Lead Opinion
Four individuals, Allen Brown, Greg Hayes, Dennis Daugs, and Dian Maxwell, and the Washington Legal Foundation (collectively “Appellants”) challenge the legality of Washington State’s Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Account (“IOLTA”) program on First and Fifth Amendment grounds. Beginning where the Supreme Court left off in Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
I. IOLTA
When a lawyer takes the oath of a state bar, he receives the great privilege of admission to the practice of law in that state and pledges to conduct himself in accordance with the code of professional responsibility that accompanies such an honor. Of the many ethical requirements placed upon lawyers, one of the most sig
In compliance with these ethical obligations, before 1980, clients’ funds were generally pooled in noninterest-bearing, federally insured checking accounts. Phillips,
Client trust accounts, however, would not remain interest-free for long. In 1980, Congress passed the Consumer Checking Account Equity Act, codified at 12 U.S.C. § 1832, which allowed federally insured banks to pay interest on certain demand accounts, called “Negotiable Order of Withdrawal” (“NOW”) accounts. NOW accounts are strictly regulated; they must “consist solely of funds in which the entire beneficial interest is held by one or more individuals or by an organization which is operated primarily for religious, philanthropic, charitable, educational, political, or other similar purposes and which is not operated for profit.” Phillips,
The availability of interest through the establishment of NOW accounts provided a unique opportunity for the legal profession to further two of its most important ethical obligations — ensuring that all individuals, regardless of their financial circumstances, have access to the judicial system and segregating client trust funds from the lawyers’ own accounts — without imposing additional societal costs. By pooling client deposits that individually were so small or held for such a short period of time that they would not earn a net positive interest, the States could use the interest earned on the combined deposits — otherwise enjoyed as a windfall by the banks — to fund indigent legal services at no cost to the owner of the principal. Thus, in 1981, Florida created the first IOLTA program. Today, every state in the nation has followed suit. See Phillips,
The Washington State Supreme Court created its IOLTA program in 1984, codifying it in the Washington Rules of Professional Conduct as Rule 1.14. This rule requires lawyers to place “client funds that are nominal in amount or expected to be held for a short period of time” in either (i) a pooled interest-bearing trust account, the interest from which is paid to the Legal Foundation of Washington, (ii) a separate interest-bearing trust account for a particular client, or (iii) a “pooled interest-bearing trust account with subaccount-ing that will provide for computation of interest earned by each client’s funds and the payment thereof to the client.” Wash. Rules of Profl Conduct R. 1.14(c)(2). When deciding the type of account to establish, lawyers need not inform their
As the IOLTA program was being created, the Washington Supreme Court also ordered the incorporation of the Legal Foundation of Washington, a nonprofit charitable organization dedicated to improving the availability and'quality of legal representation for the poor. The Legal Foundation of Washington itself does not litigate or educate but accomplishes its mission by distributing funding to different nonprofit and educational associations through a grant application process. In 1990, the IOLTA program provided $3.9 million to the Legal Foundation of Washington, and in 1995, it provided $2.7 million.
This appeal challenges one specific aspect of Washington States’s IOLTA program: its application to individuals who, during real estate transactions, place money in the hands of an escrow or title company that employs at least one Limited Practice Officer (“LPO”), a state-licensed nonlawyer who is permitted by the state to “select, prepare, and complete the appropriate legal documents incident to the closing of real estate and personal property transactions.... ” Wash. Admission to Practice R. 12. The position of “LPO” was created in 1983 in response to a Washington Supreme Court decision holding that laypersons performing those tasks were engaged in the unauthorized practice of law. See Bennion, Van Camp, Hagen & Ruhl v. Kassler Escrow, Inc.
Although escrow and title companies, like attorneys, use separate client trust funds to hold their clients’ deposits, for the purpose of this decision, the similarity stops there. Unlike attorneys, escrow and title companies have never taken advantage of the interest-bearing capabilities of NOW accounts, even though they both used non-interest bearing checking accounts before NOW accounts were established. Escrow and title companies have not deemed NOW accounts to be realistic options for their client trust funds due to the difficulty and expense attendant to the crediting of the proper amount of interest
Before the enactment of the IOLTA rules, escrow and title company client trust funds did not earn interest. They did, however, receive benefits from the holding banks in the form of “earnings credits.” The credits, which accrued to the company itself, were used to offset bank fees for a variety of services, including accounting services and wire transfers. With the enactment of Rule 12.1, however, many banks — but not all — have stopped offering earnings credits to escrow and title companies opening IOLTA accounts. To make up for the loss of earnings credits and the corresponding rise in bank fees, some escrow companies — but not all — now charge “IOLTA” fees. As an example of these charges, Appellants provide a sample “settlement statement,” which includes an “IOLTA/Aceounting fee” of $5.39 charged to both the buyer and the seller.
II. Procedural History
In reaction to the proliferation of IOLTA programs, the Washington Legal Foundation sought individuals who were affected by these programs and, joining them as co-plaintiffs, initiated a number of lawsuits raising a constitutional takings challenge to their validity. It is a matter of public record that to date, the Washington Legal Foundation has filed suit challenging state IOLTA programs in California, Massachusetts, Texas, and Washington. The first of these cases to reach the Supreme Court was Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
While Phillips progressed through the hierarchy of the federal courts, the Washington Legal Foundation’s remaining IOLTA challenges were also making their way through the federal system. In the case before us, the Foundation joined with four individuals — two LPOs and two LPO clients — to challenge Washington State’s IOLTA program, naming the Legal Foun
The district court, without the benefit of the Phillips decision, granted summary judgment to the Legal Foundation of Washington and the Justices on the ground that Appellants did not have a property right to the interest generated on funds held in IOLTA accounts. Without a property right, the district court reasoned, there could be neither a Fifth nor a First Amendment violation. While the case made its way on appeal to us, however, the Supreme Court held in Phillips that those individuals, like Appellants Brown and Hayes, who owned the principal placed in IOLTA accounts also owned the interest. A panel of this court was then faced with the task of advancing to the next stage of the Takings Clause analysis: determining whether there was a taking without just compensation. Following the Supreme Court’s lead in dividing the takings analysis into discrete pieces, the now withdrawn panel decision ■ “trifurcated” the takings question into two further issues: whether there was a taking and what compensation was due. Viewing the interest earned on IOLTA funds as an independent entity, separate and distinct from the principal that gave it life, the panel concluded that the IOLTA program resulted in an appropriation of 100% of Appellants’ property. Wash. Legal Found. v. Legal Found. of Wash.,
III. Standing
Resolving a Fifth Amendment takings claim requires a fact specific inquiry
A. Individual Standing
“[B]efore reaching a decision on the merits, we [are required to] address the standing issue to determine if we have jurisdiction.” Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v. Adams,
1. Appellant Brown
Appellant Allen Brown regularly purchases and sells real estate in the State of Washington. He knows of one transaction in which his escrow money was placed in an IOLTA account maintained at the Skagit State Bank. According to Brown, the $90,521.29 that he deposited with Land Title Company was placed in an IOLTA account for two days in April of 1997. He “objeet[s] to anyone other than me taking the interest earned on my funds.” He also “object[s] to some of the activities engaged in by LFW and by those to whom LFW distributes IOLTA funds.” Because Brown owned the principal that was placed in an IOLTA account, we conclude that the “interest income” earned on that principal is his property and therefore he has standing to challenge the IOLTA program. See Phillips,
2. Appellant Hayes
Appellant Greg Hayes has purchased real estate in the State of Washington as part of his business dealings and expects to continue to do so. He and his business partner gave $1000 earnest mon
3. Appellant Daugs
Appellant Dennis Daugs is vice-president of SeaTac Escrow, Inc. (“Sea-Tac”), which provides escrow services to buyers and sellers in connection with real estate transactions. Daugs is also a licensed LPO, but he refuses to comply with Rule 12.1 because he “ha[s] determined that doing so would violate SeaTac’s Fifth Amendment rights (as the holder of legal title to funds in the escrow account) and those of [his] customers (who hold equitable title to the funds).” Under Washington law, however, “legal title” does not include any valuable beneficial interests. See, e.g., Lee v. Wrixon,
4. Appellant Maxwell
Appellant Dian Maxwell is employed by Pacific Northwest Title Company of Washington (“PNW”), which provides escrow services among other things. After Rule 12.1 was established, PNW decided that to avoid the additional costs of the IOLTA program, estimated to be about $50.00 per transaction, it would not comply with Rule 12.1. Thus, PNW required its LPOs — including Maxwell — to surrender their licenses if they wished to continue employment. According to Maxwell, relinquishing her LPO license prevents her from fully practicing her profession because she can no longer “select and fill in the legal documents that [she is] fully qualified to select and fill in.” Unlike Daugs, who asserts in his declaration that he — as the owner of SeaTac — held legal title to the principal placed in IOLTA accounts, Maxwell does not claim any ownership in the principal or the generated interest. At most, Maxwell appears to be arguing that she lost property in the form of her LPO license as a result of the IOLTA rules.
