Innocent Purchaser
see also: title, justice changing
Rev. A. C. Auchmuty: Gems from George, a themed
collection of excerpts from the writings of Henry
George (with links to sources)
THE common law we are told is the perfection of
reason, and certainly the landowners cannot complain of
its decision, for it has been built up by and for
landowners. Now what does the law allow to the innocent
possessor when the land for which he paid his money is
adjudged to rightfully belong to another? Nothing at
all. That he purchased in good faith gives him no right
or claim whatever. The law does not concern itself with
the "intricate question of compensation" to the innocent
purchaser. The law does not say, as John Stuart Mill
says: "The land belongs to A, therefore B who has thought
himself the owner has no right to anything but the rent,
or compensation for its salable value." For that would be
indeed like a famous fugitive slave case decision in
which the Court was said to have given the law to the
North and the nigger to the South. The law simply says:
"The land belongs to A, let the Sheriff put him in
possession! " —
Progress & Poverty
— Book VII, Chapter 3, Justice of the Remedy: Claim
of Landowners to Compensation
COMPENSATED for what? For giving up what has been
unjustly taken? The demand of land-owners for
compensation is not that. We do not seek to spoil the
Egyptians. We do not ask that what has been unjustly
taken from laborers shall be restored. We are willing
that bygones should be bygones, and to leave dead wrongs
to bury their dead. We propose to let those who, by the
past appropriation of land-value, have taken the fruits
of labor, retain what they have thus got. We merely
propose that for the future such robbery of labor shall
cease. — NOW, is the State called on to compensate
men for the failure of their expectations as to its
action, even where no moral element is involved? If it
make peace, must it compensate those who have invested on
the expectation of war. If it open a shorter highway, is
it morally bound to compensate those who may lose by the
diversion of travel from the old one? If it promote the
discovery of a cheap means of producing electricity
directly from heat, is it morally bound to compensate the
owners of all the steam engines thereby thrown out of use
and all who are engaged in making them? If it develop the
air-ship, must it compensate those whose business would
be injured? Such a contention would be absurd. —
The Condition of Labor
Yet the contention we are considering is worse. It is
that the State must compensate for disappointing the
expectations of those who have counted on its continuing
to do wrong. — A Perplexed
Philosopher
(Compensation)
COMPENSATION implies equivalence. To compensate for the
discontinuance of a wrong is to give those who profit by
the wrong the pecuniary equivalent of its continuance.
Now the State has nothing that does not belong to the
individuals who compose it. What it gives to some it must
take from others. Abolition with compensation is
therefore not really abolition, but continuance under a
different form — on one side of unjust deprivation,
and on the other side of unjust appropriation. —
A
Perplexed Philosopher (Compensation)
INNOCENT purchasers of what involves wrong to others!
Is not the phrase absurd? If, in our legal tribunals,
"ignorance of the law excuseth no man," how much less can
it do so in the tribunal of morals — and it is this
to which compensationists appeal.
And innocence can only shield from the punishment due to
conscious wrong; it cannot give right. If you innocently
stand on my toes, you may fairly ask me not to be angry;
but you gain no right to continue to stand on them.
—
A Perplexed Philosopher (Compensation)
WHEN a man exchanges property of one kind for property of
another kind he gives up the one with all its incidents
and takes in its stead the other with its incidents. He
cannot sell bricks and buy hay, and then complain because
the hay burned when the bricks would not. The greater
liability of the hay to burn is one of the incidents he
accepted in buying it. Nor can he exchange property
having moral sanction for property having only legal
sanction, and claim that the moral sanction of the thing
he sold attaches now to the thing he bought. That has
gone with the thing to the other party in the exchange.
Exchange transfers, it cannot create. Each party
gives up what right he had and takes what right the
other party had. The last holder obtains no moral right
that the first holder did not have. —
A Perplexed Philosopher (Compensation)
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