| There's
no legal case for reparations suits
by
Casey Aiken
The
idea that American taxpayers should pay reparations
for the damages of slavery is fast becoming the next
big thing in civil rights. What began years ago as a
proposition pushed by political extremists is no longer
a fixation of just those on the margins.
Now
comes a series of lawsuits that seek reparations against
Aetna Insurance and Fleet Boston, along with Virginia-based
railroads CSX Corp. and Norfolk Southern Corp. The suits
claim that the ancestor companies of these firms profited
inappropriately from slave labor before the Civil War.
To
proponents, the issue is obvious. Randall Robinson,
president of the Transafrica Forum, which organized
the successful boycott of South Africa over apartheid,
maintains that the case for reparations is to "remain
faithful to the millions of blacks who remain economically
and socially disabled by the long cruel promise of American
slavery."
Supporters
likewise believe there is ample precedent for the lawsuits.
Similar ones were filed on behalf of Japanese-Americans
interned during World War II and Jewish victims of the
holocaust. They argue that Jews and Japanese-Americans
rightly received reparations from Germany and the United
States, and, by extension, all black descendants of
American slaves should be compensated. They define the
moral basis for reparations in simple terms: Slaves
were not paid for their labor for over 265 years.
Yet,
using the Japanese-American and Jewish examples as justification
for slavery reparations is riddled with problems. As
hateful as it may have been, slavery was legal in the
United States. Thus, it will be difficult to show that
the defendants wrongfully misappropriated the benefit
of slave labor while conducting a legal enterprise as
the suits claim. Estimates of actual damage run all
over the map. Some run as high as $1.4 trillion. Even
if damages were proven, courts would be hard-pressed
to assess fair and realistic monetary judgments.
Specific
injuries will be hard to show along without any provable
direct connection to the defendant companies. Even the
plaintiffs admit they can't directly connect themselves
with the actual slaves who performed the actual labor.
By contrast, German companies made payments only to
those Jews who suffered or who were direct descendants
of those who did. Being Jewish by itself did not qualify
one for reparations. And while the U.S. government did
authorize reparation payments to Japanese-Americans,
it only paid those who actually were interned in camps.
More
importantly, in the case of the Japanese-Americans,
the payments were a political gesture, not the result
of a court decision. Professor of Law Eric Yamamoto,
University of Hawaii Law School, underscores the political
intrigue that was waged during the successful campaign
to redress Japanese-Americans. "The process was
three pronged," he says. "There was a Congressional
inquiry, exhaustive legislative lobbying efforts and
legal challenges."
It's
obvious that plaintiff Deadria Farmer-Paellmann is closely
following the same script. She and her legal team say
she may file suit against as many as 100 more U.S. corporations.
Independent of the legal campaign, the USA Today newspaper
has identified dozens of companies whose predecessor
firms profited from slavery, including investment bank
Lehman Bros., textile maker WestPoint Stevens and media
companies Knight Ridder and Media General.
The
first prong of slave reparations got its start 13 years
ago when federal reparation legislation was introduced
by Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich.
In
court, however, chances for success are rather slim.
A U.S. Court of Appeals dismissed an earlier slave reparations
suit in 1995 against the federal government, and urged
the plaintiffs to seek their redress in Congress. The
threat to Virginia-based companies is small, since the
statute of limitations for a tort in Virginia is three
years, making it hard to file for damages that occurred
more than 139 years ago. In sum, Farmer-Paellman's legal
complaints may be great for public relations, but they
are built on legal quicksand.
The
author, whose ancestors lived in the Petersburg area
before the Civil War, is a partner with the law firm
of Moses & Aiken in Rockville, Md.
Return
to Virginia Business - July 2002
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