Although Maxwell may have been adversely affected by application of the IOLTA rules to LPOs, the loss of her LPO license was an indirect result of PNW’s independent decision to eliminate LPOs from its payroll. Even if LPOs were exempt from the IOLTA rules, Maxwell can
B. Representational Standing
Washington Legal Foundation is a public-interest law and policy center with members nationwide. As evidence of its connection to thé Washington IOLTA program, Washington Legal Foundation declares that its membership includes “citizens of Washington who object to having their money used to support the Washington IOLTA program, and LPOs in Washington who object to being forced to place client trust funds in IOLTA accounts.” Of the four named Appellants, it appears that only Daugs and Hayes are themselves members.
The Supreme Court has established a three-prong test for determining whether an organization, such as the Washington Legal Foundation, can sue in its representative capacity. See Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Adver. Comm’n,
With respect to the alleged Fifth Amendment violation, Washington Legal Foundation encounters problems at the third prong of the representational standing inquiry. Because “[t]he Fifth Amendment does not proscribe the taking of property; it proscribes taking without just compensation,” Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
Thus, we hold that only individual Appellants Brown and Hayes have standing. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the Legal Foundation of Washington and the Justices of the Washington Supreme Court on the Fifth Amendment claims of Daugs, Maxwell, and the Washington Legal Foundation. We leave open the question of standing as it pertains to the Appellants’ First Amendment claims. We proceed with our Takings Clause analysis only as it relates to the property of Appellants Brown and Hayes.
IV. Ripeness
Also as a jurisdictional matter, we must determine whether the Fifth Amendment challenges of Brown and Hayes are ripe for review. The ripeness doctrine is derived from Article Ill’s case or controversy requirement. It “prevents ‘the courts ... from entangling themselves in abstract disagreements over administrative policies, and also ... protectfs] the agencies from judicial interference until an administrative decision has been formalized and its effects felt in a concrete way by challenging parties.’ ” Stuhlbarg Int’l Sales Co. v. John D. Brush and Co.,
Appellees argue that the Fifth Amendment claims of Brown and Hayes are not ripe for review under Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank,
In Williamson, petitioners claimed that the application of particular zoning regulations deprived them of their property without just compensation. Specifically, they alleged that the Williamson regional planning commission unreasonably disapproved of Hamilton Bank’s preliminary development plans. Williamson,
There are, however, a few limited exceptions to the requirement of seeking compensation from the State before raising a takings claim. Williamson itself held that a plaintiff may be excused from this requirement if he demonstrates that “the inverse condemnation procedure is unavailable or inadequate.” Id. at 197,
With respect to the first requirement, the enactment of Rules 12(h) and 12.1 constitutes a final decision. With respect to the second, we believe that the futility exception applies. The final authority on a Washington State inverse condemnation proceeding is the Washington Supreme Court. The Justices of the Washington Supreme Court, as parties to the present action, have filed briefs that argue, not just that the claim is unripe, but that there was no Fifth Amendment violation. The Justices do not point to an available state remedy, nor do they suggest that one is needed. Thus, we conclude that requiring Brown and Hayes to seek compensation from the State — a decision reviewable by the State Supreme Court — would be futile, and hold that the Fifth Amendment challenges to the IOLTA program raised by Brown and Hayes are ripe for review.
V. The Fifth Amendment
The Fifth Amendment, made applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits the taking of “private property ... for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const, amend. V. For Brown and Hayes to succeed in their Fifth Amendment challenges, they must establish that the interest at issue was their private property and that it was taken without just compensation. See Del Monte Dunes at Monterey v. City of Monterey,
A. Private Property
Following the Supreme Court’s decision in Phillips, there can be no doubt that the interest earned on IOLTA account deposits is the private property of the owners of the principal. Thus, under Phillips, Appellants Brown and Hayes have a property right to whatever interest their individual deposits generate.
Appellees nevertheless attempt to distinguish Phillips, urging us to hold that, because property rights are created by state law, Phillips, which assessed property rights under Texas law, does not control the decision under Washington State law. See Phillips,
In reaching its conclusion that “regardless of whether the owner of the principal has a constitutionally cognizable interest in the anticipated generation of interest by his funds, any interest that does accrue attaches as a property right incident to the ownership of the underlying principal,” id. at 168,
We applied Webb’s and Phillips in Schneider v. California Department of Corrections,
The States’ power vis-a-vis property thus operates as a one-way ratchet of sorts: States may, under certain circumstances, confer “new property” status on interests located outside the core of constitutionally protected property, but they may not encroach upon traditional “old property” interests found within the core.
Id. at 1200-01 (emphasis in original). We defined the “core of constitutionally protected property ... by reference to traditional ‘background principles’ of property law.” Id. Because of the “common law pedigree and near-universal endorsement by American courts[,]” we concluded that the “interest follows principal” rule lay at the core of property law, and therefore could not be abridged by state statute. Id. at 1201 (citation omitted).
Although Appellees attempt to demonstrate that under Washington law, Brown and Hayes have no property right in the IOLTA interest, any distinctions that can be drawn between Washington law and Texas law (Phillips), Florida law (Webb’s), or California law (Schneider) are immaterial. This is particularly true given that Washington adopted the common law, as did most other states, by enacting a “reception statute” that provides that “[t]he common law, so far as it is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States, or of the state of Washington, nor incompatible with the institutions and condition of society in this state, shall be the rule of decision in all the courts of this state.” Wash. Rev. Code § 4.04.010. Furthermore, Washington state courts have previously applied the common law “interest follows principal” rule. In Tacoma School District. v. Hedges,
Thus, Appellees’ attempts to distinguish Phillips by pointing to differences between Washington and Texas property law fail. The interest earned on the principal owned by Brown and Hayes held in IOLTA accounts is their private property.
