Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Claeys on the Use and Abuse of Overflight Column Doctrine
Eric Claeys (George Mason) has posted On the Use and Abuse of Overflight Column Doctrine (Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference Journal) on SSRN. Here's the abstract:
Many
scholars writing on property or intellectual property policy assume
that, when commercial aviation became feasible, the ad coelum maxim
applied so literally that any airplane automatically trespassed on the
air columns above lots of land beneath its flight path. The ad coelum
maxim alienated property doctrine from sensible policies, these
assumptions continue, and this disjunction was not fixed until courts
reinvigorated property doctrine with new policies in the 1930s and
1940s.
This Article has two goals. The first is to show that
this portrait of overflight litigation is misleading. In the watershed
overflight cases, jurists took for granted that legal “property” has a
built-in normative commitment to one fundamental policy goal — that
property rights be structured to facilitate all stakeholders being
allowed to use those resources concurrently and beneficially, each for
his own individual goals. So in overflight cases, jurists revised the
scope of the ad coelum maxim to make sure that the maxim cohered with
sound policies already fundamental to property law. The maxim confirmed
landowners’ control over the low-altitude air space reasonably
necessary to their beneficial uses of their lots. But the maxim was
found not to apply to high-altitude airspace, because it seemed likely
to impede all citizens’ concurrent interests in using airspace as a
commons for air travel and transport.
The second goal is to shed
light on why contemporary scholarship portrays the ad coelum maxim and
the transition in aerial trespass law so inaccurately. The conventional
portrait of the overflight transition provides a tempting narrative
helping to make traditional rights of exclusive control seem overbroad.
By process of elimination, the “ad coelum fable” helps make seem more
attractive alternate property strategies, especially commons approaches
and “liability rule” forced transfers of use rights. Although such
approaches may be desirable in some situations, they should be judged on
their normative merits — not by setting up and then ridiculing
straw-man portraits of alternatives. This Article illustrates with
contemporary scholarship on eminent domain and urban redevelopment, and
on the Google Books dispute.
Steve
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/property/2013/07/claeys-on-the-use-and-abuse-of-overflight-column-doctrine.html