|
We have attempted to indicate the name of the
Justice asking each question based on notes of people who attended the
argument. We believe these designations to be correct, but we cannot
guarantee their accuracy.
*
* * * *
TAHOE-SIERRA
PRESERVATION COUNCIL, INC., ET AL., Petitioners v.
TAHOE REGIONAL PLANNING AGENCY, ET AL.
No.
00-1167
SUPREME
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
January 7, 2002
,
Washington
,
D.C.
APPEARANCES:
MICHAEL M. BERGER, ESQ., Santa Monica,
California
; on behalf of
the Petitioners.
JOHN
G. ROBERTS, JR., ESQ., Washington,
D.C.
; on behalf of
the Respondents.
THEODORE
B. OLSON, ESQ., Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington,
D.C.; on behalf of the United States, as amicus curiae, supporting the
Respondents.
(
11:03 a.m.
)
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST: We'll hear argument next in Number 00-1167,
Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council v. The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
Mr. Berger.
MR. BERGER: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:
There are three important things that should be kept in mind while we're
addressing the issue this morning. First, the Tahoe Regional Planning
Agency totally prohibited a select group of individual landowners
scattered around
Lake Tahoe
from making
any use whatever of their land. These
prohibitions were never designed as the kind of planning time-out touted
by TRPA and its amici. Rather, they were amendments --
J. O’CONNOR: Well, what about a temporary order that says, gee, we're
required by State law to develop a plan and it's going to take us a few
months and, pending that, you can't develop? Now, does that invoke
immediately some per se taking rule?
MR. BERGER: It does if it's a flat prohibition of use, Your Honor, and
if there is --
J. O’CONNOR: A flat
prohibition that says, while we're developing this plan, which we think
won't take long, you can't go ahead with your development?
MR. BERGER: Justice O'Connor, I do believe that if it is a total
prohibition on use, and there is no use being made of the property at
the time, that it's part of the public project to have this freeze on
use, and it's the public that ought to be paying for that project, not
the individual landowners who are frozen out.
J. KENNEDY: Suppose that -- we'll have to play with the facts a little
bit, it's a hypothetical case, but that within a month from now the
World Trade Center is ready to be constructed and New York says -- and
the owner wants to rebuild highrises for office only, and the city says,
wait a minute, this is so important to the whole city, we need a year to
think about it, a year in addition to the usual zoning process. A
taking?
MR. BERGER: I think if they forbid the entire use of the property and
don't allow any applications for use to be made, don't allow the owner
to do anything --
J. KENNEDY: Well, they could use it for a parking lot.
MR. BERGER: If there is some reasonable, economically viable, productive
use that can be made of the property at the time, then I don't believe
we have a per se taking.
J. KENNEDY: Well, I guess my question -- and I know you had a more
general introduction before I interrupted you, is the use of a
moratorium a standard instrument of zoning policy, or is it very rare? I
couldn't find anything in the briefs on this.
MR. BERGER: It has, I believe, become much more rare these days. There's
an awful lot more planning going on. Agencies are doing a better job of
planning, and they find the need for this kind of a total prohibition on
development to be made.
J. SCALIA: My impression is that most of these moratoriums, or
moratoria, whatever they're called, would not be total. I mean, if
you're considering altering a rural zoning scheme that now doesn't have
any limit on number of residencies per acre, and you're thinking of,
say, no more than one house on every 3 acres, the only -- and that's
what you're thinking about, the only moratorium you would have to impose
would be no more -- until we make up our mind, no more than one house on
every 3 acres. It wouldn't say, nobody does anything while we're sucking
our thumb on this question, right?
MR. BERGER: That's correct, Justice Scalia --
QUESTION: And --
MR. BERGER: -- and I think that's the more typical kind of moratorium,
and the kind that most of the amici on the agency's side have been
talking about.
C. J. REHNQUIST: There was one
Minnesota
moratorium
that was -- seemed somewhat like this that had been sustained by, I
think the
Minnesota
appellate
court.
MR. BERGER: There was one, Your Honor, and I would submit that that
court erred. It happens. Lower courts do that sometimes.
(Laughter.)
MR. BERGER: And we believe that --
C. J.
REHNQUIST: So we notice.
(Laughter.)
MR. BERGER: And we believe that that simply is not an appropriate
precedent for this Court to follow.
J. BREYER: Why, why is it -- I guess this is going to be your basic
point. Why is it the case -- let's take not this moratorium, but let's
take a moratorium that lasts for a year, and after that time everyone
believes the board will allow certain kinds of development. Other things
being equal, that year of no use would probably have reduced the value
of the land by 5, 10 percent. Now, so why, since that's the effect of
the moratorium I'm imagining, should the public have to give
compensation for that small diminution in value?
MR. BERGER: Because it's not the diminution in value we're talking about
here, Your Honor. It's the total elimination of the ability to make use
of the property, and in all of this Court's cases you have talked about
denial of economically productive use of land, and what we're doing
here, and what you're talking about in your hypothetical, Justice Breyer,
is taking away the right to use that land.
It's as if I took away your car for a year and I parked it in the garage
and I kept good care of it, and I returned it to you at the end of the
year with no diminution in value whatsoever, or perhaps the 5 percent
that Your Honor hypothesized. You still would have been without the use
of that car for a year, and I think that you would be entitled to
compensation for the fact that I deprived you of the use of that car.
C. J. REHNQUIST: Well, certainly if the respondent here had simply said,
we're going to need your property for 3 years, and so we're going to
take a leasehold interest for 3 years, the respondent would have had to
compensate for that.
MR. BERGER: Chief Justice, I couldn't agree with that more, and I
believe that that is in fact what we're dealing with here.
J. SOUTER: No, but you're -- it seems to me you're not dealing with that
here, because in that hypothetical the person, the third party in fact
takes the property in the sense of using it for that party's own
benefit. Here, no one, the Tahoe Regional Planning Authority isn't using
the property for its benefit. It's saying that during this period of
time there are some things that you can't do.
MR. BERGER: That's true, Justice Souter, but frankly I don't see the
difference between them, because the Government --
J. SOUTER: Well, one difference is that the person taking in the one
hypothetical gets a considerable personal value, i.e., the use of a car,
or the use of property for a period of time. There's no such fact in
evidence here.
MR. BERGER: Absolutely true, but this Court's jurisprudence has always
examined cases like this from the impact on the property owner, not from
what the Government gains by the taking. Justice Holmes said that in the
Boston Chamber of Commerce case a century ago.
J. SOUTER: Isn't your argument, and wasn't your answer to Justice
Breyer's question in effect to invoke the kind of standard language
which has come out of the Lucas case? In other words, it is preventing
all use of the property, or all economically productive use of the
property, and yet Lucas garaged (?) that phrase in the circumstance in
which the denial of economic use was assumed to be permanent.
