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REPORT FROM COUNSEL
SPRING 2003 ISSUECOURTS BEGIN PUTTING
THE BRAKES ON "TAKINGS"
The power of government to take
private property for a public use, with payment of fair
compensation, has been nearly unassailable in our legal
system. In most condemnation cases, the right to take the
property is a foregone conclusion, and the parties litigate
only the amount of compensation. Courts generally have
deferred to the government's articulation of a public purpose
for the taking, even when private parties also benefit.
In recent years, there has been
a trend toward closer scrutiny of a proposed condemnation to
find a paramount public purpose, and even to stop the
proceedings where one is lacking. Property owners targeted for
a taking are receiving a more sympathetic hearing when they
contend that the true beneficiary of the proceedings is not
the public but simply another private party with designs on
the property.
Although they were largely
unsuccessful, challenges to takings as lacking a public
purpose first arose in urban renewal cases. The government
would condemn blighted property so that it could be
redeveloped, usually by private developers. The government
could point to the overriding public benefits from such
revitalization of property and could successfully argue that
benefits to private parties were incidental.
In successful attacks on use of
the condemnation power, it is harder to find the public use
and easier to see private profit as the motivation for the
taking. For example, in one case, the developer of an
automobile racetrack wanted some neighboring land for a
parking lot, but the company that owned the land did not want
to sell it. The developer reached an agreement with a regional
authority that had condemnation powers, by which the developer
would pay for proceedings to condemn the land in return for
getting the property from the authority immediately after the
condemnation. A state supreme court found that this
transparent arrangement to take land so that it could benefit
the racetrack developer was a misuse of the eminent domain
power. As the court put it, that power "is to be
exercised with restraint, not abandon."
In another successful challenge
to a condemnation, a city tried to take land owned by a church
in order to turn the land over to a major discount retailer.
The property had been vacant for a decade, despite having been
declared a blighted area. The city tried to use blight removal
and redevelopment of the property to justify its actions. This
reasoning was undermined by the city's denial of permits
sought by the church for more church buildings on the
property, even though such a use would have eliminated blight
just as well as the commercial use favored by the city.
The more believable motive for
the city was its desire to generate more revenue by putting a
taxable business on what had been tax-exempt church property.
But the city had other ways to generate revenue. As to both of
the city's ostensible goals--blight removal and generation of
revenue--the city was "using a sledgehammer to kill an
ant." In issuing an injunction against the condemnation
proceedings, the court characterized the condemnation as
resting only on "the desire to achieve the naked transfer
of property from one private party to another."
CASE BY CASE
Long-Arm
Jurisdiction Falls Short
Robert found just the excavator he wanted advertised on an
Internet auction site. Before making the successful bid, he
contacted the seller through e-mail and received assurances
from her that the product was in good condition. Robert then
traveled to the seller's home, which was several states away,
and bought the excavator. When the equipment did not perform
as expected and the seller did not respond to Robert's request
for a partial refund, Robert sued the seller in his home
state.
Robert's lawsuit failed because
the seller was not subject to the jurisdiction of the courts
in Robert's home state. For a nonresident to bring herself
within the reach of a state's "long-arm"
jurisdiction, she must purposefully have benefited from the
privilege of doing business in that state. Perhaps the seller
could have foreseen that residents of any state might bid on
the excavator, but that was insufficient to bring her into the
courts in Robert's state. She had no control over who would
ultimately be the winning bidder, nor could she exclude
bidders from particular jurisdictions.
Also weighing against
subjecting the seller to litigation was the isolated nature of
the transaction and the fact that she was not a commercial
seller and was using a third party's site. A different result
might have been achieved against a business that used its own
website to advertise itself and make transactions across state
lines.
Liability for
Independent Contractors
In another case, a manufacturing company contracted with a
security firm to provide a security guard. The guard shot and
killed an individual who was trespassing, but not for criminal
purposes, on company property, after the person had obeyed the
guard's order to lie on the ground. The company argued that it
could not be held liable for the negligent acts of an
independent contractor, but a state supreme court ruled
otherwise.
The court agreed that the
security firm and its guard were independent contractors. The
manufacturing company's downfall was an exception to the rule
of no liability for acts of independent contractors. If the
work to be performed is inherently dangerous, the work can be
delegated to an independent contractor, but the duty to use
reasonable care cannot be avoided by the employer. Work is
inherently dangerous when it involves a foreseeable risk of
physical harm to others and requires special precautions.
In the case of the
trigger-happy security guard, who was armed and instructed to
"deter" thieves and vandals, dangerous
confrontations between the guard and persons entering the
property were contemplated. In the context of such danger, the
independent contractor status of the guard became a mere legal
technicality that did not shield the manufacturing company
from liability.
ADA AND SMALL
BUSINESSES
The Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) prohibits disability discrimination in employment
for employers with 15 or more employees. The prohibition is
far-reaching and covers hiring, firing, and everything in
between, such as promotions, benefits, and harassment in the
workplace. The smallest of businesses are not affected by the
ADA because of the 15-employee threshold for coverage. The ADA
does apply, however, to many of the roughly 25 million small
businesses in the nation.
Who Is Protected?
The ADA protects three categories of individuals: those with a
physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or
more major life activities (like sitting, standing, or
sleeping); those with a record of such an impairment, such as
a person who had debilitating cancer but is now in remission;
and those who are regarded by employers as having such an
impairment, even though the individuals otherwise are not so
impaired as to be "disabled" under the ADA.
Regardless of the category, the ADA protects only persons who
are qualified, that is, they meet job-related requirements and
can perform essential functions for the job, with or without a
reasonable accommodation.
Hiring
While an employer can ask an applicant a wide range of
questions concerning job qualifications, the ADA does not
allow medical examinations or questions about disability until
the employer has made the applicant a conditional job offer.
An exception is recognized for questions directed to an
apparently disabled applicant about whether a reasonable
accommodation will be required.
After a job offer is made, an
employer can ask any disability-related questions and require
medical examinations, so long as these requirements apply to
everyone in the same job category. For example, if, during a
medical examination required of all employees in a job
involving the use of dangerous machinery, it is revealed that
an applicant has frequent and unpredictable seizures, the
employer can withdraw a job offer to that individual.
Medical Information
Once a person is on the job, the ADA allows required medical
examinations or questions about a disability only where there
is a reasonable belief, based on objective evidence, that a
particular employee will not be able to perform essential job
functions or will pose a direct threat because of a medical
condition. As an example, if a normally reliable employee has
told her employer that a new medication she takes makes her
lethargic, and she begins to make many mistakes, the employer
can ask her how long the medication can be expected to affect
job performance.
Reasonable
Accommodation
The ADA differs from most other employment discrimination laws
in imposing an accommodation duty on employers. If a disabled
person needs a reasonable accommodation in order to apply for,
or perform, a job, the employer generally must provide it
unless to do so would create an undue hardship. An undue
hardship means significant difficulty or expense, based on an
employer's resources and operations.
Most accommodations are not
expensive or burdensome. A diabetic employee may need regular
breaks to eat properly and monitor blood sugar and insulin
levels, or a blind employee may need someone to read
information posted on a bulletin board. If more than one
accommodation will work, the employer may take the option that
is less costly or easier to provide.
In addition to the undue
hardship defense, an employer need not provide an
accommodation which:
- assists an individual off
the job;
- removes or alters the
essential functions of a job;
- lowers production or
performance standards; or
- excuses violations of rules
on good conduct.
Helpful Handbook
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which is charged
with enforcement of the ADA, has issued a new handbook to help
small businesses comply with the ADA. The handbook provides
many examples of factual situations with which small
businesses could be confronted. The ADA primer can be accessed
online at www.eeoc.gov.
SOLO 401(K)
RETIREMENT PLANS
As a result of recent tax law
changes, a new retirement savings account is now available for
"owner-only businesses." An "owner-only
business" is either a business that employs only the
owner and immediate family members or a business that employs
only the owner and employees who by law may be excluded from
participation in retirement plans. Excludable employees
include employees under age 21, employees with less than a
year of service or who work less than 1,000 hours per year,
certain union employees, and certain nonresident alien
employees.
The new plan, sometimes called
an Individual (k) plan, can be set up both by incorporated
businesses or unincorporated businesses such as sole
proprietorships and partnerships. When compared with other
types of business retirement plans, an Individual (k) plan
allows more flexibility in its funding and larger contribution
amounts.
The two components of an
Individual (k) plan are a profit-sharing contribution from the
employer (up to 25% of compensation) and an employee salary
deferral (up to $12,000 in 2003). Combining those two
components, the maximum contribution on behalf of any one
business owner is a whopping $41,000 in 2003. Contributions
are discretionary each year.
