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Sing, Dance, Rejoice—Corporate Personhood Is Doomed

Thom Hartmann's "Unequal Protection: the Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights" may prove to be the most significant book in the history of corporate personhood, a doctrine which dates to 1886. For 116 years, corporate personhood has been scrutinized and criticized, but never seriously threatened. Now Thom Hartmann has discovered a fatal legal flaw in its origin: corporate personhood is doomed . . . we now know corporate personhood has utterly no basis in law.
Published on Thursday, December 26, 2002 by CommonDreams.org
 http://www.commondreams.org/views02/1226-04.htm

Sing, Dance, Rejoice—Corporate Personhood Is Doomed
A Review of Thom Hartmann's
Unequal Protection: the Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights

by Richard W. Behan

Unequal Protection may prove to be the most significant book in the history of corporate personhood, a doctrine which dates to 1886. For 116 years, corporate personhood has been scrutinized and criticized, but never seriously threatened. Now Thom Hartmann has discovered a fatal legal flaw in its origin: corporate personhood is doomed.

What is "corporate personhood?" Suppose, to keep Wal-Mart at bay, your county commissioners enact an ordinance prohibiting Wal-Mart from doing business in your county. The subsequent (and immediate) lawsuit would be a slam-dunk for Wal-Mart's lawyers, because this corporation enjoys—just as you and I do as living, breathing citizens—the Constitutional rights of "due process" and "equal protection." Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. is a person, not in fact, not in flesh, not in any tangible form, but in law.

To their everlasting glory, this is not what the Founding Fathers intended, as Mr. Hartmann explains in rich and engaging detail. And for 100 years after the Constitution was ratified, various governmental entities led corporations around on leashes, like obedient puppies, canceling their charters promptly if they compromised the public good in any way. The leashes broke in 1886, the puppies got away, and the public good was increasingly compromised—until it was finally displaced altogether.

Today, the First Amendment protects the right of corporations-as-persons to finance political campaigns and to employ lobbyists, who then specify and redeem the incurred obligations. Democracy has been transformed into a crypto-plutocracy, and public policy is no longer crafted to serve the American people at large. It is shaped instead to maintain, protect, enhance or create opportunities for corporate profit.

One recent example took place after Mr. Hartmann's book was written. Senators Patty Murray from Washington and Ted Stevens from Alaska inserted a last-minute provision in this year's defense appropriation bill. It directed the Air Force to lease, for ten years, one hundred Boeing 767 airplanes, built and configured as passenger liners, to serve as aerial refueling tankers. Including the costs of removing the seats and installing the tanks, and then reversing the process ten years from now, the program will cost $17 billion. The Air Force never asked for these planes, and they weren't in President Bush's budget for the Defense Department. Political contributions from the Boeing company totaled $640,000 in the 2000 election cycle, including $20,230 for Senator Murray and $31,100 for Senator Stevens.

The chairman of the CSX Corporation, Mr. John Snow, has been nominated by President Bush to be the new Secretary of the Treasury. Mr. Snow's company, another legal person, exercised its Constitutional rights by contributing $5.9 million to various campaigns—three-quarters of it to Republicans—over seven election cycles. It was a wise investment. In 3 of the last 4 years, averaging $250 million in annual profits, CSX paid no federal income taxes at all. Instead, it received $164 million in tax rebates—money paid to the company by the Treasury Department.

No, this is not what the Founding Fathers intended democracy to be. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, as Mr. Hartmann details, were seriously anxious about "moneyed corporations" and their potential interference in public affairs. The Bill of Rights these two men drafted contained the ten Constitutional amendments that survive, and two more that did not: one was to control corporate expansion and dominance. (The other was to prohibit a standing army.)

As the 19th century wore on American corporations entered lawsuit after lawsuit to achieve a strategic objective: corporate personhood. With that, they could break the leashes of social control and regulation. They could sue county commissioners. Or lease their unsold airliners to the Air Force. Or collect millions in tax rebates.

In his spellbinding Chapter 6—"The Deciding Moment"—Mr. Hartmann tells how corporate personhood was achieved.

Orthodoxy has it the Supreme Court decided in 1886, in a case called Santa Clara County v. the Southern Pacific Railroad, that corporations were indeed legal persons. I express that view myself, in a recent book. So do many others. So do many law schools. We are all wrong.

Mr. Hartmann undertook instead a conscientious search. He finally found the contemporary casebook, published in 1886, blew the dust away, and read Santa Clara County in the original, so to speak. Nowhere in the formal, written decision of the Court did he find corporate personhood mentioned. Not a word. The Supreme Court did NOT establish corporate personhood in Santa Clara County.

