• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

So long 5th Amendment...

Status
Not open for further replies.

squeeze

Retired Harrier Dude
pilot
Super Moderator
Contributor
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/24/AR2005062400184.html

By MATT APUZZO
The Associated Press
Friday, June 24, 2005; 7:34 AM

NEW LONDON, Conn. -- Seven homeowners in this small waterfront community lost a groundbreaking U.S. Supreme Court decision Thursday when justices ruled that City Hall may take their property through eminent domain to make way for a hotel and convention center.

Word of the high court decision spread around Bill Von Winkle's part of town like news of a passing relative. "Hello?" he answered his cell phone. "Yeah, we lost. I know, hard to believe, huh?"

"I spent all the money I had," said Von Winkle, a retired deli owner, of the properties he bought in the Fort Trumbull neighborhood. "I sold sandwiches to buy these properties. It took 21 years."

The court's decision drew a scathing dissent from Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who argued the decision favors rich corporations.

The fight over Fort Trumbull has been raging for years. New London once was a center for the whaling industry and later became a manufacturing hub. More recently the city has suffered the kind of economic woes afflicting urban areas across the country.

City officials envision a commercial development including a riverfront hotel, health club and offices that would attract tourists to the Thames riverfront, complementing the adjoining Pfizer center and a proposed Coast Guard museum.

Most homeowners sold their properties to make way for wrecking crews, but seven families stubbornly refused to sell. Collectively, they owned 15 houses.

"The U.S. Supreme Court destroyed everybody's lives today, everybody who owns a home," said Richard Beyer, owner of two rental properties in the once-vibrant immigrant neighborhood.

Nationwide, however, legal experts said they don't expect local governments to rush to claim homes.

"The message of the case to cities is yes, you can use eminent domain, but you better be careful and conduct hearings," said Thomas Merrill, a Columbia law professor who specializes in property rights.

In his majority opinion, Justice John Paul Stevens said New London could pursue private development under the Fifth Amendment, which allows governments to take private property if the land is for public use. He said the project the city has in mind promises to bring more jobs and revenue.

"Promoting economic development is a traditional and long accepted function of government," Stevens wrote. He added that local officials are better positioned than federal judges to decide what's best for a community.

He was joined in his opinion by other members of the court's liberal wing _ David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer, as well as Reagan appointee Justice Anthony Kennedy, in noting that states are free to pass additional protections if they see fit.

The four-member bloc typically has favored greater deference to cities, which historically have used the power of eminent domain for urban renewal projects.

At least eight states _ Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, South Carolina and Washington _ forbid the use of eminent domain for economic development unless it is to eliminate blight. Other states either expressly allow private property to be taken for private economic purposes or have not spoken clearly to the question.

Meanwhile, the decision did little to bring city officials and property owners here closer together.

Under the ruling, residents still will be entitled to "just compensation" for their homes as provided under the Fifth Amendment. However, homeowners had refused to move at any price, calling it an unjustified taking of their property.

City Manager Richard Brown said he expects more lawsuits, but believes the land fight is over and doesn't expect a showdown when bulldozers arrive in the neighborhood.

Landowners in the lawsuit, however, pledged to continue their fight.

"It's a little shocking to believe you can lose your home in this country," said Von Winkle, who said he would battle beyond the lawsuits and fight the bulldozers if necessary. "I won't be going anywhere."

The case is Kelo et al v. City of New London, 04-108.

___

Associated Press writer Susan Haigh in Hartford, Conn., contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

The ruling in Kelo v. New London is available at http://wid.ap.org/documents/scotus/050623kelo.pdf

So nice to see they've thrown away all the behind the scenes dealing. Now the big companies can just flash the money and the SCOTUS will back up the city. Guess that 2nd Amendment has a use afterall.
 

beau

Registered User
yeah this is just wrong....dont get me wrong I'm all for economic developement but I sure as hell would not give up my Property.

My family owns an Island on a lake in Montana....and to me it is priceless....I would not sell it for a Billion dollars.....too many memories....too many good times....too many bad times.....

This really stinks of City greed! Rights have been trambled! This country was founded on the rights of property owners.....not that seems to mean little....pathatic!
 

eddie

Working Plan B
Contributor
If they were building needed sewage treatment plant, that's one thing, but selling the land for commercial development? Is there something I/we missed here?
 

snizo

Supply Officer
Didn't that same ruling say that people who lost their homes couldn't be found liable for torching said businesses?
 

A4sForever

BTDT OLD GUY
pilot
Contributor
The thing reeks of irony ....

This also opens up the door for (more?) potential collusion between "monied" parties and politicians ....

HAH !!! ...But the real irony is that the case originated in Connecticut. The governor of Connecticut, Jim Rowland, just resigned instead of face impeachment proceedings for graft and corruption in accepting thousands of dollars worth of gifts from private contractors ....

The second irony is the more "liberal" members of the Supreme Court voted against the property owners and FOR the big developers --- the more conservative members (and thus presumably more evil???) voted to uphold private property rights ..... :)
 

Whalebite

Registered User
This is FU#KED UP Naturally they would donate the ownership to of the new hotel to the property owners, no, thats worth too much money? No SH*T they will not be justly compensated. Just compensation is the amount of money the hotel would make from now till eternity, thus making it not profitable, thus making it pointless. Therefore what they are doing is screwing over the owners out of their investment. How is a hotel, health club and offices public?
 

caeli

Registered User
wow - I'm shocked. This seems like it would be a slam-dunk case for the property owners. This isn't even in the gray-area of the law - it seems pretty black and white. People own some houses, and the city wants to force them out of their homes and sell the property to private companies. The houses were condemned - not because of the condition of the houses, but simply because they were in the way of the city's redevelopment plans.

I don't care if the city plans to sell the property to 1 private party or 100 - it is still being sold to private companies. The court says that it's ok because the plan has been "carefully formulated" and will probably bring "new jobs and increased tax revenue." That still doesn't get around the point that you're taking private property from 1 person and giving it to a private company.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top