In 1952, the District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency (DCRLA) announced a sweeping plan to clear and redevelop the southwest quadrant of the nation\u27s capitol. Max Morris and Goldie Schneider were two business owners affected by the proposal. Schneider operated a successful hardware store that had been in the family for decades; Morris owned a department store. The agency, which had designated the area as blighted, planned to acquire their buildings, demolish them, and transfer the cleared land to the Bush Construction Company. Schneider and Morris, however, refused to sell. To prevent the government from taking their properties by eminent domain, they filed suit, alleging that taking their buildings would violate the Public Use C...
The eminent domain debate, steeped in the language of property rights, currently lacks language and ...
This paper is a transcript of testimony by Professor J. Peter Byrne before the U.S. Civil Rights Com...
In Part 1 of this paper, I describe the evolution of interpretation of the public use clause that ...
In 1952, the District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency (DCRLA) announced a sweeping plan to cle...
Defendant city instituted a comprehensive urban redevelopment plan under which condemnation and purc...
This Article examines the term blight and how it is used in eminent domain cases. Part I discusse...
Under the District of Columbia Redevelopment Act, an agency was created to redevelop blighted and sl...
Eminent domain has been a hot topic in legal circles since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s opinion in Ke...
Controversy often arises when landowners in blighted areas resist government driven urban-renewal co...
The study which follows attempts to trace, in a necessarily limited fashion, the evolving use of emi...
The public use requirement of eminent domain law may be working its way back into the United States ...
Eminent domain has been a tool for planners and city government to assemble land since the founding ...
This paper investigates changes of interpretations about the taking clause and public use based on t...
This thesis examines the evolving nature of the use of the eminent domain process and points to the ...
Published just weeks before the U.S. Supreme Court handed down their controversial decision on Kelo ...
The eminent domain debate, steeped in the language of property rights, currently lacks language and ...
This paper is a transcript of testimony by Professor J. Peter Byrne before the U.S. Civil Rights Com...
In Part 1 of this paper, I describe the evolution of interpretation of the public use clause that ...
In 1952, the District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Agency (DCRLA) announced a sweeping plan to cle...
Defendant city instituted a comprehensive urban redevelopment plan under which condemnation and purc...
This Article examines the term blight and how it is used in eminent domain cases. Part I discusse...
Under the District of Columbia Redevelopment Act, an agency was created to redevelop blighted and sl...
Eminent domain has been a hot topic in legal circles since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s opinion in Ke...
Controversy often arises when landowners in blighted areas resist government driven urban-renewal co...
The study which follows attempts to trace, in a necessarily limited fashion, the evolving use of emi...
The public use requirement of eminent domain law may be working its way back into the United States ...
Eminent domain has been a tool for planners and city government to assemble land since the founding ...
This paper investigates changes of interpretations about the taking clause and public use based on t...
This thesis examines the evolving nature of the use of the eminent domain process and points to the ...
Published just weeks before the U.S. Supreme Court handed down their controversial decision on Kelo ...
The eminent domain debate, steeped in the language of property rights, currently lacks language and ...
This paper is a transcript of testimony by Professor J. Peter Byrne before the U.S. Civil Rights Com...
In Part 1 of this paper, I describe the evolution of interpretation of the public use clause that ...