The maximum salary deferral
amount will increase by $1,000 per year through 2006. In
addition, for individuals who are age 50 or older, the
Individual (k) plans, like 401(k) plans for larger businesses,
allow "catch-up" contributions in amounts that will
increase annually through 2006. For 2003, the maximum catch-up
contribution is $1,000.
Business owners are eligible to
take personal loans from Individual (k) plans, so long as the
plan document allows for plan loans. They may borrow as much
as $50,000 in cash, or 50% of the balance in their account,
whichever is less. Borrowing from an Individual (k) plan
carries the same downside as with conventional 401(k) plan
borrowing, however, making this move a last resort for many.
Aside from undermining the accumulation of a large balance
growing tax-free in the account, a loan, if not paid back on
time, will be considered a distribution by the IRS, triggering
income taxes and a 10% penalty.
CREDIT REPORTING
AGENCY HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR ERRORS
Judy discovered that her credit
report from a large credit reporting agency erroneously
included about a dozen accounts for a different person, also
named Judith. The report identified Judy as using that
person's name as an alias. Unfortunately, the
"other" Judith, who did exist, had a checkered
debt-paying history that was erroneously presented as Judy's
in the credit report.
Judy's own spadework revealed
that the credit reporting agency had merged her information
with that of the second Judith because they had similar first
names, were born in the same year, were from the same part of
the country, and, most importantly, their Social Security
numbers differed by only one digit. This initial computer
mistake was bad enough, but what ultimately led to a very
large damages verdict for Judy was the inadequate response of
the reporting agency once Judy had brought the errors to its
attention.
The agency deleted some of the
accounts that did not belong in Judy's report, but it kept
most of them after supposedly verifying them with creditors.
This "verification" was very superficial and did not
convey to the creditors the information Judy had provided. In
effect, the agency simply asked each creditor, "Is this
what you reported?" Fully three years after Judy notified
the reporting agency of the erroneous information in her
report, some of it remained, and the undeserved stain on her
credit was as obvious as ever. To add insult to injury, some
of the deleted information from the second Judith even
reappeared on Judy's report.
The situation came to a head
when the erroneous credit report caused Judy to be denied a
mortgage. By supplying still more information to the agency,
including a supportive letter from the "other"
Judith, and contacting creditors herself, Judy eventually
cleaned up her credit report and got out from under the shadow
of a stranger's unpaid debts. By then, however, she was a
wreck emotionally, and the damage to her credit reputation was
only beginning to be restored. A jury verdict made the credit
reporting agency pay for these injuries, but sent an even
louder message in a large award of punitive damages.
The success achieved in Judy's
lawsuit was largely due to her own diligence. The steps she
took are practically a blueprint for what someone should do
when credit reporting errors are made and then left
uncorrected by an agency. It took years in her case, but Judy
prevailed in the end by making telephone calls, keeping notes
and documents, contacting creditors directly, and even
enlisting the aid of the debtor whose poor credit history had
appeared in Judy's credit report.
ONLINE BANKING
Banks that rely on the Internet
and other low-cost ways to provide service, as opposed to
"bricks and mortar" branch offices, can save on
expenses and pass the savings along to customers in higher
returns on deposits and lower interest rates on loans. Online
banking also gives customers the convenience of being able to
monitor their accounts and complete transactions around the
clock, without waiting for mailed statements or being limited
by office hours.
The flip side of online banking
is that, if a problem arises, you cannot sit down face-to-face
with someone from the bank to resolve it. There is also a
premium on doing research to check out the legitimacy of an
unfamiliar and remote institution before you entrust it with
your money and private information. A good place to start is
the "About Us" section of a bank's website, which
should at least give basic contact information. If it does
not, that in itself should raise suspicions. Other warning
signs include names or websites that are only slightly
different from those of well-known institutions and rates of
return that are far out of line with what other banks are
offering. It is a good idea to confirm that an institution is
federally insured by contacting the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or searching its "Institution Directory"
at www3.fdic.gov/idasp.
Like any bank customer, users
of online banking institutions are well-advised to safeguard
private identification information, keep good records, and
monitor transactions and balances regularly. Online banking
customers also have the protection of federal laws such as the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, the Truth in Lending Act, and
the Truth in Savings Act. Those who decide to do their banking
solely in front of a computer screen especially should know
about the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, which deals with
consumer rights involving electronic banking transactions.
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