The Bundy
stand-off in Nevada has induced several people to ask me about the extent to
which the federal government can own land, at least under the Constitution’s
intended meaning. As it happens, in 2005 I studied the issue in depth, and
published the following article: Federal Land Retention and the
Constitution’s Property Clause: The Original Understanding, 76 U. Colo. L. Rev. 327 (2005).
In a nutshell,
here’s what I found:(1) Most commentators on the issue have staked out one of two polar positions. One position, which is current U.S. Supreme Court doctrine, is that the federal government may acquire and own any land it wishes for any governmental purpose, not just for its enumerated powers. The other polar position is that the federal government may own land only for the purposes enumerated in the Enclave Clause (the national capital and “Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings”) and that the “equal footing doctrine” requires that all other federal land within a prospective state be handed over the state government upon statehood.
(2) In fact,
both polar positions are false—and very clearly so. This shines
through when you study the Constitution’s text, meaning, and background. By
“background,” I mean its drafting history, the ratification debates, 18th
century law, and so forth. However the constitutional text alone should be
sufficient to cast both polar claims into doubt. The text of the Constitution
grants the federal government no plenary power to hold land, only to dispose. A
general power to hold is just not in there. The second polar position is also
contradicted by the text: The equal footing doctrine is not there either. (It
was a feature of certain pre-constitutional documents, such as
the Northwest Ordinance.)
(3) The
Constitution grants the federal government authority to acquire real estate and
other property to carry out any enumerated purpose, either in the exercise of a
core power (such as “maintain a Navy”) or through the implied powers
memorialized in the Necessary and Proper Clause. Thus, Congress may acquire
land to build “post Roads” (limited access highways), house tax collectors, and
build lighthouses under the Commerce Power.
(4) Further,
the Constitution’s Treaty Power authorizes the federal government to acquire
territory.
(5) However,
land acquired—through, for example, the Treaty Power—may be held only for
enumerated purposes. Land not needed for such purposes must be disposed of
within a reasonable time. The federal government should have disposed of BLM
grazing land long ago.
(6) In fact,
for the federal government to own a large share of American real estate
(currently about 28 percent) is directly contrary to certain values the
Constitution was designed to further.
(7) “Disposal”
does not require handing real estate over to state government. On the contrary,
in many situations doing so would conflict with federal officials’ duties of
trust. In each instance, disposal should be effectuated so as to further the
general welfare. In the case of some parcels, it may mean transferring to state
government. But it may also require selling to the highest bidder, or, in the
case of environmentally sensitive lands, transferring to perpetual
environmental trusts, as is commonly done in England.
(8) The Enclave
Clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 17) is really more about governmental
jurisdiction than ownership. The federal government can have an enclave in
which much of the territory is titled to private parties—as is true of
Washington, D.C. It’s just that in an enclave, federal rather than statejurisdiction is
supreme. Enclaves may be held only for enumerated purposes (as signaled by the
use of the 18th century legal term “needful”). State consent to creation of an
enclave is required, and consent can be conditional upon the federal government
honoring particular terms.
9) The Enclave
Clause was sold to the ratifying public on the basis that enclaves would be
relatively small. Holding massive tracts of undeveloped land (such as in
Yosemite National Park, nearly 750,000 acres) as enclaves is not what the
Founders had in mind.
(10) This is
signaled by the Constitution’s use of the word “Building.” In the 18th century,
the term did not have to mean an enclosed space, but it did have to refer to a
fabricated construction of some kind, since as a dockyard or (in modern terms)
an airport runway.
(11) But not
every parcel of federal land need be an enclave: In fact, most are not and
should not be. Non-enclave land owned by the federal government is held under
the Property Clause (Article IV, Section 3, Clause 2), and should be held only
for enumerated purposes. Grazing, for example, is not an enumerated purpose.
(12)
Non-enclave federal property within states is subject to state law. Contrary to
current Supreme Court doctrine, when the federal government owns non-enclave
land, the federal government usually should be treated like any other
landowner, so long as the state respects the discharge of legitimate federal
functions.
Source:http://tenthamendmentcenter.com/2014/04/25/ownership-of-federal-land-answers-suggested-by-the-bundy-standoff/#.U2LoJLrD8qd
Comments
States should reclaim all land from federal
government control. This should involve
repealing the State law that authorized the State to allow federal departments
to administer the land. This may require
a new law declaring State sovereignty over land. States would need to hire staff to maintain
reservoirs and parkland.Then a title history should be done to determine who owned the land prior to federal occupancy. Rightful private owners whose relatives did not gift the land to the state should be able to lay claim.
After the dust settles, the State would own
the balance of the land and should be able to sell it to be put into productive
use.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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