Constitutional amendment; taking or damaging of private property for public use (second reference). (SJ67)

Introduced By

Sen. Ryan McDougle (R-Mechanicsville)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate

Description

Constitutional amendment (second resolution); taking or damaging of private property; public use.  Revises the prohibition on the enactment by the General Assembly of laws whereby private property may be taken or damaged. An existing provision authorizing the General Assembly to define what constitutes a public use is removed. The proposed amendment provides that private property can be taken or damaged only for a public use, only with just compensation to the owner, and only so much taken as is necessary for the public use. Just compensation must equal or exceed the value of the property taken, lost profits and lost access, and damages to the residue caused by the taking. A public service company, public service corporation, or railroad exercises the power of eminent domain for public use when such exercise is for the authorized provision of utility, common carrier, or railroad services. In all other cases, a taking or damaging of private property is not for public use if the primary use is for private gain, private benefit, private enterprise, increasing jobs, increasing tax revenue, or economic development, except for the elimination of a public nuisance existing on the property. The condemnor bears the burden of proving that the use is public, without a presumption that it is. Read the Bill »

Status

01/31/2012: Merged into SB274

History

DateAction
01/10/2012Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/11/12 12102332D
01/10/2012Referred to Committee on Privileges and Elections
01/31/2012Incorporated by Privileges and Elections (SJ3-Obenshain) (15-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)

Duplicate Bills

The following bills are identical to this one: SJ3, HJ3 and SJ117.