for eminent domain. without we would be a backwoods sheethole.
Well, prepare to be surprised. Because most people don't sit back and hope that somebody comes knocking on their door one day to let them know a new highway is proposed here and that they need to sell their land, or that a power line route runs through their property. Most people want their land left alone. Just human nature.eric76 said:I would be very surprised if eminent domain was necessary for more than a small percentage of right of ways for highways, power lines, and pipelines. Sure, there are people out there who would not sell at any price, but most people will. I see no reason to force them to take a price less than what they consider fair.schmellba99 said:eric76 said:How the hell does using the might of the state to run roughshod over private property owners support Free Markets and Capitalism?Snow Monkey Ambassador said:I get what you're saying, but eminent domain is probably the #1 tool the government has at its disposal to support free markets and capitalism. It may suck in the individual cases or people whose land is taken - and I'm not really even defending the practice, here - but it's definitely not anti-capitalist.eric76 said:That matches what I've read elsewhere.dlance said:
I have a coworker who has old family land on the border. The government ED'd a strip of his land and built part of the existing fence on it. He said they paid pretty quickly and a fair amount. The problem is he has about 75 acres left on the other side of the fence that he no longer has access to. They won't put and won't let him put a gate in for access and there is nowhere to cross it for miles, and no way to access the land from anywhere you can cross.
It is horse*****
As I've said many times, eminent domain is for people who don't believe in Capitalism and Free Markets.
Not a supporter of ED in most cases.
But without the power of ED, you would, in all likelyhood, not be able to drive to work in the morning. Odds are you would not have clean potable water piped to your house. You would probably be crapping in a home in your back yard and you and every neighbor would be burning garbage in a hand dug fire pit on a daily basis.
Because almoat every road, every easement for a pipeline (whether it be for something like water or sewer for a municipality or a P3 or private venture for a private utility like petroleum or electric) is in existence indirectly or directly because of the power that ED gives for such purposes.
And pretty much 100% of every consumable you use on a daily basis uses one of the avenues listed above. And those support and promote capitaliam and free market trade.
Unfortunately it can be an ugly thing, and when looked at in a vacuum or a single instance, it is generally bad. But the thing is that it is not a mechanism that really can be looked at in a vacuum or for a single solitary case, because you would not be looking at the big picture.
I said that I'd be surprised if it was actually used for more than a few properties along the way and you tell me to be ready to be surprised. Then you say that it is used only in rare cases.schmellba99 said:Well, prepare to be surprised. Because most people don't sit back and hope that somebody comes knocking on their door one day to let them know a new highway is proposed here and that they need to sell their land, or that a power line route runs through their property. Most people want their land left alone. Just human nature.eric76 said:I would be very surprised if eminent domain was necessary for more than a small percentage of right of ways for highways, power lines, and pipelines. Sure, there are people out there who would not sell at any price, but most people will. I see no reason to force them to take a price less than what they consider fair.schmellba99 said:eric76 said:How the hell does using the might of the state to run roughshod over private property owners support Free Markets and Capitalism?Snow Monkey Ambassador said:I get what you're saying, but eminent domain is probably the #1 tool the government has at its disposal to support free markets and capitalism. It may suck in the individual cases or people whose land is taken - and I'm not really even defending the practice, here - but it's definitely not anti-capitalist.eric76 said:That matches what I've read elsewhere.dlance said:
I have a coworker who has old family land on the border. The government ED'd a strip of his land and built part of the existing fence on it. He said they paid pretty quickly and a fair amount. The problem is he has about 75 acres left on the other side of the fence that he no longer has access to. They won't put and won't let him put a gate in for access and there is nowhere to cross it for miles, and no way to access the land from anywhere you can cross.
It is horse*****
As I've said many times, eminent domain is for people who don't believe in Capitalism and Free Markets.
Not a supporter of ED in most cases.
But without the power of ED, you would, in all likelyhood, not be able to drive to work in the morning. Odds are you would not have clean potable water piped to your house. You would probably be crapping in a home in your back yard and you and every neighbor would be burning garbage in a hand dug fire pit on a daily basis.
Because almoat every road, every easement for a pipeline (whether it be for something like water or sewer for a municipality or a P3 or private venture for a private utility like petroleum or electric) is in existence indirectly or directly because of the power that ED gives for such purposes.
