Public Use | Kelo

Looks like eminent domain and Hawaii are in the news today. Here’s what we’re reading:

  • In “Scalia the Prophet?” Gideon Kanner comments about Justice Scalia’s recent appearance at one of our almas mater, the University of Hawaii law school. Scalia says that Kelo will eventually be overruled (“it will not survive”). 
  • Lawprof Ilya

Mich Ave 2-6-2014

We’re at the ABA Midyear meeting in sunny Chicago, so we have our to-read links posted today instead of a new case digest. Our fingers are too frozen to post anything more:

  • Lawprof

We often jokingly suggest that in eminent domain, “it’s good to be the King!” quoting that eminent eminent domain scholar Mel Brooks. We think this catchphrase aptly describes the “most awesome grant of power,” City of Oakland v. Oakland Raiders, 220 Cal. Rptr. 153, 155 (Cal. App. 1985), under which the condemnor

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This morning, I joined my Owners’ Counsel colleagues Leslie Fields and Joe Waldo (the programming co-chairs), and more than 100 fellow eminent domain experts in New Orleans under the auspices of ALI-CLE at our annual gathering for the start of 2 1/2 days of legal education. 

Joe and Leslie asked me to join Professor James

Next week, we’ll be in New Orleans for the 2014 edition of the ALI-CLE Eminent Domain program, now in its 31st year. 

As usual, my Owners’ Counsel colleagues Leslie Fields and Joe Waldo (the programming co-chairs) have put together a fantastic 2.5 day of programming, taught by expert faculty.  At 11:00 a.m. on

If you were to try to predict the result in an appeal before the Ninth Circuit where the lead plaintiff is the “Alliance for Property Rights and Fiscal Responsibility,” the defendant is a municipality, and knowing nothing else, you’d probably have guessed wrong in this case.

In Alliance for Property Rights and Fiscal Responsibility v.

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to review an interesting case we’ve been following, about that big glass viewing platform over the Grand Canyon.

As we noted here, in Grand Canyon Skywalk Development, LLC v. Sa Nyu Wa, Inc., 715 F.3d 1196 (9th Cir. Apr. 26, 2013), the issues mostly involve

Cover_42_3_ The Urban Lawyer, the law review produced by the ABA Section of State & Local Goverment Law has published an article which we wrote with our Damon Key colleagues Mark Murakami and Bethany AceRecent Developments in Eminent Domain: Public Use, 45 Urban Lawyer 809 (2013).

Here’s the Introduction to the article:

Homes. Tiny homes. Things have come full circle. Because according to this report from The Day, New London’s daily paper (“Take the steps to pursue Fort Trumbull dreams“), the city’s mayor, in order to remove the “stain” of the l’affiare Kelo, has proposed a “tiny house neighborhood” on the leftover

Be sure to check out this interview with a person we’re proud to call a friend and a colleague, Gideon Kanner, in the most recent edition of Right of Way magazine, a publication of the International Right of Way Association.

A Fierce Advocate for Just Compensation” is a sitdown with Professor Kanner, and covers a lot of ground, so to speak. The entire piece is worth reading, but here’s what a colleague pointed out as perhaps the best part:

If you represent a property owner in an eminent domain case, particularly an inverse condemnation one, you must understand that your client is persona non grata or the law’s “poor relation,” as U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist once said. The California Supreme Court once stated in an opinion that it was its duty to keep condemnation awards down, which is a hell of a hurdle to overcome when your task is to persuade the Justices that your client was undercompensated by the court below. So in those not-so-good ol’ days of the 1960s, when I walked into court, I had my job cut out for me. Sometimes, the hostility emanating from the bench was palpable. As Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit once noted, what property owners in this field often get from the bench is “thinly-disguised contempt.” This is not a line of work for the faint of heart.

We agree.
Continue Reading Why We Fight: An Interview With Gideon Kanner, “A Fierce Advocate for Just Compensation”