Articles and publications

5430464_big A recent book of interest to condemnation lawyers, Current Condemnation Law: Takings, Compensation & Benefits (2d ed.).

The book is co-edited by my Owner’s Counsel of America colleague Alan T. Ackerman. (He also has a blog about eminent domain issues.)

From the blurb:

Condemnation of property is an especially topical subject after the U.S.

In a development that began in November 2007 (2005 actually, if the starting point is seen as the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Lingle v. Chevron, U.S.A., Inc., 544 U.S 528 (2005)), the Ninth Circuit finally ditched Armendariz v. Penman,75 F.3d 1311 (9th Cir. 1996) (en banc), and recognized that property owners are

Zplr_p1 The Zoning and Planning Law Report (Thomson | West) has published my article about the post-Lingle developments in substantive due process in the Ninth Circuit. Download a pdf of the article here.

From the introduction:

Substantive due process asserted as a claim for relief has a whiff of danger about it. After all

Two recent U. Hawaii Law Review articles worth mentioning.  Although neither is available free on the web, they can be obtained through legal research services such as Westlaw or Lexis, or through the U. Hawaii Law Review.  If you don’t have a UHLR subscription, you should. It’s only $30 per year for US addresses.

Water Regulation, Land Use and the Environment
David L. Callies and Calvert G. Chipchase; 30 U. Haw. L. Rev. 49 (Winter 2007)

In this article, the authors assert that the “public trust” doctrine, as misconstrued by the Hawaii Supreme Court, has distorted water law and the land use process:

Problems arise in the planning process when water and non-economic uses of water are given a sacrosanct status that abjures private use for the benefit of “the public.” This is increasingly happening under flawed interpretations of the public trust doctrine.

p. 49 (citing In re Water Use Permit Applications (Waiahole), 84 Haw. 97, 9 P.3d 409 (2000); In re Water Use Permit Applications, 105 Haw. 1, 93 P.3d 643 (2004); In re Water Use Permit Applications, 113 Haw. 52, 147 P.3d 836 (2006)). The article continues:

Many courts have forgotten that the jus privatem is as much a part of the public trust doctrine as the jus publicum. Certainly water should be available for future use, but is also should be readily available for current use. When the balance between current private and abstract or future public needs is distorted, water use and availability of water becomes the primary, or even sole, consideration in the process. This leads to the preservation of water for such uses as “minimum stream flows” and non-beneficial use by selected segments of the public and, ultimately, an elitist, communitarian regime that bears no relationship to either traditional notions of water rights or constitutionally protected rights in property.

Id

. The authors analyze the multi-layered land use planning laws in Hawaii, the state Water Code (Haw. Rev. Stat. ch. 174C), and the Hawaii Supreme Court’s extension of the public trust doctrine beyond navigation and commerce to the promotion of reasonable and beneficial use of water resources in Waiahole.  p. 70.  The article also discusses how Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico regulate their water resources, and what lessons these jurisdictions may provide for Hawaii.  pp. 77-92.

More Than a Line in the Sand: Defining the Shoreline in Hawai’i After Diamond v. State
Simeon L. Vance and Richard J. Wallsgrove; 29 U. Haw. L. Rev. 521 (Summer 2007)

In this article, the authors analyze the differences in the various definitions of the “shoreline” under Hawaii law, and the Hawaii Supreme Court decision in Diamond v. State, 112 Haw. 161, 145 P.3d 704 (2006) .  As detailed in this post about the Diamond case, the term “shoreline” is used to define both the boundary between public and private property as well as the baseline for measuring the shoreline setback (a no-build zone on beachfront property).

The difference between a  certified shoreline  and a  seaward boundary line  has become a confusing and potentially divisive issue. Confusion is predictable because the definition of  shoreline  for certification purposes is essentially identical to the definition Hawai’i courts have used to determine property boundary lines. Despite their similarity, however, the two lines  are not necessarily the same because their purposes, the impacts and the processes for determining these  lines’ are uniquely and significantly different.

The most critical of these differences is that shoreline certifications are not designed to determine ownership.  Instead, the line of ownership dividing public and private coastal property is the seaward boundary. Markedly different from the shoreline certification process outlined above, determinations of seaward boundary lines often take the form of quiet title actions, eminent domain actions, or land court petition actions.  The state’s responsibility to uphold the public trust and preserve its interest in property triggers the need for  a more rigorous and cautious approach.  In these situations, the state does not rely on shoreline certifications, but conducts its own survey in recognition of the “importance of lateral [shoreline] access over state-owned lands for recreation, native gathering practices and other purposes.”

p. 532 (footnotes omitted).  The article is a good introduction to Hawaii’s unique approach to shoreline law, and a worthy read.  And I’m not just saying that because it cites several posts from this blog as authority (See, e.g., notes 92, 146, 179, and 180, and accompanying text).
Continue Reading Two Recent Law Review Articles (Water Law and Shoreline Issues)

Slgn_frontpageThe ABA Section on State & Local Government has published my article “Because They Can: Judicially Excising the People from the Definition of “County” in the Hawaii Constitution” in the State & Local Government Law News (Spring 2008). 

The article is a summary and analysis of County of Kauai ex rel. Nakazawa v.

Two stories in today’s Honolulu papers, “Wal-Mart fights Kauai ban on ‘big-box’ stores,” “Wal-Mart says it will fight for Kauai expansion,” contain all the buzzwords indicating a vested rights and zoning estoppel dispute may be on the horizon.  The Advertiser writes:

A recent Kaua’i County ban on new “big-box” stores shouldn’t

As a way of saying “aloha” to 2006, I’ve summarized the land use lawhighlights (orlowlights, depending on your point of view) from the Hawaii SupremeCourt, the Ninth Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court, roughly inchronological order.  Topics include shorelines, eminent domain,environmental impact statements, RLUIPA, vested rights, and land uselitigation procedures.

If you think I missed any key cases or events, please email me.

    
Continue Reading ▪ 2006 Land Use in Review

In September, the ABA Section on Litigation (Committee on Condemnation, Zoning and Land Use) published Law and Procedure of Eminent Domain in the 50 States, a state-by-state summary of each jurisdiction’s eminent domain laws and cases.  I authored the chapter on Hawaii.

Topics covered include who hasthe power to take, sources for condemnation authority