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Libertarian Solutions: Property rights in America: Your 'castle' is under siege
Libertarian Party ^ | May 24, 2002 | Bill Winter & Jon Trager

Posted on 05/24/2002 12:01:16 PM PDT by Alan Chapman

In 1994, Vera Coking received an ominous letter from the New Jersey Casino Reinvestment Development Authority.

Coking, a widow who had lived in her Atlantic City home for 35 years, was notified that her house had been seized under the state's eminent domain laws.

She had 30 days to accept an offer to buy her property at one-quarter its appraised value, or the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority (CRDA) would have her forcibly removed.

But a worse indignity followed, when Coking learned why her home was being seized: It would be given to billionaire Donald Trump, so he could build a new limousine parking lot for one of his opulent casinos.

Under New Jersey law, the government -- and even quasi-governmental agencies like the CRDA -- could seize property if it could be put to better economic use by others.

Since Donald Trump's parking lot would generate more tax revenue for the government, the seizure of Coking's home qualified as a "public use," said the CRDA.

The widow was appalled. "This is my home. This is my castle," she said.

It didn't matter. In America, it used to be that a man's -- or a widow's -- home was his castle. No longer.

Now, the federal Environmental Protection Agency can declare the castle moat a protected wetland, and prohibit development. A local government can condemn the castle if the wall isn't painted properly. The Drug Enforcement Agency can seize the castle if they suspect drugs were used on the property. And, as Vera Coking found out, the state government can seize your castle if King Trump wants to expand his gambling palace.

Today, we run the risk of a government that has "practically unlimited control and jurisdiction over private property," wrote James Bovard in Lost Rights. Some examples:

* In Florida, Ocie Mills and his son were given a two-year prison sentence for dumping clean sand on their property in violation of federal "wetlands" law. Under the federal definition, a "wetland" can be dry 350 days a year.

* In Alexandria, Virginia, the Office of Code Enforcement sent letters to 22 homeowners threatening to condemn their property -- and evict the residents -- if they didn't fix chipped paint on their windowsills and door frames.

* In Adair County, Missouri, police seized the 60-acre farm of Sheri and Matthew Farrell based on a tip from a paid drug informer. The Farrells, the informant claimed, were growing marijuana on the farm -- a false allegation the police didn't bother to verify before seizing the land.

* In Lake Tahoe, which straddles the California-Nevada border, the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) imposed a moratorium on development while it worked on a long-term environmental policy. As a result, several hundred families were unable to build homes, or improve their property.

As the government's War on Property Rights escalates -- and as more laws and regulations nibble away, termite-like, at the philosophical foundations of private property -- increasing numbers of these cases are ending up in court.

Vera Coking was lucky. After a four-year legal battle, the New Jersey Supreme Court overturned the seizure order. The widow was allowed to keep her home.

The Lake Tahoe families weren't so lucky. They sued the TRPA, arguing that the freeze on development was a de facto "taking" of private property, since it deprived them of the economic value of their land. The U.S. Supreme Court disagreed on April 23, on a 6-3 vote.

"Treating all [regulations] as ... takings would transform government regulation into a luxury few governments could afford," wrote Justice John Paul Stevens.

But Americans shouldn't have to rely on expensive lawsuits -- and the legal roulette of finding a sympathetic judge -- to keep their private property private. Here are some common-sense reforms that could be passed immediately to better protect property rights:

* Sharply curtail the power of eminent domain laws.

Under the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the government was given the power to take private property "for public use" -- but only with "just compensation." This power was used to take land from private owners to build railroads in the 1800s, and to construct highways and airports in more recent times.

With the definition of "public use" now so debased that it includes even Donald Trump's limousine parking lots, privately owned baseball stadiums, and General Motors' factories, it's time to return to the original Constitutional meaning.

As the Cato Institute noted in its 2000 Handbook for Congress: "Eminent domain should be used sparingly and only for truly public use. That means for a use that is broadly enjoyed by the public, rather than some narrow part of the public. More precisely, it means for a use that is owned and controlled by the public."

While some Libertarians may cringe at allowing the government to seize property for any reason, limiting "public use" to the traditional Constitutional definition would sharply curtail eminent domain abuses.

* Require compensation for regulatory takings.

Politicians have enormous power to regulate what Americans can do with their property. By declaring a puddle of mud a "wetland" or by declaring a species of animals "endangered," politicians can block development of land. By invoking "smart growth" law, politicians can impose density codes that regulate which kinds of buildings can (and cannot) be constructed. By declaring certain areas "historic landmarks," politicians can prohibit landowners from demolishing old buildings or improving a home's exterior.

