These Kelo’s go up to 11

Sotomayor doesn’t like decisions of old white men.

Nor does she like them holding property.

In the Didden ruling, as in the Supreme Court’s infamous Kelo v. New London decision, the government used its constitutionally limited power of “eminent domain” to force one private owner to turn over land (for a fee) to give it to a private developer. Yet the Didden case was even worse than the Kelo one. When the town of New London, Conn., took Susette Kelo’s home – a rank injustice – the town at least did so after public hearings. The Village of Port Chester, N.Y., took Bart Didden’s land without a public hearing.

New London took the land around Ms. Kelo’s house in order to change it from residential use to a commercial use that purportedly was for the public good. Port Chester, to the contrary, did not claim to change the land use for the public good. Instead, it merely gave the land to a private developer who wanted to use it for the same purpose, a pharmacy, as the original owners. Instead of a CVS, the new owner used it for a Walgreens.

In essence, wrote Mr. Epstein and George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin, the taking of private property amounted to “out-and-out extortion” with government support. Yet Judge Sotomayor’s panel not only ruled against Mr. Didden’s property rights, but did so with a bare, six-paragraph order – as Mr. Somin described it, “without serious examination of the legal issues to any significant degree.”

It’s a mystery how the judge could square this case with the Constitution’s requirement that private property can be taken only for “public use,” or with its requirement that “no state” shall pass any “law impairing the obligation of contracts.”

Judge Sotomayor’s record includes several other cases in which property rights got short shrift. Two are illustrative. In Brody v. Village of Port Chester, she joined a ruling in favor of the original owner – but on procedural grounds alone, while refusing to order the remedy of returning the property to him. The panel added a gratuitous paragraph saying that government’s eminent-domain powers are quite “broad.” In the case of In re St. Johnsbury Trucking Co., the judge admitted that a regulation wiped out an owner’s property value but approved it anyway without any compensation.

Candidate Obama spoke of “spreading the wealth around”. His first (and hopefully only SCOTUS nominee) sems to believe in a redistribution of wealth as well. Though her preferred method is through court ordered property transfers.

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One Response to These Kelo’s go up to 11

  1. Rivrdog says:

    Unless the CVS store was sitting idle for some reason and there just HAD to be an operating drugstore on that land (eg: no other one within 25 miles), the only POSSIBLE justification for this grab would be an opportunity for graft, or the approval of same, on the part of the Court.

    Believe it or not, there are plenty of attorneys around who would have the chutzpah to do a graft deal with a high court.

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