Coty v. Ramsey Associates, Inc.

546 A.2d 196, 149 Vt. 451, 1988 Vt. LEXIS 48, 1988 WL 82544
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 12, 1988
Docket85-399
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 546 A.2d 196 (Coty v. Ramsey Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coty v. Ramsey Associates, Inc., 546 A.2d 196, 149 Vt. 451, 1988 Vt. LEXIS 48, 1988 WL 82544 (Vt. 1988).

Opinion

Peck, J.

In the underlying nuisance action, plaintiffs alleged that defendants had established a highly offensive pig farm on a parcel of land in Stowe in retaliation for their opposition to a motel that defendants had planned to build on the site. Plaintiffs were residents and small business proprietors owning land immediately adjoining or across the road from the farm.

The suit was based on theories of nuisance and trespass. After a bench trial, the court awarded plaintiffs compensatory and punitive damages and enjoined any further unreasonable farm operations. Defendants appealed to this Court; we affirm in part and reverse in part.

Defendants filed separate briefs on appeal, raising a multitude of issues for our consideration. First, they claim that the trial court failed to apply the correct legal standard in the nuisance determination, arguing that any interference with plaintiffs’ use and enjoyment of their properties was brief and insubstantial; that neither unsightliness nor malice is a proper basis for a finding of nuisance; and that the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient to support the court’s conclusion. Defendants also attack the award of punitive damages, contending that the evidence does not support a finding of actual malice, that the award was excessive and violates both state and federal constitutions. Defendant Raymond Ramsey argues that the trial court failed to provide clear statements of the method used in assessing damages and of the weight accorded to the various factors. Finally, defendant Normand Ramsey complains that plaintiffs Anton and Pamela *454 Flory were not entitled to bring an action in the name of their motel because they had not registered to do business in the motel’s name.

Normand Ramsey is the president and sole shareholder of defendant Ramsey Associates, Inc. (corporation), and his son, Raymond Ramsey, is the vice-president. The corporation owns and operates two large farms, a chain of motels, a nursing home, and an automobile supply store. In 1981, Normand Ramsey purchased, in the name of the corporation, an open tract of land along the Mountain Road in the town of Stowe. In the following year, Raymond Ramsey, also acting in the corporation’s name, applied for an Act 250 permit to construct a seventy-nine unit motel on the parcel.

Plaintiffs Victor and Mary Coty reside on property adjoining the pig farm. Plaintiff Dorothy Nelson owns a gift and gourmet food shop, and plaintiffs Anton and Pamela Flory own a motel and residence; the Nelson and Flory properties are situated across the road from the farm. Plaintiffs formed a committee to oppose the planned motel and attempted to purchase the land, a large open meadow, for preservation purposes. Defendants, however, refused to sell.

In late October, 1982, construction of a motel on the site was approved under Act 250, but the approval was limited to fifteen units rather than the seventy-nine proposed. Defendants were disturbed by this ruling, and they began preparations to establish an extensive pig farm on the land. Raymond Ramsey, acting on behalf of the corporation, applied successfully for a zoning permit to operate the farm, a permitted use under the provisions of Stowe’s zoning ordinance.

Shortly after the Act 250 ruling was received, a large, rusty storage tank was placed in the meadow. This tank was never used. A few days later, the Ramseys and some workmen erected a fence around the parcel. When Mrs. Coty inquired as to the purpose of the fence, Normand Ramsey replied tersely: “Pigs!” On November 2 and 3, approximately sixteen truckloads of wet chicken manure, averaging thirteen cubic yards each, were dumped along a narrow strip directly across from the Nelson and Flory properties. The truck drivers had been instructed by Normand Ramsey to dump the manure along this particular strip, and Raymond Ramsey directed the dumping of the first truckload. The drivers used the Florys’ driveway to turn their vehicles *455 around, and both the driveway and the road were covered with manure. The dumping was halted when a temporary restraining order was served upon one of the drivers, who told police that the Ramseys had finally “gotten even” with plaintiffs.

At the subsequent hearing, the Ramseys testified that the manure would be used as fertilizer over an area of four acres, and the court declined to issue a preliminary injunction. However, the mounds of manure were merely leveled off within an area of one-half acre. In the spring of 1983, approximately eleven to thirteen more truckloads of chicken manure were delivered, and most of these loads were deposited along the same strip of land. An expert produced by the plaintiffs testified, and the court found, that the resulting supply of fertilizer was so grossly in excess of the recommended application that it would kill any attempted crop. The manure encouraged an infestation of flies that plagued plaintiffs’ properties during the spring, summer, and fall of 1983 and 1984. A powerful stench also engulfed the area, eventually requiring the Florys to purchase air conditioners for their motel.

In late November of 1982, approximately one hundred pigs and cows were delivered to the property along with a house trailer and ten or more junked automobiles. The animals were fed at a place closest to plaintiffs’ properties. In December of 1982, defendant Normand Ramsey telephoned Mrs. Nelson on two occasions and told her that serious consequences would follow if she continued her opposition to the motel.

During the winter of 1982, the animals had inadequate shelter, food and water and, as a result, became sick and lame. Mrs. Nelson made an offer to provide water, but was turned down. Animals died, and decomposing carcasses were left lying around.

With variations, the conditions that began in November, 1982 continued up until the spring of 1985. The manure delivery in 1983 resulted in manure that was over three feet deep in places. The smell and resulting flies continued through 1984.

Because the pigs were not properly separated, the boars mingled with the piglets and attacked them. Roosters were penned together so that they pecked each other to death. By the fall of 1984, the property contained over two hundred sickly animals along with over twenty carcasses of dead pigs, piglets, sheep and a goat. The dead animals were finally placed in an uncovered pit. Many of the piglets born in the winter of 1984-85 died; eight to ten burlap bags filled with piglet carcasses were removed. Nor *456 mand Ramsey knew of these conditions and took few, if any, steps to improve them until just before the case came to trial. The trial court found that defendants “used the pretext of operating a farm to abuse and kill animals which itself had no purpose other than to intentionally annoy, upset and harass plaintiffs and to cause them economic injury.”

Public curiosity was stimulated by the piggery, and traffic became congested in front of plaintiffs’ properties. Tourists would often trespass upon plaintiffs’ land in order to view and photograph the spectacle, and defendants issued an instruction sheet to farmhands regarding the treatment of tourists.

In addition, Mrs. Nelson’s well and springs were polluted as a result of the excessive manure.

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Bluebook (online)
546 A.2d 196, 149 Vt. 451, 1988 Vt. LEXIS 48, 1988 WL 82544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coty-v-ramsey-associates-inc-vt-1988.