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Home Front: Politix
Supreme Court Will Determine When Cities May Seize Private Land
2004-09-28
The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to decide when governments may seize people's homes and businesses for economic development projects, a key question as cash-strapped cities seek ways to generate tax revenue. At issue is the scope of the Fifth Amendment, which allows governments to take private property through eminent domain, provided the owner is given "just compensation" and the land is for "public use."
My opinion, schools are public use. Highways are public use. Hilton hotels and Wal-Marts are not.
Susette Kelo and several other homeowners in a working-class neighborhood in New London, Conn., filed a lawsuit after city officials announced plans to raze their homes to clear the way for a riverfront hotel, health club and offices. The residents refused to budge, arguing it was an unjustified taking of their property. They argued the taking would be proper only if it served to revitalize slums or blighted areas dangerous to the public. New London contends the condemnations are proper because the development plans serving a "public purpose" - such as boosting economic growth - are valid "public use" projects that outweigh the property rights of the homeowners.
Translation: A bigger tax generator outweighs your home.
The Connecticut Supreme Court agreed with New London, ruling 4-3 in March that the mere promise of additional tax revenue justified the condemnation. Nationwide, more than 1,000 properties were threatened or condemned between 1998 and 2002, according to the Institute for Justice, a Washington public interest law firm representing the New London homeowners. In many cases, according to the group, cities are pushing the limits of their power to accommodate wealthy developers. Courts, meanwhile, are divided over the extent of city power, with seven states saying economic development can justify a taking and eight states allowing a taking only if it eliminates blight.

In New London, city officials envision replacing a stagnant enclave with commercial development that would attract tourists to the Thames riverfront, complementing an adjoining Pfizer Corp. research center and a proposed Coast Guard museum. "The record is clear that New London was a city desperate for economic rejuvenation," the city's legal filing states, in asking the high court to defer to local governments in deciding what constitutes "public use." According to the residents' filing, the seven states that allow condemnations for private business development alone are Connecticut, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New York and North Dakota. Eight states forbid the use of eminent domain when the economic purpose is not to eliminate blight; they are Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, South Carolina and Washington. Another three - Delaware, New Hampshire and Massachusetts - have indicated they probably will find condemnations for economic development alone unconstitutional, while the remaining states have not addressed or spoken clearly to the question.

The case is Kelo et al v. City of New London, 04-108.
Posted by:Steve

#12  The Bill of Rights should have included a stronger clause protecting private property from the hands of government. There is *never* valid cause to seize private property.
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever)   2004-09-28 11:31:13 PM  

#11  The city of Scotsdale(burb of Phoenix) tried this crap on the owner of a garage that had been a family buisness for 3 generations.Scotsdale wanted to sell the land to Mienike(another garage for Christ's sake).The city lost.
Posted by: Raptor   2004-09-28 7:39:34 PM  

#10  Mr. G. I stand for privatized bridges, turnstiles and the use of highwaymen in leiu highwaypatrol. We don't need bridges! We need high speed ferrys, but only San Fransisco has a clue.

(local bridge to barrier island pretty much condemned for salt water intrustion thru inspection plates..... crumbling cement.)
Posted by: Shipman   2004-09-28 6:26:32 PM  

#9  my ex musta told ya about the "mind-numbed robot by night" thing, huh? I blame Bush Tequila LOL. Socialist? I don't think so.....
Posted by: Frank G   2004-09-28 5:44:48 PM  

#8  Got that one already PD, sent it to YUT 2 in New Orleans, he he frightened that I see such things.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-09-28 5:33:16 PM  

#7  Once upon a time I believed that private property rights still existed in this nation ... then I went to law school. I fully expect the S.Ct. to find that it's perfectly acceptable for private property to be seized by governments and given to preferred private entities. Oh sure there'll be weasel-words about "necessity" or "blight" or something similar but the legal standards in the several states will develop in such a way that these won't present any real barrier to government action.
Posted by: AzCat   2004-09-28 5:20:24 PM  

#6  Watch it Ship, he's a Pusher robot...
Posted by: .com   2004-09-28 4:02:26 PM  

#5  Frank G, socialist by day, mind numbed robot by night.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-09-28 3:59:14 PM  

#4  Seizure of property by ED then using it for business development is just WRONG. If the businesses want the property, they can PURCHASE it for whatever the property owner is willing to sell it for. If the cities think they need the property for tax base development... THEY can pay for it too.

This assumption that the city is "justified" in stealing property for the "greater good" is a crock.

Posted by: Leigh   2004-09-28 3:20:58 PM  

#3  as a local gov't engineer, doing roads and bridges, we often need to acquire private property for right-of-way. Eminent domain is the last option we want to use. It adds cost, time, attorneys and litigation. Better to reach a negotiated settlement on a mutually-acceptable appraisal. If you acquire the property via ED, there is a time limit (7 yrs?) to build your project or the property can revert to the private owner. The use of ED by local gov'ts to secure large chunks of property for "redevelopment" - i.e. tax base increment - is a bastardization of the reason ED was created
Posted by: Frank G   2004-09-28 1:15:14 PM  

#2  I dunno, CrazyFool. I suspect a lot of bums and pet birds use it quite effectively.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-09-28 1:07:17 PM  

#1  The New York Times is not 'public use' either.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2004-09-28 1:04:31 PM  

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