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Federal Court Rules Takings Clause May Require Compensation when Police Destroy an Innocent Person's Home in Process of Pursuing a Suspect
The decision is at odds with rulings by some other federal courts, and could end up setting an important precedent.

On November 18, a federal district court issued a ruling indicating that the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment may require the government to pay compensation in a case where a police SWAT team destroyed an innocent person's home in the process of pursuing a criminal suspect. As Judge Amos Mazzant recognizes in his opinion in Baker v. McKinney, this ruling is at odds with decisions in similar cases by some other federal courts, which hold that there cannot be takings liability in such cases because of the "police power" exception to the Takings Clause. The issue here is an extremely important one, one on which existing jurisprudence is far from a model of clarity. As the case goes forward, it might end up setting a significant precedent.
Reason's Bill Binion has a helpful summary of the disturbing facts of the case:
In July 2020, Wesley Little—who Vicki Baker had terminated as her handyman about a year and a half prior—arrived at Baker's home in McKinney, Texas. Baker's daughter answered. Recognizing him from news reports that he was wanted for the abduction of a 15-year-old girl, she left the premises and called the police.
SWAT agents soon arrived. They set off explosives to open the garage entryway, detonated tear gas grenades inside the building, ran over Baker's fence with an armored vehicle, and ripped off her front door, despite being given a garage door opener, a code to the back gate, and a key to the home. The house was unlivable when they were through….
"In its pursuit of the fugitive and pursuant to its police powers, Baker alleges the City caused significant economic damage—over $50,000—to her home. Then, the City refused to compensate her for the damage," writes Judge Amos L. Mazzant III of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas…..
Baker will likely still have to overcome an appeal from the city. But if her suit meets a more fortunate fate, she may recuperate some of the financial costs incurred as she battles stage 3 cancer and tries to leave the state for retirement. Yet some things will not be replaceable. An antique doll collection was damaged by tear gas, for example. Worse yet, her daughter's dog was left deaf and blind.
"I've lost everything," Baker told Reason last March. "I've lost my chance to sell my house. I've lost my chance to retire without fear of how I'm going to make my regular bills."
Some of these aggressive tactics may have been understandable, given that Little was holding a 15-year-old girl against her will, and that he was believed to be armed. But, as Judge Mazzant recounts in his ruling, by the time the SWAT team "forcefully entered
the home by breaking down both the front and garage door and running over the backyard fence with a tank-like vehicle known as a BearCat," Little had already released the girl unharmed. When the police entered the house, they found he had taken his own life.
The Fifth Amendment says the government must pay "just compensation" whenever it takes private property for public use. Courts have long held that deliberate destruction of private property by government officials counts as a taking. As far back as 1872, the Supreme Court ruled that "where real estate is actually invaded by superinduced additions of water, earth, sand, or other material . . . so as to effectually destroy or impair its usefulness, it is a taking, within the meaning of the Constitution." You don't have to be a takings scholar to see that Vicki Baker's house was "effectually destroy[ed] or impair[ed] [in] its usefulness," and that the police deliberately caused the damage.
However, courts have also long held that at least some exercises of the "police power" (government's authority to protect public health and safety) are exempt from takings liability. In the 2019 case of Lech v. Jackson, the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit used the police power theory to deny takings liability in a situation remarkably similar to this one. There, too, the police essentially destroyed an innocent family's house in the process of trying to apprehend a suspect (in that instance, a suspected shoplifter).
Judge Mazzant's opinion suggests - correctly, in my view - that the reasoning of Lech is wrong, and that it isn't binding on his court (which is in the Fifth Circuit, not the Tenth):
The City asks this Court to adopt what would constitute a per se rule—that destruction to private property resulting from the exercise of valid police power cannot constitute a Fifth Amendment Taking. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Fifth Circuit have directly found a taking that requires just compensation when destruction of property results from the exercise of valid police power. The City correctly points out that other circuits have foreclosed recovery under similar circumstances. See Manitowoc Cty., 635 F.3d 331; Lech, 791 F. App'x. 711; AmeriSource Corp., 525 F.3d 1149.
However, both the Fifth Circuit and the Supreme Court have suggested such action could amount to a taking. In John Corp. v. City of Houston, the Fifth Circuit asserted that "a distinction between the use of police powers and of eminent domain power . . . cannot carry the day" when assessing whether a taking has occurred. 214 F.3d at 578–79. Further "[t]he Supreme Court's entire 'regulatory takings' law is premised on the notion that a city's exercise of its police powers can go too far, and if it does, there has been a taking." Id.(citing Penn. Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415 (1922)). In Lucas v. S.C. Coastal Council, the Supreme Court opined that if "the uses of private property were subject to unbridled, uncompensated qualification under the police power, the natural tendency of human nature would be to extend the qualification more and more until at last private property disappeared." 505 U.S. 1003, 1014 (1992)….
