Posted by Ilya Somin:
Federalism,  the Baltimore Colts, and the Limits of Eminent Domain:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_03_29-2009_04_04.shtml#1238788954


   Property law scholar Gideon Kanner has [1]an interesting article in
   the Los Angeles Daily Journal on the 25th anniversary of the Baltimore
   Colts' midnight move to Indianopolis. As Kanner points out, the Colts'
   precipitous departure was caused by the team owner's fear that the
   city of Baltimore would use eminent domain to condemn the team and
   thereby prevent it from moving. This fear was precipitated by a
   then-recent California state court decision ruling that the City of
   Oakland's effort to condemn the Oakland Raiders in order to prevent
   them from moving was a permissible "public use" under the state
   constitution.

   As Gideon points out, the Colts were able to foil Baltimore's plan
   simply by leaving before the city could act. More generally, cities
   around the country have made little effort to condemn mobile
   businesses or nonprofit organizations, despite the fact that eminent
   domain jurisprudence in many states is permissive enough that such
   efforts would likely survive judicial scrutiny. Why haven't state and
   local governments sought to condemn mobile assets? The answer is
   clear: businesses would quickly flee any jurisdiction that started
   using eminent domain in this way. The example of the Colts is telling.
   Moreover, other firms would forego the opportunity to move into the
   area in the first place.

   For these reasons, condemning mobile assets is a losing proposition
   for state and local governments - even if courts will let them do it.
   Federalism and interjurisdictional competition protect property rights
   in movable goods with relatively little need for judicial
   intervention. By contrast, there is little similar protection for
   property rights in land and other static assets. A landowner might be
   able to flee a jurisdiction with harsh policies; but he can't take the
   land with him. For this reason, decentralized federalism is less
   likely to provide effective protection for property rights in immobile
   goods. Thus, judicial intervention, including that of federal courts,
   may be necessary. I discuss this point at greater length in[2] this
   article (pp. 221-23). Once we understand the distinction between
   mobile and immobile property and the special vulnerability of the
   latter, there need be no contradiction between support for
   decentralized federalism and support for federal judicial protection
   for landowners' property rights.

References

   1. http://gideonstrumpet.info/?p=207
   2. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=874865

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