Holubec v. Brandenburger

58 S.W.3d 201, 2001 WL 987789
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 2001
Docket03-00-00684-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 S.W.3d 201 (Holubec v. Brandenburger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holubec v. Brandenburger, 58 S.W.3d 201, 2001 WL 987789 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice

(Retired).

David and Mary Holubec (the “Holu-becs”) appeal from a judgment recovered on the jury’s verdict by several plaintiffs whom we will refer to collectively as the “Brandenburgers.” 1 We will affirm the judgment.

THE CONTROVERSY

The Brandenburgers alleged against the Holubecs a nuisance action based upon conditions allegedly created by the Holubecs’ feedlot adjacent to the Bran-denburgers’ home, namely: great deposits of manure, muddy hollows, rotting feed, and decaying animal bodies that gave rise to hordes of flies, clouds of manure-laden dust, mold spores, insecticides, and foul and obnoxious odors that invaded the Brandenburgers’ property; bawling lambs confined in the feedlot for weaning; and, bright elevated lights that illuminated the Brandenburgers’ home at night and prevented their sleeping. The jury found these conditions amounted to a nuisance and the Brandenburgers recovered judgment restraining the Holubecs from certain actions regarding the feedlot and requiring or permitting other matters.

To understand properly the Holubecs’ appellate complaints, it is necessary that we summarize the body of evidence, the verdict, and the final judgment. The Ho-lubecs and Brandenburgers share a common boundary. The Holubecs own three contiguous tracts of rural land totaling about 450 acres. Their feedlot lies against their western boundary and 135 feet from the Brandenburgers’ home, which is situated just inside their eastern boundary. In addition to the 450 acres, the Holubecs own and lease other land in the vicinity amounting to about 4,500 acres. On their various properties, they ordinarily have about 3,000 ewes year in and year out and realize annually almost as many lambs. These lambs, together with others acquired by the Holubecs, are confined in the feedlot for weaning.

Before they purchased the three tracts of land comprising the 450 acres, the Holu-becs leased one of the tracts. They fed sheep in a fenced twenty-acre pasture on the leased tract. They purchased the tract subsequently and converted part of the twenty-acre pasture to a ten-acre feedlot consisting of iron-pipe pens, feed troughs, *205 and other small structures. According to David Holubec’s testimony, he designed the feedlot to accommodate 6,000 lambs and, from time to time, as many as 5,800 head were confined therein. Another witness testified the facility would accommodate 10,000 head. According to the Holu-becs’ evidence, the feedlot improvements were completed in June 1997, at a cost of $75,284.19, and at the time of trial had a depreciated value of $40,284.19 for income-tax purposes. No evidence was adduced to show the cost of moving the pens and other structures to another location or whether the feedlot was a profitable operation. The feedlot is not the Holubees’ livelihood. They make their living from farming and from their fertilizer and seed businesses. Although David Holubec testified he built the ten-acre feedlot before the Brandenburger home was erected in 1993, he was shown to be mistaken by testimony of other witnesses, county tax records, and an aerial photograph published by the United States Department of Agriculture. These show the feedlot was not constructed until several years after the Brandenburger home was built and occupied.

The Brandenburgers introduced testimony as follows: the conditions amounting to a nuisance did not exist so long as the Holubees confined and fed a number of sheep in the twenty-acre pasture from which the ten acres were carved to build the feedlot; the nuisance conditions began when thousands of lambs were confined in the newly constructed feedlot pens. It was then that manure began to accumulate in large quantities, lambs began dying in sizeable numbers, dead animals were placed in nearby “dead pits,” two lagoons were dug to catch runoff from the pens, and watering the animals in the feedlot resulted in muddy bogs, all of which furnished breeding grounds for flies, caused foul odors, and during dry periods led to dust that invaded the Brandenburger residence along with the flies, odors, and loud noise of bawling lambs.

The Holubees confine lambs in the feedlot for about a ninety-day period during which the lambs are weaned from mother’s milk to feed. About two percent of the lambs, or some 120 animals, die in the feedlot during such periods. According to David Holubec’s testimony, the feedlot is checked for dead bodies at least three times each day. The dead bodies are removed immediately on being discovered and are placed in the dead pits where they are covered with a layer of soil to prevent flies and discourage scavengers. Photographic evidence was introduced, however, showing that some of the dead bodies were not covered for weeks or months and were in a state of decay. David Holubec testified that when he dug the dead pits, he never thought about whether they would result in odