To those who attended today’s seminar “Integrating Water Law and Land Use Planning,” thank you.  The materials from my session on “Water Rights, Property Rightsand the Law of Settled Expectations” are below. 

  • Kaiser Aetna v. United States, 444 U.S. 164 (1979) – the Hawaii Kai Marina case – physical invasions, regulatory takings, and interference with settled expectations.
  • Maui Tomorrow v. State of Hawaii, 110 Haw. 234, 131 P.3d 517 (2006) – Hawaii water law is not a federal case.  Summary of the decision here.
  • Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co.,272 U.S. 365 (1926), the case in which the U.S. Supreme Court firstupheld the segregation of land uses in an Ohio suburban town intodistricts against a substantive due process challenge. Law studentsstudy the case, land use lawyers and planners know it intimately, and “Euclidean” zoning has become the shorthand for district-based single use zoning.
  • Hadachek v. Sebastian, 239 U.S. 394 (1915) – the government’s police powers can be used to protect against nuisances.
  • Joseph L. Sax, The Public Trust Doctrine in Natural Resource Law: Effective Judicial Intervention, 68 Mich. L. Rev. 471 (1970).  Copy available here.  
  • A counterpoint to Waihole: David L. Callies & Calvert G. Chipchase, Water Regulation, Land Use and the Environment, 30 U. Haw. L. Rev. 49 (2007).  Copy posted here.
  • Upsetting settled expectations in shoreline law – accretion and erosion: Maunalua Bay Beach Ohana 28 v. State of Hawaii, No. 28175 (Haw. ICA) – here’s the brief we filed which illustrates the principle that the legislature (or a court) cannot simply change the settled law without raising takings concerns. The issue in thatcase is whether the state or littoral landowners are entitled toownership of accreted land. In “Act 73,” the legislature declared thatshoreline land naturally accreted belongs to the State of Hawaii and ispublic property.  The act overturned the age-old rule of shorelineaccretion and erosion, which held that beachfront owners lose ownershipof land when it erodes, but gain it when it accretes.  Instead of thesebalanced rules, Act 73 made the erosion/accretion equation one-sided:the State wins every time. 

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