Brandon Fulton v. Fulton County Board of Commissioners
Brandon Fulton v. Fulton County Board of Commissioners
Opinion
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[PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-12041 ____________________ BRANDON FULTON, Plaintiff-Appellant, versus FULTON COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS,
Defendant-Appellee,
PAUL L. HOWARD, JR., Esq.; in his individual capacity, et al.,
Defendants.
____________________ USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 2 of 108
ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge: In Greek mythology, the Greek gods condemned Tantalus to eternal hunger and thirst, all while forcing him to forever stand in a shallow pool of water under a tree with low-hanging fruit.
Though the remedy for Tantalus’s hunger and thirst was right at hand, he could not take advantage of it. The water receded when Tantalus bent down to drink, and the fruit rose to just above his grasp when Tantalus tried to reach it.
Our Founders did not do to us what the Greek gods did to Tantalus. Our Constitution explicitly promises exactly two reme- dies: “just compensation” if the government takes our property, and the writ of habeas corpus if it tries to take our lives or liberty.
And the Constitution delivers directly on each. It doesn’t taunt us by naming these remedies but then holding them out of reach, de- pending on the whims of the legislature.
So even if Congress doesn’t legislate a procedure by which a person can obtain one of these remedies, the Constitution’s prom- ise is not illusory. A person can bring a case directly invoking either constitutional remedy.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 3 This case involves the “just compensation” remedy. Bran- don Fulton alleges that Fulton County took his horses without jus- tification and without paying for them. He asserts that the Fifth Amendment demands the County pay him “just compensation” for the taking of his property. See U.S. CONST. amend. V. So he seeks to sue to recover what he says the County owes him under the Constitution.
The problem: Congress has not provided him with a cause of action to secure “just compensation” in federal court. Fulton initially tried to bring an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. That stat- ute allows suits against municipalities who, through official policies or customs, violate the Constitution. See Monell v. Dep’t of Soc.
Servs. of N.Y.C., 436 U.S. 658, 694 (1978). But because Fulton is un- able to plead an official policy or custom under which the County took his horses, he can’t proceed under that statute—even though the Takings Clause doesn’t require a plaintiff to clear that bar to be entitled to “just compensation.”
So Fulton seeks a plan B. He asks to amend his complaint to sue directly under the Takings Clause itself.
Whether the Takings Clause contains a cause of action that allows a litigant to recover “just compensation” in federal court presents an open question. In DeVillier v. Texas, the Supreme Court confirmed that its “precedents do not cleanly answer the ques- tion . . . .” 601 U.S. 285, 292 (2024). Yet the Court also confirmed that “the absence of a case relying on the Takings Clause for a cause of action does not by itself prove there is no cause of action. It USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 4 of 108
The Dissent responds by saying we are “creat[ing] a new right of action” and leaving “constitutional wreckage in the wake.”
Diss. Op. at 35. But its answer that the Takings Clause includes no direct cause of action ignores the original public meaning of the Clause and transforms the Constitution’s promise of “just compen- sation” into nothing more than a Tantalus-type taunt. Most re- spectfully, we don’t think that’s “judicial humility,” see id. at 35; we think it’s judicial abdication. We have a duty to apply the Consti- tution as written. So we respectfully decline to read out of the Con- stitution the relief it expressly promises for taken property.
The Framers of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments pro- vided a real remedy in “just compensation” for government tak- ings. They guaranteed the ability to recover “just compensation” directly under the Constitution. So we hold that Fulton’s proposed amendment to his complaint is not futile.
I. BACKGROUND This case comes to us on appeal from a denial of a motion for leave to amend the complaint. So for purposes of our analysis, we accept as true the facts pled in the proposed amended complaint and construe them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 5 Spanish Broad. Sys. of Fla., Inc. v. Clear Channel Commc’ns, Inc., 376 F.3d 1065, 1077 (11th Cir. 2004).
On April 22, 2017, Fulton County Animal Services arrested Brandon Fulton for felony cruelty to animals and seized seven horses in his possession. Nearly a year later, on April 5, 2018, Geor- gia dismissed the criminal charges against Fulton. But Fulton County didn’t return the horses or otherwise compensate Fulton for the loss of his property.
So on May 5, 2020, Fulton brought this federal suit to re- cover his property. He initially sued the Fulton County Board of Commissioners under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the seizure was an unconstitutional taking in violation of the Fifth Amend- ment. 1 The Board of Commissioners moved to dismiss his claim. It argued that (1) it isn’t an entity capable of being sued; (2) Fulton failed to state a claim under § 1983; and (3) the statute of limitations bars Fulton’s claim. Fulton opposed the Board of Commissioners’ motion. He also moved to amend his complaint to substitute the County as defendant in place of the Board of Commissioners and
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The district court denied Fulton’s motion to amend his com- plaint and dismissed his claim against the Board of Commissioners without prejudice. It determined that Fulton’s proposed alterna- tive claim would fail because plaintiffs who want to bring constitu- tional takings claims against a municipality must sue under § 1983 and cannot sue directly under the Takings Clause. And in the dis- trict court’s view, Fulton couldn’t maintain his § 1983 claim against the Board of Commissioners or against the County because he failed to allege that some official municipal policy or practice caused the constitutional violation, as Monell v. Department of Social Services of New York City, requires. 436 U.S. at 694. Since any amendment would be futile, the district court reasoned, it declined to address whether Fulton’s suit was timely.
Fulton appealed this order.
After we heard oral argument in this case, the Supreme Court decided DeVillier, which, as we’ve noted, considered whether to address whether the Takings Clause creates a direct cause of ac- tion. 601 U.S. at 292. The Supreme Court concluded that that case did not require it to do so. Id. And faced with deciding a novel question without the Court’s guidance, we invited the Institute for Justice and the cohort of Professor James W. Ely, Jr., Professor Julia D. Mahoney, and The Buckeye Institute, each group having briefed the issue in DeVillier, to brief several related questions here. We also asked the Solicitor General of Georgia to brief the same USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 7 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 7 questions. We thank them all for their excellent briefs in keeping with the highest tradition of the legal profession.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s denial of a motion for leave to amend a complaint. Spanish Broad. Sys., 376 F.3d at 1077. But we review de novo the district court’s legal conclusion that amendment would be futile. SFM Holdings, Ltd. v. Banc of Am. Sec., LLC, 600 F.3d 1334, 1336 (11th Cir. 2010). Amend- ment is futile if the amended complaint still would be subject to dismissal. Hall v. United Ins. Co. of Am., 367 F.3d 1255, 1263 (11th Cir. 2004).
III. DISCUSSION Fulton attempts to amend his complaint to bring a damages action directly under the Takings Clause. That requires us to con- sider whether the Takings Clause provides a cause of action to re- cover “just compensation.” Recently, the Supreme Court declined to answer that question in DeVillier. But we cannot take that tack because we conclude that Fulton cannot amend his complaint to bring a state-law action and that any theoretical Takings Clause ac- tion would be timely. So we must confront the question head on.
To do so, we consider the text and history of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. Based on our review, we hold that the Takings Clause contains a direct cause of action against local gov- ernments. As a result, Fulton’s proposed amendment to his com- plaint would not be futile. So we vacate the district court’s order USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 8 of 108
A. The district court would have had jurisdiction over Fulton’s Takings Clause claim.
We begin with a clarification. In his opening brief, Fulton asserts that amendment wouldn’t be futile because the district court would have federal-question jurisdiction over his proposed claim. But the district court never suggested that it might lack ju- risdiction over a Takings Clause claim. Instead, the district court held that amendment would be futile because the Takings Clause doesn’t provide a cause of action against municipalities. We briefly explain the difference.
Subject-matter jurisdiction is “the courts’ statutory or con- stitutional power to adjudicate [a] case.” Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 89 (1998) (emphasis omitted) (citing 5A CHARLES ALAN WRIGHT & ARTHUR R. MILLER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 1350). We dismiss a claim for lack of subject- matter jurisdiction only if the claim (1) “clearly appears to be im- material and made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction;” or (2) “is wholly insubstantial and frivolous.” Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ala. v. Sanders, 138 F.3d 1347, 1352 (11th Cir. 1998) (quoting Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, 682–83 (1946)).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 9 For a claim based directly under the Constitution, 28 U.S.C. § 1331 provides the statutory basis for jurisdiction.2 Under this law, federal courts enjoy jurisdiction over “all cases aris[ing] under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.” Bush v. Lucas, 462 U.S. 367, 374 (1983) (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (1976)) (internal quotation marks omitted) (bracket in original). Here, Fulton’s pro- posed amended claim alleges a violation of the Takings Clause un- der the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. So as long as his claim wouldn’t have been “wholly insubstantial and frivolous,” the dis- trict court would have had federal-question jurisdiction over this case.
The existence of a cause of action raises a distinct issue. See Resnick v. KrunchCash, LLC, 34 F.4th 1028, 1034–35 (11th Cir. 2022).
A cause of action exists when “a particular plaintiff is a member of the class of litigants that may, as a matter of law, appropriately in- voke the power of the court.” Davis v. Passman, 442 U.S. 228, 239 n.18 (1979). Whether a plaintiff has alleged a cause of action gen- erally presents a merits question. See Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env’t Study Grp., Inc., 438 U.S. 59, 70 (1978).
2 Fulton also claims that the district court would have had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(3). But as the Board of Commissioners notes, he didn’t plead this basis for jurisdiction in his complaint, so he can’t rely on 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(3). See Taylor v. Appleton, 30 F.3d 1365, 1367 (11th Cir. 1994). And because his claim “depends . . . upon construction or application of the Con- stitution,” 28 U.S.C. § 1331 is the correct jurisdictional hook. Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env’t Study Grp., Inc., 438 U.S. 59, 70 (1978) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
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Here, Fulton has attempted to state a cause of action directly under the Takings Clause. As we’ve noted, whether the Takings Clause creates a cause of action to obtain “just compensation” raises an open question. DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292. So Fulton’s al- leged cause of action isn’t “patently without merit.” McGinnis v. Ingram Equip. Co., 918 F.2d 1491, 1494 (11th Cir. 1990) (en banc) (ci- tation omitted). And the district court had jurisdiction to evaluate whether the Takings Clause gave him a cause of action. As a result, we must independently evaluate that merits question. This case is about whether Fulton has a ticket, not whether the show can go on at all.
B. Georgia law bars Fulton from bringing a state-law action.
Before we get to the central question of the case, we must address whether we need to answer it at all. We might avoid the issue if we can remand the case to allow Fulton to press an action under state law to recover the value of his horses.
That is essentially what the Supreme Court did in DeVillier.
Indeed, the DeVillier Court found it “imprudent to decide” whether the Takings Clause contains a cause of action. DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292. Instead, it remanded the case for the plaintiffs there to amend USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 11 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 11 their complaints to “pursue their claims under the Takings Clause through the cause of action available under Texas law.” Id. at 293.
And since Georgia permits inverse-condemnation actions to re- cover the value of uncompensated takings, see Diversified Holdings, LLP v. City of Suwanee, 807 S.E.2d 876, 884 (Ga. 2017), Fulton argues for the first time after DeVillier in supplemental briefing that we could remand this case to allow him to bring a claim under a Geor- gia vehicle.
But we think Georgia law now bars any such claim. In Geor- gia, actions to recover personal property have a four-year statute of limitations from when the claim accrues. GA. CODE ANN. §§ 9-3- to 9-3-32 (2025). Here, Georgia seized Fulton’s horses on April 22, 2017, for a criminal investigation. On April 5, 2018, it dropped the charges. And Georgia law may have required law enforcement to have returned Fulton’s horses by May 5, 2018. See id. § 17-5- 54(c)(2) (giving 30 days following a guilty verdict to return property taken as part of an investigation). So even assuming Fulton’s state- law claim did not accrue until May 5, 2018, it wouldn’t be timely now, over seven years later, if it were the first time Fulton raised the issue.
That said, Fulton did file a federal complaint arising from the same set of facts on May 5, 2020, within the four-year window.
And any claim added to his complaint would relate back to its orig- inal filing date, as though he had brought it on that date, May 5, 2020. See Est. of West v. Smith, 9 F.4th 1361, 1366 n.3 (11th Cir. 2021) (looking to the state law providing the statute of limitations to USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 12 of 108
The problem, though, is Georgia has a special rule for suits against counties. It requires that “[a]ll claims against coun- ties . . . be presented within 12 months after they accrue or become payable or the same are barred . . . .” Id. § 36-11-1. And the record contains no evidence showing Fulton satisfied this requirement. So this provision bars Fulton’s state-law claim.
For this reason, we can’t avoid the question of whether Ful- ton can proceed directly under the federal Constitution.
C. A direct Takings Clause action would not be time- barred.
So we turn next to whether an action under the Takings Clause could move forward. But we still might not need to address the existence of that theoretical cause of action if it would also be time-barred. Indeed, we can’t acknowledge Fulton’s ticket—even if it’s valid—if it’s marked expired. For that reason, we first con- sider the appropriate statute of limitations for a claim directly un- der the Takings Clause. We conclude that, in Georgia, the statute of limitations would be four years. As a result, Fulton’s claim would not be time-barred.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 13 When a federal claim lacks an express statute of limitations, we look to “the forum state’s limitations period applicable to the state cause of action that bears the closest substantive resemblance to the federal cause of action.” Vigman v. Cmty. Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co., 635 F.2d 455, 459 (5th Cir. Jan. 1981) (citations omitted). 3 Here, two potentially relevant limitations periods exist. 4 First, as we’ve mentioned, Georgia law requires actions to recover the value of personal property to be filed within four years.
GA. CODE ANN. §§ 9-3-31 to 9-3-32 (2025). Similarly, inverse-con- demnation actions for recovering the value of real property also have a four-year limitations period. See id. § 9-3-30.
But second, Georgia allows potential litigants only two years to file personal-injury actions. Id. § 9-3-33. And we apply this lim- itation period to § 1983 actions. See Hillcrest Prop., LLC v. Pasco County, 754 F.3d 1279, 1281 (11th Cir. 2014) (“Section 1983 claims
4 Not relevant is the special provision for counties requiring claims to be pre- sented within 12 months. See GA. CODE ANN. § 36-11-1 (2025). That’s so be- cause it’s not a statute of limitations. Rather, it’s a state procedural require- ment that a plaintiff formally notify the county before suit. See Dates v. City of Atlanta, 903 S.E.2d 289, 292 (Ga. Ct. App. 2024). The legalistic Latin name for this type of requirement is ante litem notice. See id. USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 14 of 108
We conclude that the limitations period for the recovery of personal property—four years—governs. That’s so because it’s the most substantively similar action to Fulton’s effort to pursue his federal just-compensation right. So if Fulton were able to bring a state-law claim grounded in the Takings Clause, the four-year pe- riod for the recovery of personal property is the one that would apply. See GA. CODE ANN. §§ 9-3-31 to 9-3-32 (2025); Rowland v. Clarke Cnty. Schl. Dist., 532 S.E.2d 91, 93 (Ga. 2000) (applying a four- year limitations period for the recovery of personal property from a county school district).
True, as we’ve mentioned, § 1983 cases, which include Tak- ings Clause claims, are subject to the personal-injury statute of lim- itations. See Hillcrest Prop., LLC, 754 F.3d at 1281. But that’s so be- cause § 1983 is a “general remedy for injuries to personal rights.”
See Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261, 278 (1985). The statute “encom- passes a broad range of potential tort analogies, from injuries to property to infringements of individual liberty.” Id. at 277. So the Supreme Court thought it appropriate to apply a statute of limita- tions that captured the “unifying theme” of the statute—even if other torts might also be analogues to more specific rights that § 1983 protects. 5 Id.
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 15 But we are determining the statute of limitations that would apply to a unique cause of action that, if it exists, arises directly under the Takings Clause. And the right to “just compensation” is most analogous to recovery for inverse condemnation rather than personal injury. So we apply Georgia’s statute of limitations that governs inverse-condemnation actions.
When we do that, we conclude that Fulton’s action directly under the Takings Clause would be timely. Law enforcement seized Fulton’s horses in 2017, the charges were dropped in 2018, and he brought his action in 2020—within four years of the rele- vant facts. So the statute of limitations wouldn’t bar Fulton’s ac- tion.
Because a theoretical action directly under the Takings Clause would be timely, we must determine whether such a cause of action in fact exists.
officials . . . . courts generally apply § 1983 law to Bivens cases.” Kelly v. Serna, 87 F.3d 1235, 1238 (11th Cir. 1996) (quoting Abella v. Rubino, 63 F.3d 1063, 1065 (11th Cir. 1995)). So Bivens actions brought in Georgia similarly use the state’s two-year personal-injury statute of limitations. Id. But as we explain in Part III.D.5, infra, a cause of action directly under the Takings Clause would be completely independent of Bivens and unrelated to § 1983. So we don’t see Bivens as a reason to apply the two-year statute of limitations to a direct just- compensation claim.
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Finally, we get to the main event (it may not be Hamilton, but we do have the two other authors of the Federalist Papers a little later). We must confront whether a litigant may sue a county in Georgia—a political subdivision of the state, see GA. CODE ANN. § 25-3-4 (2025)—directly under the Takings Clause to obtain “just compensation” for a taking. After reviewing the text, history, and structure of the Constitution, we hold that a litigant can.
1. The text of the Fifth Amendment and the structure of the Constitution show that the Takings Clause contains a direct cause of action.
