
Land
rights, Why do they matter?
THE PROPERTY RIGHTS
REBELLION
by
Bruce Yandle
Fall
1995
"Nor
shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation"
Fifth Amendment
,
U.S.
Constitution
Today, all across
America
, people are focusing on a
major constitutional issue: their right to control the use of their land
and property. Landowners in the East are concerned about restrictions on
their land rights when their property is designated as historic. Farmers
are up in arms about the Corps of Engineers wetlands program that forces
them to abandon the use of farmland because it may become wet during
part of the year. Ranchers and forest owners in the West are threatened
by enforcement of the Endangered Species Act.
In some ways, the
movement is a rebellion. Yet in the strict meaning of the word, the
movement is more a revolution - a complete rotation that carries us back
to a first Constitutional principle, the principle of protection against
excessive government.
Some of the groups that
contest the state's authority describe the problem in simple terms. The
land on which they live is theirs, quite often owned by family members
for three generations or more. In their view, no one has a superior
right to tell them what they can do or not do on their land. (Of course,
if the owners are truly harming others, then they can be sued under
common law.)
Others see the problem in
more complex terms. They hold contracts, deeds and easements that give
them the legal right to graze cattle, cut trees, or build houses. They
see a growing maze of federal, state and local regulations that
interfere with the terms of the contracts and deeds they hold. These
regulations are supposed to serve a public interest, but the burden
falls on the shoulders of individuals who hold specified rights to land.
In their view, their Fifth Amendment rights are denied. They believe
what the Constitution says: "Nor shall private property be taken
for public use without just compensation."
Corporations and trade
associations see yet another dimension. These groups, in some cases, are
torn between raising their voices at what they view as violations of
private property rights and accepting them as inevitable. They fear the
public relations backlash that follows if they are tarred as being
anti-environmental.
This property rights
movement is sometimes depicted as a "stop the
environmentalists" effort, and a number of environmentalists oppose
and criticize it. But environmentalists, too, are interested in property
rights. Instead of seeking to protect existing rights, however, they
seek to redefine rights through government control of the land.
Sometimes the issue relates to how public lands will be used - logging
versus the natural sanctuary. In others, the question has to do with
private land rights - whether or not an individual can build a home on
private beach property. No matter how land-use controversies are
depicted, property rights, the legal ability to exclude others and
control use, is the fundamental issue.
The question is how
rights are to be transfered. If the government decides to change the
rights, will the existing private rights be purchased, as property
rights advocates argue they should be, or will they simply be taken, as
many environmental activists want?
My
interest in the 20th century property rights movement began with an
earlier project that involved a study of how property rights for
ordinary people evolved over the centuries. My reading carried me back
to 10th century
England
and the rise of common law.
I was struck by stories about common law rules of property and how they
had evolved from communities of people in rural areas, not from
constitutions or the seats of government. Accounts of how country
people, probably kinsmen, took annual oaths to be jointly and severally
liable for maintaining community peace were joined by stories of country
courts and judges who rendered decisions involving trespass, theft and
violent crimes.
My studies led me to the
great 17th-century English jurist Sir Edward Coke. His explanation of
the Magna Carta left little doubt in my mind that the Great Charter, as
he termed it, was a watershed event in the struggle of ordinary people
to protect their natural rights against encroachments by government.
There in the Magna Carta one finds words that sound very much like the
takings clause of the Fifth Amendment: "No freeman shall be
deprived of his free tenement or liberties or fee custom but by lawful
judgment of his peers and by the law of the land."
At the time of the Magna
Carta, "the law of the land" referred to common law, not to
laws written by a legislative body or king. Customary law, developed
informally and rooted in community norms, was seen as the only logical
way to protect property rights that had evolved over the centuries.
Rights to land emerged from community and were transmitted to the
nation/state. The lesson seems clear: People do not have rights because
the state allows them. The nation/state exists because people have
rights.
From the Magna Carta to
today, people have struggled with an endless paradox: A government
strong enough to protect property rights is also powerful enough to take
property. Constitutions that evolve from free people provide the means
to wall off government. This wall separates two economic domains - one
public, the other private. Of course, the lines often blur, but one
force dominates on each side.
One side of the wall is
governed by the law of politics. There, the body politic engages in
collective choice, where voting rules and special interest struggles
determine outcomes. The other side is governed by a rule of law, where
owners of property rights are forced to bear the cost of their actions
while gaining the fruits of their labor. On one side of the wall, land
use can be specified by statute. On the other side, transfer of land
rights requires purchase.
Things are never perfect
on either side. Through property rights, owners have the incentive to
look ahead, to conserve, to avoid short term actions that foreclose
better long-term outcomes, and to face the opportunity cost of their
actions. On the other side of the wall, the rule of politics allows
individuals to promote the public weal, but also enables the players to
engage in opportunistic behavior by calling on government power to force
costs on others.
The Fifth Amendment of
the U.S. Constitution is
America
's chief property rights
wall. But like other walls, it must be maintained. At times cracks
appear in the wall; new mortar must be applied and stones replaced.
Otherwise the wall will fall.
In many ways, today's
property rights advocxates are calling for a modern Magna Carta. Once
again, ordinary people are seeking to restrain and contain government.
But instead of having to settle differences with picks, swords and
arrows, the parties in the struggle now turn to courts and legislative
bodies. Their struggles help us to see how strong is the motivation for
freedom.
Copies of Land Rights:
The 1990's Property Rights Rebellion can be obtained by calling Rowman
& Littlefield at 800-462-6420
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.ecoworld.com/home/articles2.cfm?tid=427
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