Posted on 06/01/2008 4:57:41 AM PDT by Kaslin
In 1991, at a cost of $70 million, a group of miners and mining entities known collectively as Seven Up Pete Venture acquired mineral rights on land, near Lincoln, Montana, believed to contain over four million ounces of gold and ten million ounces of silver capable of being recovered by open-pit mining and cyanide heap leaching. During the mid-1990s, Seven Up Pete negotiated with Montana for permits to begin mining operations; however, in November 1998, Montana voters narrowly approved a ballot initiative banning recovery of gold and silver using cyanide heap leaching. Although miners and economic development advocates desired to persuade voters that the ban was ill-advised and unnecessary, an earlier ballot initiativelater declared to be unconstitutionalforbade that effort.
Because the new law barred the only process by which the ore could be recovered profitably and thereby rendered Seven Up Petes properties worthless, in April 2000, Seven Up Pete filed a federal lawsuit against Montana for unconstitutionally taking their property. At the same time, as a 1985 Supreme Court opinion required, Seven Up Pete sought to exhaust their state remedies with a lawsuit in state court seeking just compensation.
In June 2005, the Montana Supreme Court rejected Seven Up Petes claims. When Seven Up Petes petition for U.S. Supreme Court review was denied and their state remedies thereby exhausted, Seven Up Pete returned to the federal forum. There, in April 2006, the district court held that Montana was immune under the Constitutions Eleventh Amendment and that the court had to defer to the Montana Supreme Court, which, on its own initiative, addressed the federal takings issues, even though Seven Up Pete had reserved that issue for the federal court proceedings. In April 2008, the Ninth Circuit affirmed that ruling on the sole basis that, under the Eleventh Amendment, Montana was immune from federal takings claims.
Although the Eleventh Amendment bars federal lawsuits against state governments or officers for monetary damages, the U.S. Supreme Court held, in 1987, that it does not bar federal Takings Clause cases. Furthermore, because the Fourteenth Amendment, which through its Due Process Clause, applies the Takings Clause to the States, the States, by their ratification of the Civil War Amendments, including the Fourteenth, waived their immunity from federal lawsuits for just compensation. Finally, in 1908, the Supreme Court declared that state officials have no immunity if they seek to enforce legislative acts that are void because they conflict with the Constitution.
It is not just the U.S. Constitution, however, that bars the seizure of private property for public use without just compensation. Because most state constitutions contain the same provision, a property owner must exhaust his rights under his state constitution before proceeding to federal court. When he does, the U.S. Supreme Court declared in 1964, he is in no event to be denied his right to return to the [federal] District Court if he reserves his federal claims and refrains from litigating them in state court. That is what Seven Up Pete did; hence, its path to the Supreme Court to reverse the Ninth Circuits ruling seems clear.
Unfortunately, in 2005, in a trio of cases, which included the infamous Kelo ruling, the Supreme Court weakened the constitutional protections afforded property owners. In one, the Court purportedly reversed the 30-year-old precedent upon which Seven Up Pete relied. In the future, ruled the Court, if a state court decides a claim that is functionally identical to the reserved federal claims, the state court holding must be given preclusive effect. Although the Ninth Circuit did not base its ruling on this recent decision, Montana will certainly rely on it when Montana opposes Seven Up Petes petition for Supreme Court review.
Seven Up Petes petition must be heard; otherwise, state courts with a myopic view of the Takings Clause will eviscerate, not only state constitutional property rights guarantees, but also those in the United States Constitution!
If I have understood what I have learned on these threads, I'm not a lawyer, Kelo said the Constitution barred the Federal Government from taking property, States in their own Constitutions may do the same.
This is why I have always blamed the voters of New London for being first class jerks, by electing thieves into office.
This same question of “unjust/uncompensated takings” failed in an early court challenge called Star vs. OSM. Star Coal challenged the federal surface mine law on the issue of prime farm lands. The court found in favor of the federal rule and gave nothing to the ming company that could not mine leased land from a private owner.
btt
-bflr—
And unfortunately I worked on a spill that was probably cited as evidence of potential impact of the heap leaching process. Brewer Gold Mine spill in SC.
But, it was a one in a million occurence of events that led to spill. I bet that was not cited.
Where does the Fifth Amendment, which involves the right against self incrimination, come into play in either this case or this article?
Check last part of 5th.
I thought that the 14th Amendment had been interpreted to apply the Bill of Rights to the States.
It’s your typical liberal effort to further undermine the Constitution. What’s actually the most amazing part is that they were able to find a part of the Constitution which they had not already undermined.
Am I reading this right, we have rights, but not if we reside in the wrong state?
Connecticut's voters set themselves up for Kelo v. by failing to establish clear guidelines regarding reasons for "takings".
What is noteworthy is the fundamental issue at stake in Kelo was that faced by King Joab when his wife recommended that he just steal his neighbor's best gardens. This was addressed earlier by King Hammurabi in his code - and his solution was to EXECUTE anyone who used government power to "take" property for private use.
Amazingly Ruth Bader Ginzburg appears to have been allowed by her parents to have missed Hebrew School on the Sunday when King Joab's plight was discussed or she'd given the matter more thought.
Most folks had not imagined that the legal principles behind the Fifth Amendment could be construed in a way that allowed government agents to steal land from a poor man to give it to a rich man!
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