Evan McKenzie on the rise of private urban governance and the law of homeowner and condominium associations. Contact me at ecmlaw@gmail.com
Tuesday, June 10, 2003
Last night I taught the first class of my summer course on Condo Law (RE 617--Condominiums, Cooperatives, and oOher Forms of Common Ownership Communities) at John Marshall Law School in Chicago. Going over the course content with the students it struck me once again how there is a disconnect between private and public law. I come to this subject from a public law perspective, thinking in terms of municipal and constitutional law, along with civil rights and liberties. But most of the legal authorities in the field--especially the law professors--bring a private law perspective with them, grounded in the law of real property, contracts, and corporations. This second group strenuously resists the intrusions of people like me. I can see why. The values of public and private law differ. The values of public law include equality, for example, while in private law the idea is to protect people's ability to become unequal according to their individual choices. Some get rich, some loose their shirts, and it's all for the greater good. When I was practicing in the field of common interest development law, I was comfortable juggling all these private considerations, such as the language of insurance policies, the liability of real estate developers to home buyers, the powers of associations to make decisions affecting the common property, and so forth. But as a teacher and writer on the subject, I find myself thinking more about the larger values of public law and how the whole CID phenomenon fits into a larger social picture. Seems to me that this disconnect must pose a bigger problem for legislators contemplating issues of CID reform in California and elsewhere.
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