In “Why big development is so difficult in Hawaii,” Hawaii Business magazine tackles an issue first raised by U. Hawaii lawprof David Callies in recently-published law review article (and follow-up interview), where he labeled the record of the 1993-2010 Hawaii Supreme Court on property issues “appalling” (80% overall success rate for environmental
Municipal & Local Govt law
Amicus Brief In Ninth Circuit Homeless Property Case: No One Has Constitutional Right To Leave Unattended Property On The Street
Here’s the amici brief of the International Municipal Lawyers Association and the National League of Cities, which urges the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Lavan v. City of Los Angeles, 693 F.3d 1022 (9th Cir. 2012).
In that case, a 2-1 panel held that the city could not presume…
Another Amicus Brief In Tombstone Case: Property Clause Does Not Trump City’s Right To Maintain Right-of-Way
Here’s the amicus brief of the Coalition of Arizona/New Mexico Counties for Stable Economic Growth, supporting the petitioner City of Tombstone in City of Tombstone v. United States, No. 12-1069 (cert. petition filed Feb. 27, 2013). [Disclosure:we also filed an amici brief in the case in support of Tombstone.]
The case arose after the…
Amici Brief: The Tenth Amendment, The Property Clause, And The “Town Too Tough To Die”
Today, on behalf of the Cato Institute and a coalition of Western-state public policy and research foundations, we filed this amicus brief in supporting the City of Tombstone‘s cert petition in City of Tombstone v. United States, No. 12-1069 (cert. petition filed Feb. 27, 2013).
In that case, in 2011 a forest fire…
Honolulu Rail And Federal Relocation Benefits
Our colleague Mark M. Murakami has published the first in a series of posts on his blog about legal issues surrounding the multi-billion dollar Honolulu rail project, “Honolulu Rail and the Uniform Relocation Act.”
Because the HART rail project will involve federal funds, federal laws and regulations provide property owners (and their tenants)…
Tail Gunner Christie: What’s Next, The Pillory And The Stock?
If this article — Christie tells beachfront owners to sign easement for dunes or face ridicule — accurately relays the entire context of the situation, then something is seriously off here.
The article quotes New Jersey Governor Chris Christie as declaring that if shoreline property owners do not voluntarily surrender easements and allow the construction…
‘SUP, Georgia? Takings Case Not Ripe Because Property Owner Hasn’t Applied For A Permit It Doesn’t Want
Hat tip to Dean Patty Salkin’s Law of the Land blog for bringing this case to our attention. We don’t have much to add to her comprehensive write up of the Georgia Supreme Court’s opinion in City of Suwanee v. Settles Bridge Farm, LLC, No. S12A1599 (Feb. 18, 2013), a case holding that a…
BIO In Eminent Domain Pretext Case: Redevelopment Plan Established “Order Out Of Chaos”
Here’s the Brief in Opposition which responds to the cert petition in Ilagan v. Ungacta, No. 12-723 (cert. petition filed Dec. 7, 2012).
In that case, an Agana, Guam property owner is alleging that a taking of his residential property so that his neighbor (the former mayor of Agana) could have a driveway for…
60 Minutes On China’s (Possible) Housing Bubble
Update: we removed the embedded video that was posted above, since CBS kept replacing it with other clips. Here’s a direct link to the video.
As our readers know, we follow with keen interest events in the People’s Republic of China (does anyone call it that, anymore?), especially those issues related to property and…
Enviro Lawyers Off Target With Criticism Of Callies, Says Callies
The other shoe has dropped, and in “Environmental Lawyers Off Target With Criticism Of Callies,” U. Hawaii lawprof David Callies responds to and rebuts an earlier op-ed by the Director of the Sierra Club and an Earthjustice lawyer which criticized Professor Callies’ recently-published law review article (and follow-up interview) detailing the stunning…