Here, we're dealing with a situation -- Justice Breyer's question dealt
with a situation in which the deprivation is assumed to be temporary, so
that it does make sense in his hypothetical to say, well, it reduces the
value of the property during the interim period maybe by 10 percent.
That is a very different economic fact from an indefinite, permanent
deprivation which would reduce the economic value of the property down
to something close to zero, and doesn't that distinction have to be
recognized, and isn't that the reason why the Lucas formula simply
cannot be used uncritically in this circumstance?
MR. BERGER: Justice Souter, I believe that that distinction gets
recognized at the valuation phase, not at the liability phase. In other
words, taking for a small period of time, or for less than the full life
of the property, would be compensated less than taking the full fee
interest.
J. SOUTER: Yes, but what you're really saying is, if the -- I think,
that if in Justice Breyer's hypothetical there is a diminution in the
value for this period of 10 percent, that you've got to compensate for
the full 10 percent, and it seems to me that our cases are pretty clear
in saying, that's not how you measure the compensation obligation.
That's the -- that's an example of taking, you know, the one stick out
of the bundle and saying because you can't use that one, you've got to
compensate 100 percent for that one, but I think our cases rule that
out, don't they?
MR. BERGER: Actually, your cases in quite a number of different
circumstances say that if you do take one important stick out of the
bundle, you may well have taken the property --
J. SOUTER: Permanently. Permanently.
MR. BERGER: Well, except in First English, Your Honor, where this Court
expressly said, and examined all the cases, that temporary takings are
constitutionally no different than permanent takings.
J. SOUTER: Well, except that that gets to the argument that the other
side makes throughout here, that the assumption of that statement was
that we had a taking in the first place, whereas the issue in this case
is whether we do have a taking.
MR. BERGER: Well, that's correct, and what we're talking about here is a
deprivation of all use. That's why we have a pretty clean case for the
Court to deal with here.
J. SOUTER: It's a deprivation of all use if you fit it into Lucas.
Lucas was a case that did not involve a permanent taking, so that it
seems to me your first argument has got to be not that the Lucas formula
can apply here, but that the Lucas formula should apply here as opposed
to this Penn Central formula. You've got to do that in order to get into
First English.
MR. BERGER: I agree with that completely, but I think that what we're
dealing with, if you examine the facts of the case, is that from the
time that these ordinances were enacted in 1981 until whatever end point
you want to look at, there was a total deprivation of use.
J. O’CONNOR: Well, Mr. Berger, you may well have been able to prevail
under the Penn Central approach, I assume, viewed in its entirety over
this period of time, but that was waived. Am I correct in that?
MR. BERGER: We did not present a Penn Central case, that's correct.
J. O’CONNOR: And all you
want is this pure and simple per se taking, as applied to, as it comes
to us, what is it, a 3-year period?
MR. BERGER: Well, there was this 3-year period chopped out at the
beginning of the time.
J. O’CONNOR: And that's
what we're focused on here as the case actually comes to us?
MR. BERGER: That appears to be what the Court is interested in, as the
Court reframed the question.
J. STEVENS: May I ask you this question, Mr. Berger? Just looking at
temporary takings, and just looking at the liability stage as opposed to
the valuation stage, is there a distinction in your view between a
regulatory taking and a physical taking?
MR. BERGER: I don't believe so, Justice Stevens. I think that this Court
did deal with that in the First English case, and it explained that
physical takings and regulatory takings are judged by the same
constitutional standards.
J. STEVENS: So that in your
view -- of course, the physical taking, even for 10 minutes, would be a
taking. There's no doubt about that. But your view is, even if the
regulation prohibits all use of a piece of property, an automobile,
whatever it may be, for 10 or 15 minutes, there is a taking. The damages
may be infinitesimal, but there's always -- past the liability stage.
MR. BERGER: If there is a total prohibition of use --
J. STEVENS: For 10 minutes.
MR. BERGER: -- there is liability. Now --
QUESTION: So --
J. GINSBURG: Mr. Berger, can you reconcile the different approach that
this Court has said goes for spatial separation, like the air space in
Penn Central, and time segregation? It seems to me that if the one -- if
Penn Central is the regime for splitting off the air rights, it should
also be the regime for splitting off a discrete period of time.
MR. BERGER: Your Honor, this Court and other courts have always dealt
with the time value of property, if I may, differently than they have in
these spatial terms. The fact is, leasehold interests, future interests
have always been recognized as independent items of property that are
independently protected by the Constitution.
If you had a piece of property that had a landlord and a tenant and a
lender and some remainder person --
J. STEVENS: But these are all physical takings.
MR. BERGER: -- with all interests, and it was condemned, all of them
would be entitled to compensation.
QUESTION: But that's --
J. STEVENS: These are all physical takings cases.
MR. BERGER: And this Court has said in First English that there is no
difference constitutionally, Justice Stevens, between the physical
takings and the regulatory takings.
QUESTION: Suppose I --
J. SCALIA: What do you do about the fact that there is a regulatory
taking of sorts whenever you have a permit system, let's say the normal
zoning regime in which you cannot construct any building on your acreage
without first applying and getting the approval of the zoning agency?
MR. BERGER: Justice Scalia --
J. SCALIA: During that period, there's been a total taking. You cannot
do anything with that property until you get the building approved.
MR. BERGER: Clearly you cannot do anything until you've gotten the
property approved, but it seems to me that there is a fundamental
difference between a landowner working through a system whose end
product is, at least theoretically and probably very likely, the
issuance of a permit to go ahead and develop something that is
economically productive on that land as opposed to being stuck in a
system where you're forbidden --
J. O’CONNOR: But that would have been during that interval of time it
meets your test. Nothing can be done until the permit issues, so a
fortiori, under your theory, compensation due.
MR. BERGER: I don't believe so, Justice O'Connor, because --
J. O’CONNOR: Well, that's what it sounds like.
Now, what about your basic zoning law? I'm going to, as a city, limit
the use of this property to one house per acre. You can't have unlimited
apartments or commercial property owner. Now, for the enactment of that,
is there a taking immediately?
MR. BERGER: No, Your Honor.
J. O’CONNOR: Well, you're permanently deprived of the use of it for
commercial purposes.
MR. BERGER: Yes, Your Honor, but you are not totally deprived of the use
of it.
J. KENNEDY: But can we get back to the basic question that Justice
Scalia asked, and Justice O'Connor asked it as well. I want your answer.
Why is it that a delay for purposes of ordinary zoning, which, let's
assume, prohibits you from any use of the property, is not a taking?