B. Unconstitutional Taking
The Phillips majority did not address the question of whether an unconstitutional taking of private property occurred:
We express no view as to whether these funds have been “taken” by the State; nor do we express an opinion as to the amount of “just compensation,” if any, due respondents. We leave these issues to be addressed on remand.
Phillips,
Because Phillips did not reach the issue of whether a taking occurs when a state program enables otherwise barren principal to earn a net positive interest for the benefit of the poor, we turn to other takings cases involving property of a similar nature for guidance. As a preliminary matter, we must define the exact nature of the property at issue. In determining the existence of the property right, the Phillips majority stated that the accrued interest “attaches as a property right incident to the ownership of the underlying principal.” Phillips,
a. Per se v. Ad Hoc Analysis
We have generally accepted two methods of analysis in takings eases: the per se analysis used in Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
When similarly faced with the question whether a policy that transferred the interest that accrued on interpleader funds deposited in Florida courts to the clerk of the court was an unconstitutional taking in Webb’s Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
Our conclusion that we should take guidance from the Court’s analysis in Webb’s is bolstered by the Supreme Court’s reliance on the Webb’s decision in Phillips when it determined that a property right existed in the first place. Both cases applied the same common law rule — “any interest ... follows the principal” — in concluding that the interest at issue was the property of the owner of the principal. Phillips,
Moreover, we are presented with the very circumstances for which the Penn Central analysis was intended. Here, the government’s “interference arises from some public program adjusting the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the common good.” Penn Central,
That the banking industry is the regulatory backdrop for our decision also counsels against the application of the per se analysis to the regulations of the use of money at issue. Such analysis has almost exclusively been employed in situations involving real property. In creating its IOLTA program, Washington has not encroached upon a domain devoid of governmental regulation. As the Phillips majority recognized, it is the Federal Government’s own regulations that make the state IOLTA programs feasible. Specifically, “the Federal Government imposes tax reporting costs only on those who attempt to exercise control over the interest their funds generate, see Rev. Rul. 81-209, 1981-2 Cum. Bull. 16 [and] prohibits for-profit corporations from holding funds in NOW accounts if the interest is paid to the corporation, but permits corporate funds to be held in NOW accounts if the interest is paid to the [IOLTA fund], see Federal Reserve’s IOLTA letter.” Phillips,
Because of “the State’s traditionally high degree of control of commercial dealings,” Lucas,112 S.Ct. at 2899 , the principles of takings law that apply to real property do not apply in the same manner to statutes imposing monetary liability. Thus, even though taxes or special municipal assessments indisputably “take” money from individuals or businesses, assessments of that kind are not treated as per se takings under the Fifth Amendment.
Branch,
Although we note that the Fifth Circuit recently has decided in a two to one decision to adopt the per se method of analysis in similar (but not identical) circumstances, see Washington Legal Foun
b. Application of Ad Hoc Analysis
In conducting the factual inquiry required by Penn Central’s ad hoc analysis, we may conclude a taking has occurred only if a particular regulation goes so far that it “force[s] ‘some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.’ ” Wash. Legal Found. v. Mass. Bar Found.,
(i) Economic Impact
Before Rule 12.1 was enacted, escrow and title companies deposited customer trust funds into non-interest bearing checking accounts despite Congress’s authorization of interest-bearing NOW accounts in 1980. Even today, those escrow and title companies that do not employ LPOs generally do not use NOW accounts because of the expense and difficulty involved in crediting the proper amount of interest to each affected person and because many of these clients are for-profit organizations prohibited from using NOW accounts. Thus, because no interest would be earned on client funds deposited by escrow and title companies absent the IOLTA program, requiring those companies to place client trust funds in IOLTA accounts has no economic impact on the owners of the principal. Indeed, if there be any economic impact, it is a positive one. Before their enactment, client trust funds were not placed in interest-bearing trust accounts. Following their enactment, however, client trust funds must be placed in interest-bearing accounts if they are not placed in IOLTA accounts. Thus, the IOLTA program, at worst, maintains
Furthermore, the IOLTA regulations themselves provide that only those funds that would not earn a net interest — either on their own or when pooled with subac-counting — are to be deposited in IOLTA accounts. If for some reason, funds are placed in an IOLTA account which, due to miscalculation on the part of the LPO or some unforeseen delay, could have earned a net positive interest, the “taking” of that generated interest would be the direct result of the LPO’s violation of the Admission to Practice Rules. Because such a violation cannot be attributable to the State, it cannot implicate the Takings Clause. Although Appellant Hayes believes that his “choice to receive the interest from my withholdings” was taken and Appellant Brown objects to “hav[ing] no control over where the interest” goes, absent the IOLTA program, neither would have earned a positive net interest to receive or control. Brown concedes this fact. In response to being asked whether he was arguing that without IOLTA he would have earned $4.96, the amount calculated as the interest earned on the deposit at issue, Brown acknowledged that “[wjithout IOLTA in place I may not have earned anything.” Thus, because neither Brown nor Hayes would have earned net interest on their principal deposits, placing their funds in IOLTA accounts had no direct economic impact on them.
Nonetheless, Brown and Hayes maintain that they suffered a direct economic impact because, once escrow and title companies employing LPOs were required to place client funds in interest bearing IOLTA accounts, some banks decided to stop offering earnings credits due to the cost of simultaneously paying interest on IOLTA accounts and providing earnings credits. Brown and Hayes claim that, because some escrow and title companies charge IOLTA fees to make up for the lost earnings credits, the cost of their real estate transactions increased. This assertion does not affect our economic impact analysis, for two reasons. First, neither Brown nor Hayes has established either that they were charged an IOLTA fee or that the banks used by their escrow companies have stopped offering earnings credits. Second, the earnings credits were incentive payments to the escrow companies, not their customers, and, as such, the indirect economic impact on the escrow company customers of the companies’ loss of credits cannot be considered as part of a takings analysis.
To the contrary, Skagit Bank, the bank holding Brown’s principal, is among those that continue to give earnings credits for IOLTA accounts. Brown, however, argues that “it’s on a really reduced scale since IOLTA came into effect.” Thus, Brown claims that although he would not receive a direct payment of interest without IOLTA, he lost the equivalent, which “would have been earned in the sense of earnings credits” and have kept his costs down. He, however, fails to establish how much the additional costs were or whether they even existed.
