TAKINGS
ADVERSE POSSESSION
NUISANCE
RIGHT TO EXCLUDE
EASEMENTS
100

In a regulatory takings case, two legally distinct but commonly owned contiguous parcels should be combined for takings analysis purposes. What is the case and what is its test?

Murr; 1. Physical characteristics 2. How the state/local government law treats property 3. Prospective Value

100

Elements of adverse possession

Actual Possession

Open and Notorious

Exclusive

Continuous

Adverse/Hostile

Statutory Period

100

Substantial and unreasonable interference with the use or enjoyment of land. 

Nuisance

100

Elements of a necessity defense

A clear imminent danger

Reasonable expectation that his or her action will be effective as the direct cause of abating the danger. 

No legal alternative

legislature has not acted to preclude the defense. 

100

Elements of a Prescriptive Easement

Actual USE

Open and notorious

Continuous

Adverse/Hostile

Statutory Period

200

1. Economic Impact of the regulation

2. The extent to which the regulation has interfered with reasonable investment-backed expectations. 

3. The character of the government's action. 

Ad hoc test, or Penn Central test

200

The general rule that succeeding periods of possession may be added together so long as the periods are in privity with one another. 

Tacking

200

Coming to the nuisance; harmful activity established first. 

Temporal Priority

200

When damages are tripled

Trebled

200

Created by actual agreement between owners of benefitted/burdened land. 

Express Easement

300

Physical invasion or occupation by the authority of the government. 

Per se taking

300

A type of claim that asks the court to grant a declaratory judgement that the adverse possessor has become the owner of the disputed property. 

Quiet Title

300

Can privilege a serious harm to plaintiff if defendant's conduct is generally inoffensive.

Hypersensitivity

300

Federal law that prohibits segregation or discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, and national origin. 

Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title II

300

An easement where whoever owns the land benefits.

Appurtenant

400

Conditions imposed by a municipality that a landowner must meet before the municipality will issue the landowner a subdivision, building, or occupancy permit. 

An exaction

400

A claim to title that seems legitimate but may not be due to some defect in the conveyance. 

Color of Title

400

Substantial Harm + Positive Social Utility = 

Damages

400

Principle that the public must be permitted access to the natural waters and the sand up to the mean high-water mark. 

Public Trust Doctrine

400

Allows non-owners to collect resources from the land such as coal, water, or timber. 

Profit

500

A state regulation that completely deprives private property of all its economic value constitutes a taking under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments that requires the payment of just compensation to the property owner, unless the economic activity prevented by the regulation is not part of the owner's initial title or property rights when acquiring the property.

The Lucas Rule.

500

Statutory provision that mandates that the statutory period does not begin to run until after the true owner's disability ends. 

Tolling

500

Sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas

Use your property so as to not harm someone else

500

A gift of real property from a private owner to the public at large; requires an offer by the owner and acceptance by the public. 

Dedication

500

Requirement that certain kinds of contracts be memorialized in writing, signed by the party to be charged, with sufficient content to evidence the contract. 

Statute of Frauds

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