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Should localities be able to
seize private property for economic development?
CON: Kelo decision chips
away at rights
by Joanna Frizzell
For Virginia Business
September 2005
In the Supreme Court’s recent
decision, Kelo v. City of New London, the court took
the public purpose clause of the Fifth Amend-ment to
the Constitution one step further, removing a barrier
that previously served as the upper limit of local governments’
power to take property. In the words of Justice Sandra
Day O’Connor, the decision allows the locality
to “... take private property currently put to
ordinary private use, and give it over for a new, ordinary
private use, so long as the new use is predicated to
generate some secondary benefit for the public.”
What does this mean for today’s
property owner? While the short-term effects of this
decision will not likely be drastic, in the long term,
local governments may begin to push this new outer limit
to the detriment of individual property ownership rights.
The Kelo case, simply put, states that it is constitutional
for the government to take property that is not being
used to its “full” potential if the government
finds what it believes to be a more productive use
for
the property.
The Supreme Court had already expanded
the traditional “public use” definition
to include addressing social harms caused by the property,
such as blight. However, the Kelo decision further expands
the definition to include addressing social harms that
are not directly related to the property being taken.
For example, as held in Kelo, local governments may
transfer private property from one owner to another
simply in order to increase the tax base of an economically
strapped town.
By validating the local government’s
ability to take property for this purpose, the Supreme
Court has created the need for the property owner to
be politically aware and even active in order to prevent
his or her property from being taken for the benefit
of a redevelopment plan. While property owners have
always had an obligation to be aware of zoning regulations
and changes that might affect their property, until
Kelo the Constitution prevented local governments from
implementing the zoning changes by redeveloping the
property without the owner’s consent simply for
economic gain.
The saving grace for property owners
is state law, like that of Virginia, where permissible
local government action is proscribed. The state has
the ability to define the purpose for which a local
government may take property. Therefore, we must now
rely on the state legislatures to narrow the ability
of local governments to take advantage of this newly
validated mechanism for increasing their tax base. The
public purpose clause is meant to provide protection
for the individual property owner against the will of
the whole. The Kelo decision slowly chips away at this
protection, leaving property owners vulnerable to the
political process without the constitutional shield
to stand behind.
Joanna Frizzell is a lawyer in
the real estate and land use department at the Tysons
Corner office of McGuireWoods LLP. |