MR. BERGER: Because you are there in a process working toward the actual
development of the process, of the property, pardon me, in contrast to
being in a situation like these people are, where there is no process
for development. There is instead the desire --
J. KENNEDY: Let's assume that the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency
thought, in good faith, that there would be some development allowed,
but they needed a year to think about it. My -- that's the same as the
World Trade Center hypothetical. We know something very valuable is
going to be built, but you say it's a taking, and I don't understand the
difference between that and the regular zoning procedure.
MR. BERGER: The difference is that in the second situation there is a
conscious and total prohibition on use, and that's the purpose of the
regulation, is to prohibit the use. In the former situation, where
you're applying for a permit, the purpose of the regulation is not to
prohibit use but, in fact, to enable use.
J. KENNEDY: Well then, it seems to me you have to change your answer
about the World Trade Center hypothetical, where you say there's going
to be a very valuable use, we just don't know what it is, but we need a
year to think about it, in addition to the normal -- and you told me
that was taking, but now your rationale seems to me to back away from
that.
MR. BERGER: If they are in a process where there will be development at
the end, then I believe that there is not an automatic per se taking,
but it seems to me that what we're dealing with, if we've got a total
use prohibition, we do have a taking. It's a question of time.
J. STEVENS: But Mr. Berger, your -- it seems to me your deciding whether
the temporary taking is -- whether the temporary interference is a
taking or not depends on what's going to happen after the temporary
period expires, because in one situation you think, well, they know
they're going to get something valuable out of it, in the other they
don't, but that means that the test for the temporary period turns
entirely on an evaluation of the future.
MR. BERGER: Well, if I made it sound that way, Justice Stevens, I
apologize. I -- what I'm saying is that you have two different schemes
set up. One is a process leading toward development. The other is a
process of total blockage, and where the intent of the Government is
simply to block the use of property. We're not looking at the future --
J. STEVENS: Well, you're not suggesting they're doing it just for the
sole purpose of blocking the use. Don't they have some ultimate goal in
sight here?
MR. BERGER: Sometimes they may. Sometimes they don't.
J. STEVENS: But your -- you rest on the hypothesis that they are just
interested in a total blockage for a temporary period of time, and they
don't care what happens later.
MR. BERGER: But that is the fact that we're dealing with. We're dealing
with --
J. STEVENS: They don't have any interest in protecting the lake?
MR. BERGER: We have no question about their ability to protect the lake.
The question is how they do that, and what they've decided to do in
order to protect the lake is to prohibit these people from making any
use of their land.
J. SOUTER: But it seems to me in effect -- maybe this is a variant on
Justice Stevens' question -- that you're saying, what's really wrong
here is that this is not done in good faith, that this is not done,
let's say, in the case of the period of time necessary to get permits,
with an actual development in mind. This is called a moratorium, but
they mean something more than just moratorium, they just mean stop,
period, and it sounds to me as though you're making it turn on whether
it's good faith or bad faith.
MR. BERGER: Oh, I don't think it needs to. I think, in fact, in this
case, when they put this moratorium in the context not of -- they don't
even call it a moratorium. They did this as amendments to their Water
Quality Act. What they said was, these properties need to be kept frozen
in order to protect the clarity of Lake Tahoe.
C.J. REHNQUIST: And your argument in effect contrasts that with an
existing permit system whereby if you comply with certain requirements
you will ultimately end up with a permit, the purpose of which is to
make sure you do comply with the requirements.
MR. BERGER: Exactly, Chief Justice.
J. SCALIA: But you still have -- I mean, in the one case the regulating
agency has said, you can't do anything with your land while we're
thinking about the scheme we're going to adopt, and in the other case
the agency has said, just as categorically, you can't do anything with
your land while we consider your application. In both cases they're, for
a later regulatory purpose they're both saying, you can't do anything
with your land.
MR. BERGER: Justice Scalia, in a sense that is certainly true, but in
the case of the processing of a permit application, we know that there
is permitted use. It's there. It's in the books.
J. SCALIA: Not during the pendency. Not while the application is
pending.
MR. BERGER: The regulations of the agency say that for this property
there is permitted use. The question is how you make that use, and under
what conditions and circumstances, not whether there will be use at all,
where you have in the second situation a total prohibition on use and we
don't know what's going to happen at the end of that total prohibition
on use.
The key to it may be this case itself, where the light at the end of the
tunnel that they keep touting as the saving grace of this kind of a
regulatory regime turned out to be no light at all. There was a complete
continuation of the use prohibition when this temporary so-called period
ended.
J. O’CONNOR: Well, under your theory it would seem that -- suppose
that a building catches fire and is substantially destroyed by fire, and
the fire department comes, and the police department, and they block it
off for a period of time, no use while this is investigated, none,
property owner can do nothing, can't enter it, you're out of there. I
guess the city or the governing jurisdiction would have to pay the
property owner.
MR. BERGER: I don't think at that point, Your Honor, that that would be
a taking.
J. O’CONNOR: But it fits squarely within your argument.
MR. BERGER: No, I think that in that case, Your Honor, you would at
least be entitled to perhaps some nuisance examination. You've got a
wrecked building that is a hazard, and at least the Government would
have the ability to order the property cleaned up before anything else
could be done with it, and I think in those circumstances --
J. STEVENS: But that seems to make the question whether there's a taking
turn on the nature of the motive of the -- underlying the regulation or
the prohibition, and I thought your position was, regardless of the good
faith and the great public interest in doing it, the State has to pay
when it does this.
MR. BERGER: Your Honor, I think we all have to live with what this Court
called the nuisance exception when it decided the Lucas case, and that
there are some things that the Government can do that prohibit all use
that are not compensatory.
J. BREYER: Are you satisfied with the standard that says, every
Government regulation is a candidate for a taking, just as every speech
act is a First Amendment candidate, but it's actually a taking in this
area only when the impact of the Government regulation is not part of a
reasonable process looking towards a reasonable form of regulated
development?
MR. BERGER: I think I could accept that, Justice Breyer.
J. BREYER: Well, if that's so, they're going to say they win, because
they're going to say, of course, this was an effort, reasonably, to
regulate Lake Tahoe over a period of time. It's very complicated, it
didn't last -- it lasted a long time, but no more than necessary.
MR. BERGER: Oh, I would disagree with that characterization. This was
not an effort to regulate Lake Tahoe. This was an effort to prevent the
use of these properties. Certainly they --
J. KENNEDY: But that's a reasonableness calculation, and that's the Penn
Central aspect rather than the more categorical approach that you're
urging upon us, I should think.
