Posted by Eugene Volokh:
"The American Judiciary Has Never Taken a Very Broad View of Property Rights":
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1246994985


   Ilya [1]argues that this [2]statement of mine "goes too far," and says
   that "prior to the triumph of statist judicial and economic ideology
   during the New Deal period, American courts at both the state and
   federal level provided far stronger protection for property rights
   than they do today." There's much in Ilya's post with which I agree;
   certainly, to quote his post title, "judicial protection for property
   rights really did decline" starting with the New Deal, and hasn't
   substantially rebounded.

   But it still seems to me that the protection offered property rights
   during that era was not "very broad," though it was broader than it is
   now. To give some examples: The Lochner-era Court upheld zoning laws.
   It upheld billboard bans. It upheld alcohol bans (even before the
   Eighteenth Amendment) and bans on lotteries. It upheld bans on pool
   halls. Though it struck down maximum hours laws generally, it upheld
   them for women, surely a restriction on liberty of contract (even
   setting aside the equal-treatment-for-women arguments that obviously
   wouldn't have been appealing then). Though it struck down price
   controls and other highly burdensome economic regulations in various
   contexts, it also upheld rent controls, usury laws, time-and-half
   overtime laws, and other regulations. Among other things, the notion
   of a police power to regulate conduct and the use of property in order
   to protect the public's health, morals, safety, and welfare was often
   read quite broadly, which kept the protection of property rights from
   being very broad.

   As Ilya points out, some state courts at times provided more
   protections to property, contract, and general liberty of conduct. For
   instance, some state courts did strike down alcohol bans. But the
   dominant trend in state courts, to my knowledge, was in favor of
   upholding alcohol bans. And I don't think that the bulk of state
   courts provided "very broad" protection to property rights during that
   era, even if some sometimes provided somewhat more than the Supreme
   Court did.

   Finally, I agree with Ilya that "nineteenth and early twentieth
   century courts generally protected property rights as much or more
   strongly than other constitutional rights." But this doesn't mean
   courts took a very broad view of property rights, since they generally
   didn't take a very broad view of other rights -- they certainly didn't
   take such a broad view of free speech rights, for instance (as Ilya
   agrees). My point was, and is, simply that property rights protections
   were not "very broad" at the time -- not broad enough to secure a
   right to burn a flag that one owns (the example that triggered the
   post), and generally speaking not very broad in many other ways as
   well.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1246952705
   2. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_05-2009_07_11.shtml#1246948821

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