Politicians can get away with such actions, in part, because the judicial branch allows them to. Some courts have held that regulations only become "taking" when all or almost all of the economic value of property is lost. In 1922, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes ruled that regulations only become taking when "it goes too far." Under such amorphous restrictions, politicians have gone farther and farther.

However, such regulations come with a high price tag -- sometimes affecting entire communities. For example, Randall O'Toole of the Thoreau Institute reported that Portland, Oregon's "smart growth" laws "have changed one of the nation's most affordable markets for single-family housing in 1989 to one of the least affordable since 1996" by limiting new construction.

Some regulations affect only the owners of a particular piece of land. For example, according to James Bovard, after a 240-acre tract of land in East Rutherford, New Jersey was classified as "wetlands," its value plummeted from $20 million to $1 million because of development restrictions. For the owner, $19 million in value was wiped out by a single regulation.

The solution is clear, argued the Cato Institute: Acknowledge that the right of property entails the right to use it. Without such a right, private property is a meaningless concept. Therefore, "Any action by government that takes any property" -- or the right to use that property -- "is, by definition, a taking [and requires] compensation for any financial losses that the owner may suffer as a result," said the Cato Handbook for Congress.

Using such guidelines, a regulation that strips land of 50% of its value would require politicians to compensate the owner for that 50%. Under such a system, the cost of regulations would skyrocket. Regulations would indeed become "a luxury few governments could afford" -- and respect for property rights would again become a necessity that few governments could evade.

* Reform asset forfeiture laws.

Asset forfeiture laws allow police agencies to seize private property if they suspect it has been used to facilitate a crime, or if they believe it was purchased with the proceeds of a crime. No criminal conviction is required, and no court-approved evidence is needed.

Such laws create an almost irresistible incentive for police to raise revenue through seizures. That's why in 1999, almost $500 million in private property was taken by federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies. In over 80% of those cases, no one was ever formally charged with a crime.

Consequently, Rep. Henry Hyde (R-IL) introduced the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act of 2000. The bill required the government to show evidence that property was genuinely subject to forfeiture, and to notify individuals within 60 days that their property has been seized.

This bill was a modest step in the right direction, but more remains to be done. At the very least, the government should require a criminal conviction before any property is seized. If law enforcement can't prove that a crime was committed, they shouldn't be able to punish people by seizing property. Such a reform would limit property forfeitures, and help prevent cops from behaving like robbers.

As James Bovard noted in Lost Rights, property rights abuses are not new to Americans. In the early 1700s, the British Parliament banned colonial Americans from cutting down white pine trees, since the Royal Navy used them for ship's masts. The King's agent claimed every white pine for the Crown -- even if they grew on private property.

When the colonialists marched in rebellion against the British army in 1775, they carried a flag depicting a pine tree as a symbol of tyranny.

"Now, more than two centuries later," wrote Bovard, "mass confiscation has again become fashionable. Politicians and the courts have created an overwhelming presumption in favor of the government's right to seize control over private land; seize possession of private homes, boats, and cars; and even seize the cash in people's wallets."

It's time for Americans to demand more robust protections of property rights -- and perhaps to hoist the white pine flag as a symbol of a property rights "castle" that is once again under siege by government.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: landgrab; libertarians
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To: madfly
bttt
61 posted on 05/24/2002 9:17:29 PM PDT by mafree
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To: tpaine
The cultural divide between both conservatives and the Libertarian Party is about as wide as they are between conservatives and the radical Left. The LP is in league with the anarchist Left on so many issues ranging from immigration, social depravations, abortion, and even trading with terrorists and coercive economies (Castro). The ONLY way we can achieve the goals of a "conservative news forum" and those spelled out again by you is to DEBATE "principles" and illuminate friend from foe. And yes, when so-called "news" articles from the LP (it's a party, not a news organization, and the news stories are propaganda in anyone's book designed to promote traffic on their site!!) are posted to this, a "conservative" news, site, I will take the liberty to make a joke or take them on. I won't censor, as you seek to do, in a very un-libertarian moment. If the Democratic Socialists of America had predators posting pseudo-"news" stories systematically on this site and linking back to their party HQ site, I doubt anyone would have a problem with someone taking them on. But I would never censor them – it would be too much fun poking holes! If FR wants to stop calling itself "conservative" and just libertarian party central, since it seems that there are so many pretending to be conservatives participating on this site, then I'm out of here. Until then...
62 posted on 05/24/2002 9:39:22 PM PDT by CaptIsaacDavis
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To: Alan Chapman
I agree with you on the article and on this post. ED has went from being a beneficial tool that as I understand the times it was included, to take lands needed in case of an emergency such as forts, arsenals, etc. Now it is being used for everything! I can say that! My home is under threat because the National Park Service says we "pollute a view-shed"! These lands have been owned for over 200 years by the original settlers to the area and the land patent I have reads, "to William Cody Richmond, his heirs and ASSIGNS forever!

If lands were taken for such reasons above, ( and latter ed was extended to use for railroads, then highways, etc.)once the "need" for the lands was over they were to go back to the original owner or his heirs.And if railroads were abandoned, these lands as well was to go back to the original landowner or heirs---not! Somebody came up with the "Rails to Trails" idea. I have gathered this history lesson form the Virginia State Archives and from Snowcrest Farms, that has a site devoted to land and it's distirbution!

I think you said in an earlier post, that ed got to rocking and rolling around 1954 with the law case you cited and I feel you are correct. Then came gross abuses and this resulted in part to the Uniform Relocation Assistance Act, though this slowed ED some, now it is worse than it has ever been because of the spread of Sustainable Communites, Urban sprawl, etc. I have a friend in NJ that is under threat of loosing her home and farm because it is the last one in her township! Why? To protect "open-spaces"!

63 posted on 05/24/2002 9:54:09 PM PDT by countrydummy
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To: Alan Chapman
the concept of private property is meaningless.

Getting warmer. You can buy real estate and sell it. To that extend, you can own real estate. But it comes down to who has the ultimate power to use and dispose of land, and that is the public. You, of course, are not the public, nor do you represent the public. The public is those worthies you elect now and then as custodians of the public sector. Mayor, Councilmen, etc. And when their term is up, they return to the private sector and become just another private citizen. It's amazing we don't pay more attention to who we elect.

64 posted on 05/24/2002 10:11:02 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: CaptIsaacDavis
As I suspected. - You're just another weirdo like VA. -- You clowns are so confused you don't even HAVE agendas.
65 posted on 05/24/2002 10:35:25 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Aric2000

Aric2000 wrote: I believe in the adage "Do what you want as long as it does not infringe on my rights" My rights as a property owner are infringed by this mans junkyard in his yard. It brings the value of MY property down. If he wants to move out to the country, get the proper permits and open a junkyard, hey hurray for his side, but to bring down my property value in order to do what he wants, and it is a matter of private property rights is a crock. If it effects me directly, he has NO right to do it. 19

Zon wrote: How about when your neighbors house is worth 50% more than your house but your house is bringing the value of his house. Get rid of your house and move out to the country or buy the most expensive house on another block. OR, are you exempt? 40

If I own a house and it is worth 50% less then my neighbors house, well, hey, good for him, but the fact is the house is there, it was built, it had the permits, it had the property, etc. 57

Do you now deny that your original issue was with disparity of property values? Stick to the issue -- YOUR issue that you started. Or, did it lose some of the credibility that you bestowed upon it? Your choice to learn and advance the dialog or fight swimming upstream.

66 posted on 05/25/2002 1:52:23 AM PDT by Zon
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Libertarian Solutions

Would those be of the seven percent variety?

67 posted on 05/25/2002 2:01:26 AM PDT by strela
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Comment #68 Removed by Moderator

To: Zon;ex_con
Have you NO common sense? You have yet to look at this with even a little bit of that. It's all or nothing with you.

If I buy a house, and it is worth 50% MORE then your house, but your house is in a condition that it WAS in when I bought my house, then I have NOTHING to complain about. BUT, if you do something to your property after I move in that lowers my property value, THEN, I have EVERY right to sue your ass into next week.

My original post was NEVER about the DISPARITY of property values, my original post was about the fact that IF you DRIVE down my property values by doing something on your property that effects mine, THEN and only THEN do I have the right to sue you in order to stop you.

I think this righteous indignation you 2 are putting off is a crock of crap too. EVERYTHING that I stated in my post is CONSTITUTIONAL!! If what you do effects my rights, then I have every right to stop you in whatever legal way necessary.

I thought that libertarians had a modicom of common sense, but I guess not...
69 posted on 05/25/2002 8:04:32 AM PDT by Aric2000
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Comment #70 Removed by Moderator

Comment #71 Removed by Moderator

To: Alan Chapman
The people get what they vote for.
I'm getting what others vote for.
Like a former President I've never voted and I refuse to do so.

The usual response is something along the lines of...Then you don't have a right to complain.