The Takings Clause provides that no “private property [shall] be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. CONST. amend. V. Three major points about this text and how it fits into the Constitution’s overall structure stand out: (1) the Tak- ings Clause guarantees “just compensation”—a monetary rem- edy—when the government takes private property; (2) the Takings Clause is “self-executing,” Knick v. Township of Scott, 588 U.S. 180, (2019); and (3) the Takings Clause is one of only two constitu- tional guarantees that provides its own remedy. Together, these three points lead to the conclusion that the Constitution automat- ically provides Americans with the federal right to sue for “just compensation.” In this subsection, we explain each point and why it supports that conclusion.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 17 We begin with the meaning of “just compensation.” Dic- tionaries during the Founding period and in the early years of our Republic defined “just” to mean “[u]pright; incorrupt; equitable in the distribution of justice”—in other words, fair. SAMUEL JOHNSON, Just. adj., A DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1773), https://perma.cc/W4M8-T5C2 (emphasis added); see also NOAH WEBSTER, Just, adjective, AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1828), https://perma.cc/PD4F-PHYQ (defining “just,” in relevant part, to mean “[e]quitable; due; merited; as a just rec- ompense or reward”). And they defined “compensation” as “[r]ecompence; something equivalent; amends”—that is, payment for what’s been taken. SAMUEL JOHNSON, Compensa’tion. n.s, A DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1773), https://perma.cc/7RVU-GDKK; see also NOAH WEBSTER, Compen- sation, noun, AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1828), https://perma.cc/C3PP-EEBC (“That which is given or re- ceived as an equivalent for services, debt, want, loss, or suffering; amends; remuneration; recompense.”). Together, then, the plain meaning of the term “just compensation” refers to fair payment.
So it’s unsurprising that the Supreme Court has said that “just compensation” is monetary relief. City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd., 526 U.S. 687, 710 (1999). To deter- mine “just compensation,” we ask “what has the owner lost”? See id. (quoting Bos. Chamber of Com. v. Boston, 217 U.S. 189, 195 (1910)).
We don’t consider “what . . . the taker gained” or seek to put the owner in an equitable position with the taker. See id. Instead, we seek to give the owner only the value of what the government USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 18 of 108
And to get any form of “legal relief ” in the federal court- room, a litigant must have a cause of action. See id.; Davis, 442 U.S. at 239 n.18. So with an express constitutional right to receive “just compensation” as a form of legal relief, we would expect a guaran- teed cause of action to sue to recover that relief. 6 See United States v. Lee, 106 U.S. 196, 220 (1882) (“It cannot be denied that [the Tak- ings Clause was] intended to be enforced by the judiciary as one of Citing the work of Professor Jud Campbell, the Dissent argues that a consti- tutional right to a legal remedy does not necessarily supply a cause of action to get that relief. See Diss. Op. at 7 (citing Jud Campbell, Determining Rights, 138 Harv. L. Rev. 921, 923, 944, 974 n.370, 981 (2025); and then citing William Baude, Jud Campbell & Stephen E. Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amendment, 76 Stan. L. Rev. 1185, 1191 (2024)). But Campbell has argued that rights may be either legally determinate, and therefore judicially enforceable, or indeterminate. See, e.g., Campbell, Determining Rights, supra, at 923 n.7 (“Many Founders accepted the judicial enforceability of legally determinate fundamental rights, whether enumerated or not.”); cf. id. at 931 (“Although natural law was ‘law’ in an abstract sense, it generally was not ‘law’ in a judi- cially enforceable sense because it lacked determinate content.”). And he has been clear that, under his theory, the right to “just compensation” is a deter- minate right, so it follows that it is judicially enforceable. See id. at 974 n.370 (describing “the right against uncompensated takings” as a “legally determi- nate right[]”); Baude, Campbell & Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amend- ment, supra, at 1236 (recognizing “the right to compensation for takings” as a “centerpiece[]” of both the Bill of Rights and the privileges or immunities of citizenship). As a result, an adherent to Campbell’s views should remain com- fortable with the conclusion that the Constitution supplies a direct cause of action for judicial enforcement of the Takings Clause.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 19 the departments of the government established by th[e] constitu- tion.”).
The Supreme Court has also told us that the Takings Clause’s right to “just compensation” is “self-executing.” See Knick, U.S. at 194. That means that a person is automatically entitled to this relief as soon as they suffer a taking. See id. at 190. Congress need not recognize their injury nor their right to a remedy. See id. (discussing Jacobs v. United States, 290 U.S. 13 (1933)). And based on the text of the Clause, that makes sense. By its terms, the Clause reflects that as soon as the government commits a “taking, com- pensation must be awarded” and the property owner “has already suffered [a constitutional violation] at the time of the uncompen- sated taking.” Id. at 193 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Because property owners have an automatic right to a form of legal relief, it follows they have an automatic cause of action to get that relief. They are instantly entitled to receive “just compen- sation” in the courts. See id. at 194 (recognizing the ability to re- cover “just compensation” from federal officials directly under the Fifth Amendment pursuant to the Tucker Act and from local gov- ernments under 42 U.S.C. § 1983). And they need not point to a statute recognizing a right to “just compensation” or an acknowl- edgment by the government of its willingness to pay. Rather, as the Supreme Court has explained, “[s]uch a promise [i]s implied because of the duty to pay imposed by the Amendment.” First Eng- lish Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. Los Angeles County, 482 USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 20 of 108
It makes structural sense that the Constitution grants an au- tomatic cause of action to recover “just compensation.” As we ex- plain further in Part III.D.2, because of the outsized burden legis- latures placed on individual property owners before and during the Revolution, the Framers did not trust those bodies to ensure “just compensation” for takings. See Part III.D.2, infra. And if they did not provide the Takings Clause with a cause of action in the ab- sence of legislation creating one, the provision’s promised “just compensation” remedy would be empty.
So the intrinsic cause of action within the Takings Clause ensures meaning behind the constitutional guarantee. In other words, by expressly giving Americans the right to get payment from the government in the courtroom, the Constitution, of course, too gives them the ticket they need to enter in the first place. Otherwise, the government could just refuse to issue a ticket anytime it didn’t want to pay. We don’t think the Founders made an empty promise to Americans. A guaranteed remedy is a guar- anteed remedy only if it’s accessible.
Ultimately, the text is straightforward. The Takings Clause guarantees a legal damages-type remedy, and it is “self-executing”.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 21 These characteristics are especially noteworthy because they make the Takings Clause a constitutional unicorn—no other constitu- tional guarantee expressly contains these two features. Cf. DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 291 (“Constitutional rights do not typically come with a built-in cause of action to allow for private enforcement in courts.” (citation omitted)).
As a result, the Framers did not have to be concerned that a cause of action directly under the Takings Clause would willy-nilly lead to the finding of direct causes of action under multiple other parts of the Constitution. In fact, only one other part of the Con- stitution—Article I, Section 9’s Suspension Clause, which guaran- tees the writ of habeas corpus—even refers to any remedy at all, though not a compensatory one. RICHARD H. FALLON, JR., JOHN F.
MANNING, DANIEL J. MELTZER & DAVID L. SHAPIRO, HART & WECHSLER’S THE FEDERAL COURTS AND THE FEDERAL SYSTEM 330 (7th ed. 2015) [hereinafter HART & WECHSLER]; see also Akhil Reed Amar, Of Sovereignty and Federalism, 96 YALE L.J. 1425, 1509 n.329 (1987) (“[T]he non-suspension clause is the original Constitution’s most explicit reference to remedies.”).
That only two constitutional provisions expressly provide for a remedy upon violation “sets [them] apart from others and at least suggests these two rights—even if not all others in the Con- stitution—have special protections against congressional abroga- tion or dereliction” of their guaranteed remedies. DeVillier v. Texas, 63 F.4th 416, 439 (Oldham, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 22 of 108
We can see that by how the Supreme Court has treated the Suspension Clause. Indeed, the Supreme Court has expressly com- pared the Constitution’s only two guaranteed remedies. In United States v. Lee, the Court reasoned, if the Constitution offers “suffi- cient authority for [a] court to interfere to rescue a prisoner from the hands of those holding him under the asserted authority of the government [by issuing a writ of habeas corpus], what reason is there that the same courts shall not give remedy to the citizen whose property has been . . . devoted to public use without just compensation?” 106 U.S. at 218.
So we take a look at how the Supreme Court has treated the Suspension Clause. The Suspension Clause guarantees “[t]he Priv- ilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may re- quire it.” U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 2. That is, the Suspension Clause secures the remedy of the writ of habeas corpus for detained or imprisoned individuals except in highly limited circumstances. The Supreme Court has construed this “Privilege” of habeas corpus to be at least as extensive as it existed at the time of the Founding.
Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723, 746 (2008) (“[A]t the absolute min- imum the Clause protects the writ as it existed when the Constitu- tion was drafted and ratified.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 23 Over the years, Congress has enacted legislation that creates substitutes for the writ of habeas corpus. And the Supreme Court has ensured that the new frameworks preserved the constitutional guarantee. See, e.g., id. In 1948, for instance, Congress passed 28 U.S.C. § 2255 as a substitute for the writ of habeas corpus for pris- oners in custody under a sentence that a federal court imposed. See United States v. Hayman, 342 U.S. 205, 206–07 (1952). After a pris- oner filed a § 2255 motion, a federal appeals court sua sponte raised concerns that the statute violated the Suspension Clause. Id. at 209.
But the Supreme Court highlighted that the statute avoided those constitutional concerns because “where the Section 2255 proce- dure is shown to be ‘inadequate or ineffective’, the Section provides that the habeas corpus remedy shall remain open to afford the nec- essary hearing.” See id. at 223 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1947)).
The Court “implicitly held . . . that the substitution of a collateral remedy” that does not purport to narrow the writ of habeas corpus “does not constitute a suspension of the writ of habeas corpus.”
Swain v. Pressley, 430 U.S. 372, 381 (1977) (discussing Hayman).
Similarly, when the District of Columbia adopted a law mod- eled on § 2255, the Supreme Court upheld it as constitutional under the Suspension Clause. Id at 381–84. The Court explained that “[s]ince the scope of the remedy provided by [the District of Co- lumbia law] is the same as that provided by § 2255, it is also com- mensurate with habeas corpus” in all relevant respects. Id. at 381– 82. So once again, when the substitute remedy did not narrow the writ of habeas corpus, leaving a coextensive remedy to the consti- tutional guarantee, it did not violate the Suspension Clause.
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REV. 205, 212 (1985) (“Article III plainly imposes no obligation to create lower federal courts.”); but see Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee, 14 U.S. (1 Wheat.) 304, 331 (1816) (“It would seem . . . that congress are bound to create some inferior courts . . . .”). Even so, though, Article III still requires eventual federal judi- cial review, in a federal court of Congress’s choosing, for certain classes of USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 25 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 25 We draw two simple lessons from this line of precedent on habeas corpus substitutes: (1) Congress cannot narrow the scope of a constitutionally prescribed remedy, and (2) if it tries to do so, the underlying constitutional remedy remains directly available.
Because “just compensation” is a constitutionally prescribed remedy—indeed, the only other constitutionally prescribed rem- edy besides the writ of habeas corpus—Congress likewise cannot narrow the scope of that right through legislation. See Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. United States, 261 U.S. 299, 304 (1923) (“Just compen- sation is provided for by the Constitution and the right to it cannot be taken away by statute”); cf. DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292 (“[C]onsti- tutional concerns do not arise when property owners have other ways to seek just compensation.”). So if a legislative substitute for “just compensation” is not coextensive with the constitutionally prescribed remedy of “just compensation,” then the constitution- ally prescribed remedy remains directly available.
cases. See Amar, A Neo-Federalist View, supra, at 238–54 (explaining that Article III requires judicial review of three categories of mandatory cases); Martin, 14 U.S. at 330–36 (same). And those mandatory cases include cases that seek re- lief under the Constitution’s two guaranteed remedies: the writ of habeas cor- pus and “just compensation.” See U.S. CONST. art. III, § 2 (“The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitu- tion . . . .”). To be sure, Congress can pick the stage for the show. But it must provide for some way to honor a valid ticket. It has done so for takings claims by granting the federal courts federal-question jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
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2. The history behind the Takings Clause and the Four- teenth Amendment shows that the Clause contains a direct cause of action against local governments.
The history of the Takings Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment also supports the conclusion that the Takings Clause contains a direct cause of action against local governments. As we show below, the history tells us several things: (1) the Framers of the Takings Clause included the “just compensation” right to pro- tect against government abuses—even by a well-meaning govern- ment that acts for the public good; (2) the Framers designed the Takings Clause with the intent that its “just compensation” remedy would not depend upon legislation; (3) even when states did not have their own versions of the Takings Clause, courts viewed the just-compensation principle as a fundamental right and regularly awarded “just compensation” in the form of damages in common- law actions; (4) even before Congress gave federal courts jurisdic- tion to hear specifically claims for “just compensation” for takings, federal courts resolved takings claims against federal and state offi- cials when they had jurisdiction; and (5) the Framers of the Four- teenth Amendment intended for the amendment to make the Tak- ings Clause remedy available against state and local governments in federal courts.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 27 We start with colonial times. During that period, the funda- mental protection against governmental seizure of property was limited: the government could seize property only if the legislature or a jury authorized it. See William Michael Treanor, The Original Understanding of the Takings Clause and the Political Process, 95 COLUM. L. REV. 782, 785–88 (1995). But that protection contained no right to “just compensation” once a majoritarian body approved a taking.
This legislature-authorization protection traces to Article 39 of the Magna Carta. That article provided that “[n]o free man shall be . . . dispossessed . . . except by the legal judgment of his peers or by the law of the land.” Id. at 787. And it fit the period when Par- liament reigned supreme with near plenary powers over the em- pire. See id. at 786 n.15. Based on this historical background, sev- eral colonial legislatures authorized uncompensated takings—as long as a body representing the public good approved. 8 See id. at 787–88.
Still, two fundamental documents of the colonial era con- tained provisions mandating “just compensation:” the Massachu- setts Body of Liberties of 1641 and the 1669 Fundamental Consti- tutions of Carolina (drafted by John Locke but never completely
8 William Blackstone in his famous Commentaries did recognize a right to “just compensation” for takings of real property, although he gave no citation for where English law recognized this principle. See Treanor, The Original Under- standing, supra, at 786 n.15. And this appears to be a rare instance where his view did not convince English jurists of the time. See id. USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 28 of 108
Then the Revolution ushered in a new era for property law.
In advancing one of the most important causes in American history for the public good, Washington’s army seized personal property— including horses—without compensation. See Treanor, The Origi- nal Understanding, supra, at 790; AKHIL REED AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS: CREATION AND RECONSTRUCTION 79–80 (1998); Jed Ruben- feld, Usings, 102 YALE L.J. 1077, 1122–23 (1993).
That frustrated people. And those uncompensated seizures triggered a sudden interest in guaranteeing compensation for the unlucky few who suffered losses at the hands of even a well-mean- ing majority. Treanor, The Original Understanding, supra, at 790; AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra, at 79–80; Rubenfeld, Usings, su- pra, at 1122–23; see also 1 HENRY ST. GEORGE TUCKER, BLACKSTONE’S COMMENTARIES app. at 305-06 (Philadelphia, Birch & Small 1803) (opining that the eventual federal just-compensation guarantee “was probably intended to restrain the arbitrary and op- pressive mode of obtaining supplies for the army, and other public USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 29 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 29 uses, by impressment, as was too frequently practiced during the revolutionary war, without any compensation whatever”).
Vermont, for instance, added a just-compensation principle to its 1777 Constitution. VT. CONST. of 1777, ch. I, art. II. Massa- chusetts followed suit in 1780. See MASS. CONST. of 1780, part I, art. X. The Confederation Congress wasn’t far behind when it passed the Northwest Ordinance, governing the Northwest Terri- tories, with a similar guarantee. See Northwest Ordinance of 1787, art. 2.
Meanwhile, when it came time to structure the new federal government, most of the Founding generation focused on the threat that a corrupt central government could pose to all Ameri- cans. See AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra, at 77. As a result, the Bill of Rights in large part emphasized constraining the power of federal officials who might engage in self-dealing. Id. But some Framers, most notably John Jay and James Madi- son, zeroed in on the importance of checking even a good-natured government’s abuses in the form of property takings. As the war proved, even a well-intentioned government could trample the in- dividual in the name of the public good. So following Jay and Mad- ison’s lead, the Framers tacked the Takings Clause onto the Fifth Amendment. Id. at 77–80.
That Clause is the only Bill of Rights provision designed to act as a special outside check on Congress’s treatment of disfavored persons. See id. at 77–78. It does so, as we’ve explained, by guaran- teeing a remedy. And here’s the key point: both Jay and Madison USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 30 of 108
V. We start with Jay. In 1778, Jay penned a letter to the New York legislature, decrying “the Practice of impressing Horses, Teems, & Carriages by the military, without the Intervention of a civil Magistrate, and without any Authority from the Law of the Land.” John Jay (A Freeholder), A Hint to the Legislature of the State of New York, FOUNDERS ONLINE, https://perma.cc/32NL-432K (emphases altered). Instead, Jay advanced a vision where “many who . . . severely feel this kind of oppression, may . . . bring Actions and recover Damages.” Id. (emphasis added). Our first Chief Justice couldn’t have been clearer that he thought a plaintiff like Fulton, who had his horses taken without compensation, should be able to sue for damages.
As for the author of the Fifth Amendment—James Madi- son—writing Federalist 10, Madison “was ahead of his time in ar- guing that the dominant danger in America came from a possibly overweening majority rather than from self-interested government agents.” AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra, at 77; see also FEDERALIST No. 10. In Madison’s view, a majoritarian body with- out an outside check on its power offered insufficient protection for property rights. See James Madison, For the National Gazette: USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 31 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 31 Property (Mar. 27, 1792), FOUNDERS ONLINE, https://perma.cc/K8EH-FU5N [hereinafter Property] (“Where an excess of power prevails, property of no sort is duly respected.”).
So Madison crafted the Takings Clause. That Clause was unique: it created a right that applied even when the government didn’t misuse its power and instead acted “for public use.” See U.S. CONST. amend. V; Madison, Property, supra (stating that no prop- erty “shall be taken directly even for public use without indemnifi- cation to the owner . . .”). Madison envisioned the protection of that right through “independent tribunals of justice [who] will con- sider themselves in a peculiar manner [its] guardians . . . .” James Madison, Amendments to the Constitution ( June 8, 1789), FOUNDERS ONLINE, https://perma.cc/ZF5L-W9ZN.
And as a congressman, Madison tried to honor that plan by proposing a law granting the Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction to review decisions on federal claims. See Floyd D. Shimomura, The History of Claims Against the United States: The Evolution from a Legis- lative Toward a Judicial Model of Payment, 45 LA. L. REV. 625, 638 & n.94 (1985). In his view, the adjudication of a federal claim was a “judicial rather than executive” power. Id. (citing 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 611–12 ( J. Gales ed. 1834)) (recording Madison as having stated that “deciding upon the lawfulness and justice of . . . claims, and accounts subsisting between the United States and particular citizens . . . partakes strongly of the judicial character . . . .”).
But of course, at the Founding, the federal judiciary was largely undeveloped. Indeed, Congress didn’t grant the lower USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 32 of 108
Without that, federal courts generally lacked the jurisdiction to hear cases brought directly under the Fifth Amendment—even if litigants theoretically had a cause of action directly under it. Liti- gants might have had a ticket, but federal courts had no right to put on the show.
And in any case, litigants filed few takings cases against the federal government because the federal government used states to condemn property for federal use. Treanor, The Original Under- standing, supra, at 794 n.69; William Baude, Rethinking the Federal Eminent Domain Power, 122 YALE L.J. 1738, 1762 (2013) (“During the first twenty years of the federal government, Congress built quite a few things and sometimes needed eminent domain . . . . [T]he use of state power was uniform and unquestioned.”).
Still, federal courts did zealously enforce the Takings Clause in the limited instances they had jurisdiction and a relevant suit came up. In 1815, for example, the Supreme Court discussed the “just compensation” right when it was reviewing a state-law action brought to recover possession of property that federal officials USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 33 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 33 occupied. In Meigs v. McClung’s Lessee, the Defendants were United States officers who erected a garrison on property in North Caro- lina, under the authority of the United States. 13 U.S. (9 Cranch) 11, 12 (1815) (bill of exceptions). Plaintiff McClung’s lessee claimed to have leased the property where Meigs and the others resided. Id. He asserted that the officers were on the property improperly. See id. So he filed a common-law action of ejectment, a state-law ac- tion to recover possession of property from any wrongful occu- pier. 9 See id. The Defendants argued “[t]hat the United States had a right by the constitution to appropriate the property of individual citi- zens” and they had done so “as officers of the United States, for the benefit of the United States, and by their direction . . . .” Id. at 13.
But the trial court rejected that defense. Instead, it instructed the jury that “if the land . . . was at the time vacant land[,] the United States could appropriate it as they pleased; but if it was private property[,] the United States could not deprive the individual of it without making him just compensation therefor.” Id. at 14. The trial court awarded judgment to McClung’s lessee. See generally id. Then the Supreme Court affirmed. See id. at 18. In uphold- ing the ejectment remedy, Chief Justice Marshall, writing for the Court, explained that the land was “certainly the property of [McClung’s lessee]; and the United States cannot have intended to Although the case does not state why federal-court jurisdiction existed be- low, we can surmise that there must have been diversity of citizenship be- tween the parties. Cf. HART & WECHSLER, supra, at 22–24, 27–28.
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Meigs shows that the Marshall Court understood that, where it had jurisdiction, the Constitution required it to enforce the right to “just compensation.” And the Court enforced that right even though that meant allowing a private citizen to sue officers of the United States in federal court without the government’s consent.
See Lee, 106 U.S. at 210–11 (discussing how Meigs recognized a pri- vate plaintiff can sue federal officers for possession of taken prop- erty).
Still, Meigs was a rarity. And during those early years of the Republic, in the absence of federal-question jurisdiction in lower federal courts for alleged Takings Clause violations, Congress served as the primary “forum for takings claims.” Treanor, The Original Understanding, supra, at 794 n.69. Yet the terms of the Tak- ings Clause ensure that Congress lacked “discretion to deny takings claims mandated by the Takings Clause.” Id. After all, the Takings Clause guaranteed the “just compensation” remedy. And Congress instead acted only as the lawful judicial tribunal to hear damages actions stemming directly under the Clause. See id.; Shimomura, The History of Claims, supra, at 638 & n.94 (discussing Madison’s view that the adjudication of federal claims was a judicial power).
So even before the federal courts had the jurisdiction to hear claims for damages arising out of federal takings, litigants enjoyed an ef- fective direct cause of action for “just compensation”—only USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 35 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 35 Congress, not the courts, sat as the “judicial” tribunal to determine the just amount.
The Dissent disagrees with our understanding of this early history. It says Congress didn’t exercise a judicial function when it adjudicated takings claims. See Diss. Op. at 20–22. Rather than act- ing as “a pseudo-judicial tribunal,” the Dissent argues, Congress ex- ercised its legislative “power over the purse” to pay claims as it pleased. See id. at 20. For support, the Dissent draws from schol- arship on how the early Congresses resolved all federal claims—not specifically takings claims. See id. at 20–22 (first citing Shimomura, The History of Claims, supra; then citing 2 WILSON COWEN, PHILIP NICHOLS, JR. & MARION T BENNETT, THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS: A HISTORY (1978); and then citing William M. Wiecek, The Origins of The United States Court of Claims, 20 Admin. L. Rev. 387 (1968)).
But a practice of discretionarily declining to pay valid claims, while maybe permissible for most federal claims, would be a clear violation of the text of the Fifth Amendment if extended to takings claims. See U.S. CONST. amend. V (No “private property [shall] be taken for public use, without just compensation.”). As we’ve ex- plained, the Takings Clause was an innovation at the Founding— designed as a unique constraint on legislative power that required mandatory enforcement. In other words, Congress could act only USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 36 of 108
10 The Dissent implies that Congress must retain jurisdiction over takings claims to heed the Appropriations Clause, which provides that “[n]o Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law . . . .” See Diss. Op. at 22–23 (quoting U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 7). We start by noting that the Appropriations Clause has no relevance in the case before us because we are considering whether the Takings Clause pro- vides a cause of action against local governments, who are not encompassed by the Appropriations Clause. See U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 7. But even when it comes to federal takings, for at least two reasons, Congress always maintains control over the fisc, even when courts handle takings claims. First, even though Congress must provide a forum for takings claimants to pursue their constitutional cause of action, Congress retains authority to structure and as- sign the tribunal with jurisdiction over these claims. See U.S. CONST. art. III, § 1; cf. Vishnevsky v. United States, 581 F.2d 1249, 1256 (7th Cir. 1978) (collecting “a long line of cases” where “the Supreme Court has itself . . . specifically af- firmed the appropriateness of mandamus relief to compel federal officers to pay monies out of the public treasury, where the duty to do so was clear and ministerial”). Second, the federal government is liable for takings only when its officers act “within the general scope of their duties.” See Darby Dev. Co. v. United States, 112 F.4th 1017, 1024 (Fed. Cir. 2024); Part III.D.3, infra. So to owe “just compensation,” Congress must pass legislation imbuing an officer with responsibilities that generally authorize her to take property and put the public on the hook for “just compensation.” See Part III.D.3, infra; cf. CFPB v. Cmty. Fin. Servs. Ass’n of Am., Ltd., 601 U.S. 416, 431 (2024) (“[T]he origins of the Appropriations Clause confirm that appropriations needed to designate particular revenues for identified purposes. Beyond that, however, early leg- islative bodies exercised a wide range of discretion.”).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 37 Founders like Madison and Jay’s understanding of the Takings Clause. In contrast to the “just compensation” remedy, early Con- gresses drew the general claims-resolution process from early Eng- lish practice when the “just compensation” principle did not con- strain legislatures. See Shimomura, The History of Claims, supra, at 627–37 (describing the evolution of a legislative model of federal claims resolution). Congress extended that common-law practice after the Founding as it quickly moved to assert its dominance over a yet-to-be-established judiciary. Id. at 637.
But in its zeal to cement power over the courts, Congress sometimes took blatantly unconstitutional acts, often to kneecap and subserviate the judiciary. See Hayburn’s Case, 2 U.S. (2 Dall.) 408
And the results of such congressional contempt for the proper role of the judiciary were disastrous—as early as 1838, the House of Representatives’s Committee on Claims released a report that Congress had been inundated with private claims, consuming time and resources and causing injustice. See id. at 648–51 (discuss- ing early disfunction in the private bill system of claim adjudica- tion). By the Civil War, President Lincoln echoed Madison, telling Congress that “the investigation and adjudication of claims in their nature belong to the judicial department . . . .” Wiecek, The Origins of The United States Court of Claims, supra, at 398 (quoting 7 MESSAGES AND PAPERS OF THE PRESIDENTS 3252 ( James D. Richard- son, ed., New York, 1897–1911)).
All of this is to say that early congressional practice didn’t always conform to the Constitution’s structure as ratified and as leading Founders understood it. Even assuming the Dissent’s un- derstanding of early congressional treatment of takings claims is correct (again, we don’t think it is), that practice would be one such case. And we couldn’t summarily declare its constitutionality as a “contemporaneous legislative exposition of the Constitution . . . , acquiesced in for a long term of years, [that] fixes the construction to be given [the Constitution’s] provisions.” Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186, 213 (2003) (quoting Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52, 175 (1926)). After all, it wasn’t.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 39 In fact, we don’t have an “unbroken practice since the found- ing generation” of resolving takings claims through legislative ra- ther than judicial adjudication. Cf. id. Americans did not acquiesce to that practice. Instead, through the early nineteenth century, the public grew even more attached to the idea of judicial enforcement of the right to “just compensation”—vindicating Jay and Madison in any dispute with Congress.
Specifically, the inclusion of a just-compensation principle in the Fifth Amendment led to a wave of recognition of the right at the state level. And as a result, our history contains repeated ac- knowledgment that citizens were entitled to recover “just compen- sation” in the courts. Indeed, by the middle of the century, it be- came clear that state just-compensation clauses inherently con- tained a right to bring damages actions. This history offers im- portant context to understand the intent of the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment, who extended the reach of the federal Takings Clause to the states. So we take a moment to review it.
When the country ratified the Fifth Amendment, only one of the first thirteen states, Massachusetts, recognized a right to “just compensation” in its constitution. AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra, at 79. By 1800, two had. J.A.C. Grant, The “Higher Law” Background of the Law of Eminent Domain, 6 WIS. L. REV. 67, 70 (1931). By 1850, six did. Id. And by 1868, eight. Id. Plus, nearly every new state admitted to the union included a just-compensa- tion provision. Id. Not only that, but leading American jurists pro- claimed a right to “just compensation” as a fundamental right USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 40 of 108
Ultimately, courts in virtually every state extended the prin- ciple of “just compensation” against state and local governments.
AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra, at 269. And they did so even if their state constitutions didn’t mention “just compensation.” Ra- ther, courts discerned the just-compensation principle to be a fun- damental right. See, e.g., Gardner v. Newburgh, 2 Johns. Ch. 162, 166 (N.Y. 1816) (“a fair compensation must, in all cases, be previ- ously made to the individuals affected . . . . This is a necessary qual- ification accompanying the exercise of legislative power, in taking private property for public uses; the limitation is admitted by the soundest authorities, and is adopted by all temperate and civilized governments, from a deep and universal sense of its justice.”); Sinnickson v. Johnson, 17 N.J.L. 129, 146 (1839) (describing just com- pensation as “operative as a principle of universal law”); Young v. McKenzie, 3 Ga. 31, 44 (1847) (enforcing the right declared in the Takings Clause because it embodies a “great common law princi- ple . . . applicable to all republican governments, and which derived no additional force, as a principle, from being incorporated into the Constitution of the United States.”); Bradshaw v. Rodgers, 20 Johns. 103, 105–06 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1822) (same); Crenshaw v. Slate River Co., 27 Va. (6 Rand.) 245, 265 (1828) (opinion of Carr, J.) (same); The USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 41 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 41 Proprietors of the Piscataqua Bridge v. N.H. Bridge, 7 N.H. 35, 66 (1834) (same); L.C. & C.R.R. Co. v. Chappell, 24 S.C.L. (Rice) 383, 387 (1838) (same); Hall v. Washington County, 2 Greene 473, 478 (Iowa 1850) (same); State v. Glen, 52 N.C. (7 Jones) 321, 330–31 (1859) (same).
When they had jurisdiction, federal courts, including the Su- preme Court, also invoked or applied the just-compensation prin- ciple against the actions of states as a fundamental right against all governments. See, e.g., VanHorne’s Lessee v. Dorrance, 2 U.S. (2 Dall.) 304, 310 (C.C.D. Pa. 1795) (“The [Pennsylvania] legislature . . . had no authority to make an act devesting one citizen of his freehold, and vesting it in another, without a just compensation.”); Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87, 135 (1810) (“It may well be doubted whether the nature of society and of government does not pre- scribe some limits to the legislative power; and, if any be pre- scribed, where are they to be found, if the property of an individ- ual, fairly and honestly acquired, may be seized without compen- sation.”); Terrett v. Taylor, 13 U.S. (9 Cranch) 43, 52 (“[T]hat the leg- islature can repeal statutes creating private corporations, or con- firming to them property already acquired under the faith of pre- vious laws, and by such repeal can vest the property of such corpo- rations exclusively in the state, or dispose of the same to such pur- poses as they may please, without the consent or default of the cor- porators, we are not prepared to admit; and we think ourselves standing upon the principles of natural justice, upon the funda- mental laws of every free government, upon the spirit and the let- ter of the constitution of the United States, and upon the decisions of most respectable judicial tribunals, in resisting such a USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 42 of 108
And once a court recognized a just-compensation right against a state, a plaintiff could recover damages for the violation of that right. Plaintiffs brought their actions to recover compensa- tion for takings in common-law forms of action—typically a tres- pass action against an offending official. See Robert Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort: The Remedial Revolution in Nineteenth Cen- tury State Just Compensation Law, 52 VAND. L. REV. 57, 67–83 (1999).
That official would justify their action as authorized under state law. And the court would invalidate that defense when the action was an uncompensated taking. 11 See id. at 67–68, 83–97. And then courts could award damages available in trespass actions. Id. at 97– 100; see also Sinnickson, 17 N.J.L. at 147; Bradshaw, 20 Johns. at 103, 106; Bos. & R. Mill Corp. v. Gardner, 19 Mass. (2 Pick.) 33, 43 n.2 (1823); Thayer v. Boston, 36 Mass. (19 Pick.) 511, 515–17 (1837); State Although rarer, as in Meigs, these state-law suits could also be brought against federal officials who took property claiming official authority but vio- lated the Federal Takings Clause. See, e.g., Meigs, 13 U.S. 11; Lee, 106 U.S. 196; Amar, Of Sovereignty and Federalism, supra, at 1512 (discussing how a state-law trespass action allowed suit against federal officials in Lee for an uncompen- sated taking).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 43 v. Hooker, 17 Vt. 658, 672 (1845); Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co., 80 U.S (13 Wall.) 166, 175–80 (1872). Although these damages were ini- tially limited to retrospective relief, by 1860 some courts had al- lowed plaintiffs to recover full permanent damages.12 Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort, supra, at 100; see also, e.g., Mayor & Council of Rome v. Perkins, 30 Ga. 154 (1860). In effect, courts al- lowed direct damages actions for “just compensation” to move for- ward.
And during the later nineteenth and early twentieth centu- ries, states abandoned rigid common-law forms of action as pre- requisites for suits for damages and combined the courts of law and equity. Cf. Douglas Laycock, How Remedies Became a Field: A History, REV. LITIG. 161, 171 (2008) (“Anglo-American law abolished the writ system, and merged the courts of law and equity, over roughly a century from 1848 . . . to 1937 . . . . In the nineteenth century, we begin to see transsubstantive treatises on damages . . . .”). As part of this process, courts in the 1870s and 1880s described damages actions to recover “just compensation” not only as trespass but also as actions derived directly from constitutional guarantees. See Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort, supra, at 109–15; see also, e.g., City of El- gin v. Eaton, 83 Ill. 535, 536–37 (1876) (“[T]he right to recover dam- ages was given by the constitution . . . .”).
12 Retrospective relief might allow Fulton full recovery here because no evi- dence in the record shows the possibility of return of his horses. So his retro- spective loss would be their full value.
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Federal courts, too, inferred causes of action, directly under state constitutions, against local governments for damages. See, e.g., Blanchard v. City of Kansas, 16 F. 444, 446 (W.D. Mo. 1883) (Mil- ler, J.) (“[S]ince the positive declaration of the constitution is that private property shall not be taken or damaged for public use with- out just compensation, . . . it is bound in some way to make that just compensation, and . . . the law shall compel it to do it.”); see also Sumner v. Philadelphia, 23 F. Cas. 392 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1873) (award- ing damages for common-law taking).
We emphasize that these courts recognized actions directly under state constitutions without acknowledging that doing so USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 45 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 45 marked a fundamental change from the previous common-law ac- tions litigants used to obtain “just compensation” in the form of damages. See Elgin, 83 Ill. at 536–37; Johnson, 16 W. Va. at 424–26; Householder, 83 Mo. at 495; Blanchard, 16 F. at 446–47. 13 For these courts, “the limitation, turning as it did on compensation, obvi- ously and necessarily encompassed the remedial grant . . . .”
Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort, supra, at 113. And so, in ef- fect, these courts recognized as direct actions the same damages actions that other courts earlier did as trespass actions. See, e.g., Blanchard, 16 F. at 447 (“[T]he other party has . . . the right that the law gave her to recover these damages in any proper form of ac- tion.”).
In sum, through the nineteenth century, it became clear that state just-compensation clauses inherently contained a right to bring damages actions. 14 West Virginia came the closest to acknowledging an innovation. It partially justified its decision by stating that “[a] constitutional prohibition forbidding an injury to the property of a citizen is certainly as effective as a statute framed for the same purpose . . . .” Johnson, 16 W. Va. at 425. But it made this state- ment after a long summary describing how “the pride of the common law [was] that it furnishes a remedy for every wrong.” Id. at 424. So West Virginia framed its decision as a logical extension of traditional common-law practices.
14 The Dissent chastises us for “point[ing] to no decision from the early republic that permitted a suit at law against the government for compensation under the Takings Clause.” See Diss. Op. at 23–26 (emphasis in original). It empha- sizes that at the Founding, actions to recover “just compensation” proceeded in rigid common-law forms. See id. But it misunderstands the key point. True, at the Founding, litigants had to bring state actions for damages like “just com- pensation” in statutorily prescribed vehicles or rigid common-law forms like USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 46 of 108
So with Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, they constitutionalized a right to bring a federal action against local gov- ernments. In doing so, the Framers overruled Barron v. Baltimore, 32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 243 (1833).
In Barron, the Supreme Court considered the case of a plain- tiff who sought “to recover damages for injuries to [his] wharf- trespass. See Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort, supra, at 69–71. That was how the legal system worked back then. See id. But states abolished rigid forms of action over the mid-nineteenth to early-twentieth century. See Laycock, How Remedies Became a Field, supra, at 171. As part of the process, courts de- scribed the old common-law actions for “just compensation” as actions di- rectly under state takings clauses. See Brauneis, The First Constitutional Tort, supra, at 109–15. But, at bottom, both the common-law and direct-takings ac- tions were the same kind of actions with a shared lineage. See id. They both ensured that citizens could always exercise their constitutional rights to obtain “just compensation” in the courts. Compare Bos. & R. Mill Corp., 19 Mass. at 43 n.2, with Householder, 83 Mo. at 495. Today, we have a federal right to “just compensation” against local governments that guarantees Americans may re- cover damages in a federal forum with jurisdiction. See U.S. CONST. amends.
V; XIV, § 1. And we have a federal judicial system that recognizes only “one form of action—the civil action.” See FED. R. CIV. P. 2. So we translate the language of the Founding to the modern world and recognize the Constitu- tion provides a cause of action directly under the Takings Clause. And it may be brought in federal courts with appropriate jurisdiction.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 47 property . . . arising from the actions” of the local government of Baltimore. 32 U.S. at 243 (syllabus). The plaintiff contended that the Takings Clause directly applied to the states. Id. at 247. So, he asserted, Baltimore committed “an actionable tort” by “depriv[ing] a citizen of his property, though for public uses, without indemni- fication . . . .” Id. at 245 (syllabus). The Supreme Court disagreed.
It held that the Takings Clause “is intended solely as a limitation on the exercise of power by the government of the United States, and is not applicable to the legislation of the states.” Id. at 250–51. As a result, the Court, as the ultimate federal court, determined it “ha[d] no jurisdiction of the cause . . . .” Id. at 251.
The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment intended for the Amendment to overturn Barron. Despite extensive state-law protections for “just compensation” by the 1860s, the Framers made it clear that they wanted federal enforcement against state and local uncompensated takings to be available.
For his part, John Bingham, the author of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, noted that before Reconstruction, the Takings Clause was not a “limitation[] upon the States as can be enforced by Congress and the judgment of the United States courts.”
See CONG. GLOBE, 39TH CONG., 2d Sess. 811 (1867) (emphasis added); see also id. 1st Sess. 1065 (1866) (statement of Rep. Bing- ham) (Section One was “proposed . . . to protect the thousands and tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands of loyal . . . citizens of the United States whose property, by State legislation, has been wrested from them under confiscation . . . .”). So he expressed the USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 48 of 108
Bingham later explained that he “had read” Barron, which he described as a case where “the city had taken private property for public use, without compensation as alleged, and there was no re- dress for the wrong in the Supreme Court of the United States.” Id., 42D CONG., 1st Sess. App. 84 (1871) (emphasis added). Barron “induced [Bingham] to attempt to impose by constitutional amendments new limitations upon the power of the States . . . .” Id. As Bingham saw things, when left to their own devices, the States “took prop- erty without compensation, and the [citizen] had no remedy.” Id. at App. 85. But the Fourteenth Amendment was intended to fix that. 15
See id. For example, the Act provided additional civil and criminal penalties for those who conspiratorially interfered with civil rights. Ku Klux Klan Act USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 49 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 49 Another leading Framer of the Fourteenth Amendment ech- oed Bingham’s call for federal protections against takings. Senator Jacob Howard highlighted the need to pass the Fourteenth Amend- ment because “it has been repeatedly held that the restriction con- tained in the Constitution against the taking of private property for public use without just compensation is not a restriction upon State legislation . . . .” Id., 39TH CONG., 1st Sess. 2765 (1866). Instead, “the States [were] not restrained from violating the principles em- braced in [the Bill of Rights] except by their own local constitu- tions, which may be altered from year to year.” Id. at 2766.
Howard and Bingham believed that state protection for the right to “just compensation” just wasn’t enough. Rather, they thought, federal law needed to independently protect the just-com- pensation principle. And they thought so even though, as we’ve noted, by the late 1860s and 70s, when the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, the law had developed under state courts to the point where a right to “just compensation” included a right to sue for damages from an uncompensated taking. So at a minimum, the
of 1871, §§ 2–6, 17 Stat. at 13–15. Indeed, he highlighted that some “combina- tions . . . destroying the property of the citizen” may be “too powerful to be overcome by judicial process . . . .” See CONG. GLOBE, 42D CONG., 1st Sess. App. 85 (1871). And we must also consider his comments against the back- ground of a lack of federal-question jurisdiction for the lower federal courts until 1875, see Act of Mar. 3, 1875, ch. 137, § 1, 18 Stat. at 470, and the Supreme Court’s failure to recognize the right to “just compensation” as applicable to the states until 1897. See Chi., B. & Q.R. Co. v. City of Chicago, 166 U.S. 226, 241 (1897). Faced with that judicial environment, legislation affirmatively provid- ing a cause of action for takings likely seemed more important.
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The Dissent offers no persuasive retort to all this antebellum and Reconstruction history. See Diss. Op. at 25–26. Instead, it dis- misses evidence from state law because, it says, “[m]any jurists viewed state constitutional declarations of rights differently than federal declarations of the same rights.” 16 See id. at 25 (citing Jud
16 Ironically, the Dissent also asserts that almost all rights in the Constitution, including the right to “just compensation,” draw their meaning from pre-Rat- ification understandings. See Diss. Op. at 7. So under the Dissent’s view, the Takings Clause would have to draw its meaning from its few precursors-— namely the Vermont and Massachusetts constitutions. See Part III.D.2, supra. Put more generally, the federal right to “just compensation” would be defined with the same contours as the state rights to “just compensation.” Cf. Baude, Campbell & Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amendment, supra n.6, at 1199 & n.81, 1236 (explaining that certain rights had “determinate legal content,” including the right to just compensation). As a result, whether state constitu- tional guarantees of “just compensation” automatically secured judicial relief for takings would be critically relevant. And Vermont’s and Massachusetts’s constitutions did. See Bos. & R. Mill Corp., 19 Mass. at 43 n.2 (“Where it appears that a resolve of the legislature, directing the location of a road, makes no pro- vision for a ‘just compensation’ to the owners of property to be taken for the purposes of the road, agreeably to the provisions of the constitution, the agents of the State in constructing the road are liable to be treated as trespass- ers by those whose property is so taken, or upon whose property such agents enter for locating the road. Compensation in such case should be made or provided for when the property is taken.” (internal citation omitted)); Thayer, Mass. at 515–17 (recognizing broad municipal liability for the actions of municipal officers); Hooker, 17 Vt. at 672 (“[I]f the sheriff [unlawfully] takes property . . . he must answer in a suit for damage . . . .”).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 51 Campbell, Constitutional Rights Before Realism, 2020 U. Ill. L. Rev. 1433, 1441–42); but see William Baude, Jud Campbell & Stephen E.
Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amendment, 76 STAN. L. REV. 1185, 1199 & n.81, 1236 (2024) (explaining that antebellum “Amer- icans enjoyed certain fundamental legal rights with determinate le- gal content—rights that ‘no state could rightfully abridge,’” includ- ing the right to just compensation for takings). And it effectively dismisses the intent of the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment as irrelevant. See Diss. Op. at 25–26.
But the Takings Clause applies to local governments only through the Fourteenth Amendment. So the original intent of Americans when they ratified that Amendment governs its meaning. See gen- erally AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS, supra. And leading up to the Civil War, Americans loudly confirmed that they believed the “just com- pensation” right to be judicially enforceable. They also made clear they intended the new Amendment to overturn Barron and make the right federally enforceable.17
Congress isn’t liable for violations by local governments, so it has no obliga- tion to pay for them. And Congress likely can’t force state legislatures to pass bills paying for takings by local governments. See New York v. United States, 505 U.S. 144, 179 (highlighting that “[n]o . . . constitutional provision authorizes Congress to command state legislatures to legislate”). So even if at the Found- ing Congress could handle takings violations through private bills, the Four- teenth Amendment demands an alternative remedy. Cf. Fuld v. Palestine Liber- ation Org., 145 S. Ct. 2090, 2105 (2025) (recognizing a difference in the appro- priate jurisdictional inquiries under the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 52 of 108
52 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 Given this robust support for the just-compensation princi- ple after the Civil War, it’s no wonder that the Supreme Court rec- ognized it as the first provision of the Bill of Rights to apply to the States. See Chi., B. & Q.R. Co. v. City of Chicago, 166 U.S. 226, 241 (1897). In fact, the Court did so fifty years before Justice Hugo Black launched a conversation about whether the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated the protections of the Bill of Rights. See Adamson v. California, 332 U.S. 46, 74–75 (1947) (Black, J., dissenting) (concluding the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment intended to apply the protections of the Bill of Rights to the states).
And the Court later heard several equitable cases against lo- cal governments proceeding directly under the Takings Clause (with no reference to § 1983 or any other statutory cause of action).
See Norwood v. Baker, 172 U.S. 269, 276 (1898); Cuyahoga River Power Co. v. Akron, 240 U.S. 462, 463 (1916); Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S. 365, 384 (1926); Del., L. & W. R. Co. v. Morristown, 276 U.S. 182, 188 (1928); Dohany v. Rogers, 281 U.S. 362, 364 (1930). 18 So once the court incorporated the right to “just compensation”
Fourteenth Amendments to “respect . . . the distinct sovereignties” the two Amendments govern).
18 The Supreme Court observed that “the mere fact that the Takings Clause provided the substantive rule of decision for . . . equitable claims . . . does not establish that it creates a cause of action for damages, a remedy that is legal, not equitable, in nature.” DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292. So these cases aren’t con- clusive on the question before us. Still, they offer additional support that the Takings Clause directly mandates a federal remedy against local governments independent of a statutory cause of action.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 53 against the states, it was clear that the Takings Clause included a direct federal remedy for its violation by state and local govern- ments.
Altogether, this history establishes that from the Founding through Reconstruction, Americans believed that the just-compen- sation principle, when it applied, offered relief—even if at times, the provided forum was actually in Congress or before state courts in common-law actions. And that relief always included damages.
The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment then ensured a federal guarantee of the “just compensation” remedy against state and lo- cal governments. This history supports the conclusion that a fed- eral cause of action for damages exists directly under the Takings Clause.
3. The direct cause of action under the Takings Clause is available here against Fulton County.
As we’ve discussed, the text, structure, and history of the Constitution all lead to the conclusion that the Takings Clause con- tains a direct cause of action. Now, we consider whether that direct cause of action is available to Fulton. We conclude that it is.
The Supreme Court’s habeas jurisprudence teaches us that a substitute remedy for a constitutional remedy may suffice, if it’s no narrower than the constitutional remedy. See Part III.D.1, supra. But no other remedy available to Fulton at least duplicates the scope of the just-compensation remedy under the Fifth and Four- teenth Amendments.
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54 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 Congress hasn’t provided for an adequate remedial system for uncompensated takings by local governments in situations like this one—leaving Fulton remediless. Two forms of federal judicial relief might be adequate to vindicate the just-compensation right: damages actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and equitable relief. But neither completely captures the constitutional guarantee here.
We begin with § 1983. Fulton filed under § 1983, which al- lows a litigant to seek damages against “[e]very person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State . . . subjects . . . any citizen of the United States . . . to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution . . . .” 42 U.S.C. § 1983. That allows suits against local governments to recover “just compensation.” Knick, 588 U.S. at 194. But a limitation on § 1983 cases bars a class of Fifth Amend- ment plaintiffs.
Under Monell v. Department of Social Services, a local govern- ment may not be sued under § 1983 “for an injury inflicted solely by its employees or agents.” 436 U.S. at 694. Rather, suits may move forward only “when execution of a government’s policy or custom, whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts may fairly be said to represent official policy, inflicts the in- jury . . . .” Id. This limitation makes the § 1983 remedy narrower than the Takings Clause’s direct cause of action in some cases, like Fulton’s.
That’s so because under the Takings Clause, the duty to provide “just compensation” attaches to a government when its officer acts USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 55 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 55 “within the general scope of their duties.” See Darby Dev. Co. v. United States, 112 F.4th 1017, 1024 (Fed. Cir. 2024). And it doesn’t matter whether that taking resulted directly from a “regulation (or statute, or ordinance, or miscellaneous decree).” Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, 594 U.S. 139, 149 (2021). So Fulton could satisfy that showing here, even though he can’t establish that the County took his horses under an official policy or custom. 19 To be sure, the lesser showing courts have required in tak- ings cases doesn’t relieve a litigant of his obligation to show that the taking is traceable to the governmental entity alleged to have committed it. And it’s not enough to find simply that an officer employed by the relevant government interfered with property.
See, e.g., In re Chi., Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pac. R.R. Co., 799 F.2d 317, 326 (7th Cir. 1986) (“Accidental, unintended injuries inflicted by governmental actors are treated as torts, not takings.”).
But even so, the Supreme Court has repeatedly found the government liable for takings that occur “without express statutory authority or prohibition . . . . as a consequence of a[n] . . . officer’s discharge of his normal responsibilities . . . .” See Ramirez de Arel- lano v. Weinberger, 724 F.2d 143, 151–53 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Scalia, J.) (collecting cases), vacated & reheard, 745 F.2d 1500 (D.C. Cir. 1984)
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56 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 (en banc), vacated sub nom., Weinberger v. Ramirez de Arellano, 471 U.S. 1113 (1985). 20 So when an officer takes property within his typical responsibilities, the right to “just compensation” kicks in against his government.
Great Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Garland shows how this works. 124 U.S. 581 (1888). There, the Court weighed whether a compensable taking occurred when the Secretary of War took property to construct a dam outside a surveyed area Congress au- thorized for takings. Id. at 595–96. Even though the Secretary’s actions were not fully in accord with official policy, the Court de- termined that “still the United States [was] under an obligation im- posed by the constitution to make just compensation for all that ha[d] been in fact taken and [was] retained for the proposed dam.” Id. at 596. The Court emphasized that the Secretary “honestly and reasonably exercise[d] the discretion with which he was invested,” even if he ultimately went beyond official policy. Id. at 597.
Or consider Portsmouth Harbor Land & Hotel Co. v. United States. 260 U.S. 327 (1922). There, the Supreme Court considered whether a plaintiff properly alleged a taking when officers manning a fort neighboring his resort property planned to repeatedly shoot cannon projectiles over that property. Id. at 328–30. The Court found the plaintiff met his burden for his case against the
20 Although the en banc court vacated the panel opinion in Ramirez de Arellano, it “did not disagree with the panel’s analysis of the authorization issue.” Del- Rio Drilling Programs, Inc. v. United States, 146 F.3d 1358, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
On this point, then-Judge Scalia’s opinion remains persuasive.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 57 government to proceed, even though he did not allege a specific policy authorizing the firing. See id. at 330. It was enough that the “United States built the fort and put in the guns and the men . . . .” Id. But if the plaintiff had to meet § 1983’s added re- quirement to plead an official policy or custom, his claim would have likely failed because all he could allege was that his harm stemmed from the actions of the government’s agents.
United States v. Causby presents yet another example. 328 U.S. 256 (1946). In that case, the Supreme Court found the government on the hook for a taking when the Civil Aeronautics Authority au- thorized flights that passed 83 feet above the plaintiff’s property.
That was so even though Congress had authorized the taking of only “navigable airspace”—defined by regulation as at least 300 feet above the ground. Id. at 258–60, 263–64.
This requirement of “just compensation” applies just as equally to local governments as it does to the federal government.
When, as in Georgia, local governments are political subdivisions of a state, see GA. CODE ANN. § 25-3-4 (2025), they must furnish compensation for their takings. See Knick, 588 U.S. at 189 (“If a local government takes private property without paying for it, that gov- ernment has violated the Fifth Amendment—just as the Takings Clause says . . . . ”). After all, the Takings Clause is “applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment . . . .” Cedar Point Nursery, 594 U.S. at 147. And the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment, as we’ve mentioned, specifically sought to reverse Barron v. Baltimore, the decision where the Supreme Court held USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 58 of 108
58 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 that, before the Fourteenth Amendment, the Takings Clause did not apply to the actions of a city. See CONG. GLOBE, 42D CONG., 1st Sess. App. 84 (1871) (statement of Rep. Bingham) (discussing how Barron was top of mind when drafting Section One of the Four- teenth Amendment).
So if like in Great Falls Manufacturing Co., a city official exer- cised eminent domain outside a limited area that official policy au- thorized, his local government would still be liable. Or if, as in Portsmouth, a local police force engaged in repeated firing practice over private property, its government would be responsible. Or, as in Causby, if a fire department consistently flew helicopters 83 feet over an individual’s property when the city council only authorized flights at a minimum altitude of 300 feet, the local government would pay the price. In all these examples, a plaintiff would be en- titled to “just compensation” from his local government but would not necessarily be able to plead a § 1983 action. 21 The Dissent acknowledges that the federal government is liable for takings “perpetrated by its officers acting in ‘the normal scope of [their] duties.’” See Diss. Op. at 30 (alteration in original). Yet it contends the Takings Clause of- fers less protection for takings that officers of local governments commit. See id. This position is inconsistent with its argument that the Fourteenth Amend- ment’s protections apply identically between the federal and state govern- ments. See id. at 26. And it’s also odd given the well-documented focus of the Framers on overturning Barron, which, as we’ve noted, held that the Takings Clause applied to only those takings by the federal government, not the local- government defendant in that case. See Part III.D.2, supra. Bingham and How- ard couldn’t have been clearer that they sought to extend the federal protec- tions of the Takings Clause to local governments. See id. Indeed, we doubt the action brought in Barron itself would have satisfied Monell’s policy-or- USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 59 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 59 The gap between § 1983 liability for a county’s taking and a county’s liability for the same taking under the Takings Clause leaves a substantial class of plaintiffs who can’t recover “just com- pensation” under § 1983. Compare Ramirez de Arellano, 724 F.2d at 151 (describing takings liability as “a concept akin to, though not as liberal as, the ‘scope of employment’ test for application of the doctrine of respondeat superior in private law”), with Monell, 436 U.S. at 691 (“[A] municipality cannot be held liable under § 1983 on a respondeat superior theory.”).22 As Fulton’s own case shows, any time officers seize property as part of a lawful investigation but the government later fails to return it for unknown reasons, § 1983 does not afford a “just compensation” remedy. Cf. Jenkins v. United States, 71 F.4th 1367, 1373–74 (Fed. Cir. 2023) (recognizing “just
custom requirement. See Barron, 32 U.S. at 243–44 (syllabus) (summarizing that the plaintiff’s injuries were caused by flooding from streams of water di- verted by the city “partly by adopting new grades of streets, and partly by the necessary results of paving, and partly by mounds, embankments and other artificial means” that don’t appear to have resulted from an officially adopted policy or custom as Monell and its progeny construe the term).