In the casebook "headnote," however, Mr. Hartmann read this statement: "The defendant Corporations are persons within the intent of the clause in section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment... which forbids a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Here, anyway, corporate personhood was "provided"— in the headnote, instead of the formal written decision of the Supreme Court. But that's not good enough.

What is a "headnote?" It is the summary description of a court decision, written into the casebook by the court reporter. It is similar to an editor's "abstract" in a scientific journal. Because they are not products of the court itself, however, headnotes carry no legal weight; they can establish no precedent in law. Corporate personhood, Mr. Hartmann discovered, is simply and unequivocally illegitimate.

The court reporter for Santa Clara County was Mr. John Chandler Bancroft Davis, a graduate of Harvard Law School.

Mr. Hartman has in his personal library 12 books by Davis, mostly original editions. They display Davis's close alliance with the railroad industry, and they support persuasively Mr. Hartmann's argument that Davis injected the personhood statement deliberately, to achieve by deceit what corporations had so far failed to achieve in litigation.

If Davis knew his headnote was legally sterile, though, we can only speculate about his tactics. Perhaps he thought judges in the future would read his headnote as if it could serve as legal precedent, and would thereafter invoke corporate personhood in rendering court decisions. That would be grossly irregular, and it would place corporate personhood in stupendous legal jeopardy if it ever came to light. But something of that sort must have happened, because corporate personhood over time spread throughout the world of commerce—and politics.

Mr. Hartmann doesn't fill in this blank, but his daylighting of the irregularity will be the eventual undoing of corporate personhood. Its alleged source in Santa Clara County is a myth, a lie, a fraud. Corporate personhood simply cannot now survive, after Mr. Hartmann's book, a rigorous and sustained legal attack.

Sustained it will have to be, for years or decades or even longer: corporations will fight the attack bitterly, but we now know corporate personhood has utterly no basis in law.

This article is not copyrighted, so permission to reproduce it is unnecessary. Richard W. Behan's current book is Plundered Promise: Capitalism, Politics, and the Fate of the Federal Lands (Island Press, 2001). For a description of the book, a synopsis, and further information, go to  http://www.rockisland.com/~rwbehan/. Mr. Behan is currently working on a more broadly rendered critique, Derelict Democracy: A Primer On the Corporate Seizure of America's Agenda. He can be reached by email at  rwbehan@rockisland.com. For more on Mr. Hartmann's book, see  http://unequalprotection.com

homepage: homepage: http://www.commondreams.org/views02/1226-04.htm
address: address: Common Dreams NewsCenter

dream on 29.Dec.2002 09:31

gerry

I hope you're right, of course. Removing 1st Amendment protections from corporations is probably the most critical first step to reigning in the corporate capitalist monster that's upon us. But basing your hopes upon one fraudulent headnote is wishful thinking. Judges will instead cite the precedent of thousands of cases through the last century, along with Congressional acts, that have upheld the principle of corporate personhood. Don't forget, the last Presidential election, not to mention this coming war in Iraq, are far more blatanly illegal, but they're happening anyway.

First people have to become aware of what's going on. Reaching people through independent media sources is crucial. Mr. Hartmann's book is one good source, but we need far more. He hasn't uncovered anything most of us, anyway, didn't already know. Maybe the coming economic crisis will sour the corporate cult for a majority of people in this country. Maybe. (One would have thought the Enron etc. frauds would have done this.)

Hopeful news on this subject 29.Dec.2002 21:00

without hope what have we got?

News Flash from Paul Cienfuegos at Democracy Unlimited - in Humboldt County,
California!
(via Molly Morgan from WILPF and POCLAD)...

Please spread this BIG NEWS far and wide through each of your email lists.

There is now an escalation of events in Pennsylvania regarding corporate
personhood!

The elected officials of Porter Township, Pennsylvania, have passed a
law declaring that corporations operating in that township may not
claim civil and constitutional privileges. A unanimous vote cast on
December 9, 2002, evolved out of long-time efforts by citizens and public
officials to bar corporations from dumping toxic sludge on township
lands. The new law declares that corporations allowed to do business
within Porter Township possess none of the human rights that
corporations have been wielding to overrule democratic processes and
rule over communities. For details, contact the Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF) in PA at 717.709.0457
or  info@celdf.org, or contact the Program on Corporations, Law and
Democracy (POCLAD) in MA at 508.398.1145 or  people@poclad.org .


----------------------------------------------------


First Local Government in the United States
Refuses to Recognize Corporate Claims to Civil Rights:
Bans Corporate Involvement in Governing

On the evening of December 9, 2002, the elected municipal officials of
Porter Township, Clarion County - a municipality of 1,500 residents an hour
north of Pittsburgh in Northwestern Pennsylvania - became the first local
government in the United States to eliminate corporate claims to civil and
constitutional privileges. The Township adopted a binding law declaring that
corporations operating in the Township may not wield legal privileges -
historically used by corporations to override democratic decisionmaking - to
stop the Township from passing laws which protect residents from toxic
sewage sludge.
The actions by Porter Township thus repudiate the history of state and
federal public officials restricting the rights of citizens while expanding
the rights of corporations and their owners.

