This case involves approximately 450 plaintiffs who own property in the Lake Tahoe Basin. The lead plaintiff, Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. (TSPC), is an association of Tahoe-area property owners. Each individual property owner has alleged, inter alia, that each of several land-use regulations enacted in the 1980’s by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) constituted a “taking” of his property under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The principal question on this appeal is whether a temporary planning moratorium, enacted by TRPA to halt development while a new regional land-use plan was being devised, effected a taking of each plaintiffs property under the standard set forth in Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Lake Tahoe is a large alpine lake located in the northern Sierra Nevada mountains. The lake is unique, both aesthetically and ecologically, because of its size, depth, and the astounding clarity of its water. Indeed, it is one of the clearest large lakes in the world. The unusual clarity of Lake Tahoe results from the fact that it historically was “oligotrophic” — that is, very low in nutrients and lacking a steep temperature gradient that would prevent deep circulation and mixing. Since mid-century, however, the lake has been undergoing “eutrophication,” a process by which the nutrient loading in the lake increases dramatically, due to nitrogen and phosphorus (contained in soil) being washed into the lake. The excessive enrichment of the lake by these nutrients encourages the growth of algae. As algal growth in the
The dramatic increase in Lake Tahoe’s nutrient levels has been caused by the rapid development of environmentally sensitive land in the Lake Tahoe Basin. The land in the basin drains into the lake, and artificial disturbances of the land — the destruction of vegetation, the creation of impervious objects such as roads and houses, etc. — greatly increase the flow of nutrients into the lake.
In an effort to halt the increasing rate of environmental damage to Lake Tahoe, the bi-state Tahoe Regional Planning Compact was approved in 1969 by the United States Congress after being passed by the legislatures of both Nevada and California. The Compact created the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency and set goals for the preservation of the lake and the surrounding basin. Pursuant to the Compact, TRPA adopted land-use Ordinance No. 4, which, among other things, classified the land in the basin according to its susceptibility to environmental damage. Land in the Lake Tahoe Basin was divided into seven “land capability districts,” numbered 1 through 7, with 1 being the most environmentally sensitive and 7 the least. Land capability districts 1 through 3' — consisting of the steepest land in the basin — were denominated “high hazard” or “sensitive” lands. SEZ lands were classified as a special subcategory of high hazard lands and were labeled “lb” lands. Land capability districts 4 through 7 were referred to as “low hazard” or “non-sensitive” lands.
For each land classification, Ordinance No. 4 adopted recommendations as to what degree of artificial disturbance the land could safely sustain. There were numerous exceptions to the recommendations, however, and these exceptions caused significant dissatisfaction with TRPA’s regulatory scheme. This dissatisfaction, combined with evidence that the 1969 Compact was not strong enough to remedy the problems causing the decline in the basin environment, led to the amendment of the Tahoe Regional Planning Compact in 1980.
To comply with the Compact’s requirement that it temporarily restrict development pending the enactment of a new regional plan, TRPA enacted Ordinance 81-5, which became effective on August 24, 1981. Among other things, the ordinance temporarily prohibited most residential and all commercial construction on both Class 1-8 and SEZ lands. The ordinance did contain some exceptions to the development moratorium, however, which permitted TRPA to approve construction of some single family homes on Class 1, 2, and 3 lots on the Nevada side of the basin. The ordinance stated that the provisions setting forth the moratorium “shall expire upon the adoption by the agency of Amendments to the Regional Plan.”
On August 26, 1982, TRPA adopted environmental threshold carrying capacities. The agency then proceeded with the development of a new regional plan. Due to the tremendous complexity of the task, however, it soon became clear that TRPA would be unable to adopt a new regional plan within twelve months of the adoption of the carrying capacities, as required by the Compact. Concerned that it lacked the authority to issue any building permits after this date without a new regional'plan in place, TRPA adopted Resolution 83-21. The Resolution suspended all permitting activities “pending adoption of the new regional plan.” This suspension temporarily prohibited the development of all of the covered land. Although the Resolution was drafted to expire after a ninety-day period that ended on November 26, 1983, it was extended, in accordance with its design, until the new regional plan was adopted.