MR. BERGER: Your Honor, if they had come up with a nuanced, subtle
regulation that had something to it other than the meat ax approach that
the agency took in this case, I think you would have a Penn Central-type
analysis, but what we've got in this case is not anything subtle at all.
We've got a complete, easy, quick prohibition, and --
J. O’CONNOR: What is the status today? What is it, 22 years later?
MR. BERGER: We're 22 years later.
J. O’CONNOR: What's the status today of the properties affected by
this suit?
MR. BERGER: The clients that I represent are still, for the most part,
unable to do anything. There is the new plan put in in 1987, which this
Court looked at in the Suitum case, and some of the people, those in the
position of Mrs. Suitum, in the stream environment zones, are still
totally prohibited from using their land. Most of the people are still
totally prohibited from using their land.
A large number of them have sold their land to Government agencies that
were buying them up at bargain basement prices, at nothing approaching
what would, an appraiser would call fair market value, but the value of
land that couldn't be developed, in order to mitigate their losses, and
as the court approved in the Del Monte Dunes case, what they'd like to
do is to make themselves whole.
J. O’CONNOR: Well, is it your position that all of the properties
involved in this petition are, today, still totally deprived of any use
whatever?
MR. BERGER: I believe, Justice O'Connor, there may be a handful of them
that under the 1987 plan, and the regulations that came under that in
1989, were finally released and allowed to do something, but it's only a
small number, and for the most part these properties are still unused
and unusable.
J. O’CONNOR: Is it your position that the application of the Penn
Central approach would not result in appropriate compensation
determinations at the end of the day?
MR. BERGER: I don't know that, Your Honor. As a pragmatic matter, doing
a Penn Central approach on a case that involves hundreds and hundreds of
individual properties would have been a nightmarish litigation that only
the wealthiest of landowners would be able to afford and, particularly
in light of the clear prohibition of use that they decided that they
needed, we thought that it made more sense to do a Lucas-type approach
than a Penn Central approach in this case.
J. STEVENS: May I just ask this one question? With regard to those who
have subsequently been permitted to develop their land, it's your view
that you're nevertheless entitled to a takings compensation for the
period which the moratorium was in effect?
MR. BERGER: Yes --
J. STEVENS: Yes.
MR. BERGER: -- Justice Stevens, that's true.
I'd like to reserve the rest of my time, Mr. Chief Justice, if I may.
C. J.
REHNQUIST: Very well, Mr. Berger.
***
Mr. Roberts.
MR. ROBERTS: Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the
Court:
Petitioners'
only takings claim before the court of appeals and his only -- their
only takings claim before this Court is a facial per se claim. That
means that their contention is that the mere enactment of the temporary
moratorium in this case effected a taking with respect to every parcel
to which it applied -- that's the facial aspect -- without any
consideration of the reasons for the moratorium. That's the per se
aspect. And what is more, that bold claim is limited at this point to
the temporary moratorium in effect from August '81 until April 1984.
C. J. REHNQUIST: Mr. Roberts, you described it as a bold claim.
Supposing it had gone on for 10 years.
MR. ROBERTS: In 10 --
C. J. REHNQUIST: Would it be still bold?
MR. ROBERTS: On the facial aspect I think so, Your Honor. I think doing
the Penn Central analysis and not the Lucas analysis, so long as it's
not a permanent deprivation abuse.
Now, certainly a 10-year claim would have a much harder row to hoe
against a takings challenge, but I would like to know the impact on the
property's value, why the 10 years was necessary, if it was, the sorts
of things that are factored under Penn Central.
J. SCALIA: Well, you could do a Penn Central -- you could have done Penn
Central in Lucas. I mean, Penn Central is wonderful. We could apply it
to everything, but as Mr. Berger pointed out, that's a terribly
complicated analysis, enormously expensive for property owners to have
to go through, which is why you have cases like Lucas.
MR.
ROBERTS: This Court said Lucas applied only in the rare circumstance, a
total ban on economic reproductive use.
J. SCALIA: Suppose I take a 3-year leasehold, right. The Government
comes in and says, we're taking this property for 3 years, not a
permanent taking, just a 3-year taking.
MR. ROBERTS: That --
J. SCALIA: We do a Penn Central analysis of that?
MR. ROBERTS: Oh, no. If the Government condemns a leasehold, that's a
taking, and compensation is due.
J. KENNEDY: All right, suppose in this case that one of these barred
owners leased the property to someone who's going to put a mobile home
on it for a year, the moratorium comes in effect, assume the mobile home
can't be -- is that a taking of the leasehold, of the lessee's --
MR. ROBERTS: No.
J. KENNEDY: -- interest?
MR. ROBERTS: No. You don't sever up the property interest and -- so that
it corresponds to the extent of the regulation and then say --
J. KENNEDY: You're taking from the lessee. That's all he's got.
MR. ROBERTS: Well, the right at issue here is the right to build
residences, to develop the property.
J. KENNEDY: No. My hypothetical is that it applies to a mobile home and
the guy who leases for -- the lot for a year, and then TRPA says you
can't put the mobile home on there for a year. They take this entire
leasehold. Compensable?
MR. ROBERTS: It would first of all be under the Penn Central analysis,
and the economic impact --
J. KENNEDY: Why, if it's a total taking?
C. J. REHNQUIST: General Motors certainly didn't do Penn Central.
MR. ROBERTS: No, but the other -- the distinction is the one this Court
talked about in Loretto, between -- you mentioned the World War II
condemnation cases. The Pee Wee Coal case, the Government came in and
occupied the coal mine to prevent a strike. That was a taking. In
Central Eureka they said, you cannot use the gold mine, and this Court
said, that's different, that's not a taking.
That's the type of distinction that we're talking about here between
physical appropriation or, extended to Lucas, a ban on total economic
use, and the temporary regulation that's at issue here. Because the
regulation is temporary, the land retains economic value.
J. KENNEDY: I'm still not sure of your answer. Your answer is that in my
hypothetical about the 1-year lease that's taken from the lessee, it has
to be a Penn Central analysis because?
MR. ROBERTS: Because you're starting out with a property -- presumably
the regulation applies to the property generally, and it just so happens
that this one parcel has been severed out into a leasehold, and in doing
that, that is a question that has to be addressed before you get to the
analysis, should you sever out the affected property interest to a
leasehold.
C. J. REHNQUIST: But you could have made that same argument in General
Motors, and I think the Government did, that you shouldn't just treat it
as a leasehold, you've got to value the whole property. The court says
no, there was a leasehold in effect, that's what the Government took,
that's what the Government has to pay for.