Hayes’s principal was deposited in an IOLTA account, Fidelity National Title Company of Washington (“Fidelity”), held with Seafirst Bank. Although Seafirst stopped offering earnings credits on IOLTA accounts some time after Rule 12.1 was adopted, the record does not allow us to determine whether Fidelity passed the loss of earnings credits onto its customers by imposing an IOLTA fee. Hayes’s escrow closing statement does not appear to include an IOLTA fee, and Hayes does not assert that such a fee was charged. As support for his claim, Hayes relies solely
The record also fails to establish whether, as a general matter, those escrow companies that deal with banks that have stopped giving earnings credits in fact charge an additional fee to cover the loss. It seems, for example, that Daugs’s company does not impose additional costs to make up for the loss of earnings credits. On the other hand, Maxwell testified that Pacific Northwest Title Company charged a flat rate “trust accounting fee” after the enactment of Rule 12.1 during the time that it still employed LPOs. Attached to the declaration of Gerald Wheeler, a C.P.A. who does computerized escrow accounting for banks, is an escrow settlement statement from an unrelated land transaction. Both the buyer and the seller were charged $5.40 as an “IOLTA/Ac-counting Fee” and a tax on the IOLTA/Aceounting Fee. Yet Keith Leffler, an associate professor of Economics at the University of Washington, argues that IOLTA fees are really an example of sellers “testing whether they can profitably raise prices.” According to Leffler, “[i]t is very likely that the IOLTA program has had no effect on the prices paid by the users of escrow services.” He believes that only an economic analysis could determine whether IOLTA has had an adverse impact on escrow fees, but no such analysis has been done. Furthermore, because those companies that impose IOLTA fees charge both the buyer and seller, Leffler argues that “the amount [bears] no relationship to any change in earnings credits from ... earnest money deposit[s].... [E]ven if one could show that as a result of [a loss of earning credits] there was an average increase in the prices paid by users of these services, there would be no reason to believe that the impact on any particular client would bear any relationship to any loss of earnings credit on the funds of that client, much less any relationship to the interest paid to the IOLTA program on that client’s funds.”
Moreover, as Professor Leffler’s economic analysis demonstrates, even if there were an economic impact on escrow companies’ customers such as Brown and Hayes, that impact would have been the result of discrete, discretionary pricing decisions by the affected escrow companies in response to the bank’s decision to discontinue or decrease the availability of discounts on the companies’ banking charges. While the dissent focuses on the fact that the payment of the earnings credits demonstrates that the deposits had economic value to the bank, one hardly needs that evidence to understand that the entire basis for the profitability of the banking industry is the value to the bank of the temporary use of other people’s money. Much more important for present purposes is the recognition that under the commercial arrangement between the escrow companies, the banks, and the escrow companies’ customers as it existed before IOLTA, the value of that use was split between the banks and the escrow companies. The customers had no property interest in that value, and, although the escrow companies could choose to pass on the lower overhead resulting from their lower banking costs to their customers, that pricing decision did not create any property interest in the earnings credits. It is true, of course, that because of the IOLTA program the value to the bank of the temporary use of the escrow funds is less (although not zero — banks do not distribute as interest the full value of deposited money, or they would have no earnings). But that does not change the fact that the earnings credits were nothing but
Because the earnings credits did not belong to the customers in the first place, but rather were incentives provided to the escrow companies to use as they pleased for any covered banking charges, any impact on the customers is no different than many caused by economic regulation of someone else. Any price increase to customers due to increased banking costs would be just the indirect result of a decrease over time in the escrow companies’ ability to acquire a certain kind of property for themselves. Moreover, any price increase would be the direct result of a private, discretionary pricing decision in no way mandated by the government. As such, those price increases should no more count as part of a takings analysis regarding the customers’ property than any other economic decision adverse to customers a retailer makes because of the economic impact on it of regulatory changes affecting one of its suppliers. Assume, for example, that changes in banking regulations meant that a supermarket would have to pay higher fees when depositing its daily sales receipts, and consequently the supermarket raised the price of milk. Neither past nor future purchasers of milk, we presume, could validly claim that the price increase was a taking of their property by the government.
Neither Brown nor Hayes can show that the cost of their individual real estate transactions increased as a result of the IOLTA rules. Therefore, we conclude that the alleged loss of the escrow and title companies’ earnings credits had no economic impact on them.
(ii) Interference with Distinct Investmenb-Backed Expectations
“Governmental action through regulation of the use of private property does not cause a taking unless the interference is significant.” Wash. Legal Found. v. Mass. Bar Found.,
Due to the structure of the IOLTA program and the general practices of escrow and title companies, neither Brown nor Hayes could have expected his principal to earn a net interest, and thus, the IOLTA program could not have interfered with their investment-backed expectations.
(iii) Character of Government Action
Brown and Hayes concede that they would have no interest without IOLTA, but they argue that, once interest is created, they have the right to determine what — 'if anything — is done with the interest. Viewing the accrued interest as its
The IOLTA rules are better viewed as a regulation of the uses of Brown’s and Hayes’s property, consisting of the principal and the accrued interest in aggregation. That said, the character of the government action is best viewed in the context of the industry it regulates. Banking is a heavily regulated industry, and the ability of particular types of deposits to earn interest has often been the subject of banking regulations. In fact, without the Federal Government’s regulations regarding what types of accounts can earn interest, the IOLTA program may never have been born. Moreover, the ability to practice a profession — and the conduct expected of those who do — -is also heavily regulated. Lawyers have always been held to the highest legal and ethical standards. As part of their state bar membership, lawyers in Washington are encouraged to provide legal services “to persons of limited means or to public service ' or charitable groups.” Wash. Rules of Profl Conduct R. 6.1. With or without IOLTA, they are required to segregate their clients’ funds from their own to ensure that funds are not used improperly. Wash. Rules of Profl Conduct R. 1.14. When LPOs are admitted to perform a limited practice of law, they are held to the same legal and ethical standards as lawyers. Thus, they, too, are expected to safeguard their clients’ property and to do their best to ensure that the legal system is available to all who need it. Viewed in this context, the IOLTA regulations are not out of character for either the commercial industry or the professions they affect.
The Takings Clause does not prevent the Government from being able to regulate how people use their property but limits that ability to what is “just and fair.” Andrus,
2. Just Compensation
There is a second reason why Washington State’s IOLTA program does not work a constitutional violation with regard to Brown’s and Hayes’s property: Even if their property was taken, the Fifth Amendment only protects against a taking without just compensation. Because of the way the IOLTA program operates, the compensation due Brown and Hayes for any taking of their property would be nil.
Determining what constitutes “just compensation” requires putting “the owner of the condemned property ‘in as good a position pecuniarily as if the property had not been taken.’ ” United States v. 564.54 Acres of Land,
Land Title Company deposited Brown’s money — $ 90,521.29 — into an IOLTA account at Skagit State Bank where it remained for two days. The escrow IOLTA account was earning 1 percent per ann-uum. Hayes’s $14,793.32 was deposited in Fidelity’s IOLTA account; $2,000 remained in the IOLTA account for sixteen days and $12,793.32 remained in the account for two days. It is unclear from the record what the interest rate was at Hayes’s bank. As previously discussed, however, without IOLTA, neither Brown nor Hayes would have earned interest on his principal because by regulatory definition, their funds would have not otherwise been placed in an IOLTA account, and the general practice of escrow and title companies was — and still is — to place funds in noninterest-bearing accounts when IOLTA does not apply. Although without IOLTA, Brown and Hayes at most would have had the right to keep their principal from earning interest, the loss of that right has no economic value.
