Registration is up and online. Join us (online) for the 2020 Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. Tuition: free, unless you want CLE credit (in which case it is a very modest $100). Because this conference has gone virtual, the usual Wren Building awards banquet to honor this year’s B-K Prize winner, lawprof Henry Smith
Regulatory takings
New Cert Petition: Does A Physical Invasion Taking Require 24/7 Occupation?
Here’s the cert petition that we’ve been waiting to drop in a case we’ve been following. Last we checked in, the Ninth Circuit (with concurral) had denied en banc review, over a dissental.
In Cedar Point Nursery v. Shiroma, 923 F.3d 524 (May 8, 2019), a 2-1 panel of the Ninth Circuit…
New Stinky Cert Petition: By Wiping Out Nuisance Claims, Right-To-Farm Act Is A Taking
Here’s a cert petition that we’ve been waiting to drop in a case we’ve been following. This one asks whether a state legislature’s virtual elimination of a cause of action is a taking.
The harsh reality is that farms and ranches can stink. But in Right to Farm Acts, many state legislatures, Indiana’s…
New Book Coming In August: Regulatory Takings After Knick by David Callies
Coming soon (August), a new book from lawprof David Callies on what might be our favorite subject, regulatory takings.
We had a chance to review the proofs, and we highly recommend this one for your bookshelf. We’ll bring you more once published. But for now, you can reserve your copy here…
Michigan: Gov’t Keeping The Change From Tax Delinquency Sale Is A Taking
Our Louisiana friends have a great word — lagniappe — that we’re not sure we understand precisely, but to us has always meant that little something extra. As Mark Twain wrote, “[i]t is the equivalent of the thirteenth roll in a ‘baker’s dozen.’ It is something thrown in, gratis, for good measure.” As far as…
New (Mike Berger) Cert Petition: “This case is the proverbial ‘Exhibit A’ of much that is wrong [with takings law].”
Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following for what seems like forever. This is also a fact situation that has resulted in litigation in a variety of different fora, and at times has seemed like the final exam question in a Federal Courts law school class. We wrote about this latest…
Federal Court: No Takings Claim To Enjoin COVID Shut-Down Order
Here’s the latest order in one of the various challenges to coronavirus-related shut down orders. (See here, here, here, here and here, for example.)
In Xponential Fitness v. Arizona, No. CV-20-01310 (July 14, 2020) (unpub.), the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona denied preliminary relief in a case which sought an injunction against the Arizona governor’s orders. The complaint including a takings claim among others (contracts clause, due process, equal protection, as well as state law claims). The only relief sought for the taking was an injunction, not just compensation.
[Sidebar: interestingly, there’s no mention of the Eleventh Amendment, despite the State of Arizona being the lead defendant in the case; we haven’t taken a dive into the docket to see if the State consented, or objected elsewhere to being haled into federal court.]
To the court, that was fatal to the likelihood of the plaintiffs’ success on the merits. Here’s the entirety of the court’s takings analysis:
Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment takings claim cannot support their request for injunction relief. See Knick v. Twp. of Scott, Pennsylvania, 139 S. Ct. 2162, 2176 (2019) (“As long as an adequate provision for obtaining just compensation exists, there is no basis to enjoin the government’s action effecting a taking.”). “The Fifth Amendment does not proscribe the taking of property; it proscribes taking without just compensation.” Williamson Cty. Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City, 473 U.S. 172, 194 (1985), overruled on other grounds by Knick, 139 S. Ct. 2162. Thus, even if the June 29, 2020 Executive Order did violate Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment rights, Plaintiffs would not be entitled to injunctive relief because damages are the proper remedy for a taking. See Bridge Aina Le’a, LLC v. State of Hawaii Land Use Comm’n, 125 F. Supp. 3d 1051, 1066 (D. Haw. 2015), aff’d sub nom. Bridge Aina Le’a, LLC v. Land Use Comm’n, 950 F.3d 610 (9th Cir. 2020).
Slip op. at 16.