On April 26, 1984, thirty-two months after it had initially suspended development, TRPA adopted a new land-use plan, the 1984 Regional Plan. See Ordinance 84-1. On the day of its adoption, the State of California sued TRPA to block the implementation of the plan on the ground that it failed to establish land-use controls sufficiently stringent to protect the Lake Tahoe Basin. The next day, the League to Save Lake Tahoe followed suit and sought an injunction against the plan on the same grounds. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, Judge Edward J. Garcia presiding, immediately issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting TRPA from taking any action to approve building projects, and ordered TRPA to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue. On June 15, 1984, Judge Garcia granted a preliminary injunction. We upheld the preliminary injunction on appeal, see California ex rel. Van de Kamp v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency,
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
After TRPA adopted the 1984 Plan, property owners in Nevada and California filed separate lawsuits. Plaintiffs owning property on the Nevada side of the Tahoe Basin filed an action in the United States District Court for the District of Nevada, and plaintiffs owning property on the California side of the basin filed one in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California. All of the plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunc-tive relief, as well as damages, for various violations of the Takings Clause, the Due Process Clause, the Equal Protection
For purposes of litigation, the plaintiffs were divided into two groups: the first was composed of those who own land in areas classified as SEZs, and the second of those who own land in Class 1, 2, and 3 areas. In addition to the land-classification division, the plaintiffs’ claims were divided into four time periods: Period I covers August 24,1981, to August 26,1983, the time during which Ordinance 81-5 was in effect; Period II covers August 27, 1983, to April 25, 1984, the time during which Resolution 83-21 was in operation; Period III covers April 26, 1984, to July 1, 1987, the period that ran from the enactment of the 1984 Plan to the enactment of the 1987 Plan; and Period IV covers July 2, 1987, to the present, the time during which the 1987 Plan has been in effect.
Period
Nevada Class 1-3 plaintiffs plaintiffs SEZ plaintiffs X5
California Class 1-3 plaintiffs X6 plaintiffs
SEZ plaintiffs X
The procedural history of the California and Nevada actions, which involves three previous Ninth Circuit opinions, see TSPC I,
First, it is important to point out that, at this stage in the litigation, the only claims of the plaintiffs that remain at issue are some of the § 1983 takings claims. The remainder of the claims were dismissed at one point or another. The following table shows the § 1983 takings claims that are before us (the claims are represented by X’s):
I Period II Period III Period IV
X X
X X
X X7 X
XXX
The events of the most recent remand constitute the final element of the procedural history relevant to the present appeal. Following remand from TSPC III in 1995, the parties conducted a year-long settlement effort. Those efforts collapsed in early 1997. The district court then
ISSUES ON APPEAL
The defendants appeal the district court’s holding that they are liable under § 1983 for a categorical taking during Period I and Period II. The plaintiffs cross-appeal the district court’s holding that the defendants are not liable under § 1983 for any taking that occurred during Period III, and the court’s holding that the plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims for Period IV are time-barred.
DISCUSSION
I. TIME PERIODS I & II
The defendants contend that the district court erred in holding that Ordinance 81-5, which was in effect during Period I, and Resolution 83-21, which was in effect during Period II, constituted categorical takings of each plaintiffs property under the standard set forth in Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
A.
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the government from taking “private property ... for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. Courts have had little success in devising any set formula for determining when government regulation of private property amounts to a regulatory taking.
The Court’s evaluation in various cases of the three factors identified in Penn Central illustrates that the content of these factors is not amenable to pat description. For example, it is clear that a regulation’s “economic effect upon the claimant” may be measured in several different ways. See Hodel v. Irving,
The Supreme Court has identified two specific circumstances in which it will find a government regulation to constitute a “categorical” taking without performing an ad hoc balancing under Penn Central. The first situation involves regulations that compel a property owner to suffer a permanent physical “invasion” or “occupation” of his property. See, e.g., Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
[A] “taking” may more readily be found when the interference with property can be characterized as a physical invasion by government .... [w]hen the physical intrusion reaches the extreme form of a permanent physical occupation, a taking has occurred. In such a case, “the character of the government action” not only is an important factor in*773 resolving whether the action works a taking but also is determinative.
Loretto,
“The second situation in which [the Court] ha[s] found categorical treatment appropriate is where regulation denies all economically beneficial or productive use of land.” Lucas,
With respect to Periods I and II, the only question before us is whether the rule set forth in Lucas applies- — that is, whether a categorical taking occurred because Ordinance 81-5 and Resolution 83-21 denied the plaintiffs “all economically beneficial or productive use of land.” Lucas,
Our focus is also narrowed by the fact that the plaintiffs bring only a facial challenge to Ordinance 81-5 and Resolution 83-21. In facial takings claims, our inquiry is limited to “whether the mere enactment of the [regulation] constitutes a taking.” Agins,
B.
