Justice O'Connor's Parting Dissents Highlighted the Twin Perils of Local Tyranny and Federal Overreach
The late Supreme Court justice eloquently defended property rights and state autonomy.

The month before Justice Sandra Day O'Connor announced her retirement in 2005, she dissented from Supreme Court decisions in two cases that illustrated the twin perils of local tyranny and federal overreach. O'Connor, who was appointed to the Court by Ronald Reagan in 1981 and died last Friday at 93, eloquently explained why property rights are especially important for people with little political influence and how state autonomy allows policy experiments that promote progressive as well as conservative goals.
In Kelo v. New London, nine owners of homes in that Connecticut city challenged the use of eminent domain to take their property in the name of economic development. The five-justice majority agreed with the city that transferring property from one private owner to another can qualify as "public use" under the Fifth Amendment's Takings Clause when it is expected to create jobs and boost tax revenue.
O'Connor's dissent began with a 1798 quote from Justice Samuel Chase, who cited "a law that takes property from A. and gives it to B." as an example of legislation that is "contrary to the great first principles of the social compact." Because the majority "abandons this long-held, basic limitation on government power," O'Connor warned, "all private property is now vulnerable to being taken and transferred to another private owner" who plans to "use it in a way that the legislature deems more beneficial to the public."
As a result, "the specter of condemnation hangs over all property," O'Connor wrote. "Nothing is to prevent the State from replacing any Motel 6 with a Ritz-Carlton, any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory." She added that "the beneficiaries are likely to be those citizens with disproportionate influence and power in the political process."
While Kelo involved a constitutional limit on local power, Gonzales v. Raich involved a fundamental constraint on the federal government: It cannot exceed the powers specifically enumerated in the Constitution. Two Californians, Angel Raich and Diane Monson, argued that Congress had done that by purporting to criminalize their medical use of homegrown marijuana, which was allowed by state law but forbidden by the federal Controlled Substances Act.
Although Raich and Monson's conduct was neither interstate nor commercial, the six justices in the majority nevertheless held that it could be reached under the power to regulate interstate commerce. "If the Court always defers to Congress as it does today," O'Connor wrote in her dissent, "little may be left to the notion of enumerated powers."
That principle, O'Connor noted, is crucial to protecting "historic spheres of state sovereignty from excessive federal encroachment" and preserving "the distribution of power fundamental to our federalist system of government." That system, she emphasized, "promotes innovation" by allowing states to experiment with new policies that might prove worthy of emulation.
Although O'Connor was on the losing side in both of those cases, her positions were partly vindicated by subsequent political developments. The Kelo decision inspired many states to enact laws aimed at discouraging eminent domain abuse, and California's experiment in marijuana reform has spread to three dozen states, most of which allow recreational as well as medical use.
Since 2014, congressional spending riders have barred the Justice Department from interfering with the implementation of state medical marijuana laws. And in practice, the department, under both Democratic and Republican administrations, also has tolerated state-licensed businesses that serve recreational consumers.
Still, the conflict between state and federal law at the center of Raich persists two decades later, continuing to handicap marijuana businesses by subjecting them to punitive taxation and limiting their access to financial services. And as George Mason law professor Ilya Somin notes, "Many states still have few constraints on eminent domain abuse."
Respect for federalism and property rights, in short, remains largely aspirational. But O'Connor's parting dissents at least pointed us in the right direction by explaining why these putatively conservative principles deserve a defense across the political spectrum.
© Copyright 2023 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Understatement of the day (it's only 00:12, the day is young).
Great
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning 16,000 US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply. Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome9.com
FYTW shall be the whole of the law.
Come on Sandy baby, loosen up. You’re too tight
- John Riggins to Sandra Day O’Conner
Classic. I came here for that quote and Chumby delivered. Thanks partner!
Didn't Riggo fall asleep under the table at this shindig or was that another time?
I believe he did take a Costanza nap at that event. I think some years later, he ran into SDO at an event and gave her a dozen roses.
Even Thomas gets one right occasionally.
This article by Sullum, I appreciated.
Maybe Raich has to be revisited.
The scariest thing about Gonzales v. Raich is what the three dissenting justices had in common, and the other six lacked: Ginsburg, O'Connor, and Thomas had each experienced cancer treatment, either themselves or through a close family member. They were from the far left, center, and far right of the court, as were the six justices that upheld the marijuana laws, but ideology didn't matter one bit, only whether they had the life experience to sympathize with a cancer patient.
These decisions and the Justice’s dissents also highlight the hodge podge that Constitutional law has become over the last two centuries and more. After a century and, especially, the last several decades of Supreme Court decisions including the dereliction of the Court by refusing to hear key appeals in crucial cases, there is little of the original clearly defined Constitutional limitation on Federal power left. Whatever you think of the Fourteenth Amendment, it clearly extended the protection of the Bill of Rights to citizens of the several states, including the “takings” clause, although the language unfortunately only prevents uncompensated takings. Meanwhile legislation from the bench for the purpose of social engineering experiments has left the Tenth Amendment in tatters and even encroached on the First and Second Amendments. Congressional abandonment of the English language pretending to redefine interstate commerce and expansion of the Administrative State with a dozen new Departments and thousands of new unlegislated regulations has gone unchallenged by the Supremes. America is teetering on the edge of the precipice while most of the Supreme Court Justices play word games with hundreds of highly questionable legalisms thousands of pages of logically tortured excuses to accomplish thinly veiled social goals. And as for “due process” these days … don’t make me laugh!
Related on Kelo: Eminent Domain in republican Iowa. The farm owners do not want to absorb the risk of a leak on their property. Republican establishment shrugs. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/ramaswamy-challenges-iowa-governor-on-use-of-eminent-domain-for-co2-pipelines/ar-AA1kRPQb
Never forget Wickard v. Fillburn, the most destructive ruling against property rights - and freedom in general - that the court ever issued and is still in effect today.
Farm Bill- - Interesting as it relates to the carbon capture pipelines being eminent domain-Ed in Iowa. If your livelihood involves one penny from the feds, you don’t own your land, it’s an illusion. If your local government receives one penny from the feds (which they all do) the feds are going to zone in some public housing projects or withhold the bribes.