Clint Schumacher’s Eminent Domain podcast is one of those things that we almost shouldn’t post about. After all, every episode is worth your time. But this one is especially good. After all, it features our law firm colleague and friend Jon Houghton, discussing what you all know is one of our fave topics, regulatory
Inverse condemnation
Still Time To Join Us (In-Person Or Remote) For The 19th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference
One last reminder that there’ still time to register for the upcoming Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg, Virginia, September 29-30, 2022. If you can’t make it to the historic campus, there’s an option to attend remotely.
In our opinion, the Conference is the best of its kind…
New Must-Read Article: “Cedar Point Nursery and the End of the New Deal Settlement” – Property Rights Are Civil And Human Rights
Here’s your must-read for today, a new article from U. Va. lawprof Julia D. Mahoney, “Cedar Point Nursery and the End of the New Deal Settlement.”
Disclosure: we show up in footnote * along with others for offering “comments and conversations” about the piece.
Here’s the Abstract:
In Cedar Point Nursery v.
NC: Generally-Applicable Impact Fee Is Subject To Nollan/Dolan/Koontz
We recommend you review the North Carolina Supreme Court’s opinion in Anderson Creek Partners, L.P. v. County of Harnett, No. 63PA21-1 (Aug. 19, 2022). It’s long (70 page majority, plus 19 pages of concurring and dissenting opinions), but worth your time because the majority concludes that legislatively-imposed fees, applicable to all, are “exactions” that…
Registration Underway – 19th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference (Sep 29-30, 2022)
There’s still space for you to join us — preferably in-person, but remotely if that is not possible for you — at the 19th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, September 29-30, 2022, at the William and Mary Law School in Williamsburg.
The American Law Institute was kind enough to post a notice about the Conference…
Oklahoma: The “Taking” Occurs When Govt Changes Its Use Of A Previously-Granted Easement
Even though the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision in Snow v. Town of Calumet, No. 119,758 (June 21, 2022) is short, we think it is worth reading because is clarifies who can bring an inverse claim, and what exactly do these claims allege.
In 1978, the Snows’ predecessor-in-title granted the Town an easement to maintain…
Ye Olde Law 608: Eminent Domain & Property Rights, S5E1 @ William & Mary Law
Is there a more appropriate place at which to study property rights and dirt law than William and Mary Law School? After all, it is a stone’s throw from Jamestown, the place where there’s a good argument the concept of property law and property rights first took hold in the New World. As…
IRWA’s Summary Of Major Eminent Domain Cases & Legislation (Jan-May 2022)
The International Right of Way Association‘s Real Estate Law Committee produces twice-a-year reports “which contain summaries of eminent domain decisions and legislation within the United States.”
And what is really nice is that they make the report available.
We’re posting it here because we’re one of the co-authors. Hat tip to our co-authors…
CA1 Splits With CA9: “[T]he Fifth Amendment precludes the impairment or discharge of prepetition claims for just compensation in Title III bankruptcy.”
Here’s the latest in an issue we’ve been following for a while. You recall that several years ago, a divided panel of the Ninth Circuit held there’s nothing particularly special about an unresolved takings claim for just compensation that sets it apart from other creditor claims in a government bankruptcy.
The Ninth Circuit majority held…
Montana: Owners Are You-Know-What-Out-Of-Luck For Sewage-Backup Damaging Claim, Unless They Show Torty Evidence
In Witman v. City of Billings, No. DA 20-0609 (July 5, 2022), the Montana Supreme Court rejected an inverse condemnation damaging claim after a grease clog in city sewers resulted in 1000 gallons of raw sewage flooding the Witman home. Ugh.
Despite rules that limit what is supposed to go into sewage systems, people…