And pretty much 100% of every consumable you use on a daily basis uses one of the avenues listed above. And those support and promote capitaliam and free market trade.
Unfortunately it can be an ugly thing, and when looked at in a vacuum or a single instance, it is generally bad. But the thing is that it is not a mechanism that really can be looked at in a vacuum or for a single solitary case, because you would not be looking at the big picture.
And from my limited experience, ED is not something the overwhelming majority of people - including the utility owner - want to go through. It is really only used in rare cases, and that is after multiple offers are generally lobbed back and forth. Because it's cheaper to pay outright more than what the utility thinks the land is worth than to go through the court system via the ED process. I'd be willing to bet that in most cases where the courts and ED actually have to get used, the utility operator loses money on the land. There are several on here with experience, hopefully they can chime in.
I doubt seriously (don't know for sure, so not saying 100% because you seem like the type of guy that would go out and find the solitary instance it happened) that there are many, if any, cases where the utility operator walked up and went directly to the ED route. I'd be willing to be that by law you can't even do that - it was designed as a last resort tool, and should be used for that only. And should not be used so that a Wal Mart or new football stadium can be built, but strictly for legitimate public use projects (roads, power lines, pipelines, etc.).
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And should not be used so that a Wal Mart or new football stadium can be built, but strictly for legitimate public use projects (roads, power lines, pipelines, etc.).
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I would be very surprised if eminent domain was necessary for more than a small percentage of right of ways for highways, power lines, and pipelines. Sure, there are people out there who would not sell at any price, but most people will. I see no reason to force them to take a price less than what they consider fair.
Trigger06 said:
It might support capitalism, but it sure doesn't support FREE markets.
eric76 said:There was a guy in Seabrook who was awarded $1 for property worth at least a million.Stive said:
Public works like interstates and utilities are very different than the sports stadiums you've referenced. The first group should be allowed ED, the second should not, is a clear abuse of the system, and should be put down.
It's an extremely rare situation where people don't get fair market value. Not opportunistic hosing as you prefer, but FMV. And if you don't think you've gotten FMV, that's what the courts are for.
I may be wrong, I'm going to go out on a limb and bet you've never been through that process though. While frustrating and difficult at times, it usually comes out "fair", with fair being designated in the constitution (which you're likely a big fan of).
The judge denied his expert witness testimony as to the value of the property and than since he had no testimony as to its value, the judge ruled it was worth $1.
Finn Maccumhail said:eric76 said:There was a guy in Seabrook who was awarded $1 for property worth at least a million.Stive said:
Public works like interstates and utilities are very different than the sports stadiums you've referenced. The first group should be allowed ED, the second should not, is a clear abuse of the system, and should be put down.
It's an extremely rare situation where people don't get fair market value. Not opportunistic hosing as you prefer, but FMV. And if you don't think you've gotten FMV, that's what the courts are for.
I may be wrong, I'm going to go out on a limb and bet you've never been through that process though. While frustrating and difficult at times, it usually comes out "fair", with fair being designated in the constitution (which you're likely a big fan of).
The judge denied his expert witness testimony as to the value of the property and than since he had no testimony as to its value, the judge ruled it was worth $1.
Seriously dude, stop parroting this BS.
It's factually incorrect and you know it. The guy was awarded $1MM+ in ED proceedings which the court placed in escrow, the guy continued to fight ED when there was no way he could win which then exhausted the $1MM he was awarded and the courts found he had been given FMV there was no reason to award any more. That the guy burned through the $$$ in legal challenges is his own damn fault.
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Seureau fought for nearly three years to protect his property, in his family for more than 150 years, from the Port's power of eminent domain, only to lose his case in May of last year in the court of Harris County Civil Court Judge Lynn Bradshaw-Hull.
The judge ruled that having paid Seureau $1, the Port now owns the fee simple title to the property. Seureau was also ordered to give back the Port's previous payment of more than $1.9 million at 5.75 percent interest and pay the Port's court costs at the same interest rate.
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eric76
4:56p, 8/5/11
L
AG
Eminent domain is pure evil. It basically enables the government to take your property as long as they can come up with a pretext that fits into the guidelines of state law and sometimes even if it doesn't.
The worst I've ever heard of was in the Clear Lake are when a judge gave hundreds of acres of a valuable property to the Houston Port Authority for nearly nothing.