In seeking compensation for the interest their principal earned when deposited in the IOLTA account, Brown and Hayes are in actuality seeking compensation for the value added to their property by Washington’s IOLTA program. I-n other words, Brown and Hayes are seeking compensation not for the value of what they lost, but for the value of what the Legal Foundation of Washington has created. Our Takings Clause jurisprudence has never “force[d] a State to confer, upon the owner of property that cannot produce anything of value for him, ownership of the fruits of that property should that property be rendered fertile through the government’s lawful intervention.” Phillips,
In the context of real property, it is clear that the owner of condemned land need not be compensated for the value created by the government’s exercise of the power of eminent domain. In United States v. Virginia Electric and Power Co.,
It is also clear that a property owner need not be compensated for losing the ability to use his land when there is no “reasonable probability” that such a use will occur. United States ex rel. Tenn. Valley Auth. v. Powelson,
Furthermore, the Government need not compensate “for any part of what it has added to the land.” City of New York v. Sage,
Here, Brown and Hayes admit that, at most, IOLTA takes their right to let their principal lie fallow. In other words, they have lost the opportunity to place the principal in a noninterest-bearing checking account. Once Brown and Hayes gave dominion and control to their respective title and escrow companies, however, their “right” to control how the principal was used had the same value to them as the barren flowage easement would have had in VEPCO, i.e., no value at all. They have produced no evidence that, without IOLTA, they could have dictated how the escrow and title companies handled their principal. Nor have they been deprived of values resulting from their expenditures or activities because, within the restrictions of the IOLTA rules, no such values could exist. Furthermore, while Brown and Hayes have the right to control the accrued interest in theory, as a practical matter, that right will never come to fruition on its own because without IOLTA
We therefore hold that even if the IOLTA program constituted a taking of Brown’s and Hayes’s private property, there would be no Fifth Amendment violation because the value of their just compensation is nil.
VI. First Amendment
The district court did not address Appellants’ First Amendment claims because it concluded that Appellants did not have a property right to the interest at issue. Because this conclusion was abrogated by Phillips, the district court must now consider what speech, if any, is at issue and whether the IOLTA program violates any rights Appellants may have emanating from the First Amendment. Therefore, we vacate this judgment and remand Appellants’ First Amendment claims to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VII. Conclusion
For the foregoing' reasons, the district court’s grant of summary judgment with respect to Appellants’ Fifth Amendment claims is affirmed, and its grant of summary judgment with respect to Appellants’ First Amendment claims is vacated and remanded. Each party shall bear its own costs of appeal.
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom Judges TROTT, KLEINFELD and SILVERMAN join, dissenting.
For the second time within a year, our court follows the dissenters in a Supreme Court takings case while ignoring the Supreme Court majority. See also Tahoe-Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Auth.,
The majority starts — as it must — with the proposition that interest earned by appellants on funds deposited in IOLTA accounts is their property. The reason they must is that the Supreme Court said so. See Phillips v. Wash. Legal Found.,
The only case authority that arguably supports the majority’s radical proposition is Justice Breyer’s dissent in Phillips. The majority’s theory, evidently built upon Justice Breyer’s approach, seems to be that if the property owner would not have realized the value of the property but for the government’s actions, then the government can take it and pay the owner nothing. Compare Maj. Op. at 857-58 with Phillips,
The majority also builds on Phillips’s other dissent, that of Justice Souter. From there, the majority derives the novel theory that a governmental appropriation of private property can be judged by the ad hoc analysis of Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
Penn Central’s ad hoc approach deals with regulatory takings — a difficult and vexing corner of takings law. This involves the situation where the government does not take property outright but, rather, limits the owner’s use of the property for a regulatory purpose. Normally, the consequences of regulation are not com-pensable, because we must each bear the burdens — just as we enjoy the benefits — of living in a regulated society. For example, when the city requires a setback for buildings on residential lots, this is not a com-pensable taking because the regulation serves aesthetic and community purposes, and each property owner gets a correlative benefit from the fact that other homeowners can’t build within the setback portion of their own lots. However, when a regulation goes “too far” in limiting the owner’s use of the property, compensation is due. See Dolan v. City of Tigard,
The ad hoc approach has never been applied to a case where the government
The majority’s blurring of the distinction between regulatory takings and physical takings is alarming. In a complex world, a property owner will always get some benefit, real or theoretical, from a taking of his property. Thus, even the family that gets booted from its home to make room for a freeway will get the benefit of a much faster commute from the park bench whence it must take up residence. Under an ad hoc approach, this would merely be an adjustment of the burdens of life in the big city. But the Supreme Court — in majority opinions — has held that the physical taking of any property by the government or its agents is a compensable taking, even if the property owner gets an offsetting— or even a net — benefit. See Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
My colleagues try to avoid the clear teaching of Phillips by arguing that the per se approach of Loretto and similar cases applies primarily to takings of real property. Maj. Op. at 854. Of course, this is not true; if the city wants to display your Renoir in its museum, it can’t just take it and compensate you with the joy of viewing it during visiting hours. The majority seems to admit as much when it quickly adds “personal property” to the description of property covered by the per se approach. Id. (quoting United States v. Sperry Corp.,
For purposes of the takings clause, then, real and personal property are reduced to their cash equivalents. It thus strikes me as peculiar and quite dangerous to say that the government has greater latitude when it takes money than when it takes other kinds of property. This portion of the majority’s opinion will doubtless be greeted with a rousing cheer by government officials who will eagerly look to bank accounts and other places where money is kept, with an eye to snatching a few dollars here and there, and justifying it with some sort of “ad hoc” analysis.
It is no doubt true that the IOLTA program serves a salutary purpose, one worthy of our support. As a citizen and former member of the bar, I applaud the state’s effort to provide legal services for the poor and disadvantaged. But there is absolutely no reason appellants should have to give up their property to cover the full cost of this shared social responsibility. If the state believes that this is a service it should provide, it must be willing to pay for it. There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.
The case should be analyzed and decided precisely as in Judge Kleinfeld’s opinion for the three-judge panel. Because I believe Judge Kleinfeld there sets out the proper analysis, and does so elegantly and persuasively, I adopt it in full as part of my dissent. For ease of reference, I reproduce Judge Kleinfeld’s opinion as an appendix hereto.
APPENDIX
This case raises constitutional questions about Washington’s program for applying interest on lawyers’ (and others’) trust accounts to various good works.
I. FACTS
Lawyers’ ethical requirements have long required that “[mjoney of the client or collected for the client ... should be reported and accounted for promptly, and should not under any circumstances be commingled with his own or be used by him.”
In order to keep clients’ money separated, a lawyer traditionally maintains a trust account separate from the law firm account, and keeps clients’ money in the trust account. Clients advance money to lawyers for many reasons, such as for the closing of a business or real estate transaction, satisfaction of a claim, bail, and fees to be earned by the lawyer in the future
Earlier in the century, lawyers often used to keep clients’ money in separate envelopes in office safes.
Two things precipitated a change from the tradition that no interest was obtained from lawyers’ trust accounts. First, in the 1970’s, interest rates reached unprecedented high levels. Suppose $30,000 from a routine personal injury settlement were left in a non-interest bearing trust account for two weeks, while the insurer’s check cleared and court reporters’ and other expenses were paid. When rates were only 3%, only $35 in interest was lost, an amount less than the lawyers’ fees and bank charges that would be required to maintain a separate account to obtain the interest. But when money market funds were paying 19%, a client stood to lose $219 on the same deposit. The interest was just too much to ignore.
Previously, banks were receiving the benefit of the use of the money in lawyers’ non-interest bearing trust accounts, effectively as free loans from lawyers’ clients, because before 1980, federal law prohibited federally insured banks and savings and loans from paying interest on checking accounts.
The combination of statutory and regulatory changes allowing payment of interest on some demand bank accounts and high interest rates led to programs in all the states
The Washington Supreme Court created an IOLTA program in 1984 and codified it in the Washington Rules of Professional Conduct.