Background

Along with close to a dozen other municipal governments in Pennsylvania,
Porter Township officials had previously adopted a local law governing the
land application of sewage sludge in the Township. The adoption of that
municipal law was an outgrowth of the work done by residents and municipal
officials to stop sewage sludge corporations from dumping
Pittsburgh-generated sludge in the Township. To that immediate end, the
municipal government adopted a "tipping fee" law that requires corporate
sludge haulers to pay a per ton "tipping fee" to the Township to enable the
municipality to verify the safety of each load of sludge applied to land.
Sludge corporations have responded both legislatively and judicially to the
adoption of those laws by Pennsylvania municipalities - which prevent
corporations from turning to state and federal officials to override local
self-governance.

Judicial Response: In 2000, Synagro Corporation - one of the largest sludge
hauling corporations in the United States - sued Township officials in
Centre County, Pennsylvania in an attempt to overturn the "tipping fee" law
adopted by that Township. In their Complaint, the Corporation alleged that
the law violated a litany of civil and constitutional rights asserted by the
corporation. A ruling by the federal court is expected by 2004.

Legislative Response: Legislatively, sludge corporations drafted and
vigorously pushed Bills that would strip Pennsylvania municipalities of
their authority to make rules that would control the land application of
sewage sludge and factory farms. A unique coalition of groups that included
municipal governments, the Pennsylvania Farmers Union, the Pennsylvania
Association for Sustainable Agriculture, the Sierra Club, the AFL-CIO, the
United Mine Workers of America, Common Cause and others, defeated that
legislation at the end of the 2002 legislative session.

In addition to the legislative and judicial responses to the assertion of
local democracy by communities, sludge corporations have also instructed the
state environmental regulatory agency and corporate farm lobbies to
intervene with Clarion County Townships. In late 2002, the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection and the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau met
with Clarion County Townships to convince them to repeal their local laws.
The four Clarion County Townships that have adopted the law refused.
Instead, Porter Township forged ahead with adopting the most recent law,
which eliminates corporate interference in the democratic processes of the
Township.
Also in late 2002, the Alcosan Corporation, a sludge hauling corporation in
Pennsylvania, threatened to use Pennsylvania courts to overturn the sludge
law passed by the Township. Porter Township Supervisors, upon learning of
the ability of corporations to direct the courts to vindicate corporate
claims to civil and legal privileges to override local governments, decided
to pass a law to eliminate corporate claims to those rights.
The actions of Porter Township - along with the actions of other municipal
governments in Pennsylvania dealing with land applied sewage sludge and
factory farms - evidence a shift of communities away from permitting
corporate harms to asserting direct control over corporations.

The Sludge and Corporate Personhood Ordinances were developed by the
Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund in partnership with the Program
on Corporations, Law, and Democracy (POCLAD) and communities across
Pennsylvania impacted by land applied sewage sludge and corporate factory
farms.


--------


In this very scary moment in our country (and the world), as our pResident
and his staff of corporate criminals are slashing the Bill of Rights, this
is something REAL to celebrate for the holidays!!

But let's not just revel in good news. Let's make some of our own!

My co-director, Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, is on the national leadership team
of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's (WILPF's)
"Campaign to Challenge Corporate Power and Assert the People's Rights". You
may already know that WILPF's National Action to "Abolish Corporate
Personhood", which was launched in 2001, is picking up steam, with
activities now in a number of communities in Arizona, California,
Massachusetts and Minnesota.

We (Democracy Unlimited) can provide you or your local group with an
Organizing Packet that provides the information that you need to launch an
'Abolish Corporate Personhood' resolution in your town or county. WILPF's
goal is 50 cities and towns passing such resolutions. Thus far, Point Arena,
CA is the first and only, and San Francisco may be about to consider it as
well. Resolutions are simply symbolic declarations. They do NOT change the
law.

Or you could choose to follow the lead of Porter Township (as above), and go
for a legally-binding ordinance that strips the corporate form of Bill of
Rights protections.

Packets are $13, payable to Democracy Unlimited, at POB 610, Eureka, CA
95502. Or send us a legal-size SASE, and we'll mail you our newly updated
Resource List of books, informational packets, video and audiotapes. For
more info on this topic, check out WILPF's website:
 http://www.wilpf.org/cintro.html . And within one month, Democracy
Unlimited's newly redesigned website will also be available for viewing:
 http://www.monitor.net/duhc .

Paul Cienfuegos
Democracy Unlimited