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Supreme Court
Rules Cities May Seize Homes
Supreme
Court Rules Cities May Seize Homes
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5-4 Decision Leaves Homeowners Dismayed
By MATT APUZZO, AP
NEW LONDON, Conn. (June
24) - 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.
© 2005 Associated Press
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