The plaintiffs contend that, for purposes of determining whether the regulations constitute a categorical taking under Lucas, we should not treat the plaintiffs’ properties as the fee interests that they are. Instead, they argue, we should define narrowly, as a separate property interest, the temporal “slice” of each fee that covers the time span during which Ordinance 81-5 and Resolution 83-21 were in effect. It is this carved-out piece of each plaintiffs property interest, the plaintiffs assert, that has been “taken” by the regulations.
“Because our test for regulatory taking requires us to compare the value that has been taken from the property with the value that remains in the property, one of the critical questions is determining how to define the unit of property ‘whose value is to furnish the denominator of the fraction.’ ”
While Supreme Court precedent has not over the years been entirely uniform in its treatment of the conceptual severance question, compare Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
“Taking” jurisprudence does not divide a single parcel into discrete segments and attempt to determine whether rights in a particular segment have been entirely abrogated. In deciding whether a particular governmental action has effected a taking, this Court focuses rather both on the character of the action and on the nature and extent of the interference with rights in the parcel as a whole-here, the city tax block designated as the “landmark site.”
Id. (emphasis added); see also MacLeod v. County of Santa Clara,
The Court also refused to employ conceptual severance in Keystone Bituminous Coal Association v. DeBenedictis, which considered the effect of Pennsylvania’s Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land Conservation Act on the property rights of mining companies. As implemented, the Act generally required 50% of the coal beneath certain protected structures to be kept in place as a means of providing surface support. Id. at 476-77,
In holding that the regulation of the petitioners’ mining rights did not amount to a taking, the Supreme Court refused to consider the coal that the Act required the petitioners to leave in place as a separate property interest; rather, the Court emphasized, takings jurisprudence must consider the “parcel as a whole.” Id. at 497-99,
The Court’s general rule against conceptual severance is not limited to the spatial dimension of property rights. In Andrus v. Allard, the Court applied its general rule in a more functional dimension, to the “bundle” of rights that make up what we think of as “property.” In that case, federal regulation prohibited the sale of eagle feathers. Id. at 53-54,
In fact, the Supreme Court has already once rejected conceptual severance in the
The State Supreme Court correctly rejected the contention that the municipality’s good faith planning activities, which did not result in the successful prosecution of an eminent domain claim, so burdened the appellants’ enjoyment of their property so as to constitute a taking. Even if the appellants’ ability to sell their property was limited during the pendency of the condemnation proceeding, the appellants were free to sell or develop their property when the proceedings ended. Mere fluctuations in value during the process of governmental decisionmaking, absent extraordinary delay, are “incidents of ownership. They cannot be considered as a ‘taking’ in the constitutional sense.”
Agins’s rejection of conceptual severance in the temporal dimension is consistent with the Court’s rejection of other forms of conceptual severance in Penn Central and Andrus. It would make little sense to accept temporal severance and reject spatial or functional severance. A planning regulation that prevents the development of a parcel for a temporary period of time is conceptually no different than a land-use restriction that permanently denies all use on a discrete portion of property, or that permanently restricts a type of use across all of the parcel. See Margaret Jane Radin, The Liberal Conception of Property: Cross Currents in the Jurisprudence of Takings, 88 Co-lum.L.Rev. 1667, 1674-78 (1988). Each of these three types of regulation will have an impact on the parcel’s value, because each will affect an aspect of the owner’s “use” of the property — by restricting when the “use” may occur, where the “use” may occur, or how the “use” may occur. Prior to Agins, the Court had already rejected takings challenges to regulations eliminating all “use” on a portion of the property, and to regulations restricting the type of “use” across the breadth of the property. See Penn Central,
To not reject the concept of temporal severance, we would risk converting every temporary planning moratorium into a categorical taking. See Penn Central,
More important, the widespread invalidation of temporary planning moratoria would deprive state and local governments of an important land-use planning tool with a well-established tradition. Land-use planning is necessarily a complex, time-consuming undertaking for a community, especially in a situation as unique as this. In several ways, temporary development moratoria promote effective planning. First, by preserving the status quo during the planning process, temporary moratoria ensure that a community’s problems are not exacerbated during the time it takes to formulate a regulatory scheme. See Elizabeth A. Garvin & Martin L. Leitner, Drafting Interim Development Ordinances: Creating Time to Plan, Land Use Law and Zoning Digest, June 1996, at 3, 3; Schafer v. City of New Orleans,
In opposition to the overwhelming legal and logical support for not conceptually severing fee interests into small temporal pieces, the plaintiffs argue (and the district court below decided) that the Court’s decision in First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. County of Los Angeles,
First English is not even a case about what constitutes a taking. In First English, property owners challenged an ordinance that prevented the development of property located on a flood plain; they sought “damages for the uncompensated taking of all use” of the property. See id. at 309,
It is true that First English holds that, when a taking has occurred, the government must compensate property owners, even if the taking is “temporary.” Contrary to the plaintiffs’ suggestion, however, the Court’s holding in First English was not that temporary moratoria are “temporary takings.” In fact, the opposite is true. The First English Court very carefully defined “ ‘temporary’ regulatory takings [as] those regulatory takings which are ultimately invalidated by the courts.”