This case has the unusual twist (factually unusual, but it makes no difference analytically) that the IOLTA rules apply to some people who are not lawyers, and the non-lawyers are the plaintiffs. Some duties traditionally performed by lawyers are also performed in some localities by non-lawyers, frequently raising questions among the state bars and supreme courts about whether those services constitute the unauthorized practice of law. The issue of non-lawyers preparing documents for real estate transactions has been resolved by the Washington Supreme Court. In its rules for the bar, the Court has provided for “limited practice of law” by “closing officers,” who are not lawyers but may nonetheless prepare these documents.
The title and escrow companies that employ closing officers do not have the same historical traditions as the bar. Traditionally, lawyers never received anything of value from the banks they used for trust accounts, and had to pay the bank fees for the trust accounts out of their law firm accounts, that is, the lawyers’ own money. The escrow companies in Washington, like the lawyers, have in the past deposited money held in trust for customers in non-interest bearing trust accounts. Unlike the lawyers, the escrow companies have in the past received something of value in return from the banks. The banks did not pay them cash, but rather gave them credits applicable against bank fees. The credits were applied to such items as bank charges for money transfers, account reconciliations, and returned checks. Some escrow companies now charge their customers what they call “IOLTA fees” on the theory that IOLTA costs them money because they have lost these bank credits.
The small amounts of interest from each transaction in lawyers’ and escrow companies’ trust accounts add up to a lot of money, even though interest rates are not nearly as high as they were twenty years ago. In 1990 the program yielded $3.9 million for the Legal Foundation of Washington, in 1995, $2.7 million.
Appellants have varying concrete interests in the IOLTA program. Mr. Brown regularly buys and sells real estate in the course of his business, has engaged in at least one transaction where he knows interest on his $90,521.29 advance went to the Legal Foundation of Washington through the IOLTA program, and declares “I object to anyone other than me taking the interest earned on my funds.” Mr. Hayes declares likewise, and also objects “to some of the activities engaged in” by the Legal Foundation and those to whom it distributes IOLTA money. Mr. Daugs owns an escrow company and is a limited practice officer. According to his declaration, he has been violating the IOLTA rule so that his customers can have the benefit of earnings credits offsetting bank charges and because he objects to some activities of the Legal Foundation and its grantees. Ms. Maxwell is a former licensed limited practice officer employed by a title company that provides escrow services. Her company decided to fire all the limited practice officers to avoid the IOLTA rule and keep the bank credits, so she had to surrender her license and quit using some of her valuable skills in order to keep her job.
As an example of the activities some plaintiffs object to, they submitted a letter from the Legal Foundation to a legal services program saying “[hjave I got a deal for you.... This means you can do work without regard to [Legal Services Corporation] restrictions for the first three quarters.” The Legal Services Corporation, a federally funded national legal services program, provides funding for programs in the states, but legal restrictions prevent legal services staff attorneys from engaging in certain activities. The IOLTA money from Washington Legal Foundation is not encumbered by these restrictions. Thus the named plaintiffs object not only to losing the interest that IOLTA receives, and losing the free bank services they formerly received, but also to how the
The named appellants and Washington Legal Foundation, a public interest advocacy group, sued the Legal Foundation of Washington and the Washington Supreme Court. They sought a declaratory judgment that the rules requiring limited practice officers to place clients’ funds into IOLTA trust accounts, Washington Admission to Practice Rules 12(h) and 12.1, violated their First and Fifth Amendment rights. They also sought an injunction against disciplinary action for violating the rules and a refund of whatever interest IOLTA received from their deposits. On cross motions for summary judgment, the defendants prevailed in district court.
II. ANALYSIS
Plaintiffs argue that the interest on then-trust accounts belongs to the clients, and that the IOLTA program violates their Fifth Amendment right to the interest by taking it without just compensation. Plaintiffs further argue that the program violates their First Amendment right by forcing them to finance speech to which they object. We do not reach the First Amendment questions, because we conclude that plaintiffs are entitled to relief on their Fifth Amendment claim.
A. Ripeness.
Defendants argue that the Fifth Amendment claim is not ripe under Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank.
Unlike Williamson, there is no ongoing regulatory proceeding, so there is no occasion, as there was in Williamson, to await a final decision. There, the county zoning process was not yet complete. Here, what is at issue are general rules, Washington Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.14 and Washington Admission to Practice Rule 12, not an individualized regulatory
Most of what is at issue in this case is declaratory and injunctive relief, not the takings claim for $20 or so of lost interest. That $20 tail cannot wag the dog of this constitutional challenge to the IOLTA program into state court. Williamson generally keeps claims for just compensation in state court, but it does not exclude from federal court a claim for declaratory and injunctive relief to establish that a state law, on its face, violates the Fifth Amendment.
Also, Williamson does not apply where “the inverse condemnation procedure is unavailable or inadequate.”
B. Property right.
Defendants argue that the clients whose money is deposited into an IOLTA account do not own a property right in the interest that money earns, so the Fifth Amendment protection of property does not pertain. The Fifth Amendment protects property rights but does not create them.
One of the amicus briefs argues that “clients lose nothing because of IOLTA,” because were it not for the pooling, the clients could get no interest, because the costs of administering the accounts to produce it would exceed the amounts produced. Indeed, the IOLTA rule is written so that if the interest would exceed the administrative costs of obtaining and crediting it, then the money should not be deposited into the IOLTA trust account.
This is more a practical than a legal argument insofar as it addresses who owns the interest. The claim is not that the trust accounts do not produce interest, but only that the administrative expense of sharing it among the clients would exceed the amount earned. The money deposited into the trust account is the clients’ money. If the clients own the interest, it might be worth it to them to pay the expense and collect it even if the lawyers or escrow companies did not think it worth the bother. One of the affidavits in this case establishes that a client might well say (and the affiant more or less does), “it is not so much that I want the $20, though I do, as that I don’t want the Legal Foundation’s donees to get it, because I don’t like what they do with it.” If lawyers and escrow companies had to pay trust account interest to clients, then software programs might be developed to make it easy to do it. If pooling works to generate interest for IOLTA, then it could presumably be made to work to generate interest for clients. Also, as the affidavits in this case demonstrate, the clients can and do suffer a detriment if the interest is given to the Legal Foundation, because the escrow companies impose charges on the clients to compensate themselves for the bank credits they formerly obtained. The property question is whether the clients own the interest, not whether the amounts are so small it is not worth the clients’ while to collect it.
The circuits had been split on this question,
Phillips was a Fifth Amendment challenge to the Texas IOLTA program. It is materially similar to the Washington IOLTA program at issue here. Similar language was used in Texas to limit the pooled IOLTA trust funds to short term and nominal amounts that would not generate interest for clients exceeding the administrative costs of paying it to the clients. The question the Court considered was “whether interest earned on client funds held in IOLTA accounts is ‘private property’ of either the client or the attorney for purposes of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.”
Defendants argue that Phillips should be distinguished because it depends on Texas law, and Washington law differs.
Phillips begins with the proposition that the principal in the trust accounts belongs to the client. Though one the defendants’ briefs argues otherwise, on the ground that a bank is merely a debtor of the depositor whose duties depend on contract, that proposition is irrelevant. The relationship at issue is not between the bank and the lawyer or escrow company, but between either of them and the client. The Washington IOLTA rules, like the Texas rules, refer to the money at issue as “client funds,” and “funds of clients” and “his or her funds,” as distinguished from “funds belonging to the lawyer.”
