State v. Shack
Doctrine Established:Limits on Right to Exclude / Property Rights Serve Human Values
Why is State v. Shack significant?
State v. Shack held that the rights of property owners are not absolute and must yield when they conflict with the fundamental rights of others. The case established that migrant farmworkers have a right to receive visitors providing essential services — including legal aid and medical care — on the employer's property, and that a property owner cannot invoke trespass law to deny workers access to such services. It is a foundational case on the limits of property rights.
Why This Case Matters
State v. Shack held that the rights of property owners are not absolute and must yield when they conflict with the fundamental rights of others. The case established that migrant farmworkers have a right to receive visitors providing essential services — including legal aid and medical care — on the employer's property, and that a property owner cannot invoke trespass law to deny workers access to such services. It is a foundational case on the limits of property rights.
Facts
Tejeras, a field worker for a legal services organization, and Shack, a staff member of a federally funded health services organization, entered the property of farmer Tedesco to provide legal and medical services to migrant farmworkers living on the farm. Tedesco refused to allow them to meet privately with the workers and insisted on being present during any conversation. When Tejeras and Shack refused to leave without seeing the workers privately, Tedesco called the police and had them charged with criminal trespass.
Procedural History
Both defendants were convicted of trespass in municipal court. The New Jersey Supreme Court reversed the convictions.
Issue
Whether a farm owner's property rights include the right to bar representatives of legal aid and health services organizations from entering the property to assist migrant farmworkers residing on the premises.
Holding
The court held that the property owner's rights do not include the right to deny migrant workers access to governmental services, legal representation, and medical care. The court found that no trespass occurred because the visitors' entry to provide essential services to the workers was privileged. Property rights are not absolute and must be balanced against the rights of others, particularly those in vulnerable positions.
Reasoning & Analysis
Justice Dalton reasoned that property rights are not absolute but are defined by the needs of society and the rights of other individuals. The court held that migrant farmworkers, who live on their employer's property and have limited mobility and access to services, have a right to receive visitors providing essential governmental, legal, and medical services. Denying such access would effectively isolate the workers from the protections of the legal system and from basic human services. The court emphasized that the employer's property right must be balanced against the workers' fundamental rights as human beings. Rather than creating a broad exception to trespass law, the court defined the scope of the property right itself as not including the right to exclude those providing essential services to residents.
Key Quotes
“Property rights serve human values. They are recognized to that end, and are limited by it.”
“Title to real property cannot include dominion over the destiny of persons the owner permits to come upon the premises.”
“The farmer may not deny the worker his privacy or the opportunity to live with dignity and to enjoy associations customary among our citizens.”
Legacy & Impact
State v. Shack is a seminal case on the limits of property rights and has been influential in discussions about the social obligations of property ownership. The case has been cited in contexts ranging from labor law to housing law to free speech on private property. It represents the principle that property rights exist within a social framework and must accommodate the fundamental needs and rights of others.
Exam Relevance
State v. Shack appears on Property exams in questions about the limits of the right to exclude, trespass defenses, and the social function of property. Students should be prepared to discuss when property rights must yield to the rights of others and to apply the balancing framework the court articulated.
Study Tips
- 1Understand the key principle: property rights serve human values and are limited by them.
- 2Know the specific holding: essential service providers may enter to assist residents, overriding the owner's right to exclude.
- 3Be prepared to discuss broader implications: does the case apply to other contexts such as union organizers, social workers, or political canvassers?
- 4Connect this case to the right to exclude as one of the fundamental sticks in the bundle of property rights and how State v. Shack limits that stick.
Related Cases
3 Cai. R. 175 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1805) (1805) — Deep-dive analysis
21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 543 (1823) (1823) — Deep-dive analysis
428 F.2d 1071 (D.C. Cir. 1970) (1970) — Deep-dive analysis
334 U.S. 1 (1948) (1948) — Deep-dive analysis
545 U.S. 469 (2005) (2005) — Deep-dive analysis