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The New Importance of Inverse Condemnation Suits:
Acquiring Just Compensation When the Government Engages in Over-Regulation of Land
by Stephen M. Eisdorfer
Within the past several years, New
Jersey’s environmental regulations
and statutes have dramatically reduced
or destroyed the economic value of
hundreds of thousands of acres of
otherwise developable land. Separately
and together, the Highlands Act,
coastal zone (CAFRA) regulations,
and DEP regulations on stream
encroachment, flood hazards, sanitary
sewage disposal, and stream classification,
have made many properties
essentially unusable. Whatever the
public benefit these restrictions may
provide, members of the public are
not sharing equally in their economic
burdens. Instead, the economic
burdens are being borne selectively
by a comparatively small number of
individual property owners.
The ultimate legal remedy for
property owners affected by these types
of restrictions is “inverse condemnation”:
a legal proceeding claiming that
government has taken all or substantially
all the value of the property and must
therefore compensate the property
owner for that taken value (the
payment of “just compensation”).
Because there are so many obstacles
to obtaining compensation through
inverse condemnation proceedings,
property owners have historically
treated this as the remedy of last
resort. In many instances, inverse
condemnation proceedings are now
the only available recourse.
What Triggers an Inverse
Condemnation Claim?
In its recent decision in Mansoldo
v. State of New Jersey, the New Jersey
Supreme Court has addressed the
standard for determining whether an
inverse condemnation has taken place.
In that case, owners of property zoned
for two single family houses sought
inverse condemnation because DEP
flood plain regulations had restricted
the property to use as open space, a
park, or a parking lot. The Supreme
Court recognized that the regulation is
highly beneficial to the general public.
It ruled, however, that the regulation’s
beneficial character does not avoid the
government’s obligation to compensate
the property owner for the value taken.
The Supreme Court declared that
the courts must ask two questions in
such cases. The first question is
whether the regulation has denied all
economically beneficial or productive
use of the land. If the restriction is not
quite that severe, the court must then
ask a more complicated question:
Does the regulation unduly interfere
with the legitimate investment-backed
expectations of the property owner?
This will depend, among other things,
upon how the property owner could
reasonably have expected to use the
property when he or she acquired it,
whether that expectation was reflected
in the purchase price, what reasonable
investments the property owner made
in reliance on that expectation, and
whether the regulation provides
benefits to the property owner as well
as burdens.
If an inverse condemnation has
occurred, the government must compensate
the property owner for the
reduction in value in the property
caused by the regulation.
Timing of Inverse
Condemnation Proceedings
In two recent decisions, the
Appellate Division of the New Jersey
Superior Court has addressed the
question of when a property owner can
bring an inverse condemnation case.
The first, United Savings Bank v. State,
Department of Environmental Protection,
involved property affected by DEP’s
freshwater wetlands regulations. The
second, entitled OFP, L.L.C. v. State of
New Jersey, involved property within
the Highlands preservation area and
restricted by the Highlands Act. In
both cases, the courts held that the
property owner cannot file an inverse
condemnation case until he or she first
goes through any available DEP waiver
process. The courts can then determine
if there has been an inverse condemnation
based upon how the land can be
used with any waivers the DEP has
granted.
DEP’s waiver process is often very
burdensome and time consuming. For
example, under DEP’s waiver regulations
applicable to the Highlands Region, the
property owner must not only document
his or her investment expectations, but
must also do an environmental impact
analysis of various scenarios for
development of the property, offer the
property for sale to governmental entities
and non-profit organizations at a price
set by the DEP, and attempt to utilize
the (non-existent) transfer of development
rights program. The DEP may
then grant a waiver for the minimum
amount of development that it deems
will avoid an inverse condemnation. In
OFP, the Appellate Division recognized
that this process could itself be so
burdensome as to constitute a taking of
the value of the property, but declined
to reach that conclusion until the
property owner had actually attempted
to go through the process. The New
Jersey Supreme Court has agreed to
hear this case and may give further
guidance as to whether DEP’s burdensome
waiver process must be exhausted
prior to filing an inverse condemnation
proceeding.
Where Such Cases Are Filed
In its decision in San Remo Hotel. v.
San Francisco, the United States Supreme
Court held that there is no federal court
option for inverse condemnation cases.
The property owner must proceed first
in state court and the only federal court
option is appeal from the highest state
appellate court to the United States
Supreme Court itself. In New Jersey,
inverse condemnation cases must be
brought in a state trial court where
there is a full evidentiary trial both on
whether the State regulations (with any
waivers granted by DEP) are an inverse
condemnation, and how much the State
must pay for the taken value of the land.
Persistence Required
Regrettably, land use regulation in
New Jersey is often so restrictive that
property owners have no choice but to
allege that their properties have been
“taken” through regulation, with inverse
condemnation suits seeking just
compensation being the only remedy
available. Even if such suits do not
result in the government’s payment of
just compensation, they can sometimes
result in the government’s relaxation of
the land use restrictions so as to allow
for reasonable development of the
affected land. Carrying such proceedings
through to ultimate success requires
determination, persistence, and the
most sophisticated legal advice and
representation.
Stephen M. Eisdorfer is also a partner within the
Land Use Division of Hill Wallack LLP. He
concentrates his practice in land use litigation, including
Mount Laurel litigation and litigation involving the
civil rights statutes.
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