MR. ROBERTS: But if -- if this Court is -- in its past takings cases,
when it's been presented with a regulation that applies to a discrete
property interest, it hasn't said, well, let's redefine the effective
property interests to that. It didn't do it in Penn Central, it didn't
do it in Keystone Bituminous, and it didn't do it in the construction
laborers case.
The way the property was held by the petitioners in this case is fee
simple. This regulation applied to fee simple property. It did not
affect the value anywhere near the extent that the regulation in Lucas
did.
J. KENNEDY: No, but just to make it clear, in my hypothetical -- I know
it didn't happen, but in my hypothetical, no recovery because?
MR. ROBERTS: No, I'm not sure it's no recovery, but I am sure that it's
still evaluated under Penn Central, because --
J. SOUTER: But Mr. Roberts, if you evaluate it under Penn Central, would
it be legitimate to evaluate it this way. I've assumed it would be, but
maybe I'm wrong. Assume that the leasehold is not physically taken, so
that the Government doesn't substitute itself for the trailer owner and
use the property. It's strictly a prohibition of use. I assumed that
under Penn Central the lessee would have his claim against the lessor
because the lessor was not delivering. The lessor would not have a claim
for a permanent deprivation here because there, with respect to the
lessor there would only be the temporary taking.
MR. ROBERTS: Well --
J. SOUTER: So that the lessee would probably come out okay against a
different party. The lessor would be in the same position that the
lessor would be in if there had never been a lease. Is that the way it
would work?
MR. ROBERTS: Well, presumably the impact of regulation would be
something that would be addressed in the lease agreement itself.
J. SOUTER: Yes.
MR. ROBERTS: I mean, if they were leasing it to build a mobile home and
it turns out they can't, who bears the responsibility for that, again a
matter between the lessor and the lessee.
The important point is that the, what the petitioners are arguing for is
an extension of the Lucas rule which applied in a, as the Court said,
the rare circumstance in which all economic use is prohibited, and the
Court emphasized in Lucas that that had the consequence of rendering the
property valueless. This is how the Court phrased the question presented
in Lucas, whether the act's dramatic effect on the economic value of
Lucas' lot accomplished a taking.
Well, here, there is no dramatic effect on the economic value of the
affected lots, because we're talking about temporary regulation for a
limited time.
QUESTION: Well, but does --
J. O’CONNOR: Well, in light of what's happened, we know it's been 22
years, and presumably many of these properties will never be allowed to
be developed. Is there no end in sight? Can we not look at that as a
taking?
MR. ROBERTS: First, Your Honor, my understanding of the record is quite
different from my brother's. If you look at the pretrial order, Exhibit
A, pretrial order filed July 17, 1998, it describes the situations with
respect to each of the properties. Most of them have been sold long ago.
Of those that are not sold, two-thirds have a score that makes them
buildable under the '87 plan, so two-thirds of the petitioners who still
own property can build on those lots according to the record in this
case, and that is just petitioners' allegations.
J. GINSBURG: When you say sold, do you mean at the bargain price that
Mr. Berger referred to, sold to --
MR. ROBERTS: Sold typically to the Government buy-out agencies, I
wouldn't say at a bargain price.
J. SCALIA: Sold to the Government agencies who will do with it just
exactly what is achieved by the Government's not taking position of it,
that is, nothing. I find this distinction between whether the Government
takes possession of the land versus whether the Government doesn't take
possession of the land quite unrealistic --
MR. ROBERTS: Well --
J. SCALIA: -- where you're talking about a Government that wants to
assure that the land lies fallow. The Government achieves entirely what
it wants by simply saying, nobody shall do anything with the land. That
-- why should the Government condemn the land? It doesn't have to.
MR. ROBERTS: That's not, of course, what we're talking about here. What
we're talking about here is a time-out for a limited period while the
agency carries out its responsibility to determine what can be done with
the land.
J. BREYER: All right, so how does he prove that? What about the
one-third who could never build?
MR. ROBERTS: Well --
J. BREYER: What happens to them? What is your view of the correct thing
he should have done? Is a person who never is allowed to build, and
never can use the property at all, simply out of luck, if what they say
is we're having a 10-year, a 30-year procedure of 3-year moratoriums, 10
at a time or something like that? How is it supposed to work, in your
opinion?
MR. ROBERTS: Well, the first thing I'd say is, you bring an as-applied
claim and not a facial claim. The facial claim is the mere enactment of
this temporary moratorium effective taking. Well then, don't talk to me
about what happened 15 years later, if the mere enactment of the
temporary moratorium is your complaint. That's a different case, and he
brought that case, and it was thrown out because it was too late.
There were challenges brought to the '84 plan, there were challenges
brought to the '87 plan. Those challenges failed, and now the effort is
to link those challenges up to what's left, the little tail on the dog
of this temporary moratorium that started the process.
J. SCALIA: How does an as-applied challenge go? What if you make an
as-applied challenge. What would you have to prove? Would you have to
prove that any intelligent agency could make up its mind and, you know,
either fish or cut bait within a year? Suppose --
MR. ROBERTS: If the as-applied challenge is to the temporary moratorium?
J. SCALIA: Yes.
MR. ROBERTS: Well, you go through the Penn Central factors, and if it's
taking too long, that's certainly something pertinent on the character
of the Government action. That's what other courts have looked to.
J. SCALIA: No, no, but it goes beyond Penn Central if you're no -- if it
is no longer an honest moratorium to decide what you're going to do with
the land, then you're out of Penn Central. Then it's just a taking.
You're kidding us. You only need a year to decide what you want to do.
You've imposed a moratorium for 5 years. Why should I have to go through
Penn Central? Four of those years is just prohibiting me from using my
land with no other governmental purpose in mind except the prohibition.
MR. ROBERTS: And that's one of those things that they would have to
show. Here, of course, the district court found that the planning effort
was undertaken as speedily as possible.
J. SCALIA: But you acknowledge that if, in an as-applied challenge,
there's a showing that the agency does not need 3 years or 5 years or
whatever, that the thing could reasonably have been done in 1 year,
everything beyond the 1 year is then a taking?
MR. ROBERTS: No. You have to go through the other factors. This is not a
per se analysis.
J. SCALIA: Why?
MR. ROBERTS: The other factors include the impact on the property.
You're claiming a taking. What was the effect on your property?
C. J. REHNQUIST: Well, what if -- let's take a hypothesis where the
moratorium is 10 years. Now, you still go through this thing that you're
talking about? It cannot be long enough ever to be a per se taking?
MR. ROBERTS: Well, even the court of appeals recognized that the
moratorium is long enough so that the present value of the uses that
might be allowed is de minimis, then perhaps the categorical rule would
apply, and 10 years seems like it's going to be too long for the
Government to figure out and carry out its responsibilities and
planning, but I wouldn't say that we try to find a point in time at
which suddenly we shift from the accepted Penn Central analysis to the
Lucas per se analysis.
