementation of a federal program to defend his or her action by invoking the Takings Clause. Second, government seizures of private property for law enforcement purposes, such as forfeitures, are outside the scope of the Takings Clause. Third, government-imposed mandates to pay money in general, including but not limited to the kinds of monetary sanctions at issue in this case, are outside the scope of the Takings Clause.
Br. at 1-2.
The petitioners’ brief is here. The amicus brief filed by Texas is here. The brief filed by the Cato Institute, the NFIB, the Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, and the Reason Foundation is here. The brief by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is here. The amici brief by five constitutional law scholars is here. The USDA’s merits brief is here.
The case is scheduled for argument on March 20, 2013.