Note: This overview of the founding fathers vision of property rights is excellent. Following are talking points to use when calling your legislators, and tell them you demand that they vote against S.B.62 which mostly confirms the Kelo Supreme Court Decision.
Professor West first addressed the founders' view of property rights in a 1992 Claremont Institute briefing paper that was expanded and elaborated in the second chapter of his book on the founders. The following observations are based on Professor West's work.
In his 1992 paper, Professor West began by noting that the debate over the meaning of the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment misses the point -- the point being the political importance of the right to property. The right to property was central to our founding; it occupied a vital place in the system of free government the founders built. The right to property was an instrument to defend common people from the power of the establishment.
In our time the right to property is widely misunderstood, above all by liberals who do not share the vision of justice that animated our Constitution. This week the liberal assault on property rights reached one kind of culmination in the Supreme Court's Kelo decision.
For the past hundred years the attack on private property has been central to the Progressive assault on the Constitution, beginning with J. Allen Smith's The Spirit of American Government (1907) and continuing most importantly with Charles Beard's An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution (1913). Smith and Beard portrayed the constitutional protection of private property by the founders as the weapon of an elite interested in preserving its privilege. (By the time scholars got around to debunking Beard's book in particular -- few serious works of history have been as definitively disproved as Beard's -- the damage had been done.) Today the Progressive assault on property rights continues in the scholarship of liberals such as University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein.
The American Revolution is of course the appropriate place to begin to understand the role of property rights in the American legal order. The American Revolution was in part a rebellion against the feudal order, remnants of which still prevailed in Great Britain. In the feudal order all property belonged to the King; the King retained ownership but conditionally granted the use of property to his subjects.
By contrast, the idea that men possessed the right to acquire and enjoy property separate and apart from the prerogative of sovereign government was one of the "unalienable rights" grounded in "the laws of Nature and Nature's God" at the heart of the American Revolution. In the founders' view, property rights did not emanate from government. Rather, they emanated from the nature of man, and it was the function of government to protect the rights conferred on man by nature. Indeed, Jefferson characterized property rights as "the first principle of association, the guarantee to everyone [of] the free exercise of industry and the fruits acquired by it." As Jefferson's comment suggests, the right to acquire property was the critical right for the founders; it made property rights the friend of the poor by allowing them to earn and safeguard wealth ("the fruits acquired by" work).
Accordingly, when the founders crafted the Constitution and Bill of Rights, they provided numerous protections of property rights. Congress was authorized to protect the intellectual property of writers and inventors through the issuance of patents and copyrights. The states were prohibited from impairing private contractual obligations.
Further, putting property on a par with life and liberty, the Constitution prohibited the government from taking property in any criminal case without due process. And in the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment, the government was prohibited from taking private property for public use without just compensation; the government was not even afforded the power to take private property for anything but public use.
The founders extended these and other specific protections to the property of Americans in the fundamental law of the United States for the sake of freedom. The freedom to exercise and profit from one's abilities without regard to caste or class was in the view of the founders the essence of freedom.
As James Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers, "the first object of government" is the "protection of the diversity in the faculties [abilities] of men, from which the rights of property originate." In the eyes of the founders, the protection of property rights was a bulwark for the poor in assuring them that the wealth earned with the sweat of their brow could not arbitrarily be expropriated by the heavy hand of government.
It was precisely on this ground that Lincoln sought to persuade Americans of the injustice of slavery. Lincoln persistently argued that slavery was a species of tyranny enacting the ancient injustice of the principle "you work, and I eat." He often spoke of the heart of slavery as a denial of property rights: "It is the same tyrannical principle that says, 'You work and toil and earn bread, and I'll eat it.'" When Stephen Douglas mocked Lincoln during their debates for believing in the equality of a black slave with white citizens, Lincoln said: "In some respects she certainly is not my equal; but in her natural right to eat the bread she earns with her own hands without asking leave of anyone else, she is my equal, and the equal of all others."
The founders' study of history taught them that majority rule was susceptible to tyranny and that the protection of property rights was an indispensable condition for the preservation of freedom and for the growth of national wealth. The founders observed that tyrannical rule and material scarcity had by and large been the fate of man through the ages. They saw the confiscation of property by government in the name of the sovereign power of the state as an old and sorry story. Through the protection of property rights they aimed to forge a new order of the ages. It lies to us to regain their understanding and act on it.
Scott W. Johnson is a Minneapolis attorney. For more than ten years Johnson has written with his former law partner John H. Hinderaker on public policy issues including income inequality, income taxes, campaign finance reform, affirmative action, welfare reform, and race in the criminal justice system. Both Johnson and Hinderaker are fellows of the Claremont Institute.
Talking Points Regarding Texas S.B. 62
(Written for AFP and our members by a prominent property rights attorney)
General
• The U.S. Supreme Court just ruled that under the U.S. Constitution, government can take property from one person and hand it over to another because that person will pay more in taxes. • Texans aren’t happy about that ruling, and we are trying to pass legislation now to show that here in our state, we respect people’s property rights. • S.B. 62 does just the opposite. It doesn’t reject the Supreme Court’s decision. It adopts it, with one minor and meaningless exception. • The points from S.B. 62 are all taken from the majority opinion or the concurrence by Justice Kennedy—in other words, it’s all taken from the words of the people who ruled against the homeowners. • If we adopt S.B. 62 we’ll be telling the voters of Texas that we basically agree with what the Supreme Court did.
Specifics
• S.B. 62 specifies three specific situations when government cannot take property from one person and give it to another. • One is when there’s a private benefit to a particular private party. That’s directly from the mouths of the justices that taking these homes to give them to richer people. • And all someone has to do to avoid this prohibition is take property from one person and give it to two other people. Or just take it without any idea what to do with it, so there’ s no benefit to a particular private party. And then find some private business to give it to. • The second situation that is supposedly not OK under S.B. 62 is if the eminent domain “is for a public use that is merely a pretext to confer a private benefit on a particular private party.” Again, this only applies to a single private party, and the property needs to prove what was going on behind closed doors. That’s no protection for property owners. • The third situation is the only one that even tries to stop eminent domain for economic development. And it puts an exception when the project is under the municipal community development law or the urban development law. Both of those can apply to areas where the only thing wrong is that they that aren’t living up to their full economic potential. A blighted area can be one with “inadequate streets or street layout” that constitutes “an economic liability”. That isn’t any different than economic development. • S.B. 62 doesn’t do enough if it does anything at all.
Call your legislator and tell him that the electorate will not stand by while the elected stealthly move to take away the instrument given to defend common people from the power of the establishment. Thank you for your help. Americans for Prosperity - Texas.