C. J. REHNQUIST: Well, but yet you agree that shift has to take place
somewhere along the continuum of time.
MR. ROBERTS: I guess what I'm saying is at some point calling something
a temporary moratorium is a misuse of the label. If it's 30 years,
that's too long.
Now, the best that Justice Holmes could do was say that when it goes too
far it becomes a taking, and I may not be able to do much better, but
the Penn Central factors allow consideration of things like, what is the
need for it? The need may not be sufficiently compelling to justify a
moratorium of 2 years, or the need may be sufficiently compelling to
justify a longer moratorium. What was the impact on your -- the
property?
Keep in mind, the petitioners submitted no evidence of impact on value.
We have no idea from the record what the impact of the temporary
moratorium was, other than the evidence that we submitted which shows
that properties were sold for significant amounts of value during the
period of the temporary moratorium, which makes sense.
A temporary ban on development doesn't render property valueless. If you
have two parcels of property, one subject to a permanent ban on use, and
the other subject to a temporary ban, it is true, as some of the amici
say, the permanent ban could be made temporary and the temporary ban
could be made permanent, but you're not going to pay the same price for
both of those parcels of property. The one that's subject to the
temporary ban is going to have a higher market value, reflecting the
fact that future uses are available, or will be available or not,
depending on the plan that's ultimately adopted.
J. SCALIA: I suppose that depends on how much any prospective buyer
would believe that the temporary ban is really temporary, or how much
they believe that it's going to be strung out and extended, and if worst
comes to worse, and the Government can't pick it up at bargain prices it
will pay compensation to get rid of the land. I --
MR. ROBERTS: And that's like the petitioners' effort to link their lost
challenges to the permanent land use plan to their challenge to the
temporary moratorium.
QUESTION: Mr. --
MR. ROBERTS: The district court --
J.
STEVENS: Excuse me. Had you finished your answer?
MR. ROBERTS: I was just going to say that the district court in this
case specifically found that the agency acted in good faith throughout,
so the idea that the temporary moratorium to allow planning to take
place was some kind of a sham for a permanent --
J. O’CONNOR: Well, but it also found there was a total deprivation of
use for X amount of time.
MR. ROBERTS: Only looked at from that period. Only looked at for the
32-month period, and our submission is that that's the improper way to
carve up the property interest and say, oh, it's a total taking, because
we're going to only look at the property that was taken.
J. STEVENS: Mr. Roberts, in answer to one of Justice O'Connor's
questions about a hypothetical fire damage case Mr. Berger referred to
the nuisance exception as possibly taking the case out of the whole
takings area. At what point in what procedure would the possible
availability of the nuisance defense arise or be considered with respect
to polluting Lake Tahoe?
MR. ROBERTS: Well, we raised the claim before the court of appeals that
one reason there was no taking, even if Lucas applied, was because of
the nuisance, et cetera. The Court didn't find it necessary to reach
that issue.
J. STEVENS: I see.
J. GINSBURG: And so the district court said there wasn't -- that a
nuisance hadn't been made out. The district court said that, didn't it?
MR. ROBERTS: That's right, and we appealed that, and the court of
appeals didn't find --
C. J. REHNQUIST: And what was your argument to the court of appeals,
that this was a nuisance exception?
MR. ROBERTS: That given the impact on the lake of development, that it
fell within the California and Nevada nuisance requirements.
C. J. REHNQUIST: That it all should be a park.
MR. ROBERTS: Not that it should all be a park, but that further
development would threaten the serious and, in fact, irreparable harm to
the lake. That's the basis for the Government action in this case that
the petitioners have never challenged.
But I want to emphasize in concluding that it's important to remember
that the issue is not whether a total ban on use for this period effects
a taking. The issue is whether a temporary moratorium from August of '81
to April of '84 for the purpose of carrying out the responsibility of
undertaking planning with respect to these lots is on its face with
respect to every lot that it applied to a per se taking without regard
to the reason.
J. BREYER: Phrased that way, it's quite clearly in your favor, but I
think they're seeing this as a group of landowners thinking from the
beginning, whatever the justification for this, and the justification is
excellent, saving Lake Tahoe, it's going to end up that we won't be able
to use our land for anything, and we've been able to tell you that from
day one, so we brought a case right off the bat that we knew that was
going to happen, and then year after year went by when people told us,
maybe you'll be able to build, maybe you won't, which really wasn't so,
we knew we wouldn't, and then it ended up that we couldn't, all right.
Now, what are we supposed to say to them? Aren't they supposed to have
some remedy at law? And that's I think why he wanted to hear all his
questions, not just one, and there is that lurking in this case, and I'm
not totally sure how to deal with it.
MR. ROBERTS: Well, first of all they waited until the '84 plan took
effect to file their lawsuit. That suggests to me the gripe was with the
permanent ban, not so much the temporary moratorium.
Second of all, the supposition in your question makes this not a facial
challenge. In other words, it's not the mere enactment. It's because we
know what's really going on here. That's an as-applied challenge, that's
not a facial challenge, so the landowners in your case said, as, in
fact, some have, bring an as-applied challenge saying, as applied to me
this is a taking.
J. SCALIA: So do you agree that a temporary moratorium that ripens into
a permanent ban is a taking?
I mean, you know, let's assume that I sold the property during the
temporary moratorium which later ripens into a total ban, and I claim
that I should have been compensated for those 3 years that I owned the
property without any ability to do -- does that constitute a taking?
MR. ROBERTS: I think the period in which the agency's justification is,
we need a time-out to undertake planning so that we're not locking the
barn door after the horse escapes, should be evaluated separately from
the period in which the agency says, this is the land use plan, and if
you've got a gripe with us you can challenge that. Those are two
separate periods. The character of the Government action is different in
those two periods.
J. SOUTER: Okay, let's assume that they are analyzed separately, and it
is found that for the period Justice Scalia is talking about the
Government really was not acting in good faith. Its plan, its intent
right from that moment on, from the first day on, was to ban all
development whatsoever. In that case, does he have a claim for a
complete taking during the 3-year period?
MR. ROBERTS: Oh, certainly, yes.
J. SOUTER: Okay.
MR. ROBERTS: Yes. I don't think it's a facial claim, because it depends
on more than looking specifically at the face of the ordinance.
J. SOUTER: So it's a question basically of good faith and intent --
MR. ROBERTS: And here the --
J. SOUTER: -- and understanding what they're doing.
MR. ROBERTS: The district court at petition appendix at page 69 said the
agency acted in complete good faith, and completed its responsibilities
as quickly as could be expected.
