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Eminent Domain - History

property compensation public power

The concept of eminent domain is not new. It has existed since biblical times, when King Ahab of Samaria offered Naboth compensation for Naboth's vineyard. In 1789, France officially recognized a property owner's right to compensation for taken property, in the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which reads, "Property being an inviolable and sacred right no one can be deprived of it, unless the public necessity plainly demands it, and upon condition of a just and previous indemnity."

Shortly after the French declaration, the United States acknowledged eminent domain in the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, which states, "… nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation."

The Fifth Amendment grants the federal government the right to exercise its power of eminent domain, and the DUE PROCESS CLAUSE of the FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT makes the federal guarantee of just compensation applicable to the states. State governments derive the power to initiate condemnation proceedings from their state constitutions, except North Carolina, which gains its power through statute. The constitutional and statutory provisions require federal, state, and local governments and subdivisions of government to pay an owner for property taken for public use at the time the property is taken.

The power of eminent domain was created to authorize the government or the condemning authority, called the condemnor, to conduct a compulsory sale of property for the common welfare, such as health or safety. Just compensation is required, in order to ease the financial burden incurred by the property owner for the benefit of the public.

Eminent Domain - Elements Of Eminent Domain [next]

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about 1 year ago

Eminent Domain - History

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about 1 year ago

I am writing a paper on eminent domain for American Legal History. The article was helpful for 'key words' but would have been more helpful and credible if you had cited your sources. Other than to another web site that is. The only reference I found to your Historical account, was in a 1986 South Carolina case, 344 S.E.2d 857, otherwise it does not exist in any of the legal searches or historical material.