- •Contents
- •Table of Cases
- •List of Contributors
- •Introduction
- •1. Bottom-Up Theories
- •2. The Humean Approach
- •1. Introduction
- •2. The Moral Right to Labour Productively
- •2.1 The intellectual context for Lockean rights
- •2.2. Labour as a moral right
- •3. Property Acquisition in Labour Theory
- •3.1 Extending labour from the person to things
- •3.2 The social character of productive appropriation
- •3.3 Productive use as a limit on labour
- •3.4 The communicative function of productive labour
- •4. Control Rights in Labour Theory
- •5. Accession in Labour Theory
- •6. Lost Opportunities to Capture in Doctrine
- •7. Acquisition in Doctrine
- •7.1 The basic test for capture
- •7.2 Constructive capture
- •7.3 Multiple proprietary claims
- •8. Accession Policy and Ratione Soli Doctrine
- •9. On the Relation between Legal Property and Moral Rights to Labour
- •10. Conclusion
- •3: Property and Necessity
- •1. Some Conceptual Preliminaries
- •2. Winstanley’s Challenge
- •3. Grotius on Property and Necessity
- •4. Three Important Objections
- •5. Saving Property and Public Necessity
- •6. Is the Right of Necessity a Property Right?
- •4: Private Property and Public Welfare
- •1. The Fifth Amendment Paradox
- •2. Why Acquisition?
- •3.1 Physical possession
- •3.3 Exchange
- •4. Property in Civil Society
- •4.1 The origin of welfare entitlements
- •4.2 Civil society as a bifurcated entity
- •5. Property in the Political Community
- •5.1 Property in the totalitarian state
- •5.2 Property in the dialogical state
- •6. Conclusion
- •5: Average Reciprocity of Advantage
- •1. Introduction
- •2. Background
- •2.1 Judicial opinions
- •2.2 Academic commentators
- •3. Sources of Average Reciprocity of Advantage
- •4. The Limits of ‘In-Kind’ Compensation
- •4.1 General reciprocity
- •4.2 Probabilistic compensation
- •4.3 Basic structural problems
- •5. Reciprocity and Respect
- •5.1 Accepting the conclusion
- •5.2 Rejecting the premisses
- •5.3 Partial, ‘objective’ compensation
- •6. Conclusion
- •1. Introduction
- •2. Between Promise and Detachment
- •2.1 The moral principle
- •2.2 The value of LPA
- •3. Legal Enforcement
- •3.1. Encouraging pre-contractual Investment
- •3.2 Building up trust: the role of LPA
- •4. Proprietary Estoppel
- •4.1 Varieties of PE
- •a) Bargain
- •b) Gifts
- •4.2 The remedy
- •5. Conclusion
- •7: Possession and Use
- •1. Possession
- •2. The Priority of Exclusion
- •3. Bringing Actual Use Back In
- •4. Conclusion
- •8: Possession and the Distractions of Philosophy
- •1. Introduction: The Puzzle
- •3. Possession and Title
- •4. The Right of Possession and its Omnilateral Structure
- •5. Possession and the Incidents of Ownership
- •6. A Principled Practice of Property?
- •7. Conclusion
- •9: The Relativity of Title and Causa Possessionis
- •2. Privity, Estoppel, and Rights to Possess outside of Ownership
- •2.1 A public law problem?
- •2.2 Privity: the missing link between property and person
- •2.3 Let the chips fall where they may
- •3. Conclusion
- •1. Introduction
- •2. Setting the Limits of Property Rights
- •2.1 Where A has an undoubted property right
- •a) The ‘right to exclude’
- •b) The ‘right to use’
- •i. Chattels
- •ii. Land
- •c) Conclusion
- •2.2 Determining if B’s right counts as a property right
- •a) Physical things
- •b) Non-physical things
- •c) Equitable property rights
- •3. Conclusion
- •11: On the Very Idea of Transmissible Rights
- •1. Title and Succession
- •2. The Argument against Transfer or Transmissibility Stated: The Hohfeldian3 Individuation Argument
- •3. Why the Hohfeldian Individuation Argument is Wrong
- •4. Justifying Transmissible Rights
- •4.1 The power to authorize what would otherwise be a battery
- •4.2 The right to immediate, exclusive possession of property
- •4.3 The power to license and to give property away
- •4.4 The power to sell or transfer pursuant to an agreement
- •4.5 The liability to execution
- •5. A Last Word on Conventions and Social Contexts
- •12: Psychologies of Property (and Why Property is not a Hawk/Dove Game)
- •1. The Inside Perspective
- •1.1 Identity formation
- •1.2 Identity fashioning
- •1.3 Refuge
- •1.4 Empowerment
- •1.5. Generosity
- •1.6 Economic incentives
- •1.7 An admonitory postscript
- •2. The Outside Perspective
- •2.1. The picture from in rem
- •2.2 Hawks and Doves
- •2.3 The virtues of non-ownership
- •13: Property and Disagreement
- •1. Disagreements Substantive and Verbal
- •1.1 Verbal disagreements
- •1.2 Disagreement that is partly substantive and partly verbal
- •a) Clarifying the disagreement
- •b) The analysis of property
- •c) The metaphysics of property
- •d) What about W2 and W3?
