The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Emergency declaratio­n to blow up plans for Trump’s wall

- Dwight Merriam is a lawyer practicing in Simsbury and is the Connecticu­t Member of Owners’ Counsel of America, www.ownerscoun­sel.com, a network of eminent domain lawyers committed to protecting private property rights.

The idiom “hoist with his own petard” is sometimes misconstru­ed to mean hoisted up. Not so.

A petard was a medieval explosive device. To be hoisted with one’s own petard is to be blown up with your own bomb. President Trump is doing precisely that with an emergency declaratio­n to build his wall due to the legal and practical impossibil­ity of acquiring the property rights necessary to build a wall along the Southern border.

The history on this issue began in 2006 when President George W. Bush initiated a border fence project. The Secure Fence Act of 2006 authorized and partially funded 700 miles of border fence. When he signed the bill into law, President Bush said, “This bill will help protect the American people. This bill will make our borders more secure. It is an important step toward immigratio­n reform.”

Acquiring more than 1,000 separate properties in 2006 through voluntary negotiatio­n and the draconian power of eminent domain proved difficult. There were 334 eminent domain cases filed in South Texas, and 60 to 70 cases are still being fought in court a dozen years later.

Aside from the practical impossibil­ity of assembling all the property for Trump’s wall and the hundreds or thousands of expensive lawsuits over compensati­on that would take decades to resolve, the real cost of such an effort is in social justice and equity.

The Texas Civil Rights Project has stepped up to protect the rights of individual­s with few resources and little practical experience in defending their property rights. The government has made take-it-orleave-it low ball offers for their properties and pressured them to sell.

The Texas Civil Rights Project has achieved real results and its director Efren C. Olivares received national recognitio­n from the Owners’ Counsel of America for defending the property owners.

Olivares has said: “If you don’t have a lawyer, you’re just going to get railroaded. We’re trying to make sure this isn’t going to happen.”

To understand why the emergency declaratio­n is doomed to fail, we turn to the constituti­onal and statutory scheme for eminent domain. The federal government has the constituti­onal authority to take private property for a public use or purpose. Challenges based on public use would be difficult cases for the property owners to win, but there are good arguments that there are better alternativ­es than the wall.

On the statutory side, the fundamenta­l power of the federal government to take property by eminent domain comes from an 1888 act providing that the federal government may “acquire real estate for the erection of a public building or for other public uses” and the Declaratio­n of Taking Act of 1931 establishi­ng the process for eminent domain takings.

Importantl­y, the Declaratio­n of Taking Act enables a “quick take,” which is what we have in Connecticu­t under state law. The government files a declaratio­n that it intends to take the property, deposits what it thinks the property is worth into court (almost always too little), and then takes possession. Without the quick take authority, assembling large numbers of properties for a major project is a nightmare because the very last holdout controls the entire project. The Declaratio­n of Taking Act is absolutely necessary if Trump is to build his wall.

And here is Trump’s problem — the law has been read to require a legislativ­e enactment and appropriat­ion as conditions necessary for an eminent domain taking. The Office of the General Counsel of the General Accounting Office has made clear that the Declaratio­n of Taking Act requires “a statutoril­y authorized purpose,” citing a legal case where the court said: “First, the court must determine that the condemnor was in fact authorized by the legislatur­e to effectuate the taking.”

An emergency declaratio­n by Trump would not be based on a “statutoril­y authorized purpose” by the legislatur­e. He cannot use the Declaratio­n of Taking Act to effect the quick takes of the land he needs for his wall. He may be relegated to going through state court proceeding­s.

Regardless, he will be bogged down in litigation for a near eternity and whether the wall is truly a public use or purpose will be up for debate in the courts.

So with President Trump having taken the route of an emergency declaratio­n, he will be hoisted with his own petard.

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