The Volokh Conspiracy
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Essay on "How Constitutional Litigation Can Help End Exclusionary Zoning"
A guest post on economist Bryan Caplan's Bet On It substack.

Earlier today, I published a guest essay on economist Bryan Caplan's popular Bet On It substack, explaining how federal constitutional litigation can play a key role in expanding affordable housing by curbing exclusionary zoning. Here's an excerpt:
In his excellent new book, Build, Baby, Build: The Science and Ethics of Housing Regulation, Bryan Caplan advocates far-reaching deregulation of housing markets. I agree. As Bryan and other scholars have documented, eliminating exclusionary zoning and other similar restrictions on housing construction would reduce housing costs, enable more people to vote with their feet and "move to opportunity," make the economy much more productive, and greatly enhance protection for property rights. Bryan also writes that a Supreme Court decision ruling that exclusionary zoning is unconstitutional is "probably the best shot for radical housing deregulation." He's likely right on that point, too.
In "The Constitutional Case Against Exclusionary Zoning," a forthcoming Texas Law Review article, University of Wisconsin law Professor Josh Braver and I explain how to get there. The Supreme Court can rule that all or most exclusionary zoning regulations that restrict housing construction violate the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment….
Braver is a progressive living constitutionalist. I am a libertarian generally sympathetic to originalism. We differ on many issues, but agree here. If we can agree on that, I hope others can too….
In his book, Bryan suggests that a Supreme Court decision striking down exclusionary zoning would have to overturn Village of Euclid v. Ambler Realty, the Court's 1926 ruling upholding it. I would be happy to see Euclid go. But, as described in our article, the Supreme Court could easily rule against exclusionary zoning under the Takings Clause even without overruling Euclid. That's because, technically, Euclid didn't consider the Takings Clause at all. It merely ruled that exclusionary zoning does not violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment…. A future court ruling could make clear that Euclid only applies to the Due Process Clause (something the Supreme Court already suggested in a 2005 decision)….
If the Supreme Court rules that exclusionary zoning regulations are takings, governments would have to pay "just compensation" to affected property owners (usually defined as the "fair market value" of the property right in question). Few if any local governments could afford to compensate all of the many thousands of property owners currently barred from building high-rise or multifamily housing on their land by single-family zoning requirements and other exclusionary rules….
Federal constitutional litigation is far from the only way to deregulate housing, and should not be pursued to the exclusion of other strategies. In recent years, several state and local governments have enacted deregulatory legislation. Montana is a notable example. State constitutional litigation might be another useful tool….
These other options should be pursued. But federal-court judicial review has important unique advantages. State-by-state reform efforts cannot curb exclusionary zoning nationwide, at one fell swoop. A Supreme Court Takings Clause decision can take a major step in that direction. In addition, state-based reforms are often blocked or watered down by strong "NIMBY" ("not in my backyard") opposition, and by widespread public ignorance about the true effects of zoning restrictions…..
Federal judicial review can also help overcome various local government attempts to circumvent zoning reform, and forestall efforts to use state-constitutional "home rule" provisions to block it….
Historically, successful constitutional reform movements have relied on a combination of litigation and political action, rather than focusing on one approach to the exclusion of others. That was true of the civil rights movement, the women's rights movement, same-sex marriage advocates, gun rights, and such successes as property rights advocates have had in recent years. YIMBY housing advocates would do well to learn from this history….
Many thanks to Bryan for letting me do a guest post, and for his important work on housing issues.
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I’ll leave aside the level of self-delusion necessary to think that the Supreme Court would ever hold that all zoning is per se unconstitutional.
Rather, I’ll note that just because something is a taking does not mean it is invalid or “unconstitutional.” It just means that the owner has a right to compensation. The owner would still have to prove the nature and value of what had been taken, and since the vast majority of owners bought their property after the zoning regs went into effect, they did not acquire (nor did they think they were acquiring) unlimited development rights, so nothing was ever taken from them in the first place. As for the owners at the time the regs went into effect, for 99.9% of them the SoL has run on making a claim.
On a more pedantic note, since the 5th Amdt is incorporated against the states via the DP clause of the 14th Amdt, I don’t see how the fact that Village of Euclid was decided on 14th Amdt DP grounds is particularly helpful in determining whether it would need to be overruled to enable Prof Somin’s [crack] pipe dream to become reality.
I'd argue there is no statute of limitations, as the taking is ongoing.
Except that, as he said, the current owners (in most cases) bought the property with zoning in effect. Maybe enlist someone who inherited property that was unencumbered when the deceased purchased it.
Per your comment, if I bought property under a restrictive zoning regime, what exactly did I have that was taken away from me?
Not a lawyer, but didn’t Euclid restrict/take away the property owners existing rights? That’s not the case with almost all restricted property today.
I agree with what Ridgeway wrote.