72 posted on 05/25/2002 8:37:31 AM PDT by philman_36
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To: ex con
I say again, where did common sense go? If I as a neighbor to you, say in a california type neighborhood, in other words I could spit on your house from my kitchen. If I as your neighbor decide that I don't want to mow my lawn anymore, I'll just let it grow and grow and grow, until it is a field. I also will not paint my house, nor replace my windows when they are broken, I have also run into my garage door, so it's hanging there off the hinges, oh and I start collecting cars, so I have junk cars all over my yard as well.

Now, according to you, I can do that without any problems at all, after all, I am the one that has to live in it.

Well, you see, I am not just driving my property value down and making JUST my house look trashy, I am also driving your property value down, and making the entire neighborhood look trashy. So, you decide that my house looks really bad so you decide, since it is my property, that you are going to move. So you sell your house and someone else buys it, well, since that person bought thier house, when my house already looked like it did, then they have NO right to sue, BUT YOU DID, before you moved.

You bought your house BEFORE I did what I did, and drove YOUR property value down along with mine, but now that you have sold your house to someone else, and they moved in after my yard looked like it did, then they have NO right to sue me.

ARE YOU GETTING IT YET? or is it still too complicated for you?

If I live on a 5 acres out in the middle of no where, and you live up the hill from me on another 5 acres, I probably wouldn't care what you did to your property, but if you dump oil in the stream and it pollutes my stream as well, then again, I have EVERY right to sue your ass into next week. Your actions on YOUR property has effected me directly. Therefore I can and will sue you into next week if you wouldn't do anything about it.

Is that STILL too complicated for you to wrap your brain around?
73 posted on 05/25/2002 8:45:29 AM PDT by Aric2000
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Comment #74 Removed by Moderator

To: Smile-n-Win
``When I buy a piece of land, I don't want it to be taken away by anyone without my consent, eminent domain or not. And I don't think this makes me a Libertarian.''

You're absolutely right. You don't have to lean libertarian to believe that this is a violation of your constitutional right to own property. In my opinion, this reflects the sad state of affairs in public discourse when what should be a mainstream Republican issue is considered on the fringe.

75 posted on 05/25/2002 9:47:37 AM PDT by Liberal Classic
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To: Aric2000
What if I rent out the home to a large family of half Mexicans and blacks, who drive an old beat up looking rusted brown Chevy pick up and a large rusted bright yellow Cady, that they like to park right out front in the driveway, while they quietly sit out on lawn chairs, smoking hand rolled ciggerettes and watch the traffic go by. Are you suggesting that you have a right to sue me, or them? And if you are having trouble selling your home, which was suppose to be a quick easy sale - restraining order?

How about if I put in a small auto shop, which results in 8 to 12 cars being parked on my property, where their use to be just 2. My little business just increased the windshield repairmen's property next door to me. But you on the otherside took a similar loss. Do I have to sacrifice increasing of my property values to insure yours against decrease?

And what if your property also increased (but only for business purposes) and decreased as purely residential. Should progress be stopped to protect your preferred investment?

76 posted on 05/25/2002 9:57:56 AM PDT by jackbob
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To: ex con
You take risk with stock, you should not be risked with property because of your neighbors.

Again, where the hell is the common sense in your statement?

If I move into a nice home in a nice neighborhood, and then you as my next door neighbor decide to rent out to some undesirables that tear up the house, park old piece of crap cars out front and do not maintain the property, which therefore causes MY property value to decrease, then I have EVERY right in the world to sue you into next week. BUT, if I move in after they are already there, then I made that choice. If I make the choice, that is one thing, but if you made that choice and it effects me DIRECTLY, loss of value on my property, danger to my property etc, then I have EVERY right to sue you.
77 posted on 05/25/2002 12:09:10 PM PDT by Aric2000
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To: jackbob
If you already have a small auto shop when I move in, then what is it to me?

BUT, if you decide to start an auto shop after I already live there, and it will effect my property value in a negative way, then I can and will sue you, but, if it effects my property value in a positive way, whether it be business or residential, I will do my best to make sure that you are able to continue.

If you in your actions effect my property value in a negative way, you are infringing upon MY property rights, and that is not right. BUT, if you effect them in a POSITIVE way, that is a whole other story.

Again, I ask, WHERE IS THE COMMON SENSE? I shouldn't have to explain this, it should be BLATANTLY OBVIOUS!!!
78 posted on 05/25/2002 12:13:45 PM PDT by Aric2000
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Comment #79 Removed by Moderator

Comment #80 Removed by Moderator


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