Thank you, Your Honor.
J. KENNEDY: If the court of appeals opinion is just simply affirmed just
as is, weren't we wasting our time in First English?
MR. ROBERTS: Oh, no. First English didn't address the question of when a
temporary regulation can become a taking. It said that if you have a
temporary taking, and it assumed arguendo that there was a taking for a
temporary period, compensation is required, and we don't dispute that at
all.
J. KENNEDY: Yes, but as -- assume the court of appeals opinion is the
law. First English wasn't a taking. That's your whole point.
MR. ROBERTS: Well, that's what the California State courts determined on
remand when they were addressed with the question.
J. KENNEDY: No, no, just talk about Federal law. You're saying that
First English could not have been a taking, so we were just waiting our
time up here.
MR. ROBERTS: Oh, no, no, not at all. First English could have been a
taking. It would have required an evaluation under, again, Penn Central,
not Lucas, to determine whether the regulation at issue there, both the
temporary and permanent, and both were at issue at different points in
First English, constituted a taking.
But once you assume that that was a taking, and you assume the results
of that analysis, then it is a taking. Compensation is required.
C. J. REHNQUIST: Thank you, Mr. Roberts.
MR. ROBERTS: Thank you, Your Honor.
***
C. J. REHNQUIST: General Olson, we'll hear from you.
GENERAL OLSON: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court:
The colloquy so far today seems to me to illustrate the wisdom of
Justice O'Connor's comment in her concurring opinion in the Palazzolo
case last June that the Court should avoid per se rules in the area of
regulatory taking.
Petitioners knew per se rule of takings jurisprudence, taken to its
logical end, would make every freeze in the status quo, however brief,
during a permitting, planning, or rezoning process equivalent to a
condemnation, to use their words --
C. J. REHNQUIST: I don't understand it that way, General Olson. I
thought Mr. Berger separated out, or at least certainly tried to
separate out the normal zoning process where you're working towards a
permit and a permit is realistically possible at the end of the road.
GENERAL OLSON: It seems to me that's a very difficult distinction for
him to make, because it requires an analysis of the nature of the
Government's interest in each particular permitting process. We know
that they can be short, we know that they can be long, we know that they
can be comprehensive.
C. J. REHNQUIST: I don't think that's necessarily true. I think you can
segregate, at least to my satisfaction, the idea of a zoning requirement
in existence -- you have to file for a permit -- and basically to show
that you comply with the zoning requirements. In other words, if you're
going to have zoning at all, a permit process is almost necessary as
opposed to a moratorium which doesn't say, you know, look, we're going
to look over your application and decide whether you can build. It
simply says no, you can't build.
GENERAL OLSON: Well, what we would submit is that that zoning permitting
process is part of the background principles of land use, land
regulation, just as temporary moratoria have always been, that when
there's rezoning process, a process referred to by this court in the
First English case, that process may have to come to a halt.
The purpose for the temporary moratoria here was to allow the agency to
develop a sensible plan and, as Mr. Roberts has already noted by
reference to the record, there's no indication that it was not in good
faith. The length of the period, 32 months, was held by the district
court to be a reasonable time to accomplish the objectives. The purpose
of the plan, as acknowledged by the petitioners themselves, is that the
purpose for the plan was to prevent the degradation of the lake and they
indicated that a slowdown -- in their brief, they mentioned in their
brief that a slowdown in building permits was an appropriate
governmental response to that measure.
Now, in each instance the question is going to be, how long did it take,
was it in good faith, what was the Government up to? Here, the
Government was attempting to preserve the value that Mr. Berger's
clients wanted. They themselves purchased their property and planned to
build a home on it because of the pristine quality of the lake. They
make the argument in their brief that it was being degraded, that
something had to be done about it. A limit on development they say -- I
think it's on page 3 of their brief -- was the logical objective to
solve, approach to solve that particular problem.
So what Lake Tahoe, the regional board that we're dealing with here
today, was doing was saying, wait a minute, before we destroy the lake
let's stop, let's have a process in which we evaluate how to solve the
problem that every landowner around the lake, including the petitioners,
want to have solved.
J. SCALIA: Well, that's extraordinary. You refer to it, General Olson,
as just a traditional moratorium. I don't think this is a traditional
moratorium at all. I think it's quite extraordinary to just say, you
know, a time out, nobody does anything with this land. I just don't
think that that's the normal kind of moratorium. Nobody does anything
beyond the limited use that we anticipate we will ultimately impose.
It's very rare that you impose a complete prohibition of use, because
that's a condemnation.
GENERAL OLSON: It may be unusual, but it is not so rare. In fact, page 5
of the petitioners' brief refers to the two --
J. SCALIA: Two cases, as I recall, that involve -- total, right, yes.
GENERAL OLSON: Two instances, and the first one that they refer to is to
aid the preparation of a comprehensive plan by precluding developers
from obtaining permits that conflict with the plan being drafted. That
is precisely almost the same words that were used by the legislator in
connection with the compact that suggested that there ought to be a
moratorium. This is the compact itself in the 1980 amendments. It
specifically said that it was necessary temporarily to halt works of
development in the region which might otherwise absorb the entire
capability of the region for further development or direct it out of
harmony with the ultimate plan.
Now, if there is some challenge to the good faith of what was going on
here, that is not this case. If there's some challenge to what happened
afterwards -- I think the questions Justice Stevens asked point out
that, well, if there was something that was done improperly to take
these people's property with respect to what happened afterwards, or how
far it went, or how it affected a particular property owner, that is the
Penn Central test.
Now, for tactical reasons, the property owners in this case decided not
to pursue a Penn Central case. We heard here today that because it would
be too expensive and too complicated for any individual property owner
to bring that case. Well, that is going to be the case every time
anybody challenges Government action as a taking of a piece of property.
These property owners decided to pool their interest and decide not to
show what the Government's interest was, the degree of invasion in
individual property rights, how much it hurt, whether or not it was in
good faith and so forth, so they eschewed tactically all of those
considerations.
Now, instead --
J. SCALIA: With some reason, because they couldn't use their property at
all -- at all.
GENERAL OLSON: They couldn't use their property at all as far as this
case was concerned, and the question presented in this case, for a
limited period of time while a Government agency was acting to address
the problem that they acknowledge, because they acknowledge that
continued development along the lines that was occurring at the time
this moratorium was adopted was degrading the lake and destroying their
property.
J. SCALIA: That's fine, and that's a general social problem for which
the entire society should pay.
GENERAL OLSON: Well --
J. SCALIA: If, indeed, you do need that time to figure out what to do
with the lake, why should some individuals bear the burden of that
necessary pause to consider what to do?
