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Must Government Pay Compensation When It Damages Innocent Owner's Property in Police Action?
From Justice Sotomayor's opinion today respecting denial of certiorari in Baker v. City of McKinney, joined by Justice Gorsuch:
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment provides that private property shall not "be taken for public use, without just compensation." This case raises an important question that has divided the courts of appeals: whether the Takings Clause requires compensation when the government damages private property pursuant to its police power.
On July 25, 2020, in McKinney, Texas, a fugitive named Wesley Little kidnapped a 15-year-old girl. After evading the police in a high-speed car chase, Little found his way to petitioner Vicki Baker's home with his victim in tow. Little was familiar with the home because he had previously worked there as a handyman. Baker had recently retired and moved to Montana, so her daughter Deanna Cook was at the house that day, preparing to put it up for sale. When Cook answered the door, she recognized Little and the child with him: Earlier that day, Cook saw on Facebook that Little was on the run with a teenage girl. Cook feigned ignorance and let them into the house, but told Little, falsely, that she had to go to the supermarket. Once outside, Cook called Baker, who called the police.
McKinney police arrived soon after and set up a perimeter around Baker's home. Eventually, Little released the girl and she exited the house. The girl told the police that Little was hiding in the attic, that he was armed, and that he was high on methamphetamine. Later, while still in the attic, Little told the police that he was not going back to prison, that he knew he was going to die, and that he planned to shoot it out with the police.
To resolve the standoff and protect the surrounding community, the police tried to draw Little out by launching dozens of tear gas grenades into the home. When that did not work, the officers detonated explosives to break down the front and garage doors and used a tank-like vehicle to bulldoze the home's backyard fence. By the time the officers gained entry, Little had taken his own life. All agree that the McKinney police acted properly that day and that their actions were necessary to prevent harm to themselves and the public.
The actions of the police also caused extensive damage to Baker's home and personal belongings, however. As the District Court explained:
"'The explosions left Baker's dog permanently blind and deaf. The toxic gas that permeated the House required the services of a HAZMAT remediation team. Appliances and fabrics were irreparable. Ceiling fans, plumbing, floors (hard surfaces as well as carpet), and bricks needed to be replaced—in addition to the windows, blinds, fence, front door, and garage door. Essentially all of the personal property in the House was destroyed, including an antique doll collection left to Baker by her mother.'"
In total, the damage amounted to approximately $50,000. Baker's insurance refused to cover any damage caused by the McKinney police. {Homeowners' insurance policies generally do not provide coverage for damage caused by the government.} Baker, who bore no responsibility for what had occurred at her home, then filed a claim for property damage with the city. The city denied the claim in its entirety….
[The Fifth Circuit below] declined to adopt the city's broad assertion that the Takings Clause never requires compensation when a government agent destroys property pursuant to its police power. Such a broad categorical rule, the Fifth Circuit reasoned, was at odds with its own precedent and this Court's Takings Clause jurisprudence.
Instead, the Fifth Circuit adopted a narrower rule that it understood to be compelled by history and precedent: The Takings Clause does not require compensation for damaged property when it was "objectively necessary" for officers to damage the property in an active emergency to prevent imminent harm to persons. Because the parties agreed that the McKinney police's actions were objectively necessary, the Fifth Circuit concluded that Baker was not entitled to compensation. Baker now petitions for certiorari and asks this Court to reverse the Fifth Circuit's judgment.
The Court's denial of certiorari expresses no view on the merits of the decision below. I write separately to emphasize that petitioner raises a serious question: whether the Takings Clause permits the government to destroy private property without paying just compensation, as long as the government had no choice but to do so. Had McKinney razed Baker's home to build a public park, Baker undoubtedly would be entitled to compensation. Here, the McKinney police destroyed Baker's home for a different public benefit: to protect local residents and themselves from an armed and dangerous individual. Under the Fifth Circuit's decision, Baker alone must bear the cost of that public benefit.
The text of the Takings Clause states that private property may not "be taken for public use, without just compensation." The Takings Clause was "designed to bar Government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole." This Court has yet to squarely address whether the government can, pursuant to its police power, require some individuals to bear such a public burden.
This Court's precedents suggest that there may be, at a minimum, a necessity exception to the Takings Clause when the destruction of property is inevitable. Consider Bowditch v. Boston (1879), in which the Court held that a building owner was not entitled to compensation after firefighters destroyed his building to stop a fire from spreading…. "At the common law every one had the right to destroy real and personal property, in cases of actual necessity, to prevent the spreading of a fire, and there was no responsibility on the part of such destroyer, and no remedy for the owner" …. Bowditch interpreted Massachusetts state law, but subsequent cases have relied on Bowditch in the Takings Clause context.