In short, we reject the plaintiffs’ suggestion that we engage in conceptual severance. The relevant property interests in the present case are the whole parcels of property that the plaintiffs own.
C.
Having determined that the property interest at stake is just what one would expect it to be — the plaintiffs’ fee interests — we must evaluate whether Ordinance 81-5 and Resolution 83-21 effected a categorical taking of each plaintiffs property.
To determine whether the temporary moratorium instituted by TRPA’s regulations denies “all economically beneficial or productive use” of the plaintiffs’ land, we must first consider the meaning of the phrase “economically beneficial or productive use.” The phrase’s precise meaning is elusive, and has not been clarified by the Supreme Court. See, e.g., Lake Nacimiento Ranch Co. v. County of San Luis Obispo,
First, as amici Cities and Counties of California note, basic principles of economics show that the moratorium did not render the plaintiffs’ property valueless.
Of course, were a temporary moratorium designed to be in force so long as to eliminate all present value of a property’s future use, we might be compelled to conclude that a categorical taking had occurred. We doubt, however, that a true temporary moratorium would ever be designed to last for so long a period. Certainly, the moratorium at issue here was not. The temporary moratorium was designed to suspend development only until a new regional land-use plan could be formulated — a process that the 1980 Compact intended would take thirty months. While the completion of the regional plan actually
Moreover, there is no evidence that owners or purchasers of property in the basin anticipated that the temporary moratorium would continue indefinitely. Nor would they have had reason to: the district court found that TRPA worked diligently to complete the regional plan as quickly as possible. See Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council,
Furthermore, the temporary moratorium did not deprive the plaintiffs of all “use” of their property. The “use” of the plaintiffs’ property runs from the present to the future. (This is a simple corollary of our earlier conclusion that the plaintiffs’ property interests may not be temporally severed.)
Because the temporary development moratorium enacted by TRPA did not deprive the plaintiffs of all of the value or use of their property, we hold that it did not effect a categorical taking.
II. TIME PERIOD III
The plaintiffs raise two issues on cross-appeal, the first of which concerns the district court’s holding regarding Period III — the period after the passage of the 1984 Plan and before the passage of the 1987 Plan.
In a section 1983 action, the plaintiff must demonstrate that the defendant’s conduct was the actionable cause of the claimed injury. See, e.g., Arnold v. IBM Corp.,
The plaintiffs argue on two grounds that the district court clearly erred when it concluded that TRPA’s conduct was not the actionable cause of the claimed taking of the plaintiffs’ property from 1984 to 1987. First, they argue that the injunction is irrelevant to any eonsider-
That, until conclusion of trial of this matter, the defendant TRPA, its agents, servants, employees, and all other persons acting under the authority of and in concert with TRPA, hereby are enjoined and restrained from taking any action to approve any project, as defined in to Tahoe Regional Planning Compact, Public Law 96-551, 94 Stat. 3233 (1980), or to approve the construction of any man-made development within the agency’s jurisdiction, including the any of the 2,343 developments referred to in the Court’s June 15, 1984 opinion, and including the acceptance of applications for such agency approval....
As the district court’s order makes clear, the injunction prohibited TRPA from taking “any action” to approve any project, and even prohibited it from accepting permit applications. Without the ability to accept, process, or grant applications, it is impossible to see how TRPA could have implemented the 1984 Plan, the purpose of which was to regulate the granting of new permits.
