DOT, 220 N.C. App. 419, 725 S.E.2d 651 (2012). After the Court denied certification of a class action by impacted property owners, hundreds of individual inverse condemnation cases were filed by property owners claiming that NC DOT had taken their land without paying just compensation. Several of these cases were heard at the trial level and have gone up and down on appeal for different reasons. Kirby v. N.C. DOT, 368 N.C. 847 (2016). A group of Forsyth County property owners sued the NCDOT alleging that NCDOT’s filing of the transportation corridor map, an area in which their property lay, amounted to a taking of their property through eminent domain for which they were owed just compensation. The NC Supreme Court ruled that the limitations imposed on property owners by the Map Act and filing of the transportation corridor maps, i.e. inability to further develop, suppressed land value, limitations on disposing of the property and the indefinite nature of those limitations amounted to a taking of the property for which the state was required to pay. Chappell v. N.C. DOT, 374 N.C. 273, 841 S.E.2d 513 (2020) DOT v. Stimpson, 258 N.C. App. 382, 813 S.E.2d 634 (2018)