Ohio
Supreme Court Hears Eminent Domain Abuse Case
Can ³too many homeowners² justify the destruction of an entire neighborhood?
WEB RELEASE: January 10, 2006
Media Contact:
John Kramer or Lisa Knepper
(703) 682-9320
[Property Rights]
Arlington, Va. Will Ohio homeowners and small businesses have any
right to keep their properties, or will state and local governments be
permitted to take them away for private developers who claim they can make more
money off the land?
On January 11, 2006, the Ohio Supreme Court will be the first state supreme
court to hear an eminent domain abuse case after the U.S. Supreme Court removed
federal constitutional protection from homeowners and threw the issue back to
the states to decide if any state-level protection remains. This case
gives the Ohio Supreme Court a prime opportunity to do what the U.S. Supreme
Court refused to do in the case of Kelo v. City of New London:
protect home and small business owners from eminent domain abuse for private
development.
The Institute for Justice, which argued the Kelo case and represents
Norwood homeowners Carl and Joy Gamble and local businessman Joe Horney, will
argue that the Ohio Constitution places critically important restrictions on
governmentıs use of eminent domain, limiting how and when private property can
be taken, and that, in the Gamblesı and Horneyıs case, the government
overstepped its bounds.
The case began when private developer Jeffrey Anderson decided that he wanted
to expand his $500,000,000 real estate empire by building a complex of chain
stores, condominiums and office space on top of the well-kept neighborhood
where the Gambles and Mr. Horney owned homes. Using a ³study² initiated
and paid for by Anderson after he chose the neighborhood for his development,
Norwood declared the well-kept neighborhood ³deteriorating² so it could use
eminent domain under Ohio law. Under the Ohio Constitution and urban
renewal laws, eminent domain can only be used to eliminate actual conditions of
slum and blight. A trial court found that the neighborhood is not
blighted, but agreed with the City that the neighborhood is ³deteriorating²
because, among other reasons, it had ³diversity of ownership²in other words,
too many people own their own homes and businesses.
³The study was an error-ridden sham, and the City used a broad definition of
deterioratingı that could include virtually every neighborhood in Ohio and the
nation,² said Dana Berliner, an IJ senior attorney. ³If a city can use a
ridiculous definition of deterioratingı to take normal neighborhoods on behalf
of wealthy, politically connected developers, your home or small business could
be next.²
³We hope the Ohio Supreme Court will protect our right to keep and live in the
home we cherish,² said Joy Gamble, a senior citizen who has lived in her home
with her husband since 1969. ³Every citizen deserves to be protected from
what happened to us; no one should lose their home just because a private
developer wants it.²
The Gamblesı and Mr. Horneyıs case will be the most important eminent domain
case the Ohio Supreme Court has heard in more than 50 years. In 1953, in State
ex rel. Bruestle v. Rich, the Court declared that ³the power of eminent
domain may not be exercised merely or primarily to take private property for
private purposes.² Nonetheless, a report by the Institute for Justice
found more than 400 instances of threatened or actual condemnations for private
profit in Ohio cities in just a five-year period from 1998 through 2002.
In Ohio, 13 organizationsincluding the Ohio Conference of the NAACP, the Ohio
Farm Bureau, the Ohio Association of Realtors and the National Federation of
Independent Businessrecently filed ten separate amicus briefs with the Ohio
Supreme Court in support of the Gambles calling for reasonable limits on
governmentsı power of eminent domain. The Reason Foundation, a nationally
renowned think tank, and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberties, which
litigates on religious liberty issues nationwide, also joined these Ohio-based
organizations filing ³friend of the court² briefs. (Copies of the briefs
are available at here.) Each organization described their unique concern
with the abuses of eminent domain that have become all too common across Ohio
and the nation. Joining these organizations in filing a brief with the
court was a group of home and business owners from across the state who have
faced eminent domain abuse.
³Eminent domain abuse has struck a nerve with the public nationwide,² said Chip
Mellor, president and general counsel of the Institute for Justice.
³Those in government power must respect the rights of their constituents and
when they donıt it is the duty of the court to strike down this government
abuse. Thatıs what weıre asking the court to do here so every homeowner
is protected from the government Goliath.²
³The U.S. Supreme Court dropped the ball in protecting home and small business
owners from eminent domain abuse,² said Scott Bullock, an Institute for Justice
senior attorney. ³Now is the time for the state supreme court to step in
to stop the use of eminent domain for private profit in Ohio.²
The Institute for Justice and its Castle Coalition (a nationwide network of
citizen activists working to stop the abuse of eminent domain in their communities)
is leading the nationwide fight against eminent domain abuse. Legislators
in 40 states have or will consider legislation in response to the U.S. Supreme
Courtıs Kelo decision.
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