Revision as of 12:17, 19 March 2006 editSilverback (talk | contribs)6,113 edits →Origins: Governor Richardson of New Mexico vetoes reform legislation← Previous edit | Revision as of 12:18, 19 March 2006 edit undoSilverback (talk | contribs)6,113 edits →Origins: making wikilink more specificNext edit → | ||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
In Calder v. Bull, {{ussc|3|386|1798}}, Justice Chase thought it was preposterous for the government to take one person's property with no restriction and give it to another private party for their own profit. | In Calder v. Bull, {{ussc|3|386|1798}}, Justice Chase thought it was preposterous for the government to take one person's property with no restriction and give it to another private party for their own profit. | ||
In other cases, eminent domain has been used by communities to take control of planning and development. Such is the case of the Dudley Street Initiative , a community group in ], which attained the right to eminent domain and has used it to reclaim vacant properties for the purpose of positive community development. In the United States the use of eminent domain has been a powerful driver in the development of the country and its defense structure, enabling connections to be created that would have been unlikely without its use. In the last century it was a tool that enabled the construction of the many defense installations during World War II and the Cold War. Beginning in the early 1950's the ] began and eminent domain was used to purchase the 42,000+ miles of rights of way needed for construction. Without eminent domain the Interstate would never have been built out to its current extent. Its use has until recently been almost totally used for such public works, additionally including ports and airports and government complexes nationwide. The abuses of the exercise of these powers in the past have led to substantial safeguards to the public today, including extensive requirements to force the various governments units that use eminent domain to document the need for it and allow the public access to and comment on the proceedings before the real property can be "taken". Federal statutes require complete relocation programs to be administered by the various states in order to receive Federal participation in the costs of the improvements(often 80%) and further require full certification that the public process and benefits were offered to the "claimants" and that the benefits were actually paid to the correct claimants and displacees. The use of eminent domain has slowed dramatically nationwide as the full build-out of the Interstate System approaches and reflects the fact that needs in the future will be for mostly projects of a local nature, such as schools, local highways and other such improvements. The extensive use of eminent domain for such purposes as economic development are currently under attack in many jurisdictions and a rush to pass state statutes to limit this use is being contemplated in more than 30 states as this is being written in December 2005. ] of New Mexico became the first governor to veto emminent domain reform legislation resulting from this recent surge in public interest. | In other cases, eminent domain has been used by communities to take control of planning and development. Such is the case of the Dudley Street Initiative , a community group in ], which attained the right to eminent domain and has used it to reclaim vacant properties for the purpose of positive community development. In the United States the use of eminent domain has been a powerful driver in the development of the country and its defense structure, enabling connections to be created that would have been unlikely without its use. In the last century it was a tool that enabled the construction of the many defense installations during World War II and the Cold War. Beginning in the early 1950's the ] began and eminent domain was used to purchase the 42,000+ miles of rights of way needed for construction. Without eminent domain the Interstate would never have been built out to its current extent. Its use has until recently been almost totally used for such public works, additionally including ports and airports and government complexes nationwide. The abuses of the exercise of these powers in the past have led to substantial safeguards to the public today, including extensive requirements to force the various governments units that use eminent domain to document the need for it and allow the public access to and comment on the proceedings before the real property can be "taken". Federal statutes require complete relocation programs to be administered by the various states in order to receive Federal participation in the costs of the improvements(often 80%) and further require full certification that the public process and benefits were offered to the "claimants" and that the benefits were actually paid to the correct claimants and displacees. The use of eminent domain has slowed dramatically nationwide as the full build-out of the Interstate System approaches and reflects the fact that needs in the future will be for mostly projects of a local nature, such as schools, local highways and other such improvements. The extensive use of eminent domain for such purposes as economic development are currently under attack in many jurisdictions and a rush to pass state statutes to limit this use is being contemplated in more than 30 states as this is being written in December 2005. ] of New Mexico became the first governor to veto emminent domain reform legislation resulting from this recent surge in public interest. | ||
==Europe== | ==Europe== |
Revision as of 12:18, 19 March 2006
Eminent domain (US), compulsory purchase (United Kingdom, New Zealand), compulsory acquisition (Australia) or expropriation (Canada, South Africa) in common law legal systems is the power of the state to expropriate private property without the owner's consent. The term eminent domain is used primarily in the United States, where the term was derived in the mid-19th Century from a legal treatise written by the Dutch jurist Hugo Grotius in 1625. The term compulsory purchase, also originating in the mid-19th Century, is used primarily in England and Wales, and other jurisdictions that follow the principles of English law. Originally, the power of eminent domain was assumed to arise from natural law as an inherent power of the sovereign.
