Appellate law

Remember that First Circuit opinion from a few months back, which held – contrary to a prior 2-1 Ninth Circuit panel – that just compensation claims are not dischargeable in a governmental bankruptcy?

Well, the government recently filed a cert petition asking the Supreme Court to take the case and hold that there’s nothing

October 20, 2022 was what one advocate noted was “land use day at the Ninth Circuit,” because three out of the four cases being argued in Courtroom 3 of the San Francisco courthouse were indeed land use — or perhaps more accurately, regulatory takings — cases.

Ours was one of those cases, Ralston v. San

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Here’s one we’ve been waiting to drop, in a case we’ve been following.

Today, in Annapolis Group Inc. v. Halifax Regional Municipality, No. 39594 (Oct. 21, 2022), the Supreme Court of Canada held (and we’re translating into United States here), that to state a claim for a regulatory taking based on the government’s

We won’t be providing our detailed thoughts on last week’s U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit’s opinion in Hall v. Meisner, No. 21-1700 (Oct. 13, 2022), because we’re obviously biased: our law firm colleagues Christina Martin and Kady Valois represent the prevailing property owners, so we naturally agree with the court. Thus

Here’s a recently-filed cert petition in a pipeline case. This one asks whether an agency — here, FERC — has primary administrative jurisdiction over a facial challenge to Congress’ delegation of federal eminent domain authority to a private party. 

Here are the Questions Presented:

Whether a facial challenge to Congress’s delegation of eminent domain power

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We spoke on the second panel of the day at the 2022 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference at the William and Mary Law School. The subject of our panel — which included Professors David Callies, Tim Mulvaney, and Dave Owen — was “Reshaping the Framework Protecting Property Under the Roberts Court.

Here’s a rough

Here’s the latest in a case and issue we’ve been following. Check out this recently-filed cert petition, involving the federal takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the mortgage crisis in the late ‘aughts. Which allowed them to keep going, but is alleged to have iced out their private shareholders.

The Court

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If you understand the headline of this post, congratulations: you are officially so deep in the weeds that you deserve both a Federal Courts and a Takings merit badge. 

For those of you not in so deep, here’s the short story behind the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit’s short opinion in Efreom

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following. The U.S. Court of Appeals recently heard oral arguments in a case where a private Natural Gas Act condemnor (the Sabal Trail pipeline) exercised the delegated federal power of eminent domain to take the property of a Florida owner.

As we reported here