A Prudential Take on a Prudential Takings Doctrine

K. Crocker
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Abstract

The Supreme Court is set to decide a case requesting reconsideration of a doctrine that has long bedeviled constitutional litigants and commentators. The case is Knick v. Township of Scott, and the doctrine is the “ripeness” rule from Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank that plaintiffs seeking to raise takings claims under the Fifth Amendment must pursue state-created remedies first—the so-called “compensation prong” (as distinguished from a separate “takings prong”). This Essay argues that to put the compensation prong in the best light possible, the Court should view the requirement as a “prudential” rule rather than (as it has previously done) a constitutional one. It then argues that the Court should reject this doctrine not because it is a prudential rule, which would follow a larger trend in recent case discussions, but because it is a bad prudential rule. This path is the prudential one because casting doubt on prudential rules more generally could cause a significant set of additional doctrines to suffer unintended and unwelcome consequences.
审慎对待审慎征收原则
美国最高法院(Supreme Court)将对一宗要求重新考虑一项长期困扰宪法诉讼当事人和评论员的原则的案件作出裁决。该案是尼克诉斯科特镇案,其原则是威廉森县地区规划委员会诉汉密尔顿银行案中的“成熟”规则,即原告根据第五修正案寻求征收索赔,必须首先寻求州政府制定的补救措施,即所谓的“补偿措施”(区别于单独的“征收措施”)。本文认为,为了更好地理解赔偿问题,最高法院应该将这一要求视为一项“审慎”规则,而不是(像以前那样)一项宪法规定。然后,它认为法院应该拒绝这一原则,不是因为它是一项审慎规则,这将遵循最近案件讨论的更大趋势,而是因为它是一项糟糕的审慎规则。这是一条审慎的道路,因为更普遍地质疑审慎规则,可能会导致一系列重要的附加原则遭受意想不到的、不受欢迎的后果。
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