Before we move on, a comment. We’re not sure that just compensation should be considered the only remedy for a taking. First, we’ve seen cases in which the Supreme Court has recognized that an award of just compensation is not the sole way to raise a takings claim. You can raise it as a defense to some government action (“you can’t do X, government, because to do X without compensation would be an unconstitutional taking” – this is more like a rule that government cannot act except in conformity with the constitution than an actual “takings” claim for compensation). The raisin case (Horne v. USDA) is a good example. Another is Kaiser Aetna v. United States, 444 U.S. 164 (1970), where the property owner raised a similar argument in response to the Corps of Engineers’ district court lawsuit under the Rivers and Harbors Act.
Or, you might raise a takings argument affirmatively by declaratory judgment:
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST suggests that appellees’ “taking” claim will not support jurisdiction under § 1331(a), but instead that such a claim can be adjudicated only in the Court of Claims under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1976 ed.). We disagree. Appellees are not seeking compensation for a taking, a claim properly brought in the Court of Claims, but are now requesting a declaratory judgment that, since the Price-Anderson Act does not provide advance assurance of adequate compensation in the event of a taking, it is unconstitutional. As such, appellees’ claim tracks quite closely that of the petitioners in the Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, 419 U. S. 102 (1974), which were brought under § 1331 as well as the Declaratory Judgment Act. See App. in Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, O.T. 1974, Nos. 74-165, 74-166, 74-167, 74-168, p. 161. While the Declaratory Judgment Act does not expand our jurisdiction, it expands the scope of available remedies. Here, it allows individuals threatened with a taking to seek a declaration of the constitutionality of the disputed governmental action before potentially uncompensable damages are sustained.
Duke Power Co v. Carolina Env. Study Group, Inc., 438 U.S. 60, 71 n.15 (1979). We get that just compensation is the usual remedy, and the most common. But the sole remedy? Jury’s still out on that one, in our opinion.
Want more on the theory and practice of challenging these type of emergency orders? Please plan on joining us next week, Wednesday, July 22, 2020, at 1pm ET (10am PT) for a long-form program on “Emergency and Police Power: Property Claims in Times of Crisis,” sponsored by the ABA Section of State and Local Government Law. Our speakers are Professors Craig Konnoth (Colorado) and John Nolon (Pace), and one of the lawyers on the forefront of the nationwide legal challenges, Harmeet Dhillon (San Francisco). I’ll be moderating, along with Professor Sarah Adams-Schoen (Oregon).
Would you like a deeper dive into takings and these type of emergency orders? Check out our soon-to-be-published article, “Evaluating Emergency Takings: Flattening the Economic Curve” (forthcoming 2020).
Xponential Fitness v. Arizona, No. CV-20-01310 (D. Ariz. July 14, 2020) (unpub.)
Continue Reading Federal Court: No Takings Claim To Enjoin COVID Shut-Down Order
A Not Too “Takey” Takings Opinion From The Federal Circuit
It was mostly a win for the property owners in today’s Federal Circuit opinion in Hardy v. United States, No. 19-1793 (July 15, 2020).
The opinion isn’t heavy on the takings doctrine. It spent most of the time affirming the Court of Federal Claims’ conclusion that the plaintiff-owners owned property under Georgia law (their…
New Article: “A Defense of the Regulatory Takings Doctrine: A Historical Analysis of This Conflict Between Property Rights and Public Good and A Prediction for Its Future”
I must say that am pretty chuffed that one of my (now former) William and Mary Law students published a law review article, and he wrote about…takings. And Blackstone, and history.
Read it: Andrew Parslow, A Defense of the Regulatory Takings Doctrine: A Historical Analysis of This Conflict Between Property Rights and Public Good and …
HAWSCT: City’s Prohibiting Use Of Property Pending City Acquisition Is Land Banking Taking
Breaking! In H.C. Cornuelle, Inc. v. City and Cnty of Honolulu, No. 14068 (Haw. July 17, 1990), the Hawaii Supreme Court held that the City and County of Honolulu inversely condemned a strip of private property in downtown when it prohibited development and use of that land because the City intended to acquire it…





