Posted by Ilya Somin:
Sotomayor's Testimony on the Didden Case:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_12-2009_07_18.shtml#1247600417


   In the same exchange with Senator Grassley where she misstated the
   holding of Kelo v. City of New London, Judge Sotomayor also defended
   her ruling in[1] the controversial Didden case, where her Second
   Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled that it was constitutionally
   permissible for a state to condemn property because the owners had
   refused developer Greg Wasser's demand to pay him $800,000 or give him
   a 50% stake in their business, threatening to have the property
   condemned if they did not comply. As [2]I have argued in the past,
   this is precisely the sort of "pretextual" taking that even the
   Supreme Court majority in Kelo considered to be unconstitutional.

   Responding to Grassley's questions, Judge Sotomayor claimed that the
   ruling was unexceptionable because it was based purely on the property
   owners' failure to file their case within the three year period
   required by the statute of limitations. Nothing to see here, let's
   just move on.

   There are two serious problems with this explanation. First,
   Sotomayor's panel clearly addressed the substantive constitutional
   issue as well, ruling that "even if Appellants' claims were not
   time-barred, to the extent that they assert that the Takings Clause
   prevents the State from condemning their property for a private use
   within a redevelopment district, regardless of whether they have been
   provided with just compensation, the recent Supreme Court decision in
   Kelo v. City of New London . . . obliges us to conclude that they have
   articulated no basis upon which relief can be granted." Didden v.
   Village of Port Chester, 173 Fed. Appx. 931, 933 (2nd Cir. 2006)
   (emphasis added). Thus, even if Sotomayor was right about the statute
   of limitations question, she still made a seriously flawed ruling on
   the far more important constitutional issue.

   Second, as I explained in [3]this amicus brief (pp. 14-16) coauthored
   with several other property scholars, the Second Circuit's resolution
   of the statute of limitations issue was in fact inseparable from its
   resolution of the substantive question. The court had ruled that the
   three year statute of limitations expired in 2002, three years after
   the declaration of the 1999 redevelopment plan that gave the city the
   authority to use eminent domain in the area. But the plaintiffs'
   property was not condemned at that time and Wasser did not make his
   extortionate threats until November 2003, after which there property
   was almost immediately condemned.

   Until that time, it was impossible to file a pretextual taking claim
   because no pretextual taking had yet occurred or even been threatened.
   Judge Sotomayor�s panel ruled that Bart Didden and Dominick Bologna�s
   case was time-barred because it assumed that there is no legal
   difference between the mere declaration of a redevelopment area and
   the use of condemnation for purposes of extortion. The panel�s
   seemingly technical procedural ruling was actually based on a serious
   substantive error about the law of pretextual takings, as described in
   Kelo.

   The second point described above is probably too complex to discuss in
   detail in a televised hearing with strict time limits (though I do
   discuss it in my written testimony to the Judiciary Committee). For
   nonexperts, the important point to remember is the first one:
   Sotomayor's panel ruled on the constitutional property rights issue as
   well, not just the technical statute of limitations question.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_05_24-2009_05_30.shtml#1243364120
   2. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_12-2009_07_18.shtml#1247517811
   3. 
http://www.ij.org/images/pdf_folder/private_property/didden/Professor-amicus-on-petition-for-cert.PDF

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