Regulatory takings

Today’s Federal Circuit opinion in Golden v. United States, No. 19-2134 (Apr. 10, 2020) is the latest in the post-Oil States cases involving the alleged taking of patents.

Golden asserted three theories:  

The complaint alleges the takings occurred by virtue of: (1) the government’s use, manufacture, development, and disclosure of the subject

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Here’s yet another complaint alleging that a virus-related order is a taking, this time with an interesting twist (other complaints here, here and here).

The twist is that the plaintiff/property owners (who include former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee) assert that they are being prevented from using their own residential property. The complaint asserts

Here’s the latest complaint challenging the virus-related business shut down orders springing up nationwide. (Other lawsuits are posted here and here.)  

This one alleges a host of constitutional violations (and defamation!) after the Connecticut governor banned large gatherings and ordered all restaurants and bars to close, and the New Haven mayor publicly “highlighted” the plaintiff

Join us next Tuesday, April 14, 2020, at 12 noon Hawaii Time (3pm PDT, 6pm EDT) for a free webinar sponsored by the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, “Safety vs. Freedom: Are There Limits to Lockdowns?” Register here

Here’s the description of the program:

Governments at every level in Hawaii have

We’re certainly not going to delve in detail into the 109 single-spaced pages of the majority and dissenting opinions in the New York Court of Appeals’ ruling in Regina Metro. Co., LLC v. N.Y. State Div. of Housing and Community Renewal, Nos. 1-4 (Apr. 3, 2020). New York’s rent control law is infamously labyrinthine

Here’s another complaint (here’s the first) challenging a state’s business shut-down order as a taking. This time it is Colorado, and the complaint seeks an injunction and compensation.

Here are the highlights:

  • “As a result of the [shutdown] Orders listed above that restrict the gathering of more than ten people at a time,

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Here’s an article, just published in the American Planning Association’s monthly magazine, Planning (read the entire April issue here), summarizing the Ninth Circuit’s latest foray into regulatory takings, Bridge Aina Lea, LLC v. State of Hawaii Land Use Comm’n, No. 18-15738 (9th Cir. Feb. 19, 2020).

In Legal Lessons – What Constitutes Loss?

We don’t usually post trial court decisions, but when one comes along that tees up some interesting issues and is likely to get pushed further up the food chain, we’re all ears.

That’s the case with the Eastern District of North Carolina’s order in Zito v. North Carolina Coastal Res. Comm’n, No. 2:19-CV-11-D (Mar.

Here’s the latest in a case we’ve been following. We even visited the site with our class last year. 

Today, the Virginia Supreme Court heard argument on the petition for appeal (streaming above from the webstream, or download the mp3 here) in what we call the oyster case because it involves the property

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Here’s what we’re reading today, spurred by the headlines swirling around all of us. Mostly cases about the role of the courts when government curtails liberty or property rights under its police or emergency powers. We’ve now seen the first lawsuit claiming that an order to shut down businesses is a due process violation and