2021

We don’t usually post trial court rulings, but this one is very interesting, so we’re going to break our own rule.

New Orleans had a traffic camera program. Not popular, we’d suppose. People who were caught on camera brought a class action suit in Louisiana state court, arguing that the city didn’t have the legal

Here’s the cert petition, recently filed, which asks the following Questions Presented:

Petitioner owns a parcel of land in Chicago, Illinois. Chicago Terminal Railroad formerly had the right to operate a portion of rail line subject to a conditional easement over a portion of Petitioner’s property. The easement terminated according to its terms. Nevertheless

Screenshot_2021-03-10 Redefining the Boundary Between Regulation and Appropriation by Jessica Asbridge SSRN

Next up on our reading list: “Redefining the Boundary Between Regulation and Appropriation” (forthcoming, BYU L Rev), by Baylor Lawprof Jessica Asbridge. Available on SSRN here.

This one is especially relevant in light of the upcoming arguments in Cedar Point, which will consider many of the issues Prof. Asbridge writes about. 

Here’s the Abstract:

The U.S. Supreme Court currently claims to distinguish between appropriations and regulations when interpreting the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause. While appropriations always require just compensation to survive constitutional scrutiny, whether a regulation infringing upon property rights requires compensation is determined on an ad hoc basis, guided by concerns of fairness and justness. In Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corporation, the Court attempted to define the boundary between regulations and appropriations, holding that an appropriation occurs when a government action results in a permanent, physical invasion of an owner’s real property. What constitutes a permanent, physical invasion, however, is entirely unclear due to the Court’s inconsistent decisions applying Loretto. The circumstances under which the physical takings doctrine applies has confounded the lower courts, rendering the heightened constitutional protection for appropriative actions largely illusory.

Takings Clause scholars almost uniformly call for the elimination of the Court’s physical takings doctrine. Most, if not all, critics of Loretto argue that any distinction between appropriations and regulations should be eliminated, such that all government actions short of formal acts of eminent domain should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis, with compensation only justified where the public interest is minimal or the economic hardship on the owner is great. This approach, however, would only further weaken the protection provided by the Takings Clause.

The physical takings doctrine is unsound, but, contrary to the dominant view in the scholarship, the Court’s distinction between regulations and appropriations is not. The Court has long recognized that appropriations require compensation without regard to the public interest at play or fairness and justness concerns, as shown by nineteenth and early twentieth century cases overlooked or ignored by contemporary Takings Clause scholars. Rather than define appropriations as permanent, physical invasions, however, these cases demonstrate that an appropriation occurs when government seeks to transfer the right to use private property to a third party or the government itself whereas a regulation involves the government controlling or restricting an owner’s use of property. Redefining the boundary consistent with this historical understanding would bring much needed doctrinal clarity to takings jurisprudence and further important normative considerations. Requiring compensation for all properly defined appropriative acts furthers multiple values including autonomy and political freedom and accounts for the interests of owners and non-owners alike.

Check it out. Especially before the upcoming oral arguments in Cedar Point.
Continue Reading New Takings Lawrev Article: Jessica Asbridge, “Redefining the Boundary Between Regulation and Appropriation”

Read the allegations in the complaint that the Illinois Appellate Court recounted in Strauss v. City of Chicago, No. 1-19-1977 (Mar. 5, 2021), and they will make your hair curl in horror.

In short: a family rented the ground floor of its mixed residential-commercial building in Chicago to Double Door Liquors (a live music

For you original MTV folks

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following for a while (even since before the last time it went up to the Court). See this post (“The Chicago Way: City Taking Non-Blighted Property For Economic Development Was Not Pretextual Because…Studies“) and this one (“Illinois App: We

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Prof. Butler’s portrait at the entrance
to the Dean’s suite.

Here’s the full text of the William and Mary Board of Visitors’ resolution commemorating the retirement of our friend and colleague, land use and property scholar Professor Lynda Butler and her change in status to Chancellor Professor of Law, Emerita.

Many of you know

It’s Monday, so we’re just going to ease into the week by (inter alia) reading a couple of law review articles:

  • Federal Courts and Takings Litigation, by Prof. Ann Woolhandler & Prof. Julia D. Mahoney: “While Knick clearly expands the lower federal court role in takings claims, many questions remain, for it

How about buying what you thought was a retirement home, only to be told that if you want the local government’s ok change the form of ownership of the property you’ve got to offer any tenant a lifetime lease? Here’s the cert petition, filed today in a case we’ve been following for a while,

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When we think “New Mexico,” we imagine scenes like this. Endless sky, seemingly infinite open roads, high desert … you know, “the West.”

But after reading the New Mexico Supreme Court’s opinion in City of Albuquerque v. SMP Properties, LLC, No. S-1-SC-37343 (Feb. 25, 2021), we’re going to think “inverse condemnation.” (Yeah, that may