- •3. A Minor Disagreement that is both Substantive and Conceptual
- •4. Penner Redux: A Major Disagreement that is both Substantive and Conceptual
- •4.1 Reservations: of Wittgenstein and Dworkin
- •4.2 Individuation and incomplete understanding
- •5. The Nature of Property
- •5.2 Smith and the architecture of property
- •6. Conclusion
- •Appendix
- •14: Emergent Property
- •1. Intensions and Conceptualism in Property Law
- •2. Formalism versus Contextualism
- •3. Functionalism
- •4. Holism and Emergence
- •5. An Application to in Rem Rights and Duties
- •6. Conclusion
- •References
- •Index
Private Property and Public Welfare |
97 |
6. Conclusion
For Hegel, natural right consists in the ensemble of instances of mutual recognition organized within the body of the mutual recognition state. Private property exists because it is one of these instances; it exists subject to limitation because it is only one. And the same may be said for the rulers’ duty to promote the welfare of those duty-bound to obey them. That idea of reciprocal limitation within a whole explains the otherwise incomprehensible paradox of the Fifth Amendment: a state authority to expropriate for ordinary public ends subject to an unqualified duty to provide just compensation to the owner. It also shows why a liberal should prefer the constitutional guarantee of compensation understood by Hegel to the presumptive right explained by Kant. The separate end-status of the individual person is fulfilled, not in the general-will state in whose sovereignty the individual can stand only as a citizen, but in the dialogical state, within which the individual can stand both as a citizen and an owner.
The argument for a constitutional duty to compensate for a public expropriation goes with a certain understanding of what an expropriation is. It is not any sort of discriminatory harm to economic interests nor does it depend on a taking’s imposing a financial burden without promising a compensatory benefit. Someone may be expropriated even if he would end up no worse off in welfare terms. Setting aside citizen obligations (to pay taxes, not to harm common goods), an expropriation is an interference with a thing’s subjection to the control, non-nuisance use, and alienating power of someone the validation scale identifies as its relative or absolute owner. So, any legal limitation on exclusive possession, socially ordinary use, or the freedom to alienate non-harmful things is an expropriation unless attached to something allotted from the common store.
It is doubtful, finally, whether any non-Hegelian conception of natural right can resolve the Fifth Amendment paradox. If natural right is equated with an unbounded liberty, then there is, as Hobbes taught, no natural right to own capable of limiting the sovereign. As the origin of the distinction between mine and thine, sovereignty is unlimited by the concept ‘mine’; hence it does no wrong in taking without compensating, not even presumptively.47 If, as Kant thought, there is a natural right to own but no natural, conclusive right to own anything in particular, then there is a presumptive but not absolute right to compensation for a public taking of one’s (peaceably acquired) particular holding. If, as Locke claimed, there is a conditional natural right to own the particular thing into which one has infused one’s labour, then, absent necessity, the state’s forcible taking of an acquisition meeting the condition is robbery with or without compensation. And if the basis of right is the common welfare, then one’s property is defined by the sum of the laws embodying distributive justice; and whether compensation is due for the suffering caused by a public taking depends on whether the benefits accruing to the ‘owner’
47 Hobbes 1651a, 83, 117.
98 |
Alan Brudner |
from the public project will offset his loss. Only if private property and the public welfare are particular instances of an encompassing idea requiring both can they coherently acknowledge each other as an unconditional limit. Thus, only dialogic community explains an authority to expropriate for the public welfare limited by a right of compensation indefeasible by the public welfare.
Though no other theory of natural right can reveal the Fifth Amendment’s takings clause as coherent, another line of thought can shed light on the puzzle it contains. A permission in the state forcibly to take someone’s holdings for the public welfare combined with an indefeasible duty to compensate the owner might be understood as reflecting the tension in a civil society built on morally selfsufficient atoms. I mean the tension between a public authority justified as actualizing the stateless person’s welfare-blind property rights, on the one hand, and the authority of a public welfare hostile to those rights, on the other. Thus a critical theory of atomism yields a critical theory of the takings clause. However, if explanations of legal doctrine that reveal it as coherent are superior to those that criticize it as incoherent, then the Hegelian explanation is better than the critical one. Moreover, viewing it so might change even the way we regard the takings clause from the standpoint of our historical situated-ness within civil society. If that clause belongs to the law of a well-ordered political community, then there is no reason to view it merely as a symptom of the present disorder. We might just as well see the takings clause as the glinting of the well-ordered community in the present disorder.