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CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

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Constitution & Governance The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation
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Page 1: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Constitution & Governance

The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation

Page 2: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Defines the fundamental law of the federal government

• Sets forth three branches of government

• Outlines their respective jurisdictions

• Outlines basic rights of citizens

• Outlines basic relationship between federal government and the states

Page 3: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• It is the oldest written national constitution currently in

effect

• Essential principle:

• Government must be defined by Rule of Law

Page 4: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• The Constitution’s precursor:

• Articles of Confederation

• Ratified in 1781

• Guarded independence of the states

• Did not provide for a federal chief executive or a judicial system

• Concerned with limiting the powers of the federal government over the states

Page 5: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Constitution was drafted in 1787

• Started as an amendment to the Articles of Confederation

• Ended up as a complete rewrite

• By 1788 nine states had ratified the Constitution

• Ratification in most (including the remaining) states depended upon the adoption of the Bill of Rights

• Bill of Rights:• First ten amendments to the Constitution

Page 6: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• A set of general principles

• Statutes and codes emerge from these principles

• These principles are

• Concise and precise• Concise and vague

• Congress, the Courts and the Executive have been able to re-adapt and interpret the vagaries over time

Page 7: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Interpretation of constitutional intent based on

• Custom (common law)

• Precedent (past decisions)

• Usage (new interpretation)

Page 8: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Organization of the Federal Government

• Laid out in Articles I – VII• Vests all law-making powers in Congress

• Raising taxes• Borrowing money• Regulating interstate commerce

• Vests executive power to president• Chief Executive Officer• Commander-in-Chief• Treaty-making Power• Power of Appointment

Page 9: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Organization of the Federal Government (cont.)

• Vests Judicial Power in the Courts• Supreme Court as final court of appeals

• Remainder of Articles defines relations between the federal government & states, among the states, and rights of citizens in states

Page 10: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Enumerated Powers

• The powers granted to the federal government that are explicitly enumerated in the constitution

• This grant of power is implicit in the structure of the constitution, but made very plain in the 10th Amendment

• Residual Powers• Those powers not granted to the feds fall to the states

Page 11: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Residual Powers (cont.)

• Limitations to states• Nothing mandated by state laws can nullify powers granted to feds by

constitution

• “Elastic Clause”• Congress has the power to make all laws necessary and proper to allow

the federal government to carry out its responsibilities mandated by the constitution

Page 12: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• “Delegated” Powers

• Powers delegated by the states to localities (counties, cities, towns)• Power is delegated• Authority and responsibility remain with states

• Home Rule vs. Dillon’s Rule• Dillon’s Rule – Localities have only those powers allowed by states• Home Rule – Localities have more autonomy within guidelines

Page 13: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Constitution and Land Use Regulation

• The power to regulate land is (mostly) a residual power

• Not explicitly granted to Feds

• Falls to states

• States legislate within the limits of the constitutions of Fed and States

• Typically these powers are delegated to localities

• Feds have suggested these powers to states (SCPA, SSZEA)

Page 14: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Police Powers

• The ability of the state to act on behalf of the public

• The ultimate rationale: to protect the public’s health, safety and general welfare

• “The public control over the private use of property”

Page 15: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Eminent Domain Powers

• Expropriation (legal), not Confiscation (illegal = “Taking”)

• The ability to force the transfer of ownership from private to public possession

• The power of the sovereign (i.e., the State) to reassert original ownership of land

Page 16: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Constitutional limitations / protections of land use

regulation

• Fifth Amendment• Due process clause

• [no person shall] be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law

• Procedural vs. Substantive Due Process

• Takings clause• nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation• Eminent Domain vs. Police Powers

Page 17: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Fourteenth Amendment

• Due Process• … nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without

due process of law

• Equal Protection• … nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the

laws

Page 18: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• First Amendment

• Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

• Religious Institutions/Structures• Adult-Oriented Establishments• Commercial Speech

Page 19: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

The Constitution• Constitutional Challenges

• On its face• As applied

Page 20: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Federal Judiciary• Federal District Courts

• 95 in 50 States

• Federal Courts of Appeal• 13

• U.S. Supreme Court• 1

• Important for planning, because many planning disputes ultimately involve constitutional questions

Page 21: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Federal Judiciary• Federal District Court

• Trial court of the federal system• Where legal action originates• First legal judgment is reached here• Criminal and civil matters

Page 22: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Federal Judiciary• U.S. Court of Appeal

• Losing party in District Court has right of appeal• Appeal must involve a claim of legal error• Case is not retried• The decision of the lower court is reviewed to determine if error

was indeed made

Page 23: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Federal Judiciary• Supreme Court

• Has “original jurisdiction”• Cases affecting ambassadors, ministers, consuls• Disputes between states• Disputes between states and federal government

• Has appellate jurisdiction• Last court of appeal• Writ of error (old custom); writ of certiorari (current)• Reviews Appellate court decisions• Reviews State Supreme Court decisions

Page 24: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

State Judiciary• Similar in process to federal system

• Trial court• Appellate courts• Supreme court

• Jurisdiction to decide on state laws, statutes and state constitutionality

• A legal process does not have to remain strictly in the federal or the state system. Can “jump tracks”

Page 25: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Constitutionality of a Federal Law• It must be enacted according to proper procedure• It must be authorized by either

• The explicit text of the Constitution• The powers reasonably implied by the Constitution• The residuum of inherent powers on which government can call

upon to preserve the polity

• It must not violate• And of the prohibitions explicitly called for in the Constitution• Any of the rights properly implied by the Constitution

Page 26: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Constitutionality of a State Law

Page 27: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Standard of Judicial Attitudes• Regulations are presumed to be constitutional

• Party attacking regulation has burden• Benefit of doubt given to regulators

• Presumption holds under substantive due process and economic equal protection issues

• Presumption is reversed for racially based equal protection issues

Page 28: CONSTITUTION & GOVERNANCE The Power and Responsibilities of Land Use Regulation.

Basic Requirements for Disputes• Standing

• Are you a “damaged” party (physical, economic)?

• Ripeness• Have you exhausted all administrative remedies?• (similar to standing) Have you been hurt yet by the decision;

Has the decision been made yet?

• Mootness• Are you actually being harmed, or is the harm theoretical?• Has the issue been resolved, and you are pursuing a remedy

based on principle?


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