« Land Use in Palestine | Main | A Philosopher's Quest for the Perfect Home »
February 15, 2013
Owen on Taking Groundwater
Dave Owen (Maine) has posted Taking Groundwater on SSRN. Here's the abstract:
In
February, 2012, in a case called Edwards Aquifer Authority v. Day, the
Texas Supreme Court held that landowners hold property rights to the
groundwater beneath their land, and that a regulatory restriction on
groundwater use could constitute a taking of private property. The
decision provoked strong reactions, both positive and negative,
throughout the world of water law, for it signaled the possibility of
severe restrictions on governmental ability to regulate groundwater use.
This
Article considers the deeper issue that confronted the Texas Supreme
Court, and that has confronted other courts across the country: how
should the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and parallel clauses
of state constitutions, apply to groundwater use regulation? Initially,
this Article explains why this issue is exceedingly and increasingly
important. It then reviews all of the groundwater/takings decisions
from federal and state courts in the United States. Finally, the
Article considers the implications of foundational property theories for
the application of takings doctrine to groundwater use.
The
analysis supports two key conclusions. First, it undermines arguments
against treating water rights as “constitutional property” — that is,
property protected by federal and state takings clauses. Proponents of
those arguments generally assert that treating water rights as property
has uneven support from prior caselaw and that such treatment will be
prevent sensible governance. A review of groundwater caselaw
demonstrates that the former assertion runs counter to the weight of
authority, and that the fears underlying the latter argument are
overstated. Second, and more importantly, the analysis undermines
arguments for granting groundwater use rights heightened protection
against regulatory takings. Recently, litigants and commentators
skeptical of government regulatory authority have widely advanced those
arguments. But they find no support in past groundwater/takings
caselaw, and no property theory justifies adopting such an approach.
Steve Clowney
February 15, 2013 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef017ee8878e2e970d
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Owen on Taking Groundwater:

