Supreme Court Won't Hear AY Eminent Domain Case
The Supreme Court announced today that it won’t grant a hearing to a group that sued over the planned use of eminent domain for Atlantic Yards. Eleven property owners and tenants wanted to appeal a lower federal court’s dismissal of an eminent domain case and have the High Court clarify constitutional limits on private-home seizure….

The Supreme Court announced today that it won’t grant a hearing to a group that sued over the planned use of eminent domain for Atlantic Yards. Eleven property owners and tenants wanted to appeal a lower federal court’s dismissal of an eminent domain case and have the High Court clarify constitutional limits on private-home seizure. Now that the eminent domain case is toast on a federal level, the plaintiffs are going to file suit in state court, according to a press release from Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn (copy on jump). “We are, of course, disappointed that the Court declined our request to hear this important case. This is not, however, a ruling on the merits of our claims. Our claims remain sound. New York State law, and the state constitution, prohibit the government from taking private homes and businesses simply because a powerful developer demands it. Yet, that is what has happened. Recent events have revealed that the public, and the Public Authorities Control Board were sold a bill of goods by Ratner and the Empire State Development Corporation. We now know that Ratner’s project will cost the public much more than it will ever receive,” said lead attorney Matthew Brinckerhoff of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP. “Now we will turn to the state courts to vindicate our rights. We will soon file an action in New York state court under state law as we were expressly permitted to do by the rulings of the federal courts.” A statement from Forest City Ratner is presumably forthcoming.
Update: The Real Estate got the following statement from Forest City chairman Bruce Ratner: We believe, and the courts have repeatedly agreed, that Atlantic Yards provides significant public benefits including thousands of affordable homes and much needed jobs for Brooklyn. We are gratified that the Supreme Court has decided to put an end to this lawsuit. The opponents have now lost 20 court decisions relating to Atlantic Yards and we are now one step closer to making these benefits a reality for the borough and the City.
AY Owners, Renters File Eminent Domain Appeal [Brownstoner]
Photo by dbking.
The United States Supreme Court denied the petition to grant a hearing (cert petition) to eleven property owners and tenants who asked the court to hear their appeal on the Second Circuit Court’s dismissal of their challenge to the use of eminent domain for Forest City Ratner’s Atlantic Yards development proposal in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. The petition asked the Court to address the appropriate constitutional limits on the government’s power to seize private homes for the benefit of powerful real estate developers like Bruce Ratner.
The Court’s denial of the petition in Goldstein et al. v. Pataki et al. does not affirm or deny the plaintiffs’ arguments, nor is it the end of the legal road for the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs, fighting to prevent the seizure of their homes and businesses for the benefit of Forest City Ratner, will now pursue their eminent domain challenge in state court under New York State law.
“We are, of course, disappointed that the Court declined our request to hear this important case. This is not, however, a ruling on the merits of our claims. Our claims remain sound. New York State law, and the state constitution, prohibit the government from taking private homes and businesses simply because a powerful developer demands it. Yet, that is what has happened. Recent events have revealed that the public, and the Public Authorities Control Board were sold a bill of goods by Ratner and the Empire State Development Corporation. We now know that Ratner’s project will cost the public much more than it will ever receive,” said lead attorney Matthew Brinckerhoff of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP. “Now we will turn to the state courts to vindicate our rights. We will soon file an action in New York state court under state law as we were expressly permitted to do by the rulings of the federal courts.”
Besides the eleven plaintiffs on Goldstein et al. v. Pataki et al. there are approximately 30 other residents and business owners in the project’s footprint whose properties would be seized for Forest City Ratner’s benefit.
Ironically, today is the 3rd anniversary of the Supreme Court’s extremely controversial 5-4 decision in the eminent domain case Kelo v. The City of New London. The plaintiffs in the Brooklyn case did not seek to overturn Kelo, but rather utilize the majority and concurring opinions to make their case.
The petition and all lower court briefs and decisions in Goldstein et al v. Pataki et al can be found at: http://www.dddb.net/eminentdomain.
For all those anti-AY people who predict the end of the earth when built – I suggest you take a ride over to Ikea one of these days – because they predicted the end-of-the-world for that as well…..and you know what – the Earth still spins, there are still 24 hrs in a day and despite being packed – the traffic is not a “nightmare” and all of Red Hook looks like it very well might gain from the exposure.
“However, it is pretty “effective” to kill a project when the courts rule you were in fact wrong and the project should have gone ahead, isn’t it?”
Sure, it’d be effective it the project were killed, which is not the case. Once again, Ratner has not abandoned AY, a fact that you people love to overlook. Yes, it will take longer, but it will still be built.
And the almighty Goldstein and family will thereafter depart for some upstate hamlet where he will probably join the local community board and make a nuisance of himself in another place.
How do people feel about Freddy’s Backroom closing? I am mixed –
blah blah blah. the state should take back the money to be paid for these ED properties as compensation for the plaintiffs’ abuse of the ny court system.
“You can vote all you want, sign petitions and the like. But all you people who love this or think DDDB is ridiculous, one day the chickens will come home to roost, and you will find, that you have no voice. And not even this blog, will save you. I don’t wish that on you, but someday, a hospital, an agency, a neighbor, a corporate entity, a product something will harm you, and you will be helpless.”
This is a superb example of the fear tactics upon which the anti-AY crowd has so heavily relied. Fear of traffic, crowds, poor people, rich people, gentrification, terrorist attacks, parking lots, drunken basketball fans puking on stoops, etc. That’s one of the many reasons they have failed.
Hey What how will the war end with you continually instigating it?
The best part about you dick wads who point fingers at DDDB is that you spend your day reading BROWNSTONER a blog about overpriced housing and other luxuries. Chances are you are not exactly living in poverty, so get over yourself. Chances are you are a spoiled whiney troll who gets off on other people’s misery and then disguise it by pretending you are some poor hard working person who has been with out privilege your whole life.
People who post on blogs all day should not point fingers at people who post on luxury related blogs all day.
12:05 may a crane fall on your head.
Brownstoner posters hate babies. Shocking. And they weave rastafarian with trust. Next…….snooooooze.