The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights
Review 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 "head note,"
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
head note, instead of the formal written decision of the
Supreme Court. But that's not good enough.
What is a "head note?" 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, head notes 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 head note was
legally sterile, though, we can only speculate about his
tactics. Perhaps he thought judges in the future would
read his head note 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 day lighting 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
here. 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 e-mail here. For
more on Mr. Hartmann's book, go
here.