The Court finds the Fifth Circuit and Supreme Court reasoning persuasive, particularly at this stage of litigation where it construes allegations in the light most favorable to Baker. At the motion to dismiss stage, it would be imprudent to foreclose Baker's ability to recover based on the shaky reasoning recited in non-binding cases from other circuits—especially when both the Fifth Circuit and the Supreme Court have alluded that a taking could result from destructive police power. Because Baker has plausibly alleged the City's destruction of her home resulting from the exercise of its police power could amount to a taking, the Court continues its takings analysis….
While the Court acknowledges that governmental bodies are not "liable under the Just Compensation Clause to property owners every time policemen break down the doors of buildings to foil burglars thought to be inside[,]" Nat'l Bd. of Young Men's Christian Ass'ns v. United States, 395 U.S. 85, 92 (1969) (emphasis added), Baker has alleged damage to her private property—and the City's refusal to compensate for such damage—that plausibly amounts to a Fifth Amendment violation.
I think Judge Mazzant is absolutely right that the police power does not create a blank-check exemption from takings liability. Nor is there a blank check for law-enforcement operations specifically. I outlined some of the reasons why in my critique of the Lech decision and in an amicus brief in which the Cato Institute and I unsuccessfully urged the Supreme Court to review and overrule Lech. Among other things, I pointed out that the Takings Clause was enacted in the first place in part as a reaction against the depredations of British troops during the colonial era and Revolutionary War. Many of these seizures and occupations of property were, of course, undertaken for the purpose of enforcing various British laws against recalcitrant colonists.
More recently, in December 2019, the Court of Federal Claims ruled that the police power exception does not foreclose takings liability in a case where the Army Corps of Engineers deliberately flooded large parts of Houston in order to prevent potentially worse flooding elsewhere during Hurricane Harvey in 2017.
Judge Mazzant's ruling doesn't definitively resolve the case. It merely rejects the City's motion to dismiss, allowing Baker to move forward with her claim. The decision also doesn't establish a clear standard for when destructive law-enforcement operations qualify as takings. For the moment, the court only rejects the theory (endorsed in cases like Lech) that such operations enjoy a virtually categorical exemption.
Even this preliminary ruling is likely to be appealed. Thus, this ruling is just the beginning of what may be a prolonged legal battle. But it's a legal battle that bears watching. The status of the police power exemption to takings is a major issue for a wide range of government policies, including deliberate flooding of private land (as in the Houston case), Covid-19 shutdowns, and (as in this case) law enforcement operations.
Finally, it's worth noting that, regardless of the legal issues, a just government would accept that it has a moral obligation to pay compensation in cases like this one. After all, its agents have deliberately inflicted enormous harm on an innocent homeowner. Even if they do so for a good purpose (catching a dangerous criminal), basic justice and fairness demand that the cost be borne by the general public who benefit from his capture, not arbitrarily concentrated on one person, who did no wrong.
Sadly, however, governments are often blind to the demands of justice. That's one of the reasons why we need constitutional rights.
NOTE: The plaintiff in this case is represented by the Institute for Justice, a public interest law firm with which I have longstanding connections, including working there as a summer clerk when I was in law school, and writing multiple pro bono amicus briefs on their behalf. I do not, however, have any involvement in the present case. IJ has issued a statement on Judge Mazzant's ruling, available here.
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"Even this preliminary ruling is likely to be appealed."
Could the defendants even appeal it? It looks like the ruling was just a denial of a motion to dismiss, not a denial of qualified immunity.
This is a lawsuit against the city and/or police department, not individual officers. Qualified immunity does not apply.
Exactly. Hence why there is no denial of QI to appeal under the collateral order doctrine. I guess the city could move for certification of an interlocutory appeal, but seems like a longshot.
The decision also doesn't establish a clear standard for when destructive law-enforcement operations qualify as takings.
So....where is that line where it becomes 'a taking'? What is the principle to use?
Well from other articles, in this case the police were given a garage door opener, keys to the house, and the code for the gate to the back yard before they did any damage to the house.
There was simply zero for a destructive forcible entry to a property the suspect didn't own.