In the alternative, the plaintiffs argue that, even if the 1984 Plan was not itself implemented, TRPA’s adoption of the plan effectuated a taking by causing the injunction to issue. Specifically, they contend that (1) the adoption of the 1984 Plan was both a “but for” and the proximate cause of the issuance of the injunction, and (2) the injunction constituted a taking of the plaintiffs’ property.
First, the district court did not clearly err in holding that TRPA reasonably did not foresee that the 1984 Plan
Although TRPA could not have foreseen, prior to adopting the 1984 Plan, that an injunction would issue, the fact that the district court did issue an injunction reveals a second reason why TRPA may not be held legally responsible for any injury that occurred during Period III: in retrospect, there was little TRPA could have done to prevent the injunction. The reason is that “the ‘wrongdoing’ plaintiffs claim [that TRPA committed] was not the ‘wrongdoing’ that triggered the injunction.” TSPC I,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s holding that TRPA’s actions were not the actionable cause of any taking that may have occurred during Period III, and that the defendants therefore may not be held liable as to that period under § 1983.
III. TIME PERIOD IV
The second issue that the plaintiffs raise on cross-appeal concerns the district court’s resolution of the claims regarding the 1987 Plan (the Period IV claims). The plaintiffs first added these claims when they amended their complaints in 1991. At that time, the defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims for all four time periods on the ground that the claims were barred by the sixty-day statute of limitations included in the 1980 Compact.
TSPC ... brought one claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the violation of its civil rights by the actions of TRPA in adopting the 1981 Ordinance, the 1983 Resolution, the 1984 Plan and the 1987 Plan.... As to § 1983 it is established law that there is a single statute of limitation to be applied.... Obviously, the single state statute of limitations to be applied in all § 1983 actions cannot be the special 60-day period provided by the Compact. The defendants did not plead any other statute of limitations except the 60-day one. Failing to plead affirmatively any other statute of limitations, they cannot now rely on any other. No part of TSPC’s § 1983 claim is time-barred.
TSPC III,
On remand, the defendants asserted in their answers that the plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims regarding Period IV, while not barred by the sixty-day statute of limitations, were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations — a one-year limit for § 1983 actions in California, and a two-year limit for § 1983 actions in Nevada.
As an initial matter, we note that the plaintiffs’ argument is largely academic. Even were the district court bound absolutely by the holding in TSPC III, we would still have discretion, under the circumstances present here, to decline to follow the law of that case. In addition to being academic, however, the plaintiffs’ argument may well be incorrect. In United States v. Cuddy,
While our case law appears to support the authority of a district court to deviate from the law of the case in appropriate circumstances, we do not decide whether such circumstances existed in this case. Instead, we reach the same decision as the district court on the alternate ground that, regardless of the district court’s authority to decline to follow the law of the case established by this court in TSPC III, we have the discretion to do so and we exercise that discretion here. The law of the case doctrine provides that a panel of this court has discretion to depart from the law of the case established by the same panel, or another, where: “(1) the decision is clearly erroneous and its enforcement would work a manifest injustice, (2) intervening controlling authority makes reconsideration appropriate, or (3) substantially different evidence was adduced at a subsequent trial.” Jeffries v. Wood,
In order to understand why the holding in TSPC III is clearly erroneous, one must first understand what it is that TSPC III held. In concluding that the defendants had forfeited their right to argue at any point in the. litigation that the plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims were time-barred, the TSPC III court stated: “The defendants did not -plead any other statute of limitations except the 60-day one. Failing to plead affirmatively any other statute of limitations, they cannot now rely on any other.” TSPC III,
Given our conclusion about what TSPC III held, it follows that TSPC III’s holding was clearly erroneous. At the time that we heard the appeal in TSPC III, none of the defendants had ever filed an answer, or any other type of responsive pleading. See TSPC,
In addition to the clear factual error, TSPC Ill’s bare legal holding — that the defendants forfeited the correct statute of limitations defense — is clearly wrong. The defendants raised the correct limitations periods in their answers. The inclusion of the defense in an answer is sufficient to preserve the defense. See Magana v. Northern Mariana Islands,
Although it is true that, prior to filing their answers, the defendants had asserted, by way of a motion to dismiss, a statute of limitations defense premised on a mistaken choice of law, the defendants’ mistake does not in any way constitute a waiver of all other limitations periods. See Zotos v. Lindbergh Sch. Dist.,
In addition to being clearly erroneous, TSPC III’s holding would result in a manifest injustice were we to follow it. Jef-fries held that a court may find that an erroneous decision works a manifest injustice if “the challenged decision ... involve[s] a significant inequity or the extin-guishment of a right....” Jeffries,
Because the time bar holding in TSPC III is clearly erroneous and would be manifestly unjust if enforced, we decline to follow it. On the merits, the district court held the plaintiffs’ claims time-barred, and the plaintiffs affirmatively decline to argue on appeal that the district court’s resolution of that question is incorrect. Even when asked by this court at oral argument, the plaintiffs stressed that they disputed only the district court’s authority to deviate from the law of the case set forth in a disposition of this court. Their decision not to argue the merits of the time-bar issue is not surprising, given that they filed the Period IV claims years after the relevant statutes of limitations had run. Because the plaintiffs offer no argument on the merits of the timeliness of their Period IV claims, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of those claims.
AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part. REMANDED for entry of judgment in favor of defendants in accordance with this disposition.
Notes
. The destruction of vegetation increases the transport of nutrients to the lake in part because vegetation prevents soil erosion. Similarly, the construction of impervious surfaces increases the flow of nutrients to the lake in part because such surfaces prevent rain and snowmelt from seeping into the ground. This increases the surface flow of water, which hastens erosion.
. The amended Compact took effect on December 19, 1980.
. The 1980 Compact defines “environmental threshold carrying capacity” as "an environmental standard necessary to maintain a significant scenic, recreational, educational, scientific or natural value of the region or to maintain public health and safety in the region. Such standards shall include but not be limited to standards for air quality, water quality, soil quality, soil conservation, vegetation preservation and noise.” Art. II(i), 94 Stat. 3235.
. Obviously, the plaintiffs’ initial complaints, filed in 1984, did not include claims regarding the 1987 Regional Plan. Following remand from TSPC I and TSPC II, however, the plaintiffs in both actions were permitted to amend their complaints. In their amended complaints, the plaintiffs added claims regarding the 1987 Regional Plan.
. In TSPC I, a panel of this court affirmed the dismissal of the Nevada-side, Class 1-3 plaintiffs' Period I claims, concluding that the claims were unripe because the plaintiffs could have applied to TRPA for construction permits under the limited exception contained in Ordinance 81-5. See TSPC I,
. The TSPC III court did not dismiss the California-side, Class 1-3 plaintiffs’ Period I claims as unripe, because the exception contained in Ordinance 81-5 for case-by-case approval of development, which was available to the Nevada-side Class 1-3 plaintiffs, was not available to the California plaintiffs. See TSPC II,
. In TSPC I, a panel of this court affirmed the dismissal of the Nevada-side plaintiffs’ claims for Period III. There was no majority ratio
Following remand from TSPC I and TSPC II, the California and Nevada cases were consolidated, and the plaintiffs were permitted to file amended complaints. In their amended complaint, the Nevada plaintiffs attempted to reinstate their Period III claims on the ground that TSPC II was the law of the case. The district court rejected this argument, and dismissed those claims once again. The district court held that TSPC I's ruling that the claims be dismissed was also law of the case, and that the district court would follow TSPC I's judgment in spite of the inconsistency with TSPC II's reasoning. See Tahoe Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. v. TRPA,
To the extent that any of the rulings in TSPC I and TSPC II are inconsistent, our decision herein renders that fact inconsequential. Even had the Nevada plaintiffs' Period III claims not been dismissed, the plaintiffs would have lost as to those claims on this appeal for the same reasons applicable to the California plaintiffs.
. In accord with the above chart of claims, the district court stated that only the following claims remained to be addressed at the trial: the Period I § 1983 claims of all the California plaintiffs and the Nevada SEZ plaintiffs; the Period II § 1983 claims of all the plaintiffs; and the Period III claims of the California plaintiffs.
. The District Court certified all of these issues for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and we granted the petition for permission to appeal.
.For much of the nation’s history, it was generally thought that the Takings Clause reached only the direct appropriation, or the functional equivalent of a "practical ouster of [the owner’s] possession.” Transportation Co. v. Chicago,
. In the special context of exactions — land-use decisions conditioning approval of development on the dedication of property to public use — the Supreme Court has developed a different test to determine whether a regulatory taking has occurred. See Dolan v. City of Tigard,
. As do other courts, we use the term "categorical taking” throughout this opinion as a shorthand reference to government action that is determined to be a "taking” under the categorical approach set forth in Lucas (where the "economic impact of the regulation” is determinative). See, e.g., District Intown Properties,
. The problem of defining the relevant property interest at stake is commonly referred to as either the "denominator problem” or the problem of "conceptual severance.”