Governments most commonly use the power of eminent domain when the acquisition of real property is necessary for the completion of a public project such as a road, and the owner of the required property is unwilling to negotiate a price for its sale. In many jurisdictions the power of eminent domain is tempered with a right that just compensation be made for the appropriation.
Some coined the term expropriation to refer to "appropriation" under eminent domain law, and may especially be used with regard to cases where no compensation is made for the confiscated property. Examples include the 1960 Cuban expropriation of property held by U.S. citizens, following a breakdown in economic and diplomatic relations between the Eisenhower Administration and the Cuban government under Fidel Castro.
The term "condemnation" is used to describe the act of a government exercising its authority of eminent domain. It is not to be confused with the term of the same name that describes the legal process whereby real property, generally a building, is deemed legally unfit for habitation due to its physical defects. Condemnation via eminent domain indicates the government is taking the property; usually, the only thing that remains to be decided is the amount of just compensation. Condemnation of buildings on grounds of health and safety hazards or gross zoning violation usually does not deprive the owner of the property condemned but requires the owner to rectify the offending situation.
The exercise of eminent domain is not limited merely to real property. Governments may also condemn the value in a contract such as a franchise agreement (which is why many franchise agreements will stipulate that in condemnation proceedings, the franchise itself has no value).
Origins
The power of eminent domain in English law derives from the form of real property. Many landowners assume that their property right is absolute under the law, but this is rarely the case. Instead, a county or other authority has created the property in fee simple, a concept that derives from feudal fiefs. The same authority may void (or condemn) the fee and seize the land, as when a landowner fails to pay property tax. According to William Blackstone,
- "The reason of originally granting out this complicated kind of interest, so that the same man shall, with regard to the same land, be at one and the same time tenant in fee-simple and also tenant at the lord's will, seems to have arisen from the nature of villenage tenure. ... Though they were willing to enlarge the interest of their villeins, by granting them estates which might endure for their lives, or sometimes by descendible to their issue, yet did not care to manumit them entirely; and for that reason it seems to have been contrived, that a power of resumption at the will of the lord, should be annexed to these grants, whereby the tenants were still kept in a state of villenage, and no freehold at all was conveyed to them in their respective lands."
English-speaking countries that never had the feudal system have perpetuated the system of fee-simple property, including the power of eminent domain, for legal continuity.
In the United States, the United States Constitution Fifth Amendment to the Constitution requires that just compensation be paid when the power of eminent domain is used, and requires that the property be taken for "public use". These requirements are sometimes called the "takings clause." Most courts have used "just compensation" to be the fair market value of the condemned property. Over the years the definition of "public use" has expanded to include economic development plans which use eminent domain seizures to enable commercial development for the purpose of improving the community. Critics contend this perverts the intent of eminent domain law and damages personal property rights. Supporters contend that it is necessary to the improvement of communities in many situations in which transactions costs will prevent private parties from reaching efficient use of land.
In Calder v. Bull, 3 U.S. 386 (1798), Justice Chase thought it was preposterous for the government to take one person's property with no restriction and give it to another private party for their own profit.
In other cases, eminent domain has been used by communities to take control of planning and development. Such is the case of the Dudley Street Initiative , a community group in Boston, Massachusetts, which attained the right to eminent domain and has used it to reclaim vacant properties for the purpose of positive community development. In the United States the use of eminent domain has been a powerful driver in the development of the country and its defense structure, enabling connections to be created that would have been unlikely without its use. In the last century it was a tool that enabled the construction of the many defense installations during World War II and the Cold War. Beginning in the early 1950's the Interstate Highway System began and eminent domain was used to purchase the 42,000+ miles of rights of way needed for construction. Without eminent domain the Interstate would never have been built out to its current extent. Its use has until recently been almost totally used for such public works, additionally including ports and airports and government complexes nationwide. The abuses of the exercise of these powers in the past have led to substantial safeguards to the public today, including extensive requirements to force the various governments units that use eminent domain to document the need for it and allow the public access to and comment on the proceedings before the real property can be "taken". Federal statutes require complete relocation programs to be administered by the various states in order to receive Federal participation in the costs of the improvements(often 80%) and further require full certification that the public process and benefits were offered to the "claimants" and that the benefits were actually paid to the correct claimants and displacees. The use of eminent domain has slowed dramatically nationwide as the full build-out of the Interstate System approaches and reflects the fact that needs in the future will be for mostly projects of a local nature, such as schools, local highways and other such improvements. The extensive use of eminent domain for such purposes as economic development are currently under attack in many jurisdictions and a rush to pass state statutes to limit this use is being contemplated in more than 30 states as this is being written in December 2005. Governor Richardson of New Mexico became the first governor to veto emminent domain reform legislation resulting from this recent surge in public interest.
Europe
In many European nations, the European Convention on Human Rights provides protection from appropriation of private property by the state. Article 8 of the Convention provides that "Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence" and prohibits interference with this right by the state, unless the interference is in accordance with law and necessary in the interests of national security, public safety, economic well-being of the country, prevention of disorder or crime, protection of health or morals, or protection of the rights and freedoms of others. This right is expanded by Article 1 of the First Protocol to the Convention, which states that "Every natural person or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions". Again, this is subject to exceptions where state deprivation of private possessions is in the public interest, is in accordance with law, and, in particular, to secure payment of taxes.
In France, the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen similarly mandates just and preliminary compensation before expropriation.
In England and Wales, and other jurisdictions that follow the principles of English law, the related term compulsory purchase is used. The operative law is a patchwork quilt of statutes and case law. The principle Acts are the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845, the Land Compensation Act 1961, the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, the Land Compensation Act 1973, part IX of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, the Planning and Compensation Act 1991, and the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004.
Australia
In Australia, s51(xxxi) of the Constitution permits the federal government to make laws with respect to "the acquisition of property on just terms from any State or person for any purpose in respect of which the Parliament has power to make laws". This has been construed to not necessarily mean just compensation as a just term might not of necessity be monetary or proprietary recompense. However, it is for the court to determine what is just and it may be necessary to imply a need for compensation in the interests of justice, lest the law be invalidated (Andrews v Howell (1941) 65 CLR 255).
For the purposes of s51(xxxi), money is not property which may be compulsarily acquired; the Commonwealth must also derive some benefit from the property acquired and not merely seek to extinguish the previous owner's title (Mutual Pools and Staff Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (1992) 173 CLR 450). A statutory right to sue has been considered "property" under this section (Smith v ANL Ltd (2000) 176 ALR 449).
Other countries
Many countries recognize eminent domain to a much lesser extent than the English-speaking world or do not recognise it at all. Japan, for instance, has very weak eminent domain powers, as evidenced by the high-profile opposition to the expansion of Narita International Airport, and the disproportionate amounts of financial inducement given to residents on sites slated for redevelopment in return for their agreement to leave, one well-known recent case being that of Roppongi Hills.
There are other countries such as the People's Republic of China that practice eminent domain whenever this is necessary to make space for new communities and government structures. Singapore practices eminent domain under the Land Acquisitions Act which allows it to carry out its Selective En bloc Redevelopment Scheme for urban renewal. The Amendments to the Land Titles Act allowed property to be purchased for purposes of urban renewal against an owner sharing a collective title if the majority of the other owners wishes to sell and the minority did not. Thus, eminent domain often invokes concerns of majoritarianism.
Etymology
The Latin term dominium eminens ("supreme lordship") was used in the 17th century by Grotius to describe the concept explained above.
Further reading
- Steven Greenhut, Abuse Of Power: How The Government Misuses Eminent Domain, Seven Locks Press, June, 2004, trade paperback, 312 pages, ISBN 1931643377
External links
- Main, Carla How Eminent Domain Ran Amok Policy Review (October 2005)
- China Eminent Domain ruling in favor of farmers. Nanfang Daily reports 124 families in Zhujiang receive totoal of RMB$31,000,000 in land acquisition compensation.
- "House Passes Private Property Protection Act", US House of Representatives, November 3, 2005
- " H. R. 4128 IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES , ", House passes HR4128 by 376-38, November 4, 2005
- "FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 568 on HR4128", How did your representatives vote?, November 4, 2005
- "KELO ET AL. v. CITY OF NEW LONDON ET AL. (PDF)", Supreme Court Decision, June 23, 2005
- "Eminent domain up close" by Susette Kelo of Kelo v. City of New London
- Public Power, Private Gain - Eminent-domain abuse widespread in US.
- http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1096536915218230.xml "Panelists discuss eminent domain" by Thomas Ott, Cleveland Plain Dealer, September 30, 2004]
- Commentary in The Washington Times by Dana Berliner, 2004
- "GOVERNMENT VS. PRIVATE PROPERTY OWNERS: DCX expansion forces small repair shop to give up land" Sarah A. Webster, August 17, 2004, Detroit Free Press
- "Eminent Domain Nightmares: Interview with Dino Paspalakis on his fight against eminent domain abuse" Interviewer: Bill Mabon, February 8, 2005, NewPatriot Radio
- Alabama limits eminent domain Washington Times August 4, 2005
- Government Usage of Eminent Domain in Lucent Project Denies Patent Owners Profits Wired News, September 20, 2005
- "BB&T opposes seizing land for private use" Journal Now, January 26, 2006