On another point, I would argue the only time such destructive entry shouldn't count as a taking is if the entry is to a property owned by the suspect.
Ok, so if I follow your reasoning. The principle is, if LEOs destroy your property in the course of their work, it is a taking with this exception: if you are the perp, all bets are off.
Is that a fair restatement?
That seems like a good idea, even if Mathew doesn't consider it a fair restatement
Not quite.
My position is that if the property owner is not the perp/suspect (you can be a suspect without being a perp) then destruction of the property categorically is a taking.
I am not taking the position that the converse, where the suspect/perp is the property owner is categorically not a taking, but I allow that it may not be.
If I were running the town, I'd offer her $50k to settle.
Probably cheaper than appeals costs, even if they win, in addition to being the right thing to do.
There's a serious problem in the country with cops who are high on their equipment, and have a desperate desire to use it. They should be slapped down
If I were the homeowner I would not settle for anything less than my home completely restored to its original condition, regardless of cost, along with reimbursement for any rent while I have been out, along with compensation for any lost time or wages.
I'll second that.
I see this all the time in litigants and it's generally suicidal thinking.
So you won't settle unless the government agrees to it's absolute worst case outcome (or very near it) at trial? Fine, I guess we're going to trial, where you might lose, or end up with less than $50K. Sure that's how you want to play this?
Not all litigants are informed, practical, or lucid.
Well counselor, you're getting paid. Do your job and get it done. Get me a settlement and make me whole again.
That is what your clients are probably thinking, rightly or wrongly.
"So you won't settle unless the government agrees to it's absolute worst case outcome (or very near it) at trial?"
Well, what's it going to cost the gov't to keep on fighting the case?
Worst case outcome is they spend $100k+ fighting it, then have to make her whole.
No?
Especially in a case like this, where the plaintiff is represented by IJ for free, so she doesn't have to worry about her legal costs.
Yeah, and that sort of reasoning would move somebody who was spending their own money. The government? It's spending our money, they care a lot more about losing than they do about the cost of winning.
Are we sure that it isn't the Government's Insurance Company?
Why do they not care about money when spending it on court fees but do care about money going to the victim of their destruction? They're just mean like that?
It seems to me that would not be the worst case outcome. What about punitive damages?
Offer with what money? The taxpayers‘ money? Can’t offer what hasn’t been legislatively appropriated.
If you want taxpayers to pay for damages caused by police, pass a bill. Without that, the town has a duty to refuse payments.
No, the town has a duty to clean up its messes.
And the town has its own budget, otherwise it couldn't pay for the cops. Were I on the town council (whatever it's called), it's be voting to pull the money from the police budget to pay for the settlement.
And I'd tell the police (in private): Look, your people f'ed up. You all let the thugs who did that stay around, rather than getting rid of them years ago. Now you're going to pay for your failure to police your own.
You're pissed to lose this money? Take it out on the a$$es who decided to "reward" a family for letting us know where a criminal was, by destroying their house and killing their dog.
Police your own. Or see your budget cut to pay for their messes
(IANAL) Even if the cops behaved with perfect professional correctness, the townspeople as a whole can better afford to pay this catastrophic loss (a by-product of town action) than one innocent individual.
May?
Wonderful government you're running there.....
This should not even be an issue in the nation that the Founders envisioned and enshrined in the Constitution.
But it is just more evidence, which along with Civil Forfeiture and Qualified Immunity, both of which are completely outside the Constitution but condoned by the courts, that the United States is at least partially a Police State, and is become more and more a Police State.
"because of the "police power" exception to the Takings Clause."
It's funny: My copy of the Constitution doesn't seem to have that exception in it. Was it written in invisible ink in the margins?
I never thought much of Judge Mazzant -- based on his record (or lack of it), not his political registration -- but he seems to have found the stronger position here.
This is one of the most obvious "duh" cases I've seen in a long time. Yes if the government destroys your house, even if it's for a good reason, they should pay to replace it. They have plenty of money and this is one of the better uses for it.
The government is supposed to work for the general welfare, and the cost of providing the general welfare is supposed to fall upon the whole population. Not designated fall guys.
The government doesn't like this general principle, because if they can cause the whole cost of some general benefit to fall upon a small minority of people, they stand to gain more votes from the benefit than they'll lose from those few people.
They lost Ms. Baker's vote, but didn't lose the votes of people who'd object to the property tax increase necessary to compensate Ms. Baker.
Somewhat similar to qualified immunity, the protection from the reimbursing the private party from damages encourages the police force from being a good steward of others property