May 2018

Here’s the Petitioner’s Brief on the Merits in Knick v. Township of Scott, No. 17-647, the case in which the Supreme Court is being asked to revisit our old nemesis, Williamson County‘s “state exhaustion” requirement, a doctrine which tells takings plaintiffs that they cannot press a takings claim against state or local governments until the owner has pursued and lost an inverse condemnation claim in state court.

More on the background of the case (we dubbed it “The Night of the Living Zombie Zoning Inspector” case) here.

Here’s a summary of the brief’s argument:

The jurisdictional pitfalls created by the state litigation requirement are sufficient to condemn the rule as an unworkable and unacceptable ripeness concept. But the doctrine is also deeply flawed at a theoretical level because it rests on an incorrect view of the role of the Just Compensation Clause in takings litigation. Contrary to

Continue Reading Knick Brief On The Merits: Time To Ditch Williamson County‘s State Exhaustion Requirement

Recently, Pennsylvania property owners filed two cert petitions (download here and here) asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review this question:

Whether the Hazardous Liquid Pipeline Safety Act (HLPSA)1 preempts the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission’s (PUC) jurisdiction to issue Certificates of Public Convenience resulting in eminent domain power when the HLPSA states it has exclusive jurisdiction, and when the PUC specifically states it does not have jurisdiction.

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1. Also commonly referred to as the Pipeline Safety Act of 1979 (PSA).

The crux of the argument is that the Pennsylvania PUC and courts were preempted by a federal statute from accepting Sunoco’s assertion that its pipeline (which is to run from Ohio to Delaware via the petitioners’ Pennsylvania properties) is purely an intrastate pipeline, and not an interstate pipeline as defined in the statute:

Sunoco Pipeline (hereinafter “Sunoco”) seeks to build, and is currently building, an interstate

Continue Reading New Cert Petitions: Can Pennsylvania Redefine What Counts As An “Interstate” Pipeline Under Federal Law?

You have about a week to reserve your tickets for the exclusive Honolulu screening of Little Pink House,” the feature film about the Kelo v. City of New London case,  scheduled for June 11, 2018:

Two key dates:

  • June 4, 2018: This is the deadline to buy your ticket. The way this works is that if a critical mass of tickets are presold, the screening is a go. If for some reason not enough tickets are sold by June 4, you get a refund. No lose. So buy your ticket here, right now.
  • June 11, 2018: The date of the screening. It will start at 6:30pm, at the Consolidated Theatres Kahala 8 (convenient, plus plenty of parking). Easy. 

We’ve seen the film. It is a compelling piece, and very accurate to the real story (with a few concessions to the art form, of course).

If you know

Continue Reading Tickets For Honolulu Screening Of “Little Pink House” Still Available

Here’s the latest in the Houston flood cases against the federal government asserting inverse condemnation, which we’ve been following. 

In this Opinion and Order, the Court of Federal Claims (Judge Lettow) rejected the Government’s motion to dismiss, deferring it until trial. If you want a quick rundown of the case, the procedures, and the claims, you can’t do better than the order. It also sets out the Arkansas Game test established by the Supreme Court:

To establish a viable takings claim, a plaintiff must prove two things. First, he or she must show that he or she has “a property interest for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.” Members of the Peanut Quota Holders Ass’n v. United States, 421 F.3d 1323, 1330 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (citing Conti v. United States, 291 F.3d 1334, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2002)); Wyatt v. United States, 271 F.3d 1090, 1096

Continue Reading The Latest In The Houston Flood Cases: CFC Rejects Gov’t’s Motion To Dismiss

Jeff Benedict, author of “Little Pink House,” the book about the Kelo v. New London eminent domain debacle (and now a movie) has made a video (at the still-vacant Fort Trumbull site), and written an op-ed, arguing that the land should be conveyed back to its former owners, including Ms. Kelo:

Here’s the rub. Thirteen years after the Kelo decision, after all the condemning and evicting and bulldozing, nothing has been built on the land that was taken. Basically, an entire neighborhood was erased in vain. Meantime, all those vacant lots have become New London’s scarlet letter.

Thirteen years of inertia is long enough. For the sake of all parties – the city, the state, and the residents who were displaced – it’s time to turn the page and write an epilogue with a far more redeeming outcome.

….