Next, Phillips takes note of the well established rule that “interest follows principal” “as the shadow the body.”
The rule that “interest follows principal” has been established under English common law since at least the mid-1700’s. Beckford v. Tobin, 1 Ves.Sen. 308, 310, 27 Eng.Rep. 1049, 1051 (Ch.1749) (“[I]nterest shall follow the principal, as the shadow the body”). Not surprisingly, this rule has become firmly embedded in the common law of the various States.33
Phillips also responds to the practical argument discussed above, that the IOLTA program takes interest only from clients who would receive none, because the amounts are too small or deposited for too short a time to generate interest in excess of administrative expense to distribute it. The Court held that the interest is property protected under the Fifth Amendment even if “it lacks a positive economic or market value.”
Phillips goes on to establish a striking proposition: states are not free to take away the client’s property right to the interest by statutes depriving them of property rights in it.
“ ‘[A] state by ipse dixit, may not transform private property into public property without compensation’ simply by legislatively abrogating the traditional rule that ‘earnings of a fund are incidents of ownership of the fund itself and are property just as the fund itself is property.’ In other words, at least as to confiscatory regulations as opposed to those regulating the use of property, a State may not sidestep the Takings Clause by disavowing traditional property interests long recognized under state law.”39
We applied Phillips in, Schneider v. California Department of Corrections.
We noted in Schneider that in Phillips and Webb’s, the Supreme Court had held that “a State may not sidestep the Takings Clause by disavowing traditional property interests long recognized under state law,”
Phillips’ and Schneider’s rejection of positive state law as a means of avoiding the Takings Clause, disposes of the proposition that there is no taking because Washington, in its IOLTA program, has established as a matter of positive law that interest does not follow principal with respect to small and short term deposits in client’s trust accounts. Texas, after all, had also established its IOLTA program as law, so if property rights in interest could be destroyed by state law in that manner, Phillips had to come out the other way. A state cannot avoid the Fifth Amendment limitation on takings of property by legislating away the property right.
All that is left as a possible distinction of this case from Phillips is that Washington, unlike most common law jurisdictions, has not accepted the common law rule that interest follows principal. Exceptions to the rule will not establish a contrary view, because there were exceptions in Texas. Despite those exceptions, Phillips held that the client’s ownership of the principal in the trust account still gave the client a property right in the interest. Defendants have to establish that Washington is an anomaly among common law jurisdictions, not merely by having some exceptions, but by not having accepted the virtually universal rule.
Not surprisingly, the case for Washington’s anomalous status cannot be made. Most American jurisdictions adopted the common law in what are called “reception” statutes. Washington has a quite ordinary reception statute: “The common law, so far as it is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States, or of the state of Washington nor incompatible with the institutions and condition of society in this state, shall be the rule of decision in all the courts of this state.”
C. Taking.
Phillips did not express a view on whether the Texas IOLTA law was a taking, nor on the amount of compensation due if it was,
Plaintiffs presented evidence that for at least one of them, a measurable amount of money, about $20 in interest, was diverted to the Legal Foundation. Phillips holds that even where the client’s interest on trust accounts “may have no economically realizable value to its owner, possession, control and disposition are nonetheless valuable rights that inhere in the property.”
Defendants argue that there has been no taking because there has been no physical invasion of tangible property. They rely on the Supreme Court’s statement in Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City
Defendants seem to be arguing that the government can confiscate people’s money without it being a taking compensable under the Fifth Amendment, based on cases where the government provided a service and charged a reasonable user fee for the service.
Defendants make another, more appealing, argument from Penn Central that the “economic impact of the regulation on the claimant and, particularly, the extent to which the regulation has interfered with distinct investment-backed expectations are, of course, relevant considerations.”
This argument fails on several independent grounds. First, the “economic impact” test is articulated in Penn Central in the context of regulation of the use of real estate, not deprivation in its entirety of any property. The point of the economic impact test in Penn Central is to distinguish government regulations of the owner’s use of property permissible under its police power from those that go too far, requiring the government to compensate the owner for taking his property. That distinction is not necessary or appropriate where the government entirely appropriates a sum of money belonging to a private individual. The economic impact test would have relevance if the IOLTA rule merely regulated how the client used his interest, or where the interest was kept, or for how long. But that is not the case. The IOLTA rule entirely appropriates the interest on the client’s principal in a trust account, so the distinction between regulation under the police power and a taking subject to Fifth Amendment protection is not affected by the economic impact.
This analysis is compelled by Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.
The second way a client may lose interest is that the costs of lawyers’ and closing officers’ services are overestimated. As a practical matter, the lawyers and closing officers have a substantial incentive not to be bothered with crediting clients with their interest. It is therefore in their interest to say of almost all routine trust deposits that no significant interest will accrue and to place the money into the IOLTA account. But a client, whether out of desire that he or she get every penny coming to them, a feeling of getting “nick-eled and dimed,” or an objection to contributing money to lawyers’ and judges’ favorite charity, may think it is worth having a lawyer spend $19.95 worth of time to get the client $20 in interest. Also, the amount of time and trouble involved in collecting, allocating, and distributing interest to clients depends on how often it is done. If done once, it is probably a costly nuisance. If done frequently, it may become delegable to non-professional staff using off the shelf software.
D. Remedies.
Defendants argue that even if the interest is the client’s property, and even if the IOLTA rule effects a taking, the Fifth Amendment nevertheless affords no remedy because the “just compensation” is zero. On this point, which the district court did not reach, a remand is necessary. The Fifth Amendment does not prohibit the taking of private property for public use; it allows it.
Defendants argue that no equitable relief is available to enjoin a taking of private property for public use, citing Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto.
Monsanto does not address all the equitable relief demanded, only the taking itself. Though they cannot enjoin the government from taking their interest for public use, plaintiffs are entitled to a declaratory judgment that taking their interest for public use without paying them just compensation, under the IOLTA rule, violates the Fifth Amendment. Plaintiffs also seek an injunction prohibiting the Washington Supreme Court from taking disciplinary action against limited practice officers (the closing officers escrow companies employ) for refusing to deposit clients’ money into the IOLTA account, or from conditioning their licenses on complying with IOLTA rules. We do not decide whether such an injunction would be appropriate, because the district court has not yet considered the issue, but if it would otherwise be appropriate, Monsanto would not bar an injunction. Monsanto prevents courts from enjoining takings. This equitable relief would not enjoin takings, but would instead be addressed to saving the jobs of title and escrow company employees caught between the IOLTA rules and employers who do not want to employ anyone who will comply with the IOLTA rules.
Defendants correctly argue that the measure of just compensation is not the value that the government gains, but rather the value that the person whose property was taken loses.
Plaintiffs’ submissions include what the escrow companies call “IOLTA fees” charged to customers whose money is put into the IOLTA account. These fees and the affidavits explaining them support an inference that the clients are harmed financially by the IOLTA program, but the “IOLTA fees” do not measure the loss. The IOLTA fees are not charged by IOLTA, but by the title and escrow companies. Before IOLTA the banks previously received the benefit of the “float,” that is, the interest-free loans lawyers gave them of their clients’ money, and escrow companies of their customers’ money, when it was held in trust accounts. A bank account is a loan of money by the depositor to the bank.
