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A Handbook
For The Community: |
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From the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution Contents
From the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution This phrase from the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution is known as the "takings clause."Those seeking to achieve excellent land use planning for their communities need to understand it. Just what did the framers of the Constitution mean by this clause? How are we to interpret takings today? Understanding takings, and how courts have interpreted takings, is crucial to successful, visionary, community planning. And successful, visionary, community planning is the key to avoiding takings challenges. This community handbook explains takings, explains how courts have interpreted takings, and provides strategies we can pursue if we want Monterey County to remain a beautiful, vibrant, economically vital community for all its residents.
Courts have consistently ruled that takings occur only when a government irrevocably occupies an entire parcel of private land or deprives a landowner of all productive use of that land. Only when a government physically and permanently seizes property, or when it deprives a property owner of all productive uses of that property, must the government compensate the property owner.
Most Monterey County residents wish to live in clean, safe, economically vital communities. This means we want to stop unplanned urban sprawl. We want to preserve commercially productive agricultural land for agricultural uses. We want attractive, affordable housing for all county residents. We prize, and want to preserve, clean air, clean water, beautiful views, bountiful wildlife, an extensive park system, and the historic character of our communities. City and county planners and politicians can design General Plans that help us achieve these goals. They can adopt land use regulations that prevent sprawl, protect agricultural land, and shape what affordable, distinctive communities will look like. Local regulations, adopted by local governments, also help enforce state and federal mandates that preserve coastal resources and protect beautiful parkland. The power to adopt local land use policies is one of the most important ways that local government can achieve community goals. Our local governments ought to represent the majority of the people, and that means they should be able to plan communities that work for everyone's benefit. In recent years, members of the "wise use" or "property rights" movement have suggested that the government should pay private land owners who must curtail development on their land due to government regulations. They argue, in effect, that the government should pay property owners to follow the rules that the community has established to achieve community goals. When a government regulation prevents a property owner from doing whatever he or she wishes, that property owner may say that the government has "taken" their property. Sometimes, they sue the government for compensation, based on this claimed "taking." As an example, if a county prevents a farmer from turning his or her fields into an auto mall, that farmer might decide to sue for takings compensation. If a city regulates the height of buildings in a residential neighborhood, the developer who wishes to build a high-rise apartment building might sue the city, and claim loss of potential income. If the State asks an owner of 100 acres of benchlands to preserve half of his or her land because an endangered butterfly makes its home there, that landowner might also sue for compensation, and claim a "taking." As we will see below, the courts have consistently ruled that takings occur only when government occupation is permanent and physical, or if a governmental regulation has deprived a property owner of all economically productive uses of his or her land. In other words, landowners who sue under the conditions we've just described do not typically have a valid claim to be compensated. Legal battles, however, are costly. Most local governments cannot afford to fight lawsuits against takings claims. So when landowners threaten a lawsuit, government officials sometimes back down from enactments that would protect community interests. Even the idea that a landowner might sue for takings violations makes some city or county officials more timid than they might be in putting into place protections the citizens desire. The threat of takings creates a chilling atmosphere for visionary and responsible land use planning.
If you own private property, you are not automatically entitled do whatever you want to with that property. Property ownership carries responsibilities as well as rights. Government officials who seek to respect property owners' rights must also recognize the government's responsibility to help maintain livable communities for all residents. If you purchase 100 acres of oak trees, you are purchasing only that, 100 acres of oak trees. You have not purchased the right to cut down those trees and plant a vineyard. If you own 100 acres of productive farmland, you have the right to continue to farm, but you have no right to turn all or part of that farmland into a housing development. If you own a vacant lot in a residential neighborhood, you are not automatically entitled to open a gambling parlor or to erect a highrise apartment building on that lot. Private property rights are defined as the right to enjoy your land in a way that does not harm your neighbors and to continue existing uses. If the community deems that vineyards and housing developments and gambling parlors and highrises are desirable uses for the land you own, then the community might grant you permission, and give you a "permit" to develop your land as you would like. But as a property owner, your right is only to ask the community for permission to change the use on land you own. You do not have the right to do whatever you want to with the land. If the community decides not to give you permission to change the use of your land, no taking of your property has occurred.
The Supreme Court has found takings in two circumstances: when the government occupies a piece of land permanently or when government regulation forbids all economic uses of an entire piece of property. The courts have consistently affirmed that the public has legitimate safety and health concerns that sometimes impinge on the rights of private landowners and the uses they can make of their land. The courts have also said that while property owners have a right to a reasonable use of their land, the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee that the most profitable use will be allowed. Courts have consistently ruled that even large losses of potential economic benefit do not constitute a taking, as long as the owner retains some economic use of some portion of his or her land. The Fifth Amendment does not confer the right to use property in a manner that may harm the public health or welfare or damage the interests of neighboring landowners or the community as a whole. Courts have ruled, for example, that regulations preventing wetlands destruction, preserving scenic views, protecting historic resources, or protecting endangered species on private land are crucial to public health and well being. Requiring private landowners to help a community preserve wetlands, scenic views, historic resources, or rare species is a legitimate use of government authority. Here is a point of special interest to those who wish to empower public officials to plan for excellent communities: Courts give tremendous leeway to local elected officials to determine what is appropriate public regulation. They leave it to local governments to determine how best to protect the health, safety, integrity, and beauty of a community. Courts typically intervene only in extreme casesfor instance, when the civil rights of protected minorities are affected by local decisions. So, courts may intervene when official housing policies discriminate against a certain racial group, or when they do not protect the rights of handicapped people to gain access to public spaces. But they are unlikely to intervene when governments regulate to preserve wetlands, farmlands, endangered species, or historic places.
LandWatch believes that Monterey County is perfectly poised to build the future its residents most desire. Right now, the County and the cities are designing 20-year General Plans that set the foundation for our communities' future. If these plans lay out sound principles to achieve broadly supported community goals, they will protect our municipalities from unwanted takings challenges. General Plans provide excellent legal protection against takings lawsuits. Well-prepared General Plans provide the rationale for why the County or a city has decided to put restrictions on certain uses of private land, and the courts will respect and uphold those plans. Further, not only will a local government usually win in court when it bases its land use decisions on a well-prepared General Plan, comprehensive, well founded General Plans also ward off lawsuits in the first place. Landowners who understand that they will probably not win a takings lawsuit usually don't bring one. For example, Monterey County has a much better chance of preserving fertile farmland in key locations if this goal is a specific feature of its General Plan, long before anyone proposes building on the land in question. If citizens clearly and forcefully ask their public officials to plan for a sustainable future, those officials will listen. They want to fulfill their responsibilities to their constituents, and they want to keep their jobs. Communities can view the threat of takings lawsuits as a win-win situation for all members of the community. Clear planning policies that have broad public support can help private landowners, since it directs them to use their land in ways that are consistent with community objectives. Moreover, such policies are the foundation upon which to build more vital, safe, healthy, and beautiful places, and to create a community in which land retains its economic value. To ward off takings lawsuits, citizens ought to demand the clearest possible planning documents that represent the broadest array of citizen input. Public meetings should be frequent and well attended. Citizens should demand that government regulations represent the public's wishes. Resulting plans and regulations offer the clearest guidelines for private property owners. They justify and explain what kinds of development a community encourages and what kinds it prohibits.
LandWatch Monterey County is a nonprofit organization, founded in 1997. Our mission is to promote and inspire sound land use legislation at the city and county level through grassroots community action. We are actively involved in building communities that respect private property rights while protecting the public's interest in prosperous, beautiful, well planned communities. Here are some of the things that LandWatch is doing:
Visionary communities need not fear takings lawsuits. In fact, citizens and residents can use the threat of such takings lawsuits to demand General Plan policies that represent maximum public input from all sectors of our county, and that clearly state the overall objectives of the community. Such policies will benefit the community and private property owners alike.
There are literally hundreds or thousands of court cases that have discussed the "takings" clause. We hope, in this brief handbook, to have summed up the basic lesson:
Here are some of the things the courts have said, in their own words:
Supreme Court Justice Brennan, Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City, 1978
Supreme Court Justice Scalia, Lucas V. South Carolina Coastal Council, 1992
Federal District Court ruling, Burns Harbor Fish Co. v. Ralston, 1992
U.S. Supreme Court, Keystone Bituminous Coal Association v. DeBenedictis, 1987
U.S. Supreme Court, Concrete Pipe and Products v. Construction Laborers Pension Trust, 1993
U.S. Supreme Court, Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc., ET. Al. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 2002
LandWatch thanks its members and supporters for the financial assistance that makes our work possible. We are grateful to Dr. David Takacs, Associate Professor in the Earth Systems Science and Policy Program at California State University, Monterey Bay, for his research and writing assistance with this project. Updated May 15, 2002 |
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