Similarly, in United States v. Caltex (Philippines), Inc. (1952), this Court held that the Takings Clause did not require the Government to pay compensation for its destruction of oil companies' terminal facilities amid a military invasion. The destruction of that property during wartime was necessary, the Court explained, "to prevent the enemy from realizing any strategic value from an area which he was soon to capture."
That holding accorded with the common-law principle "that in times of imminent peril—such as when fire threatened a whole community—the sovereign could, with immunity, destroy the property of a few that the property of many and the lives of many more could be saved." These cases do not resolve Baker's claim, however, because the destruction of her property was necessary, but not inevitable. Whether the inevitable-destruction cases should extend to this distinct context remains an open question….
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Waiting the perp out would have worked, but at the cost of manpower.
To me, that seems like it would be a more reasonable use of manpower than blowing up the home and sending in a tank.
The whole situation sucks, but the person who should be responsible for making Vicky Baker whole is the perp, Wesley Little. However I assume he didn’t leave behind much of an estate to recover from.
If the court has agreed that the govt is not responsible, then would insurance be on the hook? I guess it’s policy dependent, but it seems it should be covered no differently than when some random criminal destroys property.
Why would the alleged criminal be civilly liable for damage caused to other people's property by the police? I guess it's possible, but you're going to have to show your work. "Criminals are evil and should suffer." Isn't really it.
Which tort did you have in mind? Tresspass? Negligence? Something else? And how do you connect the dots from there to making the alleged criminal liable for the actions of another? Can you show to civil standard that the actions of the police were foreseeable and that there was some kind of duty of care here? Or is your theory of liability one where one or both of those things does not need to be shown?
Yeah, I have to agree: While it's perfectly reasonable to hold a criminal responsible for the reasonably foreseeable consequences of their acts, and even a bit beyond this, at some point the police actions are so unreasonable that it has to be on them, not the criminal.
Why'd they do it this way? Wanted some excitement, and it was cheaper than the overtime because they were going to stiff the homeowner, maybe?
I think you've identified the theory: negligence, based on causing harm through the foreseeable action of third parties. If Don holes up in Paula's house and tells the police that he'll shoot it out with the police, it's foreseeable that the police will need to do things that damage Paula's house. (Even if they just have a sniper shoot Don through a window, that will damage the window and likely the wall behind Don.) Don is therefore liable to Paula for that foreseeable harm, though of course often Don (or Don's estate) won't have the money to pay.
To be sure, different judges and jurors might have different views as to foreseeability in any particular case. But as a general matter, Don might well be liable on this legal theory. And Don's moral culpability does factor into the analysis: To quote the Second Restatement of Torts, "Where a person has intentionally invaded the legally protected interests of another, his intention to commit an invasion, the degree of his moral wrong in acting, and the seriousness of the harm which he intended are important factors in determining whether he is liable for resulting unintended harm."
By way of analogy (and I appreciate that it's just an analogy), if Debra injures Tom (even just negligently), and Pete comes to Tom's rescue and is injured in the process, Debra can be liable even to Pete -- that's the "danger invites rescue" doctrine. (See, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Torts, "if an actor's tortious conduct imperils another or the property of another, the scope of the actor's liability includes any harm to a person resulting from that person's efforts to aid or to protect the imperiled person or property, so long as the harm arises from a risk that inheres in the effort to provide aid.") American tort law does generally recognize that various kinds of harms to and created by third parties are foreseeable.
This assumes insurance, but in any case, they’re a private actor, too, so can’t be taken from?
My gut reaction is bringing in a perp is not a decision to take something, any more than doing a goofed PIT manouver causing him to crash into a house is, and so it just sucks to be her. I like to think government would help her out out of its own kindness though, a hahhaa.
The taking is the bit where the police blew up her house...
So by that logic, I can go joyriding in your car, wrap it around a telephone pole and get away from any criminal or civil charges because I give the wreck back to you? How about if the government floods your land (to make a reservoir) but technically lets you keep the deed for not-underwater acreage?
It’s still a “taking” when you just destroy someone else’s stuff instead of keeping it. "It just sucks to be her" is not a viable answer when we're talking about government power.
Typo that missed the edit window - should be "now-underwater"
The statement notes:
“Baker’s insurance refused to cover any damage caused by the McKinney police.”