. Although Andrus demonstrates that individual strands of the property-rights bundle should generally not be treated as separate property interests, the Supreme Court has held that the total abrogation of the "right to exclude” may in certain circumstances constitute a taking because it "will result in an actual physical invasion of the privately owned [property].” Kaiser Aetna v. United States,
. In fact, there is evidence that such a race-to-develop occurred in the Lake Tahoe Basin in the years preceding the adoption of the 1980 Compact. See Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council,
. The Court was careful to include quotation marks around the word "temporary" whenever it referred to a "temporary” taking, in order to make clear that it was using the concept in the specific sense in which it had defined it.
. In concluding that First English created a categorical rule in favor of temporal severance, the district court relied heavily on the Court's statement in First English that it "do[es] not deal with the quite different questions that would arise in the case of normal delays in obtaining building permits, changes in zoning ordinances, variances, and the like which are not before us.”
Even were we to accord the Court’s dictum some weight, it appears to support, rather
. In fact, in a World War II era case involving a regulation that prohibited the owners of gold mines from using those mines, rather than permitting the government to take possession of the property, the Court found that no taking occurred. See United States v. Central Eureka Mining Co.,
. Although TRPA first passed Ordinance 81-5 and later adopted Resolution 83-21, each regulation was designed to terminate upon the occurrence of the same event — TRPA’s adoption of an amended regional plan. Accordingly, we treat the regulations as creating a single temporary moratorium that was designed to and did run from the date on which Ordinance 81-5 became effective to the date on which TRPA adopted the 1984 Plan.
. This is actually an overstatement. As the district court noted, both regulations may have permitted certain limited development, particularly on the Class 1-3 land. See Ta
. We acknowledge that, given that moratoria are, by definition, temporary, it is redundant to refer to a moratorium as a "temporary moratorium.” See Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1469 (1976) (defining "moratorium” as a "waiting period set by some authority: a delay officially required or granted”). Nevertheless, because the parties, the district court, and this court have all repeatedly referred to the moratorium at issue in the present case as a "temporary moratorium,” and because it emphasizes the temporary nature of the development ban, we use that designation here. See, e.g., TSPC I,
. See William C. Haas & Co.,
. Many cases treat the "use” and "value” interchangeably, or speak only of the effect of a regulation on the property's value. See, e.g., TSPC I,
. The parties disagree over what kind of evidence either party may introduce about the effect of the land-use regulations on specific pieces of property. Before trial, the parties stipulated that, because the action consists only of a facial challenge, “the parties will not introduce evidence regarding the specific factual situations of individual plaintiffs.” In spite of this stipulation, the defendants argue on appeal that, even though the plaintiffs brought only a facial challenge, the plaintiffs cannot succeed in proving that a taking occurred without introducing evidence regarding the specific economic impact of the regulations on their individual properties. The defendants’ argument that individualized evidence is required is in tension with the pretrial stipulation. It is also in tension with the statement, made in several cases, that a facial taking challenge "present[s] no concrete controversy concerning ... [the legal provision’s] effect on specific parcels of land.” Virginia Surface Mining & Reclamation Ass’n,
. In resolving the question of the remaining value of the plaintiffs’ property, the district court relied heavily on Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd. v. City of Monterey,
.This economic reality is precisely what differentiates a permanent ban on development, even if subsequently invalidated, from a temporary one. Basic economic theory demonstrates that the present value of land depends on the potential for future use. Accordingly, when a permanent development ban (like the one at issue in Lucas) is enacted, the value of the affected land plummets, on account of the fact that the ban bars all future development of the property. In contrast, when a temporary ban is enacted, both the owner of the affected land and any prospective purchasers know that, at a specific point in the future, the moratorium will no longer prohibit the development of the land at issue.
. We note that the average time between land purchase and development may be as long as 25 years. See Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council,
. This corollary also demonstrates that, had we engaged in conceptual severance, we would have read into the Takings Clause a requirement that the government never interfere with a property owner's wish to put his property to immediate use.
. Although we need not rely on it, we note that, even during the period of time during which the moratorium was in effect, there were cognizable "uses” to which the basin property could have been put. Although we assume for purposes of our disposition that no development of the property was permitted, see supra note 19, "use” includes much more than development. For example, Lucas treats the sale of property as an “economically productive use.” See Lucas,
. Note that, in so holding, we do not overturn any factual findings made by the district court, only its legal conclusions. Although the district court found that the plaintiffs were denied "all economically beneficial or productive use” of their property, it did so on the basis of its legal conclusion that only substantial developmental uses available during the moratorium period were relevant.