22 Amicus Institute for Justice contends that Monell’s policy-or-custom require- ment does not apply to takings claims because “[a] just-compensation claim necessarily sounds against governmental entities.” But Monell expressly con- sidered that takings actions would proceed under § 1983, yet it carved out no exception to its policy-or-custom requirement for takings violations. See Mo- nell, 436 U.S. at 686–87, 694. Nor does anything in the text of § 1983 suggest a special carveout for takings violations. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983. And almost all constitutional rights are asserted against state action. See, e.g., U.S. CONST. amends. I; II; III; IV; V; VI; VII; VIII; XIV, § 1; XV, § 1; IX; XXIV, § 1; XXVI, § 1.
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60 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 compensation” liability where officers do not return seized prop- erty at the conclusion of an investigation); Frein v. Pa. State Police, 47 F.4th 247, 252–53 (3d Cir. 2022) (same).
Congress can’t prescribe an exclusive remedy for uncompen- sated takings that is more restrictive than the Takings Clause’s guarantee of “just compensation.”23 Its authority to enact § 1983 comes from Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which au- thorizes Congress “to enforce, by appropriate legislation” the Amendment. See Monell, 436 U.S. at 665. But that provision gives “no power to restrict, abrogate, or dilute” the intrinsic protections of the Bill of Rights. See Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641, 651 n.10 (1966). And the Takings Clause mandates compensation for litigants who have suffered takings by government employees act- ing within the normal scope of their duties, whether under official local policy or not. So some other federal mechanism must allow litigants who have suffered takings by their local government to re- cover “just compensation.”
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 61 The other federal remedy that might apply is equitable re- lief. See Ex Parte Young, 209 U.S. 123 (1908). In the context of a takings claim, equitable relief would be an order enjoining the gov- ernment from taking or possessing the disputed property, requir- ing the government to leave the property in the possession of its owner. See First English, 482 U.S. at 319. But the Supreme Court has already recognized that equitable relief is inadequate because it does not allow for recovery of the rental value of property that the government temporarily possesses. See id. Nor does it offer any remedy in a case like the one here, where the government al- ready took property and its location is unknown—or worse, its value is destroyed. At bottom, “just compensation” is a form of “legal relief,” see City of Monterey, 526 U.S. at 710–11, so a system for the recovery of legal relief necessarily must exist to fulfill the prom- ise of “just compensation.”
One final remedy could be sufficient under the Fifth Amend- ment: relief that state-law causes of action authorize. As we’ve mentioned, the Supreme Court has said that “constitutional con- cerns do not arise when property owners have other ways to seek just compensation,” including state-law vehicles. Id. at 292. But we have no evidence, and some doubts, that all states permit actions to recover “just compensation” for personal property loss, like horses. Cf. Raylu Enters., Inc. v. City of Nobesville, 205 N.E.3d 260, (Ind. Ct. App. 2023) (rejecting an argument that Indiana’s in- verse-condemnation actions allow for the recovery of compensa- tion for personal property taken); Holmes Protection of Pittsburgh, Inc. v. Port Auth. of Allegheny Cnty., 495 A.2d 630, 633 (Pa. Commw.
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62 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 Ct. 1985) (holding that an inverse-condemnation action could not be sustained where there was a taking of personal but no real prop- erty); Vaughn v. City of Muskogee, 359 P.3d 192, 196 n.1 (Okla. Civ. App. 2015) (refusing to opine on whether a plaintiff can bring an inverse-condemnation action for a taking of personal property un- related to real property); Allianz Global Risks U.S. Ins. Co. v. State, 161 N.H. 121, 126 (2010) (declining to address whether inverse-con- demnation actions are cognizable for loss of personal property); WIS. STAT. § 32.19(3)(a) (2025) (capping compensation for losses to personal property from condemnation “at an amount equal to the reasonable expenses that would have been required to relocate such property”).
In Georgia, where Fulton is, to our knowledge, the state su- preme court has not ruled on the issue. See Pribeagu v. Gwinnett County, 785 S.E.2d 567, 571 (Ga. Ct. App. 2016). And it wasn’t until 2016 that a single panel of the intermediate appellate court in the state, reversing a lower court on the issue, found personal property damage recoverable in an inverse condemnation action.24 Id. That doesn’t offer assurances that all inverse-condemnation actions al- low recovery of personal property.
24 We do note, however, that other panels seemed to take it for granted that compensation could be awarded for personal property takings. See, e.g., How- ard v. Gourmet Concepts Intern, Inc., 529 S.E.2d 406, 410 (Ga. Ct. App. 2000) (“Personal injury, however, for purposes of inverse condemnation does not constitute personal property that can be taken.”); Rutherford v. DeKalb County, 651 S.E.2d 771, 774 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007) (same).
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 63 Plus, we’ve noted that Georgia requires “[a]ll claims against counties [to] be presented within 12 months after they accrue or become payable or the same are barred . . . .” GA. CODE ANN. § 36- 11-1 (2025). And it’s too late now for Fulton to comply with that requirement. But a direct action under the Takings Clause includes no such limitation. So Georgia’s state remedy is narrower than the direct cause of action under the Takings Clause. 25
We similarly would take issue if Congress were to adopt a procedural rule so unreasonably restrictive as to unfairly prevent takings claimants from having their day in court. See U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 5 (authorizing Congress “to enforce, by appropriate legislation” the protections of the Fourteenth Amend- ment, which include the incorporated Takings Clause (emphasis added)). But we think the Constitution permits Congress, for example, to set a reasonable statute of limitations for takings claims with its authority “to enforce” the Fourteenth Amendment. See id. And nobody is suggesting that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure don’t apply to takings claims. Similarly, state courts have no obligation to dispense with their regular procedural rules when adju- dicating takings claims. See DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292. But they can’t be the USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 64 of 108
64 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 At bottom, “[t]he availability of any particular compensa- tion remedy, such as an inverse condemnation claim under state law, cannot infringe or restrict the property owner’s federal consti- tutional claim . . . .” Knick, 588 U.S. at 191. We reiterate “[t]he fact that the State has provided a property owner with a procedure that may subsequently result in just compensation cannot deprive the owner of his Fifth Amendment right to compensation under the Constitution, leaving only the state law right.” Id. A federal right guarantees a federal remedy not dependent on the whims of states.
The Dissent suggests one other remedy that it claims Fulton could have availed himself of: suits against the officers who con- ducted the takings under § 1983 or state law. Diss. Op. at 3–6, 32.
But even the Dissent recognizes why that doesn’t offer Fulton re- lief—officers receive qualified immunity under federal law and
exclusive forum for this constitutional remedy if they have procedures that nar- row the availability of that remedy without any congressional blessing. Cf. id. at 293 (remanding only because petitioner had a cause of action under state law, and the state promised not to oppose amendment of his complaint to pursue it); Knick, 588 U.S. at 194. That’s because the Takings Clause promises a federal remedy independent of the whims of states. See Knick, 588 U.S. at 194; Part III.D.1 & 2, supra. And only Congress can impose ultimate proce- dural bars because the Fourteenth Amendment charges Congress specifically with its enforcement. See U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 5. But, here, because of Monell, the only time Fulton could have conceivably sought relief in any court would have been in state court within the one-year deadline Georgia alone set. GA. CODE ANN. § 36-11-1 (2025). So Georgia, as the exclusive forum, has unilaterally and unconstitutionally imposed a procedural bar on Fulton’s tak- ings claim—assuming Fulton could have ever sought relief in Georgia courts, which remains unclear. Cf. Pribeagu, 785 S.E.2d at 571.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 65 official immunity under Georgia law. See id. at 5–6 (citing Griffith v. Robinson, 884 S.E.2d 532, 534–35 (Ga. Ct. App. 2023) and then citing Lee v. Ferraro, 284 F.3d 1188, 1193–94 (11th Cir. 2002)). The parties have not presented, and we are not aware of, any clearly established law in this circuit to overcome qualified immunity in a § 1983 action against the relevant officers that took Fulton’s horses. Cf. Gilmore v. Ga. Dep’t of Corr., No. 23–10343, 2025 WL 1911728, at *8 (11th Cir. July 11, 2025) (en banc) (articulating the standard for overcoming qualified immunity under our precedents.). But the Takings Clause demands the provision of “just compensation” regardless of any officer immunity. See U.S. CONST. amend. V. Plus, just as funda- mentally, once an officer commits a taking, it’s his government, not necessarily the officer himself, that the Constitution puts on the hook for that compensation. See Knick, 588 U.S. at 189 (“If a local government takes private property without paying for it, that gov- ernment has violated the Fifth Amendment . . . .”).
At the end of the day, both we and the Dissent agree that Fulton currently has access to neither federal nor state relief. Mo- nell categorically bars him from ever suing his local government in federal court for the compensation it owes him. And Georgia law does not allow him to seek compensation in its courts today. But unlike the Dissent, we don’t think the Constitution authorizes the conclusion that he must go remediless. The Constitution doesn’t promise “just compensation” only to allow a local government’s whim not to provide it.
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66 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 Because no other constitutionally adequate remedy for tak- ings of personal property by local governments exists here, we hold that the Takings Clause directly provides for judicial relief.
4. Sovereign immunity does not bar a direct cause of ac- tion under the Takings Clause.
The Dissent disagrees with our textual, structural, and his- torical analysis. Besides concluding that the Takings Clause’s guar- anteed damages remedy doesn’t give a litigant the right to sue for damages, it argues that sovereign immunity bars a direct takings cause of action. Diss. Op. at 15–19. We agree that it would be odd for the Constitution to provide an outside check on Congress only to require Congress to waive its sovereign immunity to enforce that limitation. But we disagree that sovereign immunity has relevance here. Unlike the Dissent, we think the Takings Clause has bite.
To start, sovereign immunity can’t undermine a cause of ac- tion that the Constitution expressly makes a right. See PennEast Pipeline Co., LLC v. New Jersey, 594 U.S. 482, 508 (2021) (“[A] State may be sued if it has agreed to suit in the ‘plan of the Convention,’ which is shorthand for ‘the structure of the original Constitution itself.’” (citation omitted)). That’s why the Supreme Court has been clear that when “there [is] no remedy by which [a] plaintiff could have recovered compensation for [a] taking . . . ,” he may at least sue to recover his taken property under a “constitutional ex- ception to the doctrine of sovereign immunity . . . .” Malone v. Bowdoin, 369 U.S. 643, 647–48 (1962) (quoting Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp., 337 U.S. 682, 696–97 (1949)) (internal USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 67 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 67 quotation marks omitted); see also First English, 482 U.S. at 316 n.9 (rejecting arguments that “principles of sovereign immunity” pre- vent recognition that the Fifth Amendment is a “remedial provi- sion”); Lee, 106 U.S. at 221 (asserting if the government can defeat a takings claim by invoking sovereign immunity “it sanctions a tyr- anny which has no existence in the monarchies of Europe, nor in any other government which has a just claim to well-regulated lib- erty and the protection of personal rights”).
After all, sovereign immunity cannot defeat the other textu- ally guaranteed remedy in the Constitution: the writ of habeas cor- pus. See U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 2; Lee, 106 U.S. at 218, 220 (com- paring the power to issue a writ of habeas corpus to judicially en- forcing the Takings Clause). Otherwise, the government could de- tain an individual without ever being required to undergo judicial review, and the writ of habeas corpus would be effectively sus- pended in violation of the Constitution. See U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 2; Lee, 106 U.S. at 220.
It’s true, as the Dissent points out, see Diss. Op. at 18, that a takings suit brought under §1983 is subject to a sovereign-immunity defense. See Robinson v. Ga. Dep’t of Transp., 966 F.2d 637, 640 (11th Cir. 1992). But that’s because § 1983 is a statutory cause of action.
And a statutory cause of action abrogates a state government’s im- munity only if Congress intended it to, which Congress did not.
See Quern v. Jordan, 440 U.S. 332, 341 (1979). But the Dissent offers no binding authority that a cause of action directly from the Consti- tution can be restricted by sovereign immunity. If sovereign USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 68 of 108
68 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 immunity applied to a constitutional cause of action, that constitu- tional cause of action would offer no protection against a fickle leg- islature.
And even if we were to agree with the Dissent that sovereign immunity generally bars takings causes of action—as should be clear by now, we don’t—immunity has no place here. Fulton seeks to sue a local government. And “[u]nder the traditional Eleventh Amendment paradigm . . . . counties and similar municipal corpo- rations are not” entitled to sovereign immunity. United States ex rel.
Lesinski v. S. Fla. Water Mgmt. Dist., 739 F.3d 598, 601 (11th Cir. 2014). So Fulton County has no sovereign immunity, and the doc- trine poses no bar to relief in this suit.
At the end of the day, we read the words of the Takings Clause to mean what they say. When a government takes private property, it’s on the hook for “just compensation.” We find com- mon ground with the Dissent by heeding the words of Chief Jus- tice Marshall: “[W]e must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.” Diss. Op. at 19 (quoting McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 407 (1819)). As Marshall explained, we must give “a fair construction of the whole instrument.” McCulloch, 17 U.S. at 406. And a “fair construction” recognizes that when the Constitution grants an express right to damages, the American peo- ple have a right to recover them.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 69 5. The Takings Clause’s cause of action stands inde- pendent of “implied” Bivens actions.
One final note: some, including the Dissent, have suggested that a direct cause of action under the Takings Clause would run into the headwinds of the Supreme Court’s Bivens jurisprudence.
See, e.g., DeVillier, 63 F.4th at 420 (Higginson, J., concurring in denial of rehearing en banc); Diss. Op. at 8–10. They note that the prac- tice of “implying constitutional causes of action” against federal officials, which began with Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), is “a disfavored judi- cial activity.” DeVillier, 63 F.4th at 420 (Higginson, J., concurring in denial of rehearing en banc) (quoting Egbert v. Boule, 596 U.S. 482, (2022)). But most respectfully, we think closer scrutiny reveals that the Court’s Bivens guidance is of no relevance to this case.
We are, of course, aware that the Supreme Court, in dicta, has pointed out that “there is no express cause of action under the Takings Clause . . . .” Me. Cmty. Health Options, 590 U.S. 296, 323 n.12 (2020). But the Supreme Court has been equally clear that its “precedents do not cleanly answer the question whether a plaintiff has a cause of action arising directly under the Takings Clause.”
DeVillier, 601 U.S. at 292.
And the Court has also recognized that plaintiffs may sue to acquire “just compensation” from the federal government under the Tucker Act. See Me. Cmty. Health Options, 590 U.S. at 323 n.12.
That’s so, even though the Tucker Act “does not create substantive rights.” Id. at 322 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
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70 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 Instead, “[a] plaintiff relying on the Tucker Act must premise her damages action on other sources of law . . . .” Id. (citation and in- ternal quotation marks omitted). Those sources can be constitu- tional obligations because the act permits the Court of Federal Claims to hear “claim[s] against the United States founded . . . upon the Constitution . . . .” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). In essence, “[t]he Tucker Act . . . is itself only a jurisdictional statute . . . .” United States v. Testan, 424 U.S. 392, 398 (1976). So claims under the Tucker Act proceed with the Takings Clause directly supplying the cause of action against federal officials. The Tucker Act gives the Court of Federal Claims the right to put on the show, but it doesn’t grant litigants a ticket.
Yet at the very same time that the Supreme Court has acknowledged the viability of takings claims under the Tucker Act, it has found only three causes of actions under Bivens. See Egbert, U.S. at 490–91 (describing how the Court has only recognized Bivens actions under the Fourth Amendment for excessive force by federal agents, under the Fifth Amendment for workplace discrim- ination against federal employees, and under the Eighth Amend- ment for inadequate care to federal prisoners). But it has not listed the just-compensation cause of action as one of them.26 See id.
26 Even if we were to conceptualize a Tucker Act takings action as a Bivens action, it’s not clear what relevance the Bivens framework has for recognizing a constitutional cause of action against a local government. Every Bivens case the Court has considered has been against the federal government. See Egbert, U.S. at 486, 490–91 (collecting cases). The rights implicated are directly in the Founding’s Bill of Rights, not incorporated through the Fourteenth USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 71 of 108
22-12041 Opinion of the Court 71 We think that shows that the Takings Clause cause of action stands independent of Bivens. So for example, it is irrelevant that the Court has instructed that “a court may not fashion a Bivens rem- edy if Congress already has provided, or has authorized the Exec- utive to provide, an alternative remedial structure.” Id. at 493 (in- ternal quotation marks and citation omitted).