Sean98 said:
II was beginning to believe that Eric was more mfbarnes, just trolling us for fun. But a quick google search seems to indicate he's more Akita (was that the dude's name?) yelling at clouds and tearing down his own fence.
At least you are consistent, I'll give you that...
From a 2011 TA PostQuote:
eric76
4:56p, 8/5/11
L
AG
Eminent domain is pure evil. It basically enables the government to take your property as long as they can come up with a pretext that fits into the guidelines of state law and sometimes even if it doesn't.
The worst I've ever heard of was in the Clear Lake are when a judge gave hundreds of acres of a valuable property to the Houston Port Authority for nearly nothing.
...for what it's worth, I have wasted some time today looking through the old court records of the Grandfather/Father/Son Duo of Glenn, Glenn, and Glenn Seureau. Appears that they were actually pissed at ExxonMobil who signed a deal with them in the 60's and screwed them. They waited too long to sue Exxon (statute of limitations ran - they actually sued, but Exxon got it dropped) and took on the Port Authority which claimed governmental immunity. The son (Glenn Jr., named after Grandpa) settled and the Father continued the suit.
And how does this materially differ, other than in giving more detail, from what I said and have said in the past?Sean98 said:
II was beginning to believe that Eric was more mfbarnes, just trolling us for fun. But a quick google search seems to indicate he's more Akita (was that the dude's name?) yelling at clouds and tearing down his own fence.
At least you are consistent, I'll give you that...
From a 2011 TA PostQuote:
eric76
4:56p, 8/5/11
L
AG
Eminent domain is pure evil. It basically enables the government to take your property as long as they can come up with a pretext that fits into the guidelines of state law and sometimes even if it doesn't.
The worst I've ever heard of was in the Clear Lake are when a judge gave hundreds of acres of a valuable property to the Houston Port Authority for nearly nothing.
...for what it's worth, I have wasted some time today looking through the old court records of the Grandfather/Father/Son trio of Glenn, Glenn, and Glenn Seureau. Appears that they were actually pissed at ExxonMobil who signed a deal with them in the 60's and screwed them. They waited too long to sue Exxon (statute of limitations ran - they actually sued, but Exxon got it dropped) and took on the Port Authority which claimed governmental immunity. The son (Glenn Jr., named after Grandpa) settled and the Father continued the suit.
Buck Compton said:
I've been thinking about this topic a lot lately, as my family's land in the northeast Houston area is being taken by the government for development of the grand parkway. They seem like they're going to get a fair shake, but what's really a shame is the (and I kid you not) 17 lawyers that have contacted my elderly grandma trying to get her to sign something and let them represent her. That's what borders on harassment.
This....is just way, way out there. You are talking about something completely different and trying to force a round peg into a square hole. In all reality, not applicable to the discussion and is pretty much a text book example of using extreme examples in an effort to paint everybody on the other side as an extremist and completely out of touch with the actual reality of whatever is being discussed.wai3gotgoats said:
You folks that argue that a person who "holds out" for over fair market value is wrong and screwing the public good for his own greedy gain, should set an example for that person.
Put a For Sale sign in your yard, and/or on your business. Accept the highest offer, subtract from that the fair market value, and give the difference to the governmental agency of your choice. For the public good, earmark your donation for the next project that the benevolent "powers that be" deem beneficent to the public good.
Start a movement of benefactors of the public good, which will surely show those of us who seek liberty, private property rights, and government that protects the individual against the powerful and advantaged, the error of our greedy ways.
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I've been thinking about this topic a lot lately, as my family's land in the northeast Houston area is being taken by the government for development of the grand parkway.
They are not supposed to, but it happens everywhere you go and has through history. DIA is a great example - there is a reason that it is hell and gone from Denver. And that reason lies solely with the mayor of Denver at the time.aggiedent said:Quote:
I've been thinking about this topic a lot lately, as my family's land in the northeast Houston area is being taken by the government for development of the grand parkway.
Not to derail my own thread, but the Grand Parkway got me thinking of a separate issue of "public works projects" and the use of ED.
As many of you may know Bob Lanier took a dormant plan for the Grand Parkway and brought it back to life in the 1980's and 1990's. So sure that he would get the project done, he purchased swaths of land along the proposed route. Although he died in 2014, his relatives are reaping the financial benefits of selling the land to developers.
How does the forum feel about politicians benefitting financially from "public work projects" in this manner?