Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor is dominating the conversation
in Washington as analysts begin to dig into her past rulings. And
while she has yet to weigh in on abortion, the judge has spoken loud
and clear on an issue of interest to livable streets advocates: eminent
domain.
As a judge on the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, Sotomayor ruled against property owners in Didden v. Village of Port Chester, a case that centered on plans for a CVS drug store in Westchester County.
Lawyer and blogger Ilya Somin, who urged the Supreme Court to consider the Didden case, has a thorough -- if undeniably subjective -- summary of the case here.
In an unsigned judgment, Sotomayor's court ultimately allowed the
Westchester developer to condemn the land belonging to plaintiff Didden
and build a competing pharmacy, despite the questionable public-use
benefit that would result from the taking.
During her confirmation hearing, Sotomayor is likely to get pointed questions on Didden from conservatives who were dismayed when the nation's highest court ruled in favor of eminent domain rights in 2005's Kelo v. New London.
But should urbanites, and livable streets advocates in particular, also
be concerned by the nominee's stance on takings of private property?
In
theory, eminent domain can and should be used for beneficial purposes,
such as transit expansion. Yet a recent push along those lines was halted by the Colorado state legislature last year, and proposed curbs on eminent domain are also imperiling the future of light rail in the Houston area.
On
the flip side, local governments often take private property for new
development projects, claiming that commercial and office buildings
justify a standard of "public use" -- as was the case in Kelo and in Brooklyn's Atlantic Yards case, which was turned away by the Supreme Court last year. Another eminent domain case heard by Sotomayor's court, Brody v. Village of Port Chester, involved condemnation to build a Stop-'n-Shop supermarket parking lot.
Sotomayor's
appeals court handed property owner William Brody a partial victory in
2005, ruling that his due process rights were violated but not
requiring Port Chester to reverse the condemnation. In fact, the Brody opinion (available for download here) states that judges should not weigh in on the merits of taking land for "public use":
[T]herole of the courts in enforcing the constitutional limitations oneminent domain is one of patrolling the borders. That which fallswithin the boundaries of acceptability is not subject to review.
What do Streetsblog readers think about the Didden and Brody cases, and the role of eminent domain in community development?