GENERAL OLSON: I submit it's the teaching of this Court that not every
delay, not every intrusion on the use of property, not every incursion
on property rights constitutes a taking under the Fifth Amendment.
J. SCALIA: I understand that, but these aren't the only people who are
using Lake Tahoe. They're preserving Lake Tahoe for all of the citizens
of that State and for citizens of other States, for that matter.
GENERAL OLSON: Well, Justice --
J. SCALIA: And yet they're saying, since we need time to think about
this, we are preventing total, total, all the use of your land for 3
years.
GENERAL OLSON: Well --
J. SCALIA: I don't see that it seems to me fair that these people should
bear the whole brunt of the moratorium.
GENERAL OLSON: They haven't established that they have bore the whole
brunt. They haven't established the degree to which their individual
property rights were violated, or the extent of their intrusion. They
haven't done all of the things that this Court --
J. SCALIA: They've certainly established a common situation. That is,
every one of them, presumably, was prevented from using the property for
3 years.
GENERAL OLSON: Because the use of that property, as they acknowledge,
would have destroyed the very property rights that they're here seeking
to vindicate, and what we're saying is that in many different situations
the Government might have lots of reasons, local governments, State
governments, Federal Governments, to cause a pause in the development.
Now, what --
J. SCALIA: I agree with that, and that's what worries me.
GENERAL OLSON: That's right, and --
J. SCALIA: That's exactly what worries me.
GENERAL OLSON: And that's why this Court in the Penn Central case gave
an opportunity to use a reasoned decisionmaking to solve the problem, to
find out how far is too far. To ask that very question that Justice
Holmes did is to entertain the answer. We need to know how -- in order
to determine how far is too far, this Court has said repeatedly we need
to look at the circumstances.
What -- the rule that petitioners are proposing interdicts that judicial
fact-finding, reasoned decisionmaking process. What it also does is
cause the permitting agency, the Lake Tahoe Regional Planning Board, to
try to do this on a permit-by-permit, quasi-adjudicative process, as
opposed to what they did do, as instructed by Congress, a legislative
process in which things would stop, reasoned decisionmaking would take
place --
C. J. REHNQUIST: Well, no one is challenging their authority in the
sense of acting for the Government, but the fact that they were
instructed to do it by Congress doesn't make it any more or any less of
a taking.
GENERAL OLSON: Well, I understand that, Mr. Chief Justice, but what I'm
saying is that the Government agencies that looked at this problem
decided that it had to be solved in a global way. This was Government
acting in a way we want it to act, in a legislative process with
transparency to look at the whole problem and, if there had been a
taking because it was too long, or too much of an intrusion, there is a
remedy under the Fifth Amendment and it's described, how you get to that
remedy is described in this Court's jurisprudence in the Penn Central
case. The petitioners here sought not to pursue that remedy.
J. STEVENS: May I ask, do you understand your opponent to be arguing
that a curfew would be a taking?
GENERAL OLSON: A taking -- well, a curfew --
J. STEVENS: I remember in Honolulu during the war you couldn't go out
after certain hours of the night, and so the property was totally
useless when the curfew -- would that be a taking under --
GENERAL OLSON: Well, I think that they're arguing that any momentary
suspension of the use of property would be a taking.
J. STEVENS: So it would be.
C. J. REHNQUIST: Thirteenth Amendment.
***
Mr. Berger, you have 4 minutes remaining.
MR. BERGER: Thank you, Your Honor. Let me touch briefly on a couple of
things, if I might.
First, General Olson talked about this Court's cases that generally have
built on the question of, we can't tell how far the regulation goes
until we know how far they went. Well, that's true, and in this case we
know precisely how far they went. They totally prohibited the use of all
of the property owners who are here in front of this Court, and it's
that question that we're here to answer. When we know how far they went,
we don't need to get into any detailed, factual investigation of other
circumstances.
Justice Kennedy asked about the First English case, and whether the
Court wasted its time there if the Ninth Circuit's opinion in this case
is simply affirmed, and I would have to conclude that that is indeed
what happened. The clear message of merely affirming what the Ninth
Circuit did in this case would be to tell all the lower courts that they
need to pay no attention to First English, because this Court laid out a
lot of clear messages in the First English decision that the Ninth
Circuit paid no attention to, and --
J. GINSBURG: But it also said we merely hold -- this is from First
English, stating the holding. We merely hold that where the Government's
activities have already worked a taking of all use of property, no
subsequent action by the Government can relieve it of the duty to
provide compensation for the period during which the taking was
effective.
MR. BERGER: Absolutely, Justice Ginsburg, that is true, and -- but what
the Court said in First English was that we're limiting, you were
limiting the case to what you called the facts presented in that case,
and the facts presented in that case were a temporary moratorium for
about the same length of time as the one that we're dealing with here,
which froze all use of that property and, in fact, in my belief had a
better justification for it, because it had a health and safety
justification, which this one doesn't.
As you, Justice Ginsburg, pointed out, the trial court examined at great
length the question of whether these people were creating a nuisance and
concluded that there was no nuisance created here. As much as he was
concerned about the fact that continued development around Lake Tahoe
might change the color of the lake, there was no health problem with
changing the color of the lake. There was no safety problem with
changing the color of the lake. We would all be the poorer, I think --
J. GINSBURG: But that question was not resolved on appeal.
MR. BERGER: That's correct, the court of appeals did not deal with that
question, only the district court did, and its analysis is there for you
to look at.
The 1980 compact amendments that the two legislatures and Congress went
through are interesting in this case, because while they, in fact, said
there was a need for a moratorium, but the moratorium that the
legislators and Congress agreed to was not the one that TRPA enacted
here. They said, what we need is a cap on the number of building permits
that are issued, and that's in the record here, too, and they said we're
going to limit the number of building permits that each city and county
can issue to the number that they issued in 1978.
The first thing that TRPA did after that was enacted was to say, we need
to rearrange that, and we're going to say, you can issue those permits,
but you can't issue any of them to these people. These people are
totally frozen out, and they're being frozen out as part of a major
public project so that we can clarify the waters in Lake Tahoe, and it
just seems to us that where you have these people who are being asked to
make this sacrifice on behalf of the greater public good, either of the
people who already own homes around Lake Tahoe, and whose lands
therefore gets more valuable, or on behalf of the rest of us who don't
own homes up there but who might like to vacation there so that we can
also enjoy the beauties of Lake Tahoe, that those people shouldn't be
left flapping in the breeze with no compensation for the fact that
they're the ones that have been asked to pay for this project.
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST: Thank you, Mr. Berger.
The case is submitted.
(Whereupon, at 12:03 p.m., the case in the above-entitled matter was
submitted.)
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