2020

Here’s the cert petition that we’ve been waiting to drop in a case we’ve been following. Last we checked in, the Ninth Circuit (with concurral) had denied en banc review, over a dissental.

In Cedar Point Nursery v. Shiroma, 923 F.3d 524 (May 8, 2019), a 2-1 panel of the Ninth Circuit

This is a case about trees. The County highway maintenance department entered the plaintiffs’ rural undeveloped land (with permission) to cut and remove certain trees, but then went to the wrong place and cut the wrong trees.

The plaintiffs wanted compensation for the trees, measured as the cost to replace the trees. The County offered

Here’s a cert petition that we’ve been waiting to drop in a case we’ve been following. This one asks whether a state legislature’s virtual elimination of a cause of action is a taking.

The harsh reality is that farms and ranches can stink. But in Right to Farm Acts, many state legislatures, Indiana’s

We don’t often post trial court orders, but this one, Chiquita Canyon, LLC v. Cnty of Los Angeles, No. BS 171262 (Cal. Super. July 2, 2020), from the California Superior Court, is worth reading for you land use and exactions mavens.

It’s a long order, so we won’t go into great detail, but the

Callies_book
by David Lee Callies

Coming soon (August), a new book from lawprof David Callies on what might be our favorite subject, regulatory takings.

We had a chance to review the proofs, and we highly recommend this one for your bookshelf. We’ll bring you more once published. But for now, you can reserve your copy here

A pipeline needed private property. Did it wait until it had actually taken the property before it started to build the pipeline? No. 

In Bayou Bridge Pipeline, LLC v. 38.00 Acres, No. CA 19-0565 (July 2020), the Louisiana Court of Appeal addressed a host of challenges:

  • A broad facial challenge to Louisiana’s expropriation system.

Our Louisiana friends have a great word — lagniappe — that we’re not sure we understand precisely, but to us has always meant that little something extra. As Mark Twain wrote, “[i]t is the equivalent of the thirteenth roll in a ‘baker’s dozen.’ It is something thrown in, gratis, for good measure.” As far as

Like a lot of other jurisdictions, Hawaii’s emergency response statutes contain an “automatic termination” limitation on the governor’s or a mayor’s declaration of emergency:

A state of emergency and a local state of emergency shall terminate automatically sixty days after the issuance of a proclamation of a state of emergency or local state of emergency

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Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following for what seems like forever. This is also a fact situation that has resulted in litigation in a variety of different fora, and at times has seemed like the final exam question in a Federal Courts law school class. We wrote about this latest

This one is California process-specific, but we think the California Supreme Court’s opinion in Weiss v. People ex rel Dep’t of Transportation, No. S248141 (July 16, 2020), is still worth a read for you non-Golden Staters.

Why, you ask? Well, we all have been in the situation where, just before you are about to