The Takings Clause’s independence from Bivens makes sense. “The cause of action for takings claims pre-dated Bivens by over a hundred years . . . . It therefore cannot be dismissed as ‘judi- cial genesis’ of the same sort that begat Bivens.” DeVillier, 63 F.4th at 440 (Oldham, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc); see also O’Connor v. Eubanks, 83 F.4th 1018, 1029 (Thapar, J., concurring) (“Perhaps our circuit should also allow suits against officials directly under the Takings Clause. There’s some historical support for this approach . . . . The right to just compensation shouldn’t depend on any statute—the Constitution requires it.”). We “create” nothing by recognizing it. See Egbert, 596 U.S. at 490 (describing Bivens as “creat[ing] a cause of action” (internal quotation marks and cita- tion omitted)). We instead have read text that mandates monetary damages and reviewed a history supporting a guaranteed right to sue. And because the Court has already recognized a direct cause of action against federal officials inherent in the Takings Clause, its Amendment birthed during a separate historical period. See id. These differ- ences may alter the appropriate test to assess claims raised against local gov- ernments. And in any case, as we’ve explained, Congress cannot narrow the scope of the expressly guaranteed “just compensation” remedy through legis- lation.
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72 Opinion of the Court 22-12041 own precedents suggest it must extend that protection against state and local governments. Cf. Timbs v. Indiana, 586 U.S. 146, 154 (2019) (“[W]hen a Bill of Rights protection is incorporated, the protection applies identically to both the Federal Government and the States.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
We further recognize the limited practical effect of our de- cision today. Litigants are still likely to proceed under § 1983 where it is available because it authorizes consequential damages and at- torney’s fees. See City of Monterey, 526 U.S. at 749 n.10 (Souter, J., concurring in part & dissenting in part) (“Respondents in this [§ 1983] case sought damages for the fair market value of the prop- erty, interim damages for a temporary taking, holding costs, inter- est, attorney’s fees, costs, and other consequential damages.”); 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b) (authorizing the award of attorney’s fees in § 1983 suits). Only plaintiffs who don’t already have a recognized cause of action are likely to sue directly under the Takings Clause without access to these additional damages.
Still, the Founders included the “just compensation” remedy as one of only two remedies the Constitution expressly identifies.
And they meant for those remedies to be meaningful and accessi- ble—regardless of legislative action or inaction. So today we pay heed to the text, structure, and history of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments and of the Constitution more broadly and recognize a direct cause of action under the Takings Clause.
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22-12041 Opinion of the Court 73 IV. CONCLUSION Fulton is not trying to receive relief from a past injury. He alleges that Fulton County, to this day, is violating his constitutional rights. That’s because, under his allegations, the County took his property and ever since has had an active obligation under the Fifth Amendment to pay him “just compensation.” We don’t think the Constitution’s promise of “just compensation” is an empty prom- ise. It doesn’t taunt the American public like the Greek gods did Tantalus. So Fulton can bring an action directly under the Takings Clause. And because he may do so, amendment of his complaint is not futile. For these reasons, we vacate the district court’s order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED and REMANDED.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 1 WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, dissenting: In the more than 230 years since the Bill of Rights was rati- fied, neither the Supreme Court nor this Court nor our predecessor circuit has ever held that the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amend- ment creates an implied right of action for damages against a gov- ernment—federal, state, or local—and for good reason. The text and history of the Clause, the structure of the Constitution, and Supreme Court precedent make clear that we should not imply a right of action. But the majority ignores that history, usurps the role of Congress, and invents a right of action directly under the Constitution against a county even though property owners today have more ways to vindicate their constitutional right to just com- pensation than ever before. These ample alternatives undermine any need to imply a constitutional right of action, yet the majority “overhaul[s] constitutional doctrine” by ignoring them. Ann Wool- handler, Julia D. Mahoney & Michael G. Collins, Takings and Implied Causes of Action, 2023–2024 CATO SUP. CT. REV. 249, 250 (2024). I would instead follow the Supreme Court’s lead in Knick v. Township of Scott, 139 S. Ct. 2162 (2019), and DeVillier v. Texas, 144 S. Ct. 938 (2024), and hold that the statutory action for federal civil-rights vi- olations, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and state law provide adequate remedies for takings by local governments. Because Fulton failed to pursue his many federal and state remedies against proper parties in a timely manner and because we have no business creating a consti- tutional remedy for him, I respectfully dissent.
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2 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 I. BACKGROUND Although the majority describes the basic facts of this appeal well enough, it fails to explain the many paths Brandon Fulton did not take to vindicate his takings claim. Instead, it assumes that be- cause “Fulton seeks a plan B” to vindicate his constitutional right to just compensation, we must create one for him. Majority Op. at 3. But, as the history of this litigation and the litany of remedies available establish, the many alternative paths that Fulton could have taken obviate any need to create a new remedy for him.
Fulton County Animal Services officers arrested Fulton for felony cruelty to animals and seized seven of his horses on April 22, 2017. On April 5, 2018, Georgia dismissed the felony charges against Fulton, but County officers did not return his horses or their equivalent value. Fulton then waited over two years to bring claims under section 1983 against the Fulton County Board of Commissioners; Paul L. Howard, Jr., the former District Attorney for Fulton County; and Rebecca Guinn, the CEO of Lifeline Ani- mal Project, Inc., the “managing organization” of Fulton County Animal Services. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Fulton then voluntarily dis- missed his claim against Guinn under Federal Rule of Civil Proce- dure 41(a)(1)(A)(ii). That voluntary dismissal was Fulton’s first waiver of a potential remedy. The district court also dismissed the claim against Howard.
The Board also moved to dismiss Fulton’s complaint on the grounds that it was untimely, that the Board was not an entity ca- pable of being sued, and that Fulton had failed to allege municipal USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 76 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 3 liability. Fulton responded by moving to amend his complaint by swapping the Board for Fulton County. He also sought leave to add an alternative claim against the County for an uncompensated tak- ing based on the Fifth Amendment. The district court granted the Board’s motion to dismiss and denied Fulton’s motion to amend as futile. The district court reasoned that both a claim against the County under section 1983 and a direct claim under the Takings Clause would fail because Fulton pleaded no “official policy or practice,” see Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of the City of N.Y., 436 U.S. 658, 690–91 (1978), so neither amendment would save Fulton’s complaint. And the original section 1983 claim against the Board failed for the same “municipal liability deficiencies.”
Fulton appeals only the denial of his motion for leave to amend. He concedes that the district court “was right that Monell . . . bars [his] Takings Clause claim raised through [section] 1983 against Fulton County.” So Fulton admits that he cannot allege that a policy or custom of the County caused his deprivation. That con- cession bars our review of the dismissal of his section 1983 claim against the County—Fulton’s second road-not-taken to remedy his alleged taking. Yet the majority permits Fulton to sue the County directly under the Takings Clause without having to prove that any County policy or custom caused his alleged deprivation.
Fulton also could have availed himself of several other rem- edies. Under section 1983, he could have sued the officers and any other persons acting under color of law who seized his horses. See Hudson v. Palmer, 468 U.S. 517, 537–39 (1984) (O’Connor, J., USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 77 of 108
4 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 concurring) (explaining that although “the Fourth Amendment does not protect a prisoner against indefinite dispossession[,] . . . [t]he Due Process and Takings Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments stand directly in opposition to state action intended to deprive people of their legally protected property interests”).
Under Georgia law, Fulton also could have sued those individuals for conversion to obtain damages and detinue or replevin to obtain possession of his horses. See GA. CODE ANN. § 51-10-1; Mims v. Ex- clusive Ass’n Mgmt., Inc., 906 S.E.2d 799, 802 (Ga. Ct. App. 2024) (ex- plaining that the statute “embodies the common law action of tro- ver and conversion”); Decatur Auto Ctr. v. Wachovia Bank, N.A., 583 S.E.2d 6, 7 (Ga. 2003) (“Conversion consists of an unauthorized as- sumption and exercise of the right of ownership over personal property belonging to another . . . [or] an act of dominion over the personal property of another inconsistent with his rights.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); Md. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Welchel, 356 S.E.2d 877, 879 (Ga. 1987) (“Trover in Georgia embraces the common-law actions of trover, detinue, and replevin. . . . [R]eplevin was an action to recover specific chattels unlawfully taken and wrongfully withheld; while the action of detinue was al- lowable to recover specific chattels wrongfully retained, though lawfully acquired.” (alteration adopted) (citation and internal quo- tation marks omitted)); Fla. State Hosp. for the Insane v. Durham Iron Co., 21 S.E.2d 216, 218 (Ga. 1942) (stating that individual-capacity tort suits are “generally maintainable” under Georgia law, includ- ing suits “to recover property wrongfully withheld from the true owner, or to recover damages . . . in tort for an injury to person or USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 78 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 5 property”). And under Georgia law, he could have sued the County for inverse condemnation. See Bowers v. Fulton County, 146 S.E.2d 884, 889–90 (Ga. 1966) (concluding that the Georgia Constitution forbids the uncompensated “taking or damaging . . . of any species of property,” including “things real and personal owned”); Duffield v. DeKalb County, 249 S.E.2d 235, 237 (Ga. 1978) (“[A] county is liable for inverse condemnation of property under [the Georgia] Consti- tution.”); see also Pribeagu v. Gwinnett County, 785 S.E.2d 567, 570– (Ga. Ct. App. 2016) (holding that an inverse-condemnation ac- tion for damage to personal property was cognizable).
The majority’s assertion that “Congress has not provided [Fulton] with a cause of action to secure ‘just compensation’ in fed- eral court” is absurd. Majority Op. at 3. Fulton had access to both federal and state courts to seek just compensation and more. An action under section 1983 can be filed in either federal or state court, and the district court would have supplemental jurisdiction over any claim under state law that forms part of the “same case or controversy.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). Had he succeeded in securing re- lief under section 1983, Fulton also could have recovered attorney’s fees. See 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b). Whether any of Fulton’s hypothetical claims might have succeeded is beyond the scope of this appeal. For example, we have no occasion to consider whether a claim against an individual officer could overcome official or qualified immunity.
See Griffith v. Robinson, 884 S.E.2d 532, 534–35 (Ga. Ct. App. 2023) (discussing state official immunity); Lee v. Ferraro, 284 F.3d 1188, 1193–94 (11th Cir. 2002) (discussing qualified immunity). But one USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 79 of 108
6 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 thing is clear: Fulton had many remedies, federal and state, to vin- dicate his takings claim.
II. DISCUSSION To explain the majority’s errors, I divide my discussion in three parts. First, I explain why neither the text nor structure of the Constitution supports the creation of an implied right of action un- der the Takings Clause. Second, I explain how our constitutional history also leads to that conclusion. Third, I explain that sec- tion 1983 and Georgia law provide Fulton adequate remedies that counsel against our creation of an implied right of action.
A. Neither the Constitutinal Text nor Structure Supports Creating an Implied Right of Action under the Takings Clause.
The text of the Takings Clause provides in its entirety, “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compen- sation.” U.S. CONST. amend. V. “[T]his provision does not prohibit the taking of private property, but instead places a condition on the exercise of that power.” First English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles, 482 U.S. 304, 314 (1987). If a gov- ernment “pa[ys] for the property . . . no constitutional injury” will arise “from the taking alone.” City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd., 526 U.S. 687, 710 (1999). In other words, the text of the Takings Clause imposes an obligation on the government to pro- vide payment for any property it takes. The enforcement of that obligation is another matter.
To be sure, “in the event of a taking, the compensation rem- edy is required by the Constitution.” First English, 482 U.S. at 316.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 7 But as the Supreme Court acknowledged in Maine Community Health Options v. United States, the text of the Takings Clause does not provide an express cause of action to vindicate that right. 140 S. Ct. 1308, 1328 n.12 (2020). So “any cause of action in the Takings Clause . . . if it exists, is implied.” DeVillier v. Texas, 63 F.4th 416, 420 (5th Cir. 2023) (Higginson, J., concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc). The Supreme Court has explained that “just compensa- tion is, like ordinary money damages, a compensatory remedy . . . traditionally associated with legal relief.” Del Monte Dunes, 526 U.S. at 710–11 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). But recognition of a compensatory remedy does not necessarily mean that the Constitution directly supplies a cause of action to pursue the remedy. Cf. Jud Campbell, Determining Rights, 138 HARV. L. REV. 921, 923, 981 (2025) (explaining that “some rights were determined . . . by common law” and “enumerating rights in constitutional text did not automatically transform them into determinate legal ob- jects”). Even where the Constitution enumerates “legally determi- nate rights”—rights whose contours were well-defined when they were enumerated—it enshrined and clarified “the content of exist- ing rights” and “rarely created rights out of whole cloth.” Id. at 944, n.370 (emphasis added); cf. William Baude, Jud Campbell & Ste- phen E. Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amendment, 76 STAN.
L. REV. 1185, 1191 (2024) (making a similar argument that Sec- tion One of the Fourteenth Amendment “secured but did not con- fer” rights).
“Constitutional rights do not typically come with a built-in cause of action to allow for private enforcement in courts.”
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8 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 DeVillier, 144 S. Ct. at 943 (citing Egbert v. Boule, 142 S. Ct. 1793, 1802–03 (2022)). Instead, rights-holders rely on common-law rem- edies and statutory causes of action to supply the procedural vehi- cles to enforce their rights. See, e.g., Del Monte Dunes, 526 U.S. at 710 (explaining that “in a strict sense” the section 1983 suit was not a suit for “just compensation per se but rather damages for the un- constitutional denial of such compensation”); First English, 482 U.S. at 308 (explaining that plaintiffs sued under a California statute and in inverse condemnation and tort). That the Takings Clause guar- antees a substantive right to monetary compensation does not mean that it also creates a procedural vehicle to vindicate that right.
Cf. DeVillier, 144 S. Ct. at 943 (“Texas does not dispute the nature of the substantive right to just compensation[,] . . . only . . . the proce- dural vehicle by which a property owner may seek to vindicate that right.”); Alexander v. Sandoval, 532 U.S. 275, 290 (2001) (“[S]ome re- medial schemes foreclose a private cause of action to enforce even those statutes that admittedly create substantive private rights.” (emphasis added)). “[I]n all but the most unusual circumstances, prescribing a cause of action is a job for Congress, not the courts.” Egbert, 142 S.
Ct. at 1800. The Supreme Court, in Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics, “held that it had authority to create ‘a cause of action under the Fourth Amendment.’” Id. at 1802 (quoting 403 U.S. 388, 397 (1971)). But since then, the judicial creativity used to imply causes of action has fallen out of favor. See id.; Hernández v. Mesa, 140 S. Ct. 735, 742–43 (2020). Today, “[i]n both statutory and constitutional cases, our watchword is caution.”
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 9 Hernández, 140 S. Ct. at 742. The Court has explained that it has “come ‘to appreciate more fully the tension between’ judicially cre- ated causes of action and ‘the Constitution’s separation of legisla- tive and judicial power.’” Egbert, 142 S. Ct. at 1802 (quoting Hernán- dez, 140 S. Ct. at 741–42). As a result, it has declared that “creating a cause of action is a legislative endeavor.” Id. And we have gotten the message, Johnson v. Terry, 119 F.4th 840, 847–52 (11th Cir. 2024) (describing precedents “drastically restrict[ing]” Bivens’s “reach”)— until today.
The majority contends that the Bivens precedents do not bear on the question before us because the Takings Clause is some- how different from other provisions of the Bill of Rights. Majority Op. at 69–72. But the admonition to adhere closely to the text of the Constitution in respect of the separation of powers should give us pause before we construe the Fifth Amendment to create an im- plied right of action. A constitutional reference to a remedy, with- out more, does not mean that the Constitution creates a right of action for that remedy.
Keep in mind too that the short-lived experiment of Bivens remedies—which the Supreme Court later came to regret, see Her- nández, 140 S. Ct. at 742–43 (“[I]f the Court’s three Bivens cases had been decided today, it is doubtful that we would have reached the same result.” (alterations adopted) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); Goldey v. Fields, No. 24-809, slip op. at 3 (U.S. June 30, 2025) (“For the past 45 years, this Court has consistently de- clined to extend Bivens to new contexts. We do the same here.”
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10 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 (citation omitted))—involved civil-rights violations committed by federal, not state, officers. See 403 U.S at 395. The Bivens Court cre- ated a damages remedy for federal violations because Congress had not done so. Id. at 397. In his dissenting opinion, Justice Black ar- gued that the power to create that remedy belonged to Congress, not the Court, id. at 427–28 (Black, J., dissenting), and that sec- tion 1983 could serve as “a model” for future legislation should Congress choose to exercise its power, id. at 429. Yet, the majority here invents a remedy, under the Fifth Amendment, against a local government even though Congress created a remedy, under sec- tion 1983, more than 150 years ago, that remains available to prop- erty owners today.
Contrary to the majority’s confusion, Majority Op. at 19–20, Supreme Court precedents that describe the Takings Clause as “self-executing” do not suggest that the Clause creates an implied right of action. In Jacobs v. United States, for example, the Supreme Court explained that a suit for just compensation under the Tucker Act vindicates a “right to recover . . . guaranteed by the Constitu- tion.” 290 U.S. 13, 16 (1933). Jacobs considered whether suits under the Tucker Act for just compensation proceeded under a theory of implied contract—where interest would not be allowed—or “rested upon the Fifth Amendment”—where interest would be. Id. Because the Tucker Act suits “were based on the right to recover just compensation for property taken by the United States for pub- lic use,” it did not matter that the United States had not initiated condemnation proceedings in which the plaintiff challenged the taking. Id. “The form of the remedy did not qualify the right.” Id. USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 84 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 11 The United States had to pay for the taking, including interest, even without an additional promise to pay. Id. So the Court held that the Fifth Amendment required no further action to impose an obliga- tion on the government. Id. The Takings Clause imposed a “self- executing” obligation. See Self-Executing, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (12th ed. 2024). Yet the Tucker Act waived sovereign immunity and gave federal courts jurisdiction over an action to enforce that obli- gation, so the Act, not the Fifth Amendment, supplied the proce- dural vehicle to enforce the self-executing constitutional right. Ja- cobs, 290 U.S. at 15 (stating that petitioners sued “under the Tucker Act”).