. This portion of the appeal concerns only the California-side plaintiffs. See supra note 7.
. Because the district court concluded that TRPA could not be held liable for any taking that occurred during the 1984-87 period, it did not determine (1) whether the developmental moratorium effected by the injunction actually amounted to a taking, or (2) whether the 1984 Plan, had it been implemented, would have amounted to a taking. We, too, do not decide these questions.
. It is true that there is little discussion of a "causation” requirement in any of the case law involving regulatory takings. But cf. Penn Central,
. The plaintiffs suggest that, in the absence of sufficient guidance from § 1983 cases or other federal constitutional case law, we should look to state tort law for guidance as to the meaning of proximate cause. The Supreme Court "ha[s] repeatedly noted that 42 U.S.C. § 1983 creates a species of tort liability, and ha[s] interpreted the statute in light of the background of tort liability.” City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd.,
. Although the plaintiffs did not raise this argument until their cross-appeal reply brief, we exercise our discretion to address it on the merits.
. Because we conclude that the injunction prohibited the implementation of the 1984 Plan, we need not decide whether the plan, had it been implemented, would have constituted a taking of the plaintiffs’ property. See supra note 32.
. The plaintiffs suggest that the 1984 Plan somehow effected a taking in the few days that passed between the time of the plan's adoption and the adoption of the TRO. As Judge B. Fletcher noted in TSPC I, however, it would have been impossible for TRPA to implement the plan during these few days, or for the plaintiffs to "complete[ ] all the necessary prerequisites to building, including getting a TRPA permit.” TSPC I,
. The plaintiffs also argue that, even if the plan did not go into effect, the injunction did not “prevent TRPA from providing the Plaintiffs with Just Compensation.” The failure to provide such compensation, they assert, is itself an actionable wrong. The plaintiffs’ argument skips over the question of liability. If TRPA is not legally responsible for any taking that occurred during Period III, then TRPA has no obligation to provide just compensation to the plaintiffs.
.Although it is a logically necessary component of their argument, the plaintiffs do not directly support their implicit assertion that the court injunction resulted in a taking of the plaintiffs’ property. Their general argument that a taking occurs when a legislative or executive body implements a temporary building moratorium provides indirect support for this position, but the plaintiffs never explain why a temporary moratorium ordered by a court should be treated in the same fashion. In fact, there are good reasons to believe that a government action that would otherwise constitute a taking should be treated differently when it is ordered by a court. Moreover, even if a court order could qualify as a taking, it is not clear who, if anyone, would be held liable for that taking under § 1983. Obviously, however, it would ordinarily not be the party that has no choice but to follow the court order.
. Article VI(j)(4) of the 1980 Compact reads as follows:
A legal action arising out of the adoption or amendment of the regional plan or of any*786 ordinance or regulation of the agency ... shall be commenced within 60 days after final action by the agency.
. The district court dismissed the Period III claims on the ground that the 1984 Plan caused no harm because it had been enjoined. See TSPC III,
. Because § 1983 does not contain a statute of limitations, federal courts apply the forum state's statute of limitations for personal injury claims. See Wilson v. Garcia,
. For some time, there have existed in the Ninth Circuit two different formulations of the set of circumstances in which a court may decline to follow the law of the case. The first formulation, set forth in a line of cases that includes Jeffries, states that a court may depart from the law of the case if "the [previous] decision is clearly erroneous and its enforcement would work a manifest injustice.” Jeffries,
Recently, we noted this conflict — which appears to have gone unrecognized in previous case law — but did not resolve it. Mendenhall v. NTSB,
. Of course, il is understandable that the panel in TSPC III might not have realized that, ten years into the litigation, the defendants had not yet actually answered the complaints.
. The plaintiffs suggest that if a defendant raises a particular time bar in a motion to dismiss, it must raise all potential time bars in that motion. This argument is clearly incorrect. Some time bars may be resolved on such a motion and others may not. For example, a time bar that turns on the resolution of factual disputes may only be resolved at a later stage of the litigation. It would make little sense to require defendants with multiple potential time bar defenses, some of which may be subject to resolution on a motion to dismiss and some of which may not, to raise all of those defenses at the very outset of the proceeding.
