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The
Supreme Court and the End of Limited Government
6/24/05
by Sheldon Richman
Sheldon Richman is the editor of The Freeman.
Yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling permitting governments
forcibly to transfer property through eminent domain from one private
party to another for the sake of economic development did not come out
of the blue. Although the “takings” clause in the Fifth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution specifies “nor shall private
property be taken for public use without just compensation,” the
“Court long ago rejected any literal requirement that condemned
property be put into use for the general public” (Hawaii Housing
Authority v. Midkiff, 1984, cited in the current case, Kelo et al. v.
City of New London et al.).
In 1954 the Court unanimously upheld Washington, D.C.’s
taking of a department store as part of a plan to replace a blighted
neighborhood, although some of the land would be turned over to private
parties (Berman v. Parker).
In 1984 the Court upheld a Hawaii statute that gave tenants
ownership of their apartments against the will of the owner (Midkiff).
The objective of the statute was to diffuse the ownership of land, and
the Court deferred to the legislature’s belief that this was a
proper public objective. What counted, the Court wrote, is “the
taking’s purpose, and not its mechanics.” Other cases could
be cited.
In the current case Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for
the 5-4 majority, invoked deference to the people’s
representatives in explaining why the taking of homes and businesses in
New London, Connecticut, for economic development is something the
court should countenance. “Because that [development] plan
unquestionably serves a public purpose, the takings challenged here
satisfy the public use requirement of the Fifth Amendment.” In
other words, public use includes any valid “public
purpose,” and legislative bodies have wide latitude in acting on
behalf of the public. It is of no consequence that a private party will
benefit in the process. “Quite simply,” Stevens writes,
“the government’s pursuit of a public purpose will often
benefit individual private parties.”
In a concurring opinion Justice Anthony Kennedy opined
against the petitioners’ plea for a rule making
economic-development takings per se or at least presumptively invalid.
“A broad per se rule or a strong presumption of invalidity,
furthermore, would prohibit a large number of government takings that
have the purpose and expected effect of conferring substantial benefits
on the public at large and so do not offend the Public Use
Clause.”
That the majority followed the Court’s precedent hardly
makes the decision easier to swallow. Today it is clearer than ever
that government can take property and transfer it to private
individuals so long as it claims that its overriding purpose is the
betterment of the public. The only limit set out by the Court is that
the taking not be solely for private benefit. But that is no real limit
at all. There is a word for a system in which private owners are
permitted to retain their property so long as they use it for the
public good—as understood by the political authorities.
The Dissenters
This is scary. As Justice Sandra Day O’Connor writes in
her dissenting opinion, “For who among us can say she already
makes the most productive or attractive possible use of her property?
The specter of condemnation hangs over all property.” Then she
adds perceptively, “[T]he fallout from this decision will not be
random. The beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with
disproportionate influence and power in the political process,
including large corporations and development firms. As for the victims,
the government now has license to transfer property from those with
fewer resources to those with more. The Founders cannot have intended
this perverse result.”
O’Connor’s words are to be savored, although she
largely accepts the precedents, striving only to distinguish them from
the current case. But it is to Justice Clarence Thomas we must turn for
a model of proper constitutional interpretation and reasoning. His
dissenting opinion goes further than O’Connor’s by calling
the precedents into question. It is refreshing indeed.
Thomas writes: “Today's decision is simply the latest
in a string of our cases construing the Public Use Clause to be a
virtual nullity, without the slightest nod to its original meaning. In
my view, the Public Use Clause, originally understood, is a meaningful
limit on the government's eminent domain power. Our cases have strayed
from the Clause's original meaning, and I would reconsider them.”
(Emphasis added.)
Thomas proceeds to show, first, that it is sound
constitutional principle to regard every word in the Constitution as
meaningful and purposeful; second, that use at the time of the framing
meant the “act of employing”; third, that to construe use
more broadly would make the takings clause duplicative of powers
already expressly delegated; and fourth, that the common law and great
legal authorities such as Blackstone support this narrow reading of the
word.
Thus, “The Constitution's text, in short, suggests that
the Takings Clause authorizes the taking of property only if the public
has a right to employ it, not if the public realizes any conceivable
benefit from the taking…. The Takings Clause is a prohibition,
not a grant of power.… The Clause is thus most naturally read to
concern whether the property is used by the public or the government,
not whether the purpose of the taking is legitimately public.”
Since that is the case, the issue of deference to the
legislature is put into perspective: “[I]t is most implausible
that the Framers intended to defer to legislatures as to what satisfies
the Public Use Clause, uniquely among all the express provisions of the
Bill of Rights.”
He concludes: “When faced with a clash of
constitutional principle and a line of unreasoned cases wholly divorced
from the text, history, and structure of our founding document, we
should not hesitate to resolve the tension in favor of the
Constitution's original meaning.” (Emphasis added.)
Dissenting opinions are, alas, just that. As things stand,
the majority rules. Governments may take private property and give it
to anyone they like; all they must do is proclaim that this serves a
public purpose. How in principle can one show otherwise? The Court has
spoken: it will not second-guess such decrees.
A final note: It should go without saying that even the most
narrowly construed eminent-domain power would violate individual
rights. That taken property is to be literally used by members of the
public or by the government itself provides no valid justification for
the taking. Either a person owns his legitimately acquired property or
he does not. The requirement of “just compensation” cannot
turn theft into something else. There is no just compensation possible
in a forced sale. What makes a transaction legitimate is not
compensation but consent.
That said, the framers at least sought to limit the
government’s eminent-domain power. Yesterday, the Supreme Court
erased the final traces of that limit.
The Top
Ten Predictions for 2005
( author unknown )
1. The Bible
will still have the answers.
2. Prayer will still work.
3. The Holy Spirit will still move.
4. God will still inhabit the praises of His people.
5. There will still be God-anointed preaching.
6. There will still be singing of praise.
7. God will still pour out blessings upon His people.
8. There will still be room at the Cross.
9. Jesus will still love you.
10. Jesus will still save the lost.
SMILES
FROM THE BIBLE
Q. What kind of
man was Boaz before he married?
A. Ruthless.
Q. What do they call pastors in Germany?
A. German Shepherds.
Q. Who was the greatest financier in the Bible?
A. Noah. He was floating his stock while everyone
else was in liquidation.
Q. What was the greatest female financier in the Bible?
A. Pharaoh's daughter. She went down to the bank of the
Nile and drew out a little prophet.
Q. What kind of motor vehicles are in the Bible?
A. Jehovah drove Adam and Eve out of the Garden in a
Fury. David's Triumph was heard throughout the land. Also, probably a
Honda, because the apostles were all in one Accord.
Q. Who was the greatest comedian in the Bible?
A. Samson. He brought the house down.
Q. What excuse did Adam give to his children as to why he no longer
lived in Eden?
A. Your mother ate us out of house and home.
Q. Which servant of God was the most flagrant lawbreaker in the Bible?
A. Moses. He broke all 10 commandments at once.
Q. Which area of Palestine was especially wealthy?
A. The area around Jordan. The banks were always
overflowing.
Q. Who is the greatest baby sitter mentioned in the Bible?
A. David. He rocked Goliath to a very deep sleep.
Q. Which Bible character had no parents?
A. Joshua, son of Nun.
Q. Why didn't they play cards on the Ark?
A. Because Noah was standing on the deck. (Groannn...)
KEEP SMILING!!!!
GOD LOVES YOU BUNCHES AND BUNCHES!!!!
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