Here's the latest in a case we've been following since before it became one of ours.
In Gearing v. City of Half Moon Bay, No. 21-16688 (Dec. 8, 2022), the Ninth Circuit upheld the district court's dismissal of a regulatory takings case, holding that federal courts should abstain from considering regulatory takings cases in favor of pending state court eminent domain actions, even when the condemnor instituted the state court action after the federal takings lawsuit was filed.
In the time since the Ninth Circuit issued the opinion, our law firm has joined up with our colleague Kristen Renfro who represented the owner in the court of appeals. That's why we won't be commenting further, and instead suggest you read the cert petition we filed today, chiefly authored by Counsel of Record Deborah LaFetra (lately of the Tyler v. Hennepin County takings case).
Here is the Question Presented:
Thomas and Daniel Gearing are categorically prohibited from building on residentially zoned vacant land that the City of Half Moon Bay prefers as an open space public park. They exercised their choice of forum by filing a lawsuit in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging a regulatory taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and seeking just compensation, costs, and attorneys’ fees. The City responded by filing an eminent domain lawsuit in state court that significantly limits the issues and the Gearings’ remedies. The City then convinced the federal court to abstain from deciding the Gearings’ first-filed federal lawsuit under Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co., 312 U.S. 496 (1941). As a result of the forthcoming state court decision to which federal courts are bound to give full faith and credit, 28 U.S.C. § 1738, the Gearings will be deprived of full just compensation as well as other recovery authorized by the Civil Rights Act.The question presented is:Whether federal courts may deprive takings claimants of their chosen forum by invoking the prudential Pullman abstention doctrine to require them to first litigate their claims in state court.
Stay tuned, as always.
Petition for Writ of Certiorari, Gearing v. City of Half Moon Bay, No. ___ (June 1, 2023)