Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Developer eyes high court ruling

- By Shea Johnson Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @Shea_LVRJ on Twitter.

After a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, a housing developer accusing Las Vegas officials of taking 65 acres of his property on a defunct golf course may test his claim in federal court.

In a statement this past week, EHB Cos. CEO Yohan Lowie drew a parallel between his case and the matter at the forefront of the high court’s June 21 decision: A Pennsylvan­ia farm owner tried to contest her town’s cemetery ordinance in federal court but was denied because she was required to first litigate through state channels.

The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that developers and landowners may sue immediatel­y in federal court to argue that a state or local government has trampled on their property rights.

“We have been forced to go through a long proceeding before the state court would even consider the city’s illegal actions against us,” Lowie said. “We are now able to proceed in federal court.”

The city declined to comment on the ruling and how it might affect litigation.

Lowie has proposed constructi­ng homes on the Badlands golf course weaving through the affluent Queensridg­e community near Summerlin. He has filed several lawsuits against the city after the council knocked down his redevelopm­ent plan in June 2017.

For years, the proposal has stirred contentiou­s debate invoking property rights and opposition to high-density developmen­t.

An inverse condemnati­on lawsuit filed in state court nearly a year ago alleges the council’s refusal to allow the project is tantamount to taking Lowie’s property without just compensati­on.

Before the Supreme Court decision, people seeking federal court interventi­on would have had to first seek a remedy through state court. If they lost, their claim would be barred in federal court. That led Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the conservati­ve majority opinion, to note how it presented a “Catch-22” for plaintiffs.

In Knick vs. Township of Scott, Pennsylvan­ia, farm owner Rose Mary Knick had protested an ordinance that required people whose land included a cemetery to open the property to the public during the day.

Knick, who denied her land maintained a cemetery, argued the town rule meant the government was taking her property without paying for it.

 ?? Michael Quine Las Vegas review-Journal @Vegas88s ?? A developer has proposed constructi­ng homes on the Badlands golf course weaving through the affluent Queensridg­e community near Summerlin.
Michael Quine Las Vegas review-Journal @Vegas88s A developer has proposed constructi­ng homes on the Badlands golf course weaving through the affluent Queensridg­e community near Summerlin.

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