Of Buildings, Statues, Art, and Sperm: The Right to Destroy and the Duty to Preserve

G. Alexander
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy, Spring 2018, Vol. 27, No.3Markets require some sort of property rights, including transferability. Without transferable property rights market relations cannot get off the ground. Moreover, markets assume that these rights refer to some resource, some thing that is the object of the market relationship. In this sense property is, as some commentators recently have argued, about things. Saying that property is about things doesn’t tell us very much, though. It tells us nothing about the sorts of things that are the object of property rights, and it gives no indication whether property rights are uniform and fixed regardless of the sort of thing involved. Things are not all of a piece; pencils are not Picassos. There is no good reason to think that the law of property should treat all things alike. Modularity can take us only so far. Property law does and should make distinctions regarding the rights that owners have or don’t have and the extent of those rights depending upon the sorts of things they own.This Article investigates distinctions that property law does draw or should draw with respect to the right to destroy. That right has important implications for the market because the consequence of full exercise of the right, i.e., destruction of the thing, is complete and irrevocable removal of an asset from future market transactions. Where the asset involved is of a fungible sort, a pencil, for example, there is little cause for concern about this loss. The losses about which we worry, however, are those involving non-fungible items, pearls of great price. Such losses include historic buildings and important works of art. Disputes involving the right to destroy have ranged farther, though. Among the most contentious and sensitive of these are disputes over the disposition of human reproductive material. These controversies too have implications for the market, as human sperm and eggs may be sold and bought under certain conditions.Despite its importance, the right to destroy is one of the least discussed twigs in the proverbial bundle of rights constituting ownership. A recent article by Lior Strahilevitz analyzes the right in detail. Other than his article, only an earlier article by Edward McCaffery, and 1999 book by the late Joseph Sax, Playing Darts with a Rembrandt, have discussed the right to destroy within the past several decades. McCaffery’s essay takes the position that most courts have adopted, rejecting the claim that owners have the right to destroy that which they own. McCaffery regards such a right as “an embarrassment in Anglo-American law.” This appears to be the conventional wisdom, with the recent edition of Black’s Law Dictionary excluding the right to destroy from the incidents of ownership included in its definition of ownership. More recently, however, Lior Strahilevitz has provided a powerful defense of the right to destroy. Strahilevitz bases his argument substantially on expressive values implicated in an owner’s preference to destroy an object that he owns. Sax’s book opposes a right to destroy with respect to works that have cultural significance.This Article analyzes the right to destroy from the perspective of the human flourishing theory that I have been developing over the past several years. I will discuss four controversies in which the related questions whether owners have a right to destroy what they own and whether they have obligations to preserve their property. The settings that I will examine, albeit briefly, are historic preservation, artists’ destruction of their own work, removal of public statues, and destruction of frozen sperm. My aim is to show how the human flourishing theory provides an illuminating framework for analyzing what is at stake in disputes over an owner’s asserted right to destroy something that he owns. Hopefully, this framework will provide a more satisfying, analytically and morally, means of resolving such disputes. To set the stage for these case studies, I begin with a brief summary of Lior Strahilevitz’s argument in support of the right to destroy.
论建筑、雕像、艺术与精子:毁灭的权利与保存的义务
《康奈尔法律与公共政策杂志》,2018年春季版,第27卷,no .3。没有可转让产权,市场关系就无法起步。此外,市场假定这些权利指的是某种资源,是市场关系的对象。从这个意义上说,正如一些评论家最近所主张的那样,财产是关于事物的。说财产是关于事物的,并不能告诉我们很多。它没有告诉我们什么东西是产权的客体,也没有说明产权是否是统一的和固定的,不管涉及的是什么东西。事情并非完全一致;铅笔不是毕加索。没有充分的理由认为财产法应该一视同仁。模块化只能带我们走这么远。物权法确实也应该区分所有者拥有或不拥有的权利以及这些权利的范围取决于他们拥有的东西的种类。本文探讨了财产法对毁坏权所作或应作的区分。这项权利对市场具有重要影响,因为充分行使这项权利的后果,即销毁该物品,就是彻底和不可撤销地将一项资产从未来的市场交易中移除。如果涉及的资产是一种可替代的类型,例如一支铅笔,那么几乎没有理由担心这种损失。然而,我们所担心的损失是那些涉及不可替代物品、价值不菲的珍珠的损失。这些损失包括历史建筑和重要艺术品。不过,涉及销毁权的争议范围更广。其中最具争议性和敏感性的是关于人类生殖材料处理的争议。这些争议也对市场产生了影响,因为人类精子和卵子可能在某些条件下进行买卖。尽管它很重要,但在众所周知的构成所有权的一系列权利中,破坏的权利是最少被讨论的一个小分枝。Lior Strahilevitz最近的一篇文章详细分析了这种权利。除了他的文章,在过去的几十年里,只有爱德华·麦卡弗里(Edward McCaffery)早期的一篇文章和已故的约瑟夫·萨克斯(Joseph Sax) 1999年出版的《与伦勃朗玩飞镖》(Playing dart with a Rembrandt)一书讨论了破坏的权利。麦卡弗里的文章采取了大多数法院采取的立场,拒绝了所有者有权销毁其拥有的东西的主张。麦卡弗里认为这样的权利是“英美法律中的尴尬”。这似乎是一种传统观念,最新版的《布莱克法律词典》(Black’s Law Dictionary)在对所有权的定义中,将破坏的权利从所有权事件中排除了出来。然而,最近,Lior Strahilevitz为破坏的权利提供了强有力的辩护。斯特拉希莱维茨的论点基本上建立在表达价值的基础上,表达价值涉及到所有者破坏他所拥有的物品的偏好。萨克斯的书反对摧毁具有文化意义的作品的权利。本文从我多年来发展的人类繁荣理论的角度来分析毁灭权。我将讨论四个争议,其中相关的问题是所有者是否有权摧毁他们所拥有的东西以及他们是否有义务保护他们的财产。我将简要考察的背景是历史保护、艺术家对自己作品的破坏、公共雕像的移除以及冷冻精子的破坏。我的目的是展示人类繁荣理论如何提供了一个有启发性的框架,用于分析在所有者声称有权摧毁其拥有的东西的争议中,什么是利害攸关的。希望这一框架将提供一种更令人满意的、分析性和道义性的解决这类争端的方法。为了为这些案例研究奠定基础,我首先简要总结一下Lior Strahilevitz支持毁灭权的论点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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