But before the city can expect

Continue Reading “Little Pink House” Author: Time To Give The Land Taken By Eminent Domain Back To Kelo And Other Former Owners

The Seventh Circuit’s opinion in New West, L.P. v. City of Joliet, No. 17-2865 (May 23, 2018) is short — 4 1/2 pages — and is written in Judge Easterbrook’s trademark plain language and breezy style. We picked it up anticipating of a good read. It was.

Then why did we have to read it three times before we understood it? 

Here’s the deal. As the opinions notes, “[t]his is the fourth published appellate opinion in a long-running dispute between New West and the City of Joliet.” Slip op. at 1. Follow along:

  • NW v. City (federal court): City is violating the federal Fair Housing Act. 
  • City v. NW (state court, filed seven months later): We’re condemning your property, New West. 
  • NW removed the state court eminent domain case to federal court.
  • NW argued in the removed eminent domain case that condemning its property would violate the Fair Housing


Continue Reading 7th Cir: Be Careful About Your Counterclaims In Eminent Domain Cases

Earlier this week, we reported that a San Francisco trial court had heard arguments that Pacific Gas and Electric could not be liable for damages resulting from the Northern California wildfires under an inverse condemnation theory.  

Well, here’s the court’s written Order Overruling PG&E’s Demurrers which the court made available yesterday. The crux of the court’s rationale is that PG&E hasn’t shown that it will not be able to spread any damage judgment to the (its) public:

Even if PG&E were right that a privately-owned public utility will be unable to recoup its losses through rate increases eviscerates a plaintiff’s right to inverse condemnation, I would overrule the demurrer. Taking the PUC decision at face value, the loss spreading rationale may be satisfied in this case so long as PG&E acted as a “prudent manager.” Whether PG&E acted as a “prudent manager” is disputed — PG&E of course contends it

Continue Reading More On No. Cal. Wildfire Inverse Cases – Order Overruling Demurrers

A slight detour from our usual fare, to note a decision from a closely-divided Hawaii Supreme Court in a case about when a State employee is eligible for service-connected disability retirement benefits under the State Employees’ Retirement System. In Pasco v. Board of Trustees of the Employee Retirement System, No. SCWC-13-3629 (May 22, 2018), the court, in a majority opinion by Justice Sabrina McKenna, concluded that a State of Hawaii employee was disabled as the result of an on-the-job accident, and was therefore eligible for disability benefits. 

The reason we’re posting this 3-2 case (majority opinion heredissenting opinion here) is that we find close cases like this fascinating, and we represent the prevailing employee. While employment law isn’t our usual area of operations, we handle appeals in just about any area of law, and for this one — argued back in February 2017 — we

Continue Reading HAWSCT Clarifies When An “Accident” Occurs In Service-Connected Disability Retirement Statute

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Today’s 7-2 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Upper Skagit Indian Tribe v. Lundgren, No. 17-387 (May 21, 2018), isn’t a takings case, and is more about appellate procedure and framing your issues, but there are several nuggets which takings mavens should note. 

It’s not often that a simple boundary dispute gets to the Supreme Court, and the ultimate question in the case is who owns a one acre parcel in Washington. The Tribe bought a 40 acre parcel, planning to add it to its adjacent reservation. A survey showed that one acre of land on the other side of a barbed wire fence was part of that parcel, even though the Lundgrens thought they owned it.

The Lundgrens brought a quiet title action in Washington state courts. The Tribe responded by asserting its sovereign immunity. “It relied on the many decisions of this Court recognizing the sovereign authority of Native American tribes and their right to ‘the common-law immunity from suit typically enjoyed by sovereign powers.’” Slip op. at 3 (quoting Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Community, 134 S. Ct. 2024 (2014). The Washington Supreme Court sided with the Lundgrens:

The court reasoned that sovereign immunity does not apply to cases where a judge “exercis[es] in rem jurisdiction” to quiet title in a parcel of land owned by a Tribe, but only to cases where a judge seeks to exercise in personam jurisdiction over the Tribe itself. 187 Wash. 2d 857, 867, 389 P. 3d 569, 573 (2017). In coming to this conclusion, the court relied in part on our decision in Yakima [v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima Nation, 502 U. S. 251 (1992)]. Like some courts before it, the Washington Supreme Court read Yakima as distinguishing in rem from in personam lawsuits and “establish[ing] the principle that … courts have subject matter jurisdiction over in rem proceedings in certain situations where claims of sovereign immunity are asserted.” 187 Wash. 2d, at 868, 389 P. 3d, at 574.