I am only going to add the following. NOT EVERYTHING IS A CONSTITUTIONAL PROBLEM. Different states and different localities have different zoning rules. That's totally fine!
I think that people can reasonably disagree about the necessity of different zoning regulations. Which is fine- solve it politically!
We really should get back to the point of trying to solve problems politically, instead of just using the courts to enforce our policy preferences on each other by saying that everything is solved by the Constitution, which always seems to enact the policy preferences of the person speaking.
Nice.
Because we all want auto repair shops and dry cleaners next to our homes. That rather than affordable housing is the most likely result of eliminating zoning.
What is this? I have a grand theory proving that the Constitution enforces my policy preferences week?
"I have a grand theory proving that the Constitution enforces my policy preferences week?"
That's every week!
I would also mention, re: Village of Euclid ... that decision was from 1926. When the Court was ... let's just say kinda sorta conservative.
And the majority opinion was written by Justice Sutherland, who was one of the "Four Horseman."
(He also authored the companion case of Nectow two years later, which did not approve of a zoning change that deprived an individual of his property rights by re-zoning)
In other words, zoning came about during one of the most conservative eras in the history of the Court, and it's bizarre to see people arguing for an even more constrained vision of self-governance than that Court had.
That was what I meant by "level of self-delusion" 😉
Prof Somin's zoning/takings posts remind me of people talking about how Wickard was wrongly decided, and then concluding that the whole administrative state is therefore unconstitutional. Even if there were some grains of truth there, it is positively insane to think that the Supreme Court could or would do anything more than chisel away at the edges.
Wasn't there a Josh B post a while back where he was hankering to unincorporate the Bill of Rights? This is that level of self-delusion.
Couldn't the same exact takings argument could be used against zoning reform too?
Seems if this argument is valid, one could make a takings claim that zoning reform is just the government taking away a benefit.
Basically, zoning reform would be removing the benefits for things like preventing people next-door from building duplexes which lead to an increase in the area's population density, reduces available parking, increase congestion, and leads to reduced property value.
That's right. If I buy into a neighborhood zoned for single-family dwellings, and rezoning allows apartment buildings, then my property rights have been taken.
No they haven’t been. You now have the right to build a larger set of buildings than you did before. That means you have more property rights, not fewer. What someone will pay for your property is a private choice. The constitution (with exceptions like the 13th Amendment) only limits government choices, not private ones.
No, that's crazy. I bought into a single-family house neighborhood because that is where I want to live, not because I want to build apartment buildings.
Yes, I was going to get into this in my OP, in discussing how, if there were a taking, it would be valued. But it was getting too long and complicated...
The other obvious criticism is that this analysis turns every regulation into a taking:
Building Codes? Taking!
Drivers Licenses? Taking!
Taxes? Taking! and Theft!
Grand Canyon? Ok that may not be a taking (as long as we ignore the Indians), but it should be privatized once we get rid of zoning regulations. Priorities, people!
Libertarianism works nicely as an inclination, and terribly as an ideology. And not only did the Constitution not enact Mr. Spenser's Social Statics, it did not enact Mr. Rothbard's Manifesto.
So if government lets umarried couples or gay people move in next door, does that take away the property rights of people who don’t like them? What’s the constitutional difference?
Government allowing the people next door to do additional things does not take away anything you’re entitled to unless the people next door do something that actually intrudes on your property, like bad smells or loud noise or a loose dog, things that actually get on your property. Merely letting other people do things you don’t like on their own property doesn’t take away anything you’re constitutionally entitled to.
The constitution doesn’t say anything about this subject. Strict zoning laws are constitutional. Lenient zoning laws are constitutional. No zoning laws are constitutional. None of this is the federal courts’ business.
The immigrant is a thief and should be treated as such.
Shouldn’t the Roe/Dobbs pair be something of a warning that making an end run around the political process by using courts to create expansive, judge-made interpretations of rights runs a risk of styming the political process, eroding political support, and ultimately creating a backlash that leads to reversal later on?
If courts merely substitute conservatives’ wish lists of things they can’t get legislatures to pass for liberals’, they merely further tarnish their legitimacy to the point of having no public support at all.
Libertarians who oppose zoning want to build a lead smelting plant wherever they choose while simultaneously feeling confident that there will not be a lead smelting plant next door to them
Zoning is annoying and limiting but better than all the alternatives
All those horror stories about veterans not being able to have a flag or whathaveyou, neighborhood associations, not zoning.
The other thing about zoning, it has allowed uses. Places you are allowed to build a lead smelting plant.
I live near a town [in Mass!] with no zoning and you must get basic approval for any business use anywhere.
In the town I work in, I can run a business in the proper area.
Industrial use? In I-1 you just go get a business purpose.
Eliminate zoning, you eliminate I-1. I would still need environmental permits to run my lead smelting plant, but the business is legal.
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