We tend to avoid cases about insurance. Not because they are dull (as you might wrongly imagine). Indeed, there’s more excitement in insurance cases than you’d guess. But insurance law and the insurance regulation field needs a certain level of very niche expertise that we don’t possess. So normally, we would not have given the
Your 2024 Dirt Lawyer Holiday Gift Guide (Including Last-Minute Gifts)
Too busy writing those briefs and petitioning for those writs, so haven’t found the time to hit your local store or the interwebs and fulfill your seasonal duties? Or maybe you just have gifter’s block about an appropriate present for the dirt lawyer in your life this holiday season?
You could go the last-minute route:…
CFC: Complaint Adequately Pleaded Physical Taking Of JFK Assassination Film
Check out the opinion of the Court of Federal Claims in Nix v. United States, No. 23-704C (Dec. 11, 2024). Fascinating stuff.
We post it here not because it breaks new ground, but due to the subject matter of the lawsuit: the alleged taking of a film that captures (in part) the assassination of…
Latest Ep, Eminent Domain Podcast: Podworthy Cases, ALI-CLE, And 1970s Bands
Our thanks to Bobby Debelak for having us back on as a guest on his Eminent Domain Podcast.
We’re long-time fans of the pod (naturally), and it was good to get together with Bobby and talk a bit of shop.
Here’s a description of our session:
Robert Thomas joins Bobby Debelak to discuss the…
New Article (Donald Kochan): “Involuntary Regulatory Servitudes: Correcting for ‘Regulatory Takings’ Terminological Problems”
Check this out, a new SSRN posting by lawprof Donald Kochan (George Mason/Scalia Law).
If this one is not a direct sequel to his earlier work on re-branding the “takings clause” (a piece we think is excellent and is part of the materials we teach in our Eminent Domain course at William and Mary Law), it does at least seem like a spiritual successor.
Here, Professor Kochan suggests that we’re being unclear when we use the term “regulatory takings” to describe those instances where an exercise of some governmental power other than eminent domain results in what feels like an eminent domain taking from the property owner’s viewpoint.
Instead, he argues, we should focus on the burdens the regulations place on an owner’s use (what the common law described as a servitude). To us, that seems very consistent with the Supreme Court’s approach, and proposals from other commentators. And it does focus the inquiry on the right question, namely what effect has a regulation put on an owner’s property rights. As that suggests, this should be a property-centric inquiry, and not on such unknowables such as the “character of the government action,” or whether an owner has “distinct investment-backed expectations.”
Here’s the Abstract:
This essay challenges the use of the term “regulatory takings” in our takings jurisprudence and scholarly discussion. The words we choose when developing doctrine matter. They can, even subconsciously, affect—by reducing, enlarging, distorting, limiting, or accurately shaping—the perceived and functional quality and character of the things they describe.
The better way to frame the inquiry underlying what is often called regulatory takings law should be to determine not whether there is a “regulatory taking” – some special kind of taking – but instead whether there is a regulation that amounts to a taking. Segmenting the judicial treatment of regulatory effects into a specialized analysis that takes it farther and farther away from an enterprise focused on equivalency between the private law of voluntary servitudes and the public law of what we should be calling involuntary regulatory servitudes. Regulations that restrict some but not all sticks in the property rights bundle should be characterized as the involuntary equivalent of the voluntary instrument, mechanism, or transfer that would have been necessary to achieve a parallel result. The essay proposes an alternative test for determining whether a regulation should be deemed a taking based on a comparison between the effect on the bundle from the regulation and determining whether the same effect in the private marketplace would have required a consensual, mutually beneficial exchange with appropriate compensation. This would better serve the meaning and purposes of the so-called Takings Clause.
The essay also documents the usage history of the regulatory takings label. To be sure, “regulatory takings” was not a dominate part of the takings lexicon before 1981. The first law review publication available in Westlaw to use the term “regulatory takings” is from 1965. The first court opinion to use the term came in a footnote in 1977. Briefing in advance of the 1980 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Agins v. Tiburon involved significant invocations of “regulatory takings” language across nearly a dozen briefs. But, the U.S. Supreme Court in its Agins opinion never uses the phrase “regulatory takings.” The first major court opinion to use “regulatory takings” language is the dissenting opinion by Justice William Brennan—joined by Justices Stewart, Marshall, and Powell—in the 1981 case of San Diego Gas & Elec. Co. v. City of San Diego. And, the Brennan dissent may have entrenched the term in the takings lexicon and is likely the impetus for widespread adoption of the term after 1981.
A must-read for all you takings…uh, dirt law…mavens.
Continue Reading New Article (Donald Kochan): “Involuntary Regulatory Servitudes: Correcting for ‘Regulatory Takings’ Terminological Problems”
A Takings Clause Vibe In A Second Amendment Case
We’ve been following a Second Amendment case, Hawaii v. Wilson, as it awaited the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision whether to accept review. Not because it is relevant to the usual subjects of this blog, but because a friend and colleague is Counsel of Record for the petitioner, and we’re just naturally interested in cases…
DC Cir: TikTok Taking? Uh, No. Because They Can Sell It To Americans
Holiday Dirt Law Movie: “Christmas at the Drive In” (aka Rudolph The Red-Nosed Redeveloper)
‘Tis the season for TV holiday movies. Here’s one to add to your list, as it is on-brand for us dirt lawyers. “Christmas at the Drive In” is described thusly:
“A property lawyer works to prove that her town’s Drive In Theater, a local institution, is not closed down at the holidays, finding…
Beyond The Hohfeldian Bundle: Cryptocurrencies, Blockchain, And The “Ordinary, Common” Meaning Of “Property”

We thought this was going to be about sticks.
We ain’t gonna pretend we understand cryptocurrency or blockchain. I’m just a caveman. Your world frightens and confuses me!
And there’s a lot there to confuse us in the U.S. Court of Appeals’ recent opinion in Van Loon v. Dep’t of the Treasury, No.
Another Semester Of Dirt Law In The Books
Once again, our fall duties included teaching two property law courses at the William and Mary Law School: Eminent Domain & Property Rights, and Land Use Controls. We started in mid-August, and just wrapped the classroom portion of the courses earlier this week. I say “classroom portions” because although we are done…



