Graveley Ranch v. Scherping

782 P.2d 371, 240 Mont. 20, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 304
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1989
Docket89-035
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 782 P.2d 371 (Graveley Ranch v. Scherping) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graveley Ranch v. Scherping, 782 P.2d 371, 240 Mont. 20, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 304 (Mo. 1989).

Opinions

JUSTICE McDONOUGH

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff appeals from an order of the District Court of the First Judicial District, Lewis and Clark County, granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants, the Scherpings. The issue on appeal is whether summary judgment was properly granted based on the running of the statute of limitations. We reverse the District Court’s order and remand this case for trial.

On October 29, 1987, the Graveley Ranch filed a lawsuit seeking damages for the death of 27 cows, 11 calves, the expectant offspring of those cows, and other miscellaneous expenses incurred as a result of defendants’ negligence. The complaint establishes that the plaintiff holds a grazing permit for 177 head of cattle on lands adjacent to defendants’ property. On September 30, 1984, defendants’ residence burned to the ground, leaving lead batteries inside the foundation walls exposed with no means of protection from plaintiff’s cattle which were pastured in the area during the summer of 1985. During that summer, plaintiff contends that he noticed some of his cattle “were looking very bad and were losing weight.” Plaintiff traced these symptoms and resulting deaths to the exposed lead batteries, alleging that:

“. . . (plaintiff) caused some of those animals to be tested and learned that several cows had died from lead poisoning. On November 4, 1985, he received a letter from the Solid and Hazardous Waste Bureau of the Montana Department of Health and Environmental Services that the source of the lead poisoning had been pinpointed as the foundation of defendants’ destroyed home.”

[22]*22Plaintiff contended that 27 cows and 11 calves died as a result of lead poisoning between September 1985 through the calendar year 1986.

In the answer, defendants’ alleged as a defense that the two-year statute of limitations period provided in § 27-2-207,. MCA, had run against the plaintiff prior to the filing of the action. Defendants moved for summary judgment, which plaintiff resisted on the ground that the limitation period did not begin to run until formal confirmation of the source of the injury was received. Plaintiff pinpointed November 4, 1985, as the date of formal confirmation when he allegedly received a letter from the Department of Health and Environmental Sciences.

The District Court refused to toll the statute of limitations because it concluded that plaintiff had knowledge of the actual cause of the injury prior to November 4, 1985, as evidenced by the following letter from plaintiffs counsel to the defendants dated September 25, 1985:

“. . . As a result of your failure to clean up the property, my brother has suffered the loss of at least six head of grown cattle and may incur substantial expense in drawing blood and testing the same on over 700 head of cattle. The lead poisoning has been confirmed by the State Department of Health, and the source has been identified as the lead batteries that were left at the uncleaned scene of the fire ...”

In its Answer to Interrogatories and Requests for Admissions on July 14, 1988, plaintiff admitted that the copy of the September 25 letter was true and correct. We agree with the District Court that plaintiff’s knowledge of the cause of injury as of September 25, 1985, precludes a tolling of the statute of limitations until November 4, 1985 when formal confirmation was allegedly received.

Plaintiff further contends that the statute of limitation period should be tolled until the damage was completed or stabilized. The District Court also rejected this argument, concluding that once plaintiff had knowledge and confirmation of the cause of the injury, no further stabilization was necessary. We conclude that the continuing nature of the injury in this case tolls the statute, and remand the case to the District Court.

In reaching this conclusion, we must first determine the type of injury sustained by the plaintiff. A nuisance is statutorily defined in Montana as:

“Anything which is injurious to health, indecent or offensive to the [23]*23senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property ...”

Section 27-30-101, MCA. We conclude that the presence of exposed lead batteries on defendants’ property resulting in a series of livestock deaths is potentially injurious to health and sufficiently interfered with plaintiff’s use of property for grazing so as to constitute a nuisance under § 27-30-101, MCA.

Whether or not the two-year statute of limitations can be tolled in a nuisance case depends upon whether it is a permanent, temporary, or continuous nuisance. In making such a determination, this Court has followed the general statement set forth in 39 Am.Jur., Nuisance, § 141, which is restated in 58 Am.Jur.2d, Nuisance § 132, pgs. 701-702.

“The nature of a nuisance as permanent or temporary, which, as has been seen, is a question that frequently is difficult to determine, has an important bearing on the running of the statute of limitations. Where a nuisance is permanent in character, and its construction and continuance necessarily result in an injury, all damages are recoverable in only one action, and the statute commences to run from the completion of the structure or thing which constitutes or causes the nuisance. The fact that the nuisance continues does not make the cause of action a recurring one. The running of the statute is not prevented by the fact that the plaintiff failed to discover that permanent character of the injury, or its cause, in time to bring an action for damages.

“On the other hand, when the injury is not complete, so that the damages can be measured in one action at the time of the creation of the nuisance, but depends upon its continuance and uncertain operation of the seasons or of the forces set in motion by it, the statute will not begin to run until actual damage has resulted therefrom. Each repetition of a temporary continuing nuisance gives rise to a new cause of action, and recovery may be had for damages accruing within the statutory period next preceding the commencement of the action . . .”

See Walton v. City of Bozeman (1978), 179 Mont. 351, 356, 588 P.2d 518, 521; Nelson v. CC Plywood (1970), 154 Mont. 414, 434, 465 P.2d 314, 324-25.

In Nelson, this Court held that pollution of the plaintiffs’ groundwater by defendant’s dumping of glue waste was a continuing temporary nuisance justifying a tolling of the statute of limitations. Although the dumping began in 1960 and plaintiffs did not file their [24]*24complaint until 1965, this Court held that the limitation period would be tolled and that plaintiffs could recover for all damages incurred in the two years preceding the filing date.

In Walton, supra, this Court also found a continuing nuisance where the City of Bozeman relocated an irrigation ditch and constructed a storm sewer which caused annual flooding of plaintiffs’ farm crops. This Court held that:

“. . . the damages caused here were a continuing nuisance and as such were within the applicable statute of limitations, because at all times, the City could have abated the nuisance by taking curative action.

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

Related

Lake County v. State
2024 MT 284 (Montana Supreme Court, 2024)
Christian v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
2015 MT 255 (Montana Supreme Court, 2015)
Burley v. Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co.
2012 MT 28 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)
Town of Superior v. Asarco, Inc.
874 F. Supp. 2d 937 (D. Montana, 2004)
Gomez v. State
1999 MT 67 (Montana Supreme Court, 1999)
Country Estates Homeowners Ass'n v. McMillan
915 P.2d 806 (Montana Supreme Court, 1996)
Currier v. Holden
862 P.2d 1357 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1993)
Montana Pole & Treating Plant v. I.F. Laucks & Co.
993 F.2d 676 (Ninth Circuit, 1993)
Knight v. City of Missoula
827 P.2d 1270 (Montana Supreme Court, 1992)
Montana Pole & Treating Plant v. IF Laucks and Co.
775 F. Supp. 1339 (D. Montana, 1991)
Graveley Ranch v. .Scherping
806 P.2d 29 (Montana Supreme Court, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
782 P.2d 371, 240 Mont. 20, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graveley-ranch-v-scherping-mont-1989.