In First English, the Supreme Court held that a property owner in a state judicial proceeding was entitled to pursue compen- sation for an alleged “temporary” regulatory taking. 482 U.S. at 308, 310 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court held that, due to the “self-executing character” of the Takings Clause, the prop- erty owner was entitled to seek compensation even if the property was no longer burdened by the regulation. Id. at 315–19, 322 (cita- tion and internal quotation marks omitted). Compensation was owed when the property was taken. Id. at 319, 321. And invalidating the regulation would not provide compensation for any interim vi- olation. Id. at 321. But the Court did not hold or even hint that the property owner had an implied right of action under the Takings Clause for any temporary taking. The property owner instead pro- ceeded by inverse condemnation under California law and sought relief in tort and under a provision of the California Code. Id. at 308.
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12 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 In Knick, a property owner sued a municipality for violating the Takings Clause. 139 S. Ct. at 2168. The Court described how section 1983 also allows property owners to enforce the “self-exe- cuting” Takings Clause against state officials in federal court: “[a] property owner has an actionable Fifth Amendment takings claim when the government takes his property without paying for it.” Id. at 2167. When the taking occurs, the owner’s constitutional right has been violated, and he may use whatever cause of action Con- gress has provided to vindicate that right. See id. at 2168 (“[W]hen the government takes his property without just compensation, [the plaintiff] may bring his claim in federal court under [section] 1983 at that time.”). The Court explained that “the existence of the Fifth Amendment right . . . allows the owner to proceed directly to fed- eral court under [section] 1983.” Id. at 2171. Knick held that “be- cause the violation is complete at the time of the taking, pursuit of a remedy in federal court need not await any subsequent state ac- tion. Takings claims against local governments should be handled the same as other claims under the Bill of Rights.” Id. at 2177. But the Court again did not hold or even suggest that the Constitution creates an implied right of action.
None of these decisions held that the “self-executing charac- ter” of the Takings Clause creates a right of action. Instead, each precedent makes clear that “self-executing” means only that viola- tions of the Takings Clause occur as soon as the government fails to comply with its obligation of just compensation and that just compensation is the remedy, regardless of the method of its vindi- cation. And the precedents contemplate three procedural vehicles USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 86 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 13 through which a property owner can vindicate his right to com- pensation: the Tucker Act, state-law actions, and section 1983.
Indeed, the Supreme Court recently clarified in DeVillier that repeated acknowledgments of the Takings Clause’s “self-executing character . . . do not cleanly answer the question whether a plaintiff has a cause of action arising directly under the Takings Clause.”
144 S. Ct. at 943–44 (citation and internal quotation marks omit- ted). The Court acknowledged “[i]nstead, constitutional rights are generally invoked defensively in cases arising under other sources of law, or asserted offensively pursuant to an independent cause of action designed for that purpose, see, e.g., 42 U.S.C. § 1983.” Id. at 943. That is, the constitutional right is self-executing even if the method for remedying its violation is not.
The majority frames the Takings Clause as “a constitutional unicorn,” unique in its “damages-type remedy” and “‘self-execut- ing’” nature. Majority Op. at 20–21. But there is scarce evidence that a “constitutional unicorn” exists. And it would be odd for us to construe the Takings Clause as so different from its sister provi- sions as to provide an implied right of action. This unicorn, like others, is a myth.
Notwithstanding the majority’s suggestion to the contrary, see Majority Op. at 2, 21–25, even the Suspension Clause, the only other explicit reference to a remedy in the Constitution, see RICHARD H. FALLON, JR. ET AL., HART AND WECHSLER’S THE FEDERAL COURTS AND THE FEDERAL SYSTEM 330 (7th ed. 2015), does not create a right of action. Instead, it secures the preexisting writ USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 87 of 108
14 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 of habeas corpus—a creature of common law that predates and ex- ists independent of the Constitution, see id. at 1193 & n.1 (citing 3 WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES *129–32); see also Boumediene v. Bush, 553 U.S. 723, 739–42 (2008) (explaining that the writ devel- oped in English common-law courts before Parliament passed the Habeas Corpus Act of 1679 to “establish[] procedures for issuing the writ”)—from legislative suspension, Boumediene, 553 U.S. at 745. But it does not extend the writ “beyond its scope ‘when the Constitution was drafted and ratified.’” Jones v. Hendrix, 143 S. Ct. 1857, 1871 (2023) (quoting Dep’t of Homeland Sec. v. Thuraissigiam, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1963 (2020)). Because the Founding generation un- derstood that the Constitution did not create that remedy for un- lawful detention, the First Congress promptly granted federal courts the power to issue writs of habeas corpus in section 14 of the Judiciary Act of 1789. Act of Sept. 24, 1789, ch. 20, § 14, 1 Stat. 73, 81–82. Although this grant of jurisdiction also did not create the writ of habeas corpus (it already existed), that Congress empowered inferior federal courts to grant the writ underscores that it did not understand the Constitution to create a new remedy.
The Takings Clause is similar. The Clause conditions the tak- ing of property on compensation for it. It does not create a right to sue. Instead, it guarantees the substantive right of compensation that is enforced in a separate form of action, like inverse condem- nation, ejectment, or trespass: if the government takes property, it will provide just compensation, and should it fail to do so, the prop- erty owner may use existing forms of action to recover his property or its value. See Campbell, Determining Rights, supra, at 943–44 USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 88 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 15 (explaining that even “[s]pecificatory enumerations” of rights “usu- ally clarified the content of existing rights that were otherwise grounded in natural law or custom”).
Construing the Takings Clause to create an implied right of action would offend the structural premise of sovereign immunity.
The Framers understood that the very “nature of sovereignty” meant that the United States, though bound by the Constitution, would “not . . . be amenable to the suit of an individual without its consent.” THE FEDERALIST No. 81, at 486 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961); accord FALLON ET AL., HART AND WECHSLER, supra, at 877–78; see also United States v. Bormes, 568 U.S. 6, 9–10 (2012) (“Sovereign immunity shields the United States from suit absent a consent to be sued that is unequivocally expressed.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). Throughout the nineteenth century, this understanding required the pursuit of tak- ings claims through officer suits, tort actions, and private bills. See, e.g., United States v. Lee, 106 U.S. 196, 206–08, 219–23 (1882) (holding that although the United States could not be sued, the property owners could sue for ejectment of federal officers). True, a cause of action might exist even if barred by sovereign immunity, see Lar- son v. Domestic & Foreign Com. Corp., 337 U.S. 682, 692–93 (1949), but a cause of action provided by the Constitution would be ineffectual without a waiver of that bar by Congress. And it would be odd for us to conclude that the Constitution created an ineffective right of action. ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS § 4, at 63 (2012) (“The USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 89 of 108
16 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 presumption against ineffectiveness ensures that a text’s manifest purpose is furthered, not hindered.”)
Congress did not generally provide for claims against the federal government based on the Constitution until it passed the Tucker Act in 1887. FALLON ET AL., HART AND WECHSLER, supra, at 897–98; see also Bormes, 568 U.S. at 12 (citing Act of Mar. 3, 1887, ch. 359, 24 Stat. 505 (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1))).
That Act primarily waived sovereign immunity and vested jurisdic- tion in the Court of Claims over “any claim against the United States founded . . . upon the Constitution . . . or upon any express or implied contract with the United States . . . or for liquidated or unliquidated damages in cases not sounding in tort.” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). The Tucker Act was construed to allow claims under any constitutional provision that “c[ould] fairly be interpreted as mandating compensation by the Federal Government for the dam- age sustained.” Eastport S.S. Corp. v. United States, 372 F.2d 1002, 1009 (Ct. Cl. 1967); see also United States v. Testan, 424 U.S. 392, 400 (1976) (adopting that test); Me. Cmty., 140 S. Ct. at 1328 (same). But the Tucker Act does not supply any substantive right; it relies on other provisions imposing duties and obligations on the federal government (like the Takings Clause) to provide the right that can then be enforced under the Act. See United States v. Navajo Nation, 556 U.S. 287, 290 (2009). “[T]here cannot be a right to money damages without a waiver of sovereign immunity, and . . . [not] all substantive rights of necessity create a waiver of sovereign immunity such that USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 90 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 17 money damages are available to redress their violation.” Testan, 424 U.S. at 400–01. The Takings Clause provides a substantive right to compensation, but there was not a judicially enforceable right to money damages against the United States until the Tucker Act waived sovereign immunity for those claims. Cf. Me. Cmty., 140 S.
Ct. at 1328 n.12 (noting that “Congress enacted the Tucker Act to ‘supply the missing ingredient for an action against the United States for the breach of monetary obligations not otherwise judi- cially enforceable’” (alteration adopted) (quoting Bormes, 568 U.S. at 12)).
Nor does the acknowledgment that the Takings Clause pro- vides a basis for a damages remedy for an uncompensated taking, see First English, 482 U.S. at 316 n.9, undermine the presumption of sovereign immunity. First English—like the authorities it cited—did not rely on that basis to serve as the cause of action. Id. at 308, 316 (concluding that the Takings Clause serves as the basis for awarding damages under state causes of action and determines the scope of those damages); see also Kirby Forest Indus., Inc. v. United States, 467 U.S. 1, 3–7 (1984) (statutory condemnation proceeding); United States v. Causby, 328 U.S. 256, 267 (1946) (relying on the Tucker Act); Seaboard Air Line Ry. Co. v. United States, 261 U.S. 299, & n.2 (1923) (statutory right of action under the Lever Act, ch. 53, § 10, 40 Stat. 276, 279, waiving sovereign immunity); Monon- gahela Navigation Co. v. United States, 148 U.S. 312, 312–14, 324 (1893) (noting appeal from condemnation proceeding). Judicial remedies for takings require a separate right of action, either against an of- ficer or against the government itself based on a clear waiver of USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 91 of 108
18 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 sovereign immunity, to proceed in federal court. See, e.g., Lee, 106 U.S. at 219–23 (permitting ejectment suit against federal officers); see also Larson, 337 U.S. at 696–97 (explaining that Lee’s “constitu- tional exception to the doctrine of sovereign immunity” involved a suit “against federal officers” based on the theory that their “pos- session of the land was illegal,” so “a suit against them was not a suit against the sovereign”); PennEast Pipeline Co. v. New Jersey, 141 S. Ct. 2244, 2254–55, 2258–59 (2021) (holding that states consented to eminent domain actions by the federal government or those with delegated federal power “in the plan of the Convention”).
Moreover, even if the Takings Clause had waived sovereign immunity for suits against the federal government, it did not abro- gate state sovereign immunity. See Ladd v. Marchbanks, 971 F.3d 574, 578–80 (6th Cir. 2020) (holding that there was no Eleventh Amend- ment immunity waiver for a direct Fifth Amendment takings claim or a section 1983 takings claim); see also Robinson v. Ga. Dep’t of Transp., 966 F.2d 637, 640 (11th Cir. 1992) (holding that there was no waiver in section 1983 takings suit); Williams v. Utah Dep’t of Corr., 928 F.3d 1209, 1214 (10th Cir. 2019) (same); Bay Point Props., Inc. v. Miss. Transp. Comm’n, 937 F.3d 454, 456–57 (5th Cir. 2019) (similar, but not specifying cause of action). A direct action against a state government under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments would be barred by the Eleventh Amendment. And the Supreme Court in DeVillier embraced the sufficiency of state-law remedies for takings claims against states, instead of implying a federal right of action that would silently abrogate state immunity. 144 S. Ct. at 944.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 19 From this textual and structural analysis, we should draw two lessons. First, any direct right of action under the Takings Clause must be implied, not express. Second, the Constitution gen- erally creates no right of action and contemplates structural barri- ers to suits against the government, which counsel against implying a right of action for takings. In the words of Chief Justice Marshall, “we must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.”
McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 407 (1819). There is no textual or structural reason to think that we should create an implied right of action for takings of property.
B. The History of the Takings Clause Also Establishes that It Does Not Create an Implied Right of Action.
The majority focuses on colonial and revolutionary ration- ales for including the Takings Clause in the Bill of Rights. But even accepting the majority’s account of that pre-constitutional history, it fails to answer the question before us. For example, the majority points to statements from John Jay and James Madison suggesting that takings claims should be judicially enforceable. See Majority Op. at 29–31, 36–38. But supporting judicial enforceability does not necessarily mean endorsing a direct right of action under the Con- stitution. Nor does it mean that the Founding generation under- stood the Constitution to create a direct right of action. To the con- trary, our constitutional history establishes that takings claims de- pend on external remedies, such as congressional resolution of pri- vate claims against the government and common-law forms of ac- tions to recover taken property. And later changes—like the ratifi- cation of the Fourteenth Amendment—did not alter this structure.
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20 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 In the early days of the republic, “Congress retained sole re- sponsibility for paying takings claims against the federal govern- ment.” William Michael Treanor, The Original Understanding of the Takings Clause and the Political Process, 95 COLUM. L. REV. 782, 794 n.69 (1995). In doing so, Congress did not sit as a pseudo-judicial tribunal but instead considered private bills as part of its “power over the purse.” Floyd D. Shimomura, The History of Claims Against the United States: The Evolution from a Legislative Toward a Judicial Model of Payment, 45 LA. L. REV. 625, 627–28, 637 (1985) (first dis- cussing the roots of legislative resolutions for claims against the government in English parliamentary practice, then explaining how Congress maintained that power after the Constitution was adopted). But see Majority Op. at 34 (describing Congress as “the lawful judicial tribunal to hear damages actions stemming directly under the Clause”). Private bills reflected the early republic’s solu- tion to the fundamental tension between an “individual’s interest in receiving fair consideration and prompt payment of a meritori- ous claim” and “society’s interest in maintaining democratic con- trol over the allocation of limited public revenue among competing public needs.” Shimomura, supra, at 626. So as part of its appropri- ations power, Congress meted out compensation for takings claims on an individual basis. See 2 WILSON COWEN, PHILIP NICHOLS, JR. & MARION T. BENNETT, THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS: A HISTORY 5 (1978).
When Congress delegated its authority over these claims, it did so to executive and legislative bodies—not courts. For example, shortly after the Constitution was ratified, Congress empowered USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 94 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 21 “the auditors and the Comptroller within the newly established Treasury Department” to review claims against the United States.
Shimomura, supra, at 637 (citing 2 COWEN, NICHOLS & BENNETT, supra, at 4). But Congress retained control over the resolution of those claims through appeals from the Comptroller’s decisions and “by simply refusing to appropriate the necessary funds” to satisfy a claim. Id. Congress expressly rejected judicial review of the Comp- troller’s decisions. See William M. Wiecek, The Origin of the United States Court of Claims, 20 ADMIN. L. REV. 387, 390 (1968) (noting that James Madison’s proposal that “appeals from the Comptroller’s de- cisions be allowed to the United States Supreme Court . . . was not adopted”). Indeed, “when Congress enacted the Judiciary Act of 1789 and extended federal court jurisdiction over the federal gov- ernment,” it provided jurisdiction over “only those situations where ‘the United States are plaintiffs . . . or petitioners.’”
Shimomura, supra, at 638 (quoting Act of Sept. 24, 1789, ch. 20, § 11, 1 Stat. 73, 78).
In addition to its delegations to the Treasury, Congress con- tinued to process private bills. The First Congress entertained more than 700 private and public petitions. Id. And, in 1794, Congress further entrenched its jurisdiction over claims against the federal government. The House established a Committee of Claims, which “had jurisdiction over all money claims against the United States” and would “report their opinion thereupon” to the House. Id. at 644 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). “By 1832, half of Congress’[s] time was consumed with . . . private busi- ness—Fridays and Saturdays being fully set aside for such USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 95 of 108
22 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 purposes.” Id. (citing 8 MEMOIRS OF JOHN QUINCY ADAMS 479 (Phila., Charles Francis Adams ed., 1876)). And the Supreme Court acquiesced to Congress’s authority over claims against the federal government as “[t]he universally received opinion [was], that no suit can be commenced or prosecuted against the United States.”
Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 411–12 (1821). The Court explained that “without . . . an appropriation” from Congress, “no . . . remedy lies against any officer of the Treasury Department” for “claim[s] on the United States.” Reeside v. Walker, 52 U.S. (11 How.) 272, 291 (1851) (affirming the denial of a writ of mandamus).
This early commitment to congressional resolution of tak- ings claims establishes that neither Congress nor the federal courts recognized a right of action directly under the Takings Clause. Re- liance on private bills continued at least until Congress created the Court of Claims and later vested it with final jurisdiction over most claims against the United States in the Tucker Act. Shimomura, su- pra, at 652, 663–64. The upshot of this history is that although Con- gress may have been constitutionally compelled to pay just com- pensation in a way that it was not compelled to pay discretionary claims, see Treanor, supra, at 794 n.69, the appropriation of those funds lay with Congress, not the courts, see U.S. CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 7 (“No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Conse- quence of Appropriations made by Law . . . .”); Off. of Pers. Mgmt. v. Richmond, 496 U.S. 414, 424 (1990) (“For . . . a claim for money from the Federal Treasury, the [Appropriations] Clause provides an explicit rule of decision. Money may be paid out only . . . [as] au- thorized by a statute.”); Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau v. Cmty. Fin. Servs.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 23 Ass’n of Am., Ltd., 144 S. Ct. 1474, 1484 (2024) (“By the time of the Constitutional Convention, the principle of legislative supremacy over fiscal matters engendered little debate and created no disa- greement.”).
