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Will court curb eminent domain?
February 27, 2005
By Jeff Jacoby jacoby@globe.com
The Boston Globe
Boston, Massachusetts
To submit a Letter to the Editor: letter@globe.com
Beginning his oral argument in Kelo v. City of New London, the
Connecticut eminent-domain case the Supreme Court took up last week,
Scott Bullock of the Institute for Justice puts the stakes bluntly:
"Every home, church, or corner store would produce more jobs and
tax revenue if it were a Costco or a shopping mall," he says. If
state and local governments can force a property owner to surrender
his land so it can be given to a new owner who will put it to more
lucrative use, no home or shop in America will ever be safe again.
That's just what New London wants to do to Bullock’s clients, the
last remaining homeowners in the city’s working-class section of
Fort Trumbull.
When Pfizer, the big pharmaceutical firm, announced in 1998 that it
would build a $300 million research facility nearby, the city decided
to raze Fort Trumbull's modest homes and shops so they could be
replaced with more expensive properties: offices, upscale condos, a
luxury hotel.
But can the government kick people out of their homes or businesses
simply to make way for new development?
Under the Bill of Rights, the power of eminent domain may be used only
when land is needed for a public use. "Nor shall private property
be taken for public use without just compensation," the Fifth
Amendment commands. A school, a post office, a right of way for a
railroad -- those are the kinds of public uses for which property
owners have traditionally been made to relinquish their land.
But that isn't why New London wants to tear down the 112-year-old
Victorian that Susette Kelo worked so hard to renovate, or the house
at Walbach and East streets where Wilhelmina Dery has lived for all of
her 87 years.
The city doesn't want their land for a public facility or a new road.
It simply wants the expanded tax base and economic growth that will
come with new development.
Is that what the Constitution means by "public use" -- the
trickle-down benefits of private use?
Once, Supreme Court justices would have given short shrift to such a
claim.
"The despotic power ... of taking private property when state
necessity requires, exists in every government," Justice William
Paterson wrote in a 1795 case, Vanhorn's Lessee v. Dorrance, but the
state must not invoke that power ‘‘except in urgent cases."
He could not imagine any situation that would justify "the
seizing of landed property belonging to one citizen, and giving it to
another citizen.... Where is the security, where the inviolability of
property, if the legislature ... can take land from one citizen, who
acquired it legally, and vest it in another?"
But there is no echo of Paterson’s spirited defense of property
rights as the justices consider Fort Trumbull.
When Bullock argues that New London wants to throw people out of their
homes for the sake of ordinary economic development, Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg asks why that's a problem. New London is depressed, she
says; what’s wrong with trying to "build it up and get more
jobs?" If the city could buy property on the open market and turn
it over to a developer, wonders Justice David Souter, why can't it use
eminent domain to achieve the same end? Justice Stephen Breyer notes
that there is bound to be some public benefit from almost any land
taking. Isn't that enough to satisfy the Constitution's "public
use" requirement?
It is a depressing colloquy for anyone who believes that property
rights are fundamental to liberty. But there is worse to come. Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor presses Wesley Horton, the lawyer for New London,
on whether eminent domain can really be deployed to condemn any
property that could be put to better use.
"For example, a Motel 6," O'Connor says. "A city
thinks, 'If we had a Ritz-Carlton, we'd get higher taxes.’ Is that
OK?"
"Yes, that’s OK," Horton replies.
Justice Antonin Scalia: "You can take from A and give it to B, if
B pays more in taxes?"
Horton: "Yes, if it’s a significant amount."
Got that? Anyone's property can be taken by eminent domain if the
government identifies another owner who could use it to earn a higher
profit. New London isn't alone in making such an outrageous claim.
In planning commissions and redevelopment authorities nationwide, the
Fifth Amendment’s "public use" requirement has been
ignored for years.
The question now is whether five Supreme Court justices will agree to
kill off this piece of the Bill of Rights for good, or to bring it
back to life.
The fate of more than just seven Connecticut homeowners is riding on
their decision.
Copyright 2005, The Boston Globe.
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