Crea v. Crea

16 P.3d 922, 135 Idaho 246, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 129
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2000
Docket24793
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 16 P.3d 922 (Crea v. Crea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crea v. Crea, 16 P.3d 922, 135 Idaho 246, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 129 (Idaho 2000).

Opinion

*247 WALTERS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment enjoining the defendants, Mike and Lu Crea, from operating their hog-raising facility as a private nuisance. The judgment was entered after a trial before the district court. We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The following is a summary of facts that were determined by the district court at trial. William and Virginia Crea reside on property in Idaho County that was homesteaded in 1879 by William’s grandfather. In 1976, William and Virginia purchased 320 acres of the farm from William’s parents, and in 1977 moved into a home constructed by the family in 1899. The home and its surroundings are well maintained. The grounds surrounding the house are attractively landscaped, providing the Creas with a pleasant atmosphere to entertain themselves and their guests.

In 1992, Mike and Lu Crea, William’s nephew and niece, purchased an adjacent parcel of property from William’s brother Lewis. At the time of Mike and Lu’s purchase, Lewis Crea owned and operated a hog-raising facility. Mike and Lu took over Lewis’ operation, expanding the facility and increasing the number of sows from approximately ninety-six to around 160.

Mike and Lu’s hog-production facility is known as a “farrow-to-finish” operation. This essentially means that on a periodic basis some portion of Mike and Lu’s sows used in production are impregnated and then housed in a gestation bam. The barn is located within twenty-five feet of William and Virginia’s property line and approximately 650 feet from them home. The sows produce significant amounts of manure, which is scraped and stacked outside the barn prior to disposal.

The sows each produce litters of piglets. The sows and piglets are kept in a farrowing house. The piglets, once they are weaned, are then taken to a nursery. At that point, they are either sold or are “finished.” Those piglets that are finished are transferred to a modified open-front building in order to gain the weight necessary to be sold at market. The sows return to be bred — thus beginning the process all over again. Each of the sows is somewhere along this process at any given time. A typical sow can produce at least two litters of piglets in a given year.

Mike and Lu’s operation also contains three earthen impoundments 1 to store waste. These impoundments are, however, inadequate in terms of handling the waste produced by the hogs. One impoundment (impoundment A) was constructed at a size smaller than recommended by Gerald Bod-man, the expert hired by Mike and Lu to advise them with regard to construction of the waste disposal facilities. Another, (impoundment B) which the district court described as “an open septic tank,” lies just across William and Virginia Crea’s property line and approximately 1,100 feet from their home. A third impoundment (impoundment C) is located west of impoundment B. The gestation bam, impoundments, and other fa *248 eilities near William and Virginia’s home have allegedly resulted in frequent periods of offensive odor and profuse numbers of flies.

William and Virginia filed suit in 1997, seeking an injunction and damages. After a five-day trial the district court issued its decision on May 1, 1998, granting the injunction and awarding damages of $1,000 each to William and Virginia. The judgment was subsequently amended on May 7, 1998, and June 27, 1998. The amended judgment required Mike and Lu to: (1) discontinue their use of impoundment B; (2) construct at a new location further away from William and Virginia’s residence a facultative lagoon with an increased storage capacity following a new design, with the new lagoon to contain waste currently deposited elsewhere — including the waste in impoundment C; (3) decrease the size of the permanent breeding herd (including sows and gilts 2 ) back down to ninety-six or to relocate the herd to another site further away from William and Virginia’s property; (4) dispose of any existing and future waste by incorporating the manure into fields or pasture, and if such incorporation is within a one-half mile radius of William and Virginia’s residence, to immediately work the manure into the soil; (5) remove the waste currently in impoundment B and incorporate it into the soil; (6) refill and smooth over impoundment B with compacted soil.

ISSUES

Mike and Lu present two issues on appeal. First, they challenge whether the district court erred by not considering the applicability of the Idaho Right to Farm Act to them hog operation. Second, they question whether the district court’s finding that them hog facility constituted a private nuisance was based on substantial and competent evidence. William and Virginia request an award of attorney fees for responding to the appeal.

DISCUSSION

A. Applicability of the Idaho Right to Farm Act

Mike and Lu argue that the Idaho Right to Farm Act (RFTA or the Act), I.C. §§ 22-4501 to 22-4504, protects them expanding agricultural operation from being declared a nuisance. This issue presents a question of law over which we exercise free review. See, e.g., Ausman v. State, 124 Idaho 839, 841, 864 P.2d 1126, 1128 (1993).

The RFTA seeks to shield certain agricultural operations from being declared a nuisance. See Payne v. Skaar, 127 Idaho 341, 344, 900 P.2d 1352, 1355 (1995). The Act, in pertinent part, provides that:

[n]o agricultural operation or an appurtenance to it shall be or become a nuisance, private or public, by any changed conditions in or about the surrounding nonagricultural activities after the same has been in operation for more than one (1) year, when the operation was not a nuisance at the time the operation began; provided, that the provisions of this section shall not apply whenever a nuisance results from the improper or negligent operation of any agricultural operation or an appurtenance to it.

I.C. § 22-4503. In Payne, this Court concluded that the RTFA did not protect all existing agricultural operations from being declared a nuisance. Id. at 344, 900 P.2d at 1355. Noting the Act’s intent to address the encroachment of “urbanizing areas,” as well as changes in “surrounding nonagrieultural activities,” the Court found that the expansion of the defendant’s feedlot, without a showing of either circumstance, resulted in a private nuisance. Id.

Mike and Lu argue that the decision in Payne is not applicable to the present ease because of the addition of section 22-4502(2) to the Act in 1997. They assert that this amendment indicates the Idaho Legislature’s intent that the Act apply to nonagrieultural activity. Essentially, Mike and Lu contend that the Court’s holding in Payne does not apply to their hog operation because their use of their property is residential, and residential use is embraced in the amended version of the statute.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Powers v. Airbnb, Inc.
D. Hawaii, 2023
Gestner v. Divine
519 P.3d 439 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2022)
Village of Chadwick v. Nelson
2017 IL App (2d) 170064 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2017)
State v. Grado
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2016
The Village of LaFayette v. Brown
2015 IL App (3d) 130445 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2015)
McVicars v. Christensen
320 P.3d 948 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2014)
State v. Descheny
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2010
State v. K Akers
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2009
Trickett v. Ochs
2003 VT 91 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2003)
Fox v. Mountain West Electric, Inc.
52 P.3d 848 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2002)
Belk v. Martin
39 P.3d 592 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2001)
Anderson v. Larsen
34 P.3d 1085 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.3d 922, 135 Idaho 246, 2000 Ida. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crea-v-crea-idaho-2000.