The Court in Phillips drew a distinction that implies the proper resolution of the just compensation measure (and with it, the constitutionally permissible form of an IOLTA program). Phillips says that the taking of interest on trust accounts “would be a different case” if the state were “imposing reasonable fees it incurs in generating and allocating interest income.”
Just as a client is not entitled to the full amount that a lawyer collects for him, but only that amount less the lawyer’s reasonable expenses and fees,
Even though when funds are deposited into IOLTA accounts, the lawyers expect them to earn less than it would cost to distribute the interest, that expectation can turn out to be incorrect, as discussed above. Several hypothetical cases illustrate the complexities of the remedies, which need further factual development on remand. Suppose $2,000 is deposited into a lawyer’s trust account paying 5% and stays there for two days. It earns about $.55, probably well under the cost of a stamp and envelope, along with clerical expenses, needed to send the $.55 to the client. In that case, the client’s financial loss from the taking, if a reasonable charge is made for the administrative expense, is nothing. The fair market value of a right to receive $.55 by spending perhaps $5.00 to receive it would be nothing. On the other hand, suppose, hypothetically, that the amount deposited into the trust account is $30,000, and it stays there for 6 days. The client’s loss here would be about $29.59 if he does not get the interest, which may well exceed the reasonable administrative expense of paying it to him out of a common fund. It is hard to see how just compensation could be zero in this hypothetical taking, even though it would be in the $2,000 for 2 days hypothetical taking. It may be that the difference between what a pooled fund earns, and what the individual clients and escrow companies lose, adds up to enough to sustain a valuable IOLTA program while not depriving any of the clients and customers of just compensation for the takings. This is a practical question entirely undeveloped on this record. We leave it for the parties to consider during the remedial phase of this litigation.
E. First Amendment Claim
Plaintiffs claim that the IOLTA program violates the First Amendment because it forces clients of lawyers and customers of escrow companies to contribute their interest money to groups such as legal services programs asserting public positions with which they disagree. Because plaintiffs prevail on their Fifth Amendment claim, and because the district court did not reach the First Amendment claim, we do not reach the First Amendment claim.
Ill CONCLUSION
IOLTA programs spread rapidly because they were an exceedingly intelligent idea. Money that lawyers deposited in bank trust accounts always produced earnings, but before IOLTA, the clients who owned the money did not receive any of the earnings that their money produced. IOLTA extracted the earnings from the banks and gave it to charities, largely to fund legal services for the poor. That is a very worthy purpose. But as Phillips reminds us, the interest belongs to the clients. It does not belong to the banks, or the lawyers, or the escrow companies, or the state of Washington. If the clients’ money is to be taken by the State of Washington for the worthy public purpose of funding legal services for indigents or anything else, then the state of Washing
In sum, we hold that the interest generated by IOLTA pooled trust accounts is property of the clients and customers whose money is deposited into trust, and that a government appropriation of that interest for public purposes is a taking entitling them to just compensation under the Fifth Amendment. But just compensation for the takings may be less than the amount of the interest taken, or nothing, depending on the circumstances, so determining the remedy requires a remand.
Notes
. Canons of Professional Ethics Canon 11(1908) (amended 1933).
. Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.15(a) (1999).
. See Clark v. State Bar,
. See id. Some lawyers became troubled about amounts in trust exceeding FDIC insurance limits during the 80’s when many banks failed.
. Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.15 cmt. 1 (1999).
. See In re Massachusetts Bar Ass’n,
. See 12 U.S.C. § 371a.
. See Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Washington Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.14 (2000).
. See id. The rules provide:
A lawyer who receives client funds shall maintain a pooled interest-bearing trust account for deposit of client funds that are nominal in amount or expected to be held for a short period of time. The interest accruing on this account, net of reasonable check and deposit processing charges which shall only include items deposited charge, monthly maintenance fee, per item check charge, and per deposit charge, shall be paid to The Legal Foundation of Washington, as established by the Supreme Court of Washington. All other fees and transaction costs shall be paid by the lawyer. A lawyer may, but shall not be required to, notify the client of the intended use of such funds.
. Washington Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.14(2) (2000).
. Washington Admission to Practice Rules Rule 12 (2000).
. Washington Admission to Practice Rules Rule 12(b)-(c) (2000).
. Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
. See id. at 175,
. See id. at 186,
. Id. at 186, 194,
. See Sinaloa Lake Owners Ass’n v. City of Simi Valley,
. See Suitum v. Tahoe Reg'l Planning Agency,
. Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
. See City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd.,
. San Remo Hotel v. City and County of San Francisco,
. Levald, Inc. v. City of Palm Desert, 998 F.2d 680, 689 (9th Cir.1993).
. See Board of Regents v. Roth,
. IOLTA Adoption Order,
. Compare Cone v. State Bar of Florida,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Id. at 160,
. Id.
. Washington Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.14 (2OOO).
. Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.15 (1999).
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Id.
. Id. at 169,
. Id. at 170,
. See id. at 171,
. See Webb's Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
. See id. at 164-65,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Schneider v. California Dep’t of Corrections,
. Id. at 1194.
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. See id.; Webb's Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
. Schneider v. California Dep’t of Corrections,
. Id.
. Schneider v. California Dep't of Corrections,
. Id.
. Wash. Rev.Code § 4.04.010 (2000).
. Tacoma School District v. Hedges,
. City of Seattle v. King County,
. Id. at 1155.
. See Wash. Rev.Code § 18.85.310(5) (real estate brokers must deposit nominal deposits in trust accounts, the interest to be used for low income housing and continuing education for real estate professionals); Wash. Rev.Code § 36.48.090 (interest on bail goes to county expenses, not those posting the bail); Wash. Rev.Code § 59.18.270 (landlords receive the interest on tenants’ security deposits). These three statutes were adopted, respectively, in 1995, 1963, and 1973, long after the reception of the common law rule that interest follows principal. We have no occasion, of course, to consider the constitutionality of these provisions.
. Sutherland Slat. Const. § 61.01-61.06 (5th Ed.). The old maxim that statutes in derogation of the common law are strictly construed may be incorrect as prescription or description of how such statutes are actually construed. But as a description of how legislatures promulgate laws, it is correct to say that by legislating on one matter, they do not abrogate all common law inconsistent with the new statute on other matters that were not even before them at the time.
. See Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. See id. at n. 4.
. See Washington Legal Foundation v. Massachusetts Bar Foundation,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York,
. Id. at 124,
. See e.g., United States v. Sperry Corp.,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. See also our user's fee decision in Commercial Builders of Northern California v. City of Sacramento,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York,
. Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
. Id. at 426,
. Id. at 435,
. See id. at 432,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. Id. at 170,
. Id. at 170,
. Id. at 171,
. Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
. Washington Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.14(3). The rule for closing officers, Washington Admission to Practice Rules Rule 12.1(b)(3), is analogous, except that "cost of closing officer's services” is substituted for "cost of lawyer’s services.”
. First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. County of Los Angeles,
. U.S. Const, amend. V.
. Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
. See Williamson County Reg'l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
. See IT Corp. v. General Am. Life Ins. Co.,
. Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. United States v. Sperry Corp.,
. See id. at 57.
. See Paul, Johnson, Alston & Hunt v. Graulty,
. See Phillips v. Washington Legal Foundation,
. An additional detail not clear from the record as it stands is whether the interest could flow to clients, or only to charities selected by clients, under the restrictions applicable to financial institutions in which trust funds could prudently be pooled.
. See Armstrong v. United States,
