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Inverse Condemnation Complaint

Drafts inverse condemnation complaints seeking just compensation for government takings without formal eminent domain. Use when a user needs a takings clause complaint, inverse condemnation pleading, or property rights constitutional claim involving physical, regulatory, or temporary takings.

ID: us.real-estate.inverse-condemnation-complaint Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Inverse Condemnation Complaint

Draft a complaint seeking just compensation for property taken or damaged by government action without formal condemnation proceedings, under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.

Prerequisites

Collect before drafting:

  1. Property docs — deed, legal description, APN, title report, acquisition date/price
  2. Government action records — notices, permits denied/revoked, regulatory decisions, correspondence
  3. Valuation evidence — before/after appraisals, comparable sales, income loss documentation
  4. Administrative exhaustion — claims filed, hearings, variances sought, negotiation history
  5. Physical evidence — photos, surveys, engineering reports of damage or occupation
  6. Party identification — full legal names of all plaintiff owners and defendant government entities

Quick Start

  1. Identify taking type (physical, regulatory, total regulatory, temporary)
  2. Confirm ripeness — final government decision obtained and state compensation procedures pursued
  3. Choose forum (federal vs. state) and verify jurisdiction
  4. Draft complaint sections in order below
  5. Validate against pitfalls checklist

Complaint Structure

1. Caption & Introduction

  • Title: "Complaint for Inverse Condemnation and Just Compensation"
  • State constitutional basis (Fifth via Fourteenth Amendment, state provision, 42 U.S.C. § 1983), taking type, and timeframe

2. Jurisdiction

Forum Basis Requirements
Federal 28 U.S.C. § 1331 or § 1343 (§ 1983) Final decision per Williamson County v. Hamilton Bank [VERIFY]; address Tucker Act inapplicability for state/local defendants
State State takings provision + inverse condemnation statute/common law State-specific limitations period; venue where property is located

Allege ripeness: (1) final government decision on regulation/permit; (2) state compensation procedures pursued or shown inadequate/unavailable.

3. Parties

  • Plaintiff: Name (as on deed), address, ownership interest type, acquisition date, proportionate interest if multiple owners
  • Defendant(s): Official entity name, address, registered agent, responsible agency/department; entity in corporate capacity and/or officials in official capacity

4. Factual Narrative (Chronological, Numbered Paragraphs)

  1. Property — address, legal description, APN, acreage, zoning, permitted uses
  2. Pre-taking condition — structures, improvements, actual use, development plans
  3. Investment-backed expectations — purchase price, improvements, reasonable use expectations
  4. Government action — dates, officials/agencies, stated justification, legal authority cited
  5. Physical impact — area affected, nature of interference (flooding, occupation, encroachment, permit denial, regulatory restriction)
  6. Economic impact — FMV diminution with figures, income loss, duration, permanence
  7. Exhaustion — claims submitted, hearings, variance requests, government refusal to compensate

5. Causes of Action

Select applicable theory(ies):

Type Elements Authority
Physical (per se) Permanent physical occupation; compensation required regardless of public interest/economic impact Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp., 458 U.S. 419 (1982)
Regulatory (Penn Central) (1) Economic impact; (2) interference with investment-backed expectations; (3) character of government action Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 438 U.S. 104 (1978)
Total regulatory (Lucas) Denies ALL economically beneficial use; not restricted by background nuisance/property law Lucas v. S.C. Coastal Council, 505 U.S. 1003 (1992)
Temporary Deprived all use/value for specific period; compensation required even if regulation later withdrawn First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. County of Los Angeles, 482 U.S. 304 (1987)

For each: allege constitutional provision violated, identify government purpose/public use, emphasize compensation arises from fact of taking.

6. Damages

Component Measure
Total taking FMV as of date of taking
Partial taking FMV before minus FMV after, plus severance damages
Temporary taking Rental/use value for deprivation period
Consequential (if allowed) Goodwill, relocation, loss of access, damage to remainder
Pre-judgment interest From date of taking through judgment
Attorney fees § 1988 (§ 1983 claims) or state fee-shifting statutes

Include preliminary damage estimate; preserve right to prove exact amount at trial.

7. Prayer for Relief

  1. Just compensation (not less than $[amount])
  2. Pre-judgment interest from date of taking
  3. Post-judgment interest
  4. Attorney fees and costs (cite § 1988 or state authority)
  5. Declaratory relief that a taking occurred
  6. Injunctive relief if applicable
  7. Jury trial demand
  8. Such other relief as the court deems just

8. Verification & Signature

  • Verification under oath if required (28 U.S.C. § 1746 for federal)
  • Attorney signature block with bar number, firm, contact info
  • Rule 11 certification
  • Civil cover sheet (federal) or case information statement (state)

Pitfalls & Checks

  • Ripeness is jurisdictional — deficient exhaustion means dismissal; verify final decision and compensation procedure pursuit thoroughly
  • State variations — standards, limitations periods, and fee-shifting rules vary significantly by state; research jurisdiction-specific elements
  • Specificity — every factual allegation must tie to documentary evidence; avoid conclusory statements
  • Paragraph numbering — consecutive throughout entire complaint
  • Format — comply with local rules (margins, spacing, font, page numbering)
  • Rule 11 — all claims must be well-grounded in fact and law

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