Adding: “Homeowners’ insurance policies generally do not provide coverage for damage caused by the government.” [with source]
Right. And if the court has ruled the government is not liable, Baker can argue the damage was ultimately caused by the perp.
I think this is the “just” answer.
Little is ultimately liable. Therefore his estate is responsible with homeowners insurance picking up the slack.
But this isn’t the first time that two parties have escaped responsibility by having their cases tried separately.
I think Baker might be able to say that either way.
To be clear, my response was to this:
If the court has agreed that the govt is not responsible, then would insurance be on the hook? I guess it’s policy dependent, but it seems it should be covered no differently than when some random criminal destroys property.
The answer seems to be “no” since as a general rule the insurance company is not liable when the damage is a result of this sort of government action. It is not the same as criminal destruction.
BTW, the district court opinion said she was covered for the costs of cleaning up the body.
I certainly agree that the criminal should be responsible if he has assets, but that will be vanishingly rare.
In cases where the criminal does not have assets I think the government should pay for reasons of both equity and public policy.
1. Equity: The damage was caused by the government while exercising its duties. The costs of this should be borne by society, not by random unlucky property owners.
2. Public Policy: If people know that the government will not pay for damage to their property caused by government action then people will try to prevent such action. For example, in the case above, Cook could have just walked away and hoped that Little would leave on his own or Baker could have told her "Get out of there and go get a coffee. He will leave when he want." This could have had extremely bad consequences for Little's kidnap victim but might have saved Baker's home. We want to incent people like Baker and Cook to do the right thing and call the police. You do not do that by giving the police the right to destroy their property without compensation.
I'm not sure how precedents about military actions or inevitable destruction are relevant here, unless you want to definitively accept that US policing is basically war now, and that their destructive behaviour is like an inevitable force of nature.
If you're going to invent an exception for the police, there may well be policy reasons for doing so. The 5th Circuit rehearses a few. But invoking irrelevant precedents doesn't really seem helpful.
If the circuits are really divided on the question, that seems like reason enough to take the case, no matter what one thinks the right rule is.
SCOTUSBlog page helpfully provides links:
https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/baker-v-city-of-mckinney-texas/
Did anyone argue strict liability?
I’m not seeing this “objectively necessary” rule.
A dam might be “objectively necessary” to control flooding, a highway expansion might be “objectively necessary” to allow first responders to get quickly from place to place, a school might be “objectively” necessary to due to increased enrollment.
I thought compensation was required in all those cases. Is the distinction in this case that the owner can rebuild?
I think the distinction was that it was the police, which is why they're probably focusing on an objective test. I think it's misguided and without precedent to make that distinction, but I suspect that's why that distinction was made.
I don't know that the court made that decision as much as that all the parties stipulated to it. In hindsight, that might have been a strategic mistake by the homeowner's lawyer.
I don't think the concession of the stipulation was a problem. It frames it as a purely legal issue, which avoids a lot of expensive litigation. However, if all parties framed the case as one of objective reasonableness, that might have been a mistake. My guess, not having read the opinion, is that the Fifth Circuit is the one who proposed that test when rejecting the extremes.
I think there's a better case where, if you don't demolish the property to create a firebreak, the property's going to burn anyway, along with the neighbors', too.
But absent that "The property was doomed in any case." factor, if you destroy somebody's property to benefit the community, how is that not taking it for public use?
And constitutional provisions aside, as a policy matter, if government damages one property to benefit the greater community, then the greater community should pay for it. Absent trying to calculate who benefits how much and allocating the cost that way, distributing it among everybody via taxation is a reasonable alternative.
Instead, the Fifth Circuit adopted a narrower rule that it understood to be compelled by history and precedent: The Takings Clause does not require compensation for damaged property when it was "objectively necessary" for officers to damage the property in an active emergency to prevent imminent harm to persons
The Fifth Circuit is wrong here.
The private property was taken for "public use". That it was found "objectively necessary" means it actually WAS for "public use".
The city damn well should have been forced to pay to repair her house
The real take away here is that the local government is run by creeps, I think.
I'm thinking she ought to destroy an equal value of town property.
Fair is fair.
There is still a political remedy: vote out the mayor / city council /whoever and vote in someone with a conscience.
Sure. I'm sure that will cost a LOT less than the $50k she's already out
(That was sarcasm, in case you missed it)
In an ideal world, this wouldn't be a constitutional takings question. Government would just pay to cover the damages it intentionally caused like literally anybody else would have to do.
Government shouldn't be above the law.
And if it has to be a constitutional issue, it should just be a 5th/14th amendment one - you have obviously been deprived of property without due process of law.