Is there a more appropriate place at which to study property rights and dirt law than William and Mary Law School? After all, it is a stone's throw from Jamestown, the place where there's a good argument the concept of property law and property rights first took hold in the New World. As noted by author David Price in "Love and Hate in Jamestown - John Smith, Pocahontas, and the Start of a New Nation" -
The introduction of private property for the common citizen had a salubrious effect on the owners' sense of initiative, as John Rolfe would observe. By the end of 1619, he reported, the "ancient" (or longtime) colonists had chosen their allotments, "which giveth all great content, for now knowing their owne lande, they strive and are prepared to build houses and to cleare their grounds ready to plant, which giveth ... greate incouragement, and the greatest hope to make the colony florrish that ever yet happened to them."
Was it a coincidence that at the same time as property rights took hold, that the seeds of representative and republican government were also planted? As Price writes:
The other major liberalization of 1619 sprang from the company's desire for "a forme of government there as may bee to the greatest benifitt and comfort of the people, and wherby all injustice grevance and oppression may be prevented." That form of government would be English America's first representative legislature. Sir Thomas Dale's authoritarian "Lawes Divine, Morall and Martiall" would be superseded by enactments of a locally elected body, to be known as the General Assembly.
And also just down the road from the Law School, coincidentally, is where the "new birth of freedom" took hold, again by way of a property-centric argument. So yes, William and Mary Law is a very appropriate venue for the study of property rights and property law.
With that background in mind, in just over three weeks, we're about to get underway with the fall semester at the Law School, where we're again teaching two upper-division courses: Eminent Domain and Property Rights (Law 608), and Land Use Controls (Law 425). For a sampling of what we cover, check out some of the final papers our students produced last year - pretty compelling stuff.
The enrollment in the courses has really grown over the five years we've done them, which might be a reflection that the word is getting out. in the Eminent Domain and Property Rights class we cover not only eminent domain and just compensation, but takings, civil forfeiture, property theory, the cultural view of what it means to "own" something, and international approaches to property law and property rights. And, importantly, how to lawyer up these cases (this is a professional school after all). Of course, we take advantage of the opportunity to have some of the nation's best property law scholars "guest lecture" during the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference. Here's the official description of the course:
Property rights and the sovereign's power of eminent domain have been essential components of Anglo-American law for centuries, and the protection of the right of private property ownership is one of the foundations on which the U.S. Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the post-Civil War Amendments are built. This course will introduce students to the practical lawyering and analysis necessary for eminent domain practice, including the nuts and bolts of takings practice as well as the study of recent (and ongoing) U.S. Supreme Court cases. In addition, this course will focus on the history, policy, and, to some extent, the politics of property rights, eminent domain law, and related legal topics. We will examine how the right of private property was developed in common and constitutional law, the relationship of property rights to other civil rights and the sovereign's power to take land, the role of federal and state courts in protection of property rights, how private property squares with environmental law, and the proper 'place' of property rights in the modern administrative state. Course materials will be cases and selected portions of books and journal articles, and other materials which will be made available. Grading will be based on a take home paper and class participation.
The Land Use Controls class is your class land use regulation class that focuses on things like zoning and planning, the administrative process, vested rights, nonconforming uses, due process, Euclid, private land use controls, nuisance, and other dirt law topics.
Students: it's not too late to join (add/drop will commence soon after the first day of classes). We can't promise that you will gain instant knowledge of the subjects, but can guarantee a rewarding semester taking a deeper dive, coming out of it in December with a greater appreciation of these areas of law, and a working understanding of what it takes to actually practice. Come, join us!