Tellingly, the majority points to no decision from the early republic that permitted a suit at law against the government for compensation under the Takings Clause. See Meigs v. McClung’s Les- see, 13 U.S. (9 Cranch) 11, 16 (1815) (ejectment action); Lee, 106 U.S. at 198 (ejectment action); Bonaparte v. Camden & A.R. Co., 3 F. Cas. 821, 831, 834 (C.C.D.N.J. 1830) (No. 1,617) (bill in equity); see also Gardner v. Trs. of the Vill. of Newburgh, 2 Johns. Ch. 162, 166–68 (N.Y. Ch. 1816) (bill in equity); Bradshaw v. Rodgers, 20 Johns. 103, 105–06 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1822) (trespass); Bos. & Roxbury Mill Corp. v. Gardner, 19 Mass. (2 Pick.) 33, 40 (1823) (statutory cause of action under an act of incorporation); Crenshaw v. Slate River Co., 27 Va. (6 Rand.) 245, 256 (1828) (opinion of Carr, J.) (bill in equity); Proprietors of the Piscataqua Bridge v. N.H. Bridge, 7 N.H. 35, 72 (1834) (bill in equity); Thayer v. City of Boston, 36 Mass. (16 Pick.) 511, 514 (1837) (nui- sance); L. C. & C. R.R. Co. v. Chappell, 24 S.C.L. (Rice) 383, 384, 398 (1838) (eminent domain petition); Sinnickson v. Johnson, 17 N.J.L. 129, 129, 144 (1839) (trespass on the case); State v. Hooker, 17 Vt. 658, 672 (1845) (indictment for assault on sheriff, and stating that sheriffs acting unlawfully may be sued for taking property); Young v. McKen- zie, 3 Ga. 31, 37 (1847) (bill in equity “to restrain . . . action of eject- ment”); Hall v. Washington County, 2 Greene 473, 477 (Iowa 1850) (implied contract based on statute); State v. Glen, 52 N.C. (7 Jones) 321, 330 (1859) (defense to indictment).
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24 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 Takings claims instead proceeded through common-law forms of action against the offending officers. The Supreme Court and inferior courts (and state courts) often used proceedings at “common law to provide redress for state and local takings.” See Ann Woolhandler & Julia D. Mahoney, Federal Courts and Takings Litigation, 97 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 679, 684 (2022). In these com- mon-law actions, the property owner would sue the officer or gov- ernment corporation in trespass or another common-law action.
See, e.g., Thacher v. Dartmouth Bridge Co., 35 Mass. (18 Pick.) 501, 501– (1836); see also Knick, 139 S. Ct. at 2176. The official would re- spond that “his trespass was lawful because [it was] authorized by statute or ordinance.” Knick, 139 S. Ct. at 2176. The property owner would in turn attack the constitutionality of that statute or ordi- nance under the Fifth Amendment. See id. Although property own- ers could bring “various causes of action” for takings violations, DeVillier, 63 F.4th at 435 (Oldham, J., dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc), those causes of action were not created by the Takings Clause. See, e.g., Monongahela Navigation Co., 148 U.S. at 313–14, 324 (condemnation action initiated by United States); VanHorne’s Lessee v. Dorrance, 2 U.S. (2 Dall.) 304, 310, 316 (C.C.D.
Pa. 1795) (claim to title under Pennsylvania law); Fletcher v. Peck, 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87, 127–28 (1810) (breach of covenant action); Fair- fax’s Devisee v. Hunter’s Lessee, 11 U.S. (7 Cranch) 603, 603–04, 607– (1813) (ejectment action); Terrett v. Taylor, 13 U.S. (9 Cranch) 43, 45, 55 (1815) (quiet title action); Green v. Biddle, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 1, 3 (1823) (action “to recover certain lands”); Bonaparte, 3 F. Cas. at USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 98 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 25 (bill in equity). Common-law forms of action provided the only ways for courts to redress takings.
That states added just compensation guarantees to their constitutions tells us nothing about the existence of a right of ac- tion under the federal Takings Clause. But see Majority Op. at 39– (implying the opposite). Many jurists viewed state constitutional declarations of rights differently than federal declarations of the same rights. See Jud Campbell, Constitutional Rights Before Realism, 2020 U. ILL. L. REV. 1433, 1441–42 (explaining that “recognizing a common set of rights, applicable against the state and federal gov- ernments alike, did not necessarily mean that those rights had the same legal boundaries”). And the development of common-law remedies under state takings clauses did not alter the structure of the federal Takings Cause. Indeed, contrary to the majority’s con- tention, where state takings clauses predated the ratification of the Fifth Amendment, state courts relied on statutory or common law rights of action to judicially enforce the clauses. See Bos. & Roxbury Mill Corp., 19 Mass. at 40–43, 43 n.2 (discussing a Massachusetts stat- ute that provided a right of action to property owners damaged by the erection of bridges or dams, and explaining that if the govern- ment had not made such a provision, the state takings clause would permit suits in trespass against the agents perpetrating the taking); Thayer, 36 Mass. at 515–16 (embracing tort liability against city where the “act is done by the authority and order of the city gov- ernment” or its branches); Hooker, 17 Vt. at 672–73 (observing that an officer acting unlawfully—such as in violation of the state tak- ings clause—could be sued in trespass). But see Majority Op. at 50 USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 99 of 108
26 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 n.16 (citing the same decisions but concluding that the constitu- tions of Massachusetts and Vermont “automatically secured judi- cial relief for takings”). So the development of these takings reme- dies under state law reaffirmed that alternative remedial schemes— most often common-law forms of action—were the primary and often sole vehicle for vindicating takings claims at both the state and federal level.
Nor did the Fourteenth Amendment change the scope of the Takings Clause. See id. at 1448–50 (explaining the early view of the Fourteenth Amendment as “refer[ing] to” rights, not “creat[ing]” them (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
Incorporation does not change the fundamental character of the protection extended; it takes prohibitions that operate against the federal government and applies parallel prohibitions against the states. See McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 765 (2010) (plu- rality opinion) (noting that “incorporated Bill of Rights protections are all to be enforced against the States under the Fourteenth Amendment according to the same standards that protect those per- sonal rights against federal encroachment” (emphasis added) (cita- tion and internal quotation marks omitted)). The Fourteenth Amendment did not change the structure of the Takings Clause or imbue it with a previously unknown right of action. And all the textual and structural limitations discussed above apply with equal force to claims against states as they would against the federal gov- ernment.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 27 The Fourteenth Amendment grants Congress the power to enforce its provisions through legislation. U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 5; Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641, 648 & n.7 (1966). In other words, the Fourteenth Amendment provides Congress the author- ity to decide whether to abrogate state immunities and whether to provide a cause of action for constitutional violations and how to define its contours. A direct right of action against the states or lo- cal governments, under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, would undermine this textual delegation. Cf. Cale v. City of Coving- ton, 586 F.2d 311, 316–17 & n.8 (4th Cir. 1978) (suggesting that im- plying rights of action under the Fourteenth Amendment flouts Congress’s power to create remedies). So although the majority is correct that private congressional bills would be “an ill fit” for tak- ings by local governments, Majority Op. at 51 n.17, the Fourteenth Amendment permits Congress to create statutory causes of action.
And as I explain below, Congress did so when it enacted sec- tion 1983.
This constitutional history reveals no evidence that the Tak- ings Clause impliedly provides a right of action for property own- ers. History instead establishes that property owners pursued their right to just compensation through alternative means: private bills, common-law forms of action, and suits in equity. And today prop- erty owners enjoy more remedies for takings than ever before.
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28 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 C. Section 1983 and Georgia Law Provide Adequate Remedies for Takings.
Even if the text and history of the Takings Clause demanded judicial enforcement, an adequate alternative remedy would still obviate the need to imply a right of action. “[C]onstitutional con- cerns do not arise when property owners have other ways to seek just compensation.” DeVillier, 144 S. Ct. at 944. Property owners like Fulton have many remedies for takings under both federal law, see 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and state law.
Section 1983 provides a right to sue state officers. Id. And in Monell, the Supreme Court held that “[l]ocal governing bodies . . . can be sued directly under [section] 1983 for monetary, declaratory, or injunctive relief where . . . the action that is alleged to be uncon- stitutional implements or executes a policy statement, ordinance, regulation, or decision officially adopted and promulgated by that body’s officers.” 436 U.S. at 690. It also held that this “official policy” rule could be satisfied if a plaintiff proved that a “governmental cus- tom” resulted in the violation. Id. at 690–91 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Monell’s requirement of a “policy or custom” ensures that the local government, which acts through its officers, is responsible for the alleged violation before liability attaches. See id. at 663 n.7, (first clarifying that respondeat superior liability could not serve as the basis for holding local governments liable for employ- ees’ constitutional violations, then confirming that local govern- ments may only be sued “when [the] execution of a government’s USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 102 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 29 policy or custom . . . inflicts the injury [such] that the government as an entity is responsible under [section] 1983”). A contrary hold- ing would subject local treasuries to liability for every constitu- tional violation perpetrated by the police, sheriff’s deputies, ani- mal-control officers, parks-and-recreation employees, sanitation workers, clerks, or other officials. See Owen v. City of Independence, 445 U.S. 622, 657 (1980) (concluding that Monell protects the public, as represented through a local government, from liability for ac- tions not directly caused by its decisions, so local governments did not need the protection of qualified immunity). In other words, Monell’s “policy or custom” rule ensures that the plaintiff sues the proper “offending party,” not to circumscribe the underlying right. Id. at 651.
Monell does not limit the constitutional right to just compen- sation. Indeed, section 1983 expands the scope of constitutional remedies against wrongdoers to include “[e]very person” acting “under color of ” state law, including both officers and local govern- ments. After Monell, there is no reason to imply a right of action against local governments under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Thanks to Congress, that cause of action already exists under sec- tion 1983. See Owen v. City of Independence, 589 F.2d 335, 337 (8th Cir. 1978) (“By enacting section 1983, Congress has provided an ap- propriate and exclusive remedy for constitutional violations com- mitted by municipalities.”), overruled on other grounds by 445 U.S. 622; Turpin v. Mailet, 591 F.2d 426, 427 (2d Cir. 1979) (en banc) (“[T]here is no place for a cause of action against a municipality USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 103 of 108
30 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 directly under the 14th Amendment, because the plaintiff may pro- ceed . . . under [section] 1983.”).
We should respect Monell’s rejection of vicarious liability for local governments before fashioning a broader implied right of ac- tion for takings. Although the United States may sometimes be held liable for takings violations perpetrated by its officers acting in “the normal scope of [their] duties,” Darby Dev. Co. v. United States, 112 F.4th 1017, 1024–27 (Fed. Cir. 2024) (discussing Great Falls Man- ufacturing. Co. v. Garland, 124 U.S. 581, 597 (1888), and Portsmouth Harbor Land & Hotel Co. v. United States, 260 U.S. 327, 330 (1922)), local governments are liable only through state action under the Fourteenth Amendment. True, they are creatures of state law. Yet local governments are separate entities. That is, a local government is not a “state” within the meaning of the Amendment. Local gov- ernments are “persons” that act under color of state law, cf. Will v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police, 491 U.S. 58, 62–64 (1989) (holding that “a State is not a person within the meaning of [section] 1983”), and do not enjoy Eleventh Amendment immunity, Hess v. Port Auth. Trans- Hudson Corp., 513 U.S. 30, 47 (1994). The Amendment does not es- tablish that local governments are vicariously liable for the actions of their employees. See Kostka v. Ho, 560 F.2d 37, 44 (1st Cir. 1977).
And it grants Congress the discretion to create remedial schemes for its enforcement, “rather than the judiciary.” Katzenbach, 384 U.S. at 648 & n.7. The constitutional text supplies no reason to undermine the statutory rejection of vicarious liability by creating an end-run around Congress’s chosen remedial scheme.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 31 That section 1983 does not abrogate state sovereign immun- ity is also no bar to the conclusion that an alternative remedial scheme fully vindicates takings claims. Sovereign immunity would protect only the federal government and state governments from suit. Cf. Owen, 445 U.S. at 638 (“[T]here is no tradition of immunity for municipal corporations.”). The Tucker Act solves any problem posed by the former. And state law solves the latter.
Although we have no occasion to address the adequacy of other states’ rights of action today, but see Majority Op. at 61–62 (discussing whether a sufficient inverse condemnation action lies for takings of personal property in Indiana, Pennsylvania, Okla- homa, New Hampshire, and Wisconsin), every state in the Union provides a remedy under state law for uncompensated takings. See Knick, 139 S. Ct. at 2168 & n.1. In most, including Georgia, property owners may bring inverse-condemnation actions against the state.
See Bray v. Dep’t of Transp., 750 S.E.2d 391, 393 (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).
And the two commonly cited exceptions, Ohio and Louisiana, also provide remedies. In Ohio, plaintiffs may petition by a writ of man- damus to compel a condemnation proceeding. Knick, 139 S. Ct. at 2168 n.1. In Louisiana, plaintiffs may bring an inverse-condemna- tion action and enforce a judgment in their favor through a writ of mandamus. See Constance v. State through Dep’t of Transp. & Dev., Off. of Highways, 626 So. 2d 1151, 1156 (La. 1993); Watson Mem’l Spir- itual Temple of Christ v. Korban, 387 So. 3d 499, 512 (La. 2024). The key lesson from these alternative schemes and the history of tak- ings litigation is that although American law has always provided some remedial scheme for takings claims—whether petitions to USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 105 of 108
32 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 Congress for private bills, trespass and ejectment actions against in- dividual federal officers, the Tucker Act and section 1983 actions, or state inverse-condemnation—the Takings Clause has never been understood as creating an implied right of action.
That some property owners—like Fulton—might be barred from seeking compensation from a local government under sec- tion 1983 does not mean that they lack remedies. Fulton could have sued the officers who seized his horses either under section 1983 or under state law. Georgia law provides causes of action for both in- verse condemnation against the government and conversion against an individual officer. See Bray, 750 S.E.2d at 393; Decatur Auto Ctr., 583 S.E.2d at 7 (defining conversion); Fla. State Hosp. for the In- sane, 21 S.E.2d at 218 (noting that individual-capacity tort suits against state officials are “generally maintainable” under Georgia law). If the officers responded that their seizure of Fulton’s horses was lawful, Fulton could have replied that any authority to take the horses violated the Takings Clause—like centuries of takings liti- gants before him. Simply put, Fulton’s takings claim is not unique, and we need not create an unprecedented constitutional remedy for him.
Nor do the procedural rules attendant to each of these alter- native remedial schemes constitute “limits” on the scope of the Takings Clause. As renowned legal scholars James Ely and Julia Ma- honey explain in their amicus curiae brief for the Buckeye Institute, “legislatures may regulate jurisdictional and procedural issues that govern how claimants seek and obtain” “redress for USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 106 of 108
22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 33 uncompensated takings.” That property owners must choose from “a complex network of remedies” does not undermine legislative authority to define and shape those remedies. Woolhandler, Ma- honey & Collins, supra, at 266.
For example, Georgia’s one-year notice requirement for suits against counties does not “narrow” the right to just compen- sation. Under state law, “[a]ll claims against counties must be pre- sented within 12 months after they accrue or become payable or the same are barred.” GA. CODE ANN. § 36-11-1. But holding that this bar “narrow[s]” the scope of the underlying right upsets the role of procedural rules in our judicial system. See Majority Op. at 63–64. Nothing would stop that logic from being applied to any statute of limitations, for example. If statutes of limitations and other procedural rules narrow constitutional rights, then none of those rules could ever apply to constitutional claims. See Seaboard, U.S. at 304 (explaining that Congress cannot narrow a constitu- tional right). And if, as the majority contends, the narrowing prob- lem only arises when states are the “exclusive” forum for a claim, then it should give us no pause here. Majority Op. at 63 n.25 (em- phasis omitted). Georgia is not the exclusive forum for Fulton’s tak- ings claim. He instead failed to sue the right parties at the right time to take advantage of his alternative federal forum.
After reaching the opposite conclusion on each of these points, the majority transgresses the separation of powers to de- cide yet another novel question of law: what statute of limitations should apply to an implied right of action under the Takings USCA11 Case: 22-12041 Document: 64-1 Date Filed: 07/31/2025 Page: 107 of 108
34 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 22-12041 Clause? See Majority Op. at 12–15. On the one hand, our precedents apply the state statute of limitations for personal-injury torts in ac- tions brought under section 1983. See, e.g., McNair v. Allen, 515 F.3d 1168, 1173 (11th Cir. 2008) (citing Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261, 275– (1985)); Hillcrest Prop., LLC v. Pasco County, 754 F.3d 1279, 1281 (11th Cir. 2014). And we apply the same statute of limitations to the few Bivens claims brought “directly” under the Constitution. See Kelly v. Serna, 87 F.3d 1235, 1238 (11th Cir. 1996). To break with that precedent would allow substantively identical claims to follow dra- matically different tracks through the federal courts because, at least in Georgia, personal-injury actions must be brought within two years, and inverse-condemnation and conversion claims must be brought within four years. GA. CODE ANN. §§ 9-3-30, -32, -33; Wise Bus. Forms, Inc. v. Forsyth County, 893 S.E.2d 32, 37 (Ga. 2023).
On the other hand, takings claims are like inverse-condemnation or conversion claims. And when a federal claim lacks a specific lim- itations period, we borrow the statute of limitations that applies to the most similar state law. Vigman v. Cmty. Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co., 635 F.2d 455, 459 (5th Cir. Jan. 1981). “At bottom,” weighing the costs and benefits of alternative limitation periods “is a legislative en- deavor” we have no authority to undertake. Egbert, 142 S. Ct. at 1802. And that constitutional principle is especially evident where section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment expressly delegates en- forcement questions to Congress, which has already weighed the costs and benefits to provide an adequate remedy with the shorter borrowed limitations period.
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22-12041 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., dissenting 35 III. CONCLUSION Let us survey the constitutional wreckage in the wake of the majority opinion. Contrary to the text and structure of the Fifth Amendment and our history and tradition, the majority creates a new right of action for takings of property by local governments.
It flouts recent Supreme Court precedents instructing that we should not imply a right of action whenever statutory and com- mon-law remedies already exist. It ignores Supreme Court prece- dents that reject vicarious liability for local governments and in- stead require proof of a municipal policy or custom to establish a constitutional violation. And it borrows a statute of limitations twice as generous as the one we use both for actions under sec- tion 1983 and for Bivens actions. The resulting destruction from this step-by-step rejection of judicial humility is as unnecessary as it is regrettable.
Georgia law and section 1983—alone or in combination— provide property owners more than adequate alternative remedies against local governments and their officers to vindicate their con- stitutional right to just compensation. That Fulton failed to bring his claims against the appropriate parties or in a timely manner does not make his otherwise available remedies inadequate. The text, structure, and history of the Takings Clause provide no sup- port for creating an implied right of action. The majority’s tale of a “constitutional unicorn” is a fantasy.
Because I would affirm the judgment of the district court, I respectfully dissent.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.