Slip op. at 3. 

In an opinion by Justice Gorsuch, the U.S. Supreme Court disagreed, concluding that the Yakima case didn’t sweep so broadly, and was merely a case about statutory interpretation, not about the differences, if any between in personam and in rem jurisdiction. Here’s your appellate practice pointer: courts appreciate it when counsel is candid:

Commendably, the Lundgrens acknowledged all this at oral argument. Tr. of Oral Arg. 36. Instead of seeking to defend the Washington Supreme Court’s reliance on Yakima, they now ask us to affirm their judgment on an entirely distinct alternative ground.

Slip op. at 5. Knowing when to hold em and knowing when to fold em is not necessarily something which comes naturally to zealous advocates, so bravo to the Lundgren’s lawyers for good lawyering. 

The Lundgrens’ Plan B was to argue that the Court should reach the same result by applying common law sovereign immunity. Slip op. at 5 (“At common law, they say, sovereigns enjoyed no immunity from actions involving immovable property located in the territory of anothe rsovereign.”). In those cases, the government is acting more like a private landowner, and therefore is subject to suit. 

But rather than decide the case, the seven-Justice majority sent the case back to the Washington courts to develop the arguments (not briefed in the Supreme Court). Justices Thomas and Alito, by contrast, argued the Court should have decided the issue because “the immovable-property exception was extensively briefed and argued, and its application here is straightforward.” Dissent at 2. They would have resolved the question in favor of the Lundgrens and the courts of Washington, concluding “there has been ‘uniform authority in support of the view that there is no immunity from jurisdiction with respect to actions relating to immovable property.’” Dissent at 4. Land is governed by the law of where the land is. 

Here are the two nuggets from the case that might be of interest to takings folk:

  • The distinction between in rem and in personam jurisdiction appears to be losing whatever meaning it may have once had. For example, the feds (and a few states) still adhere to the fiction that an eminent domain action is against the land, and not the owner. And some eminent domain doctrines — such as the “undivided fee rule” — are based on the idea that the government is taking the land, and not the rights of the owner of that land. The in rem vs in personam distinction doesn’t mean much when it comes to jurisdiction (see, for example, Shaffer v. Heitner, 433 U.S. 186, 207 (1977), which held that the same due process standards govern in rem cases, and that in rem jurisdiction is really shorthand for “referring to jurisdiction over the interests of a person in a thing.”). That the Court in Skagit didn’t go down the in rem vs in personam path tells us that this trend continues. 
  • Sovereign immunity is still hanging out there. Check out the Chief Justice’s concurring opinion, joined by Justice Kennedy, in which he laments the position which the ruling puts private litigants like the Lundgrens in, and notes that broad claims of sovereign immunity cannot carry the day. Concurring op. at 1 (“The correct answer cannot be that the tribe always wins no matter what; otherwise a tribe could wield sovereign immunity as a sword and seize property with impunity, even without a colorable claim of right.”). This could be of interest to those (like us), with a continuing interest in the question of whether the federal government is immune from being sued in an Article III court for just compensation. The concurring Justices also pointed out that when a government acts like a private party, it should be treated like a private party.      

A quick and interesting read all around. 

Upper Skagit Indian Tribe v. Lundgren, No. 17-387 (U.S. May 21, 2018) 

Continue Reading The Difference Between “In Rem” And “In Personam” Jurisdiction Becoming Much Less Important

Update 5/23/2018: the court’s written order here.

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Here’s the latest in those inverse condemnation cases against Pacific Gas & Electric for taking the homes and businesses which were lost as the result of last fall’s northern California wildfires. Multiple complaints have been filed, and they’ve been consolidated in the San Francisco Superior Court, and assigned to a single judge as complex litigation.

Last Friday, the court (as reported here, here, and here), denied PG&E’s demurrer (that’s pretty much a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim for you non-Californians), which asked the court to determine that the inverse condemnation cause of action is not applicable when a private utility cannot “automatically” pass on the costs of a judgment to ratepayers. In short, toss the cases because even if everything alleged is true, the utility could not be held liable for inverse condemnation.

Continue Reading Case To Watch: Utilities, Wildfires, And Inverse Condemnation