The Michigan Supreme Court is dominated by Federalist Society members, i.e.
rightwingers. However, here we have their conservatism/libertarianism
turning into its opposite, in defense of small private property against
monopolies.

Charles



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By Diane Bukowski
The Michigan Citizen

DETROIT - Saying its landmark 1981 Poletown decision was a violation of the
State Constitution and a contradiction of a century of previous case law,
the Michigan Supreme Court on July 31 largely barred local governments from
seizing land for private use.

The unanimous ruling, in Wayne County v. Hathcock, was authored by the
court's four most conservative justices. It prevents Wayne County from
seizing 40 parcels of private land interspersed in a 1,300-acre tract the
county wants to use to build the private $2 billion Pinnacle Aeropark. The
project includes plans for hotels, factories, offices, and a golf course
adjacent to Metropolitan Airport.

The court said its decision is retroactive, meaning that it will affect
pending cases that specifically challenged the Poletown decision, including
a lawsuit filed by residents of Brush Park against the City of Detroit.

In the Poletown case, the court allowed the City of Detroit to seize and
bulldoze hundreds of private homes, businesses and churches on the near east
side so that General Motors could build an auto plant that replaced its
Cadillac and Fleetwood facilities, actually cutting its total workforce. The
company had threatened to move that production out of Detroit if it was not
allowed to build at the Poletown site.

The Poletown ruling was the first of its kind in the country, and has been
used since as precedent to seize private property in eminent domain cases
nationwide.

"Because Poletown . . . was such a radical departure from fundamental
constitutional principles and over a century of this Court's eminent domain
jurisprudence . . . we must overrule Poletown in order to vindicate our
Constitution, protect the people's property rights, and preserve the
legitimacy of the judicial branch as the expositor - not creator - of
fundamental law," said Justices Robert Young Jr., Maura Corrigan, Clifford
Taylor and Stephen Markman.

Noting that Article 10, Section 2 of the state constitution requires that
government seizures be performed for "public use," not just a "public
purpose," the Court went on, "Before Poletown, we had never held that a
private entity's pursuit of profit was a 'public use' . simply because one
entity's profit maximization contributed to the health of the general
economy."

Alan Ackerman, attorney for the plaintiffs in Hathcock, said, "This ruling
means our government was meant to have limited powers, unlike in England,
where private property could be taken for any use the king wanted. It will
change the law of the land. It protects people's individual rights."

Ackerman said those signing amicus briefs in support of his clients included
a broad political spectrum, ranging from libertarian right wing
organizations like the Civic Legal Foundation and the Institute for Justice
to the American Civil Liberties Union and Ralph Nader.
He said the decision should favorably impact residents of Brush Park, but
that plaintiffs in the Graimark case, which involved land seizures on the
city's far east side, had already signed off their property rights.
Attorneys in that case failed to challenge the Poletown decision.

Ackerman's clients included private home, business and farmland owners. Lead
plaintiff Edward Hathcock, who owns Gem Products and Supply, a kitchenware
and millwork plant in the path of the Pinnacle project, was exultant at the
court's decision.

"This shows what can happen if you stand up and fight, when enough's
enough," said Hathcock. "This puts the county on notice that they can't just
acquire our property."
Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano issued a written statement in reaction,
saying, "The court ruling impacts economic development for the entire state.
All municipalities and government entities are affected and must explore how
they will be competitively leveraged to attract investments that result in
jobs that improve the quality of life for those who live, work and raise
their families in Wayne County."

Gwen Mingo is lead plaintiff in the Brush Park suit against the City of
Detroit, which has seized the majority of the land there. A good deal of the
remaining buildings in this historic district located off Woodward and I-75,
have been destroyed in unsolved arson cases.

"This is wonderful news," Mingo said. "This shows that God works in high
places and the victory is his. We give him the glory. Ours has been a
horrendous ordeal for hundreds of people. Many have died or become very old,
feeble and sick working to bring this to fruition. Many times I have driven
burned up people to the hospital, and had to help those who were thrown out
on the street and lost everything they had. But finally we see a light at
the end of the tunnel."

Attorney George Corsetti was among dozens of people who were arrested in
1981 for participating in a sit-in at the Immaculate Conception Church
located in Poletown, prior to the church's demolition. He and his associates
documented the cost of the Poletown displacements on the residents' lives,
in a film called, "Poletown Lives."

Reacting to the Hathcock decision, Corsetti said, "The justices who wrote
the opinion were actually more interested in private property than in the
trials and tribulations of the Poletown people."

Corsetti said that the Poletown precedent has been taught in law schools
across the country as landmark case law, while at the same time many schools
show his film to let students see the impact of such decisions.

The two consortiums in the final running to be named project developer were
the Aeropark Alliance, Wayne County LLC, and the Metro South Development
Group, LLC. The Aeropark Alliance is composed of companies who are prominent
contributors to the campaigns of Democratic candidates, such as the Sterling
Group, as well as Michigan Democratic Party co-chair Melvin "Butch"
Hollowell.

The Metro South group is composed of companies who were prominent
contributors to the campaigns of George W. Bush and John Engler, including
The Heritage Group and Kojaian Lehman Brothers Partnership, and may have
been likely to lose out in the contest.

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