Posted by Ilya Somin:
George Will on the *Empress Casino* Takings Case:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_04_12-2009_04_18.shtml#1239592073


   George Will has written [1]an op ed on Empress Casino v. Giannoulias,
   the important takings case in which I and other property scholars
   coauthored [2]an amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to hear it. As
   Will points out, the case involves a challenge to a narrowly targeted
   Illinois tax that transfers money from four riverboat casinoes to
   several horse-racing tracks. Will correctly points out that this is an
   egregious example of special interest legislation transferring wealth
   from one narrow interest group to another without any justify public
   interest.

   Unfortunately, Will also somewhat misstates the legal point at issue
   in the case. At this stage of the litigation, it is not whether the
   taking of the riverboat casino's money is for a valid "public use,"
   but whether there is any taking at all. The Illinois Supreme Court's
   opinion in the case ruled that no tax could ever be a taking. If its
   ruling is allowed to stand, the Illinois tax will not only be
   permitted, but the casinoes won't even receive any compensation for
   their losses. More importantly, state governments will be able to
   circumvent the Takings Clause simply by using taxation to force firms
   or individuals to do whatever they want. For example, there is clearly
   a taking if the state legislature passes a law requiring a property
   owner to let state officials trespass on his land. But under the
   Illinois Supreme Court's reasoning, the state legislature could
   achieve the same exact result simply by requiring the owner to pay a
   special tax if he refuses to allow the trespass.

   The "public use" issue was also litigated at the state court level.
   But it is not part of the cert petition presented to the Supreme
   Court. In my view, Will is correct to suggest that if there is a
   taking, there is no defensible public use here. Indeed, the tax is a
   particularly blatant example special interest legislation, one that
   [3]may have been passed in part because of a payoff to notoriously
   corrupt Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich. However, as Will also
   points out, the Court reaffirmed the position that almost any
   governmental objective counts as a "public use" in Kelo v. City of New
   London (2005). Like Will, I hope that the Court eventually revisits
   and overrules Kelo and previous decisions that have essentially gutted
   the Public Use Clause. But that's not the issue that the Empress cert
   petition focuses on.

References

   1. 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/10/AR2009041002606.html
   2. http://volokh.com/files/empresslawprof.pdf
   3. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_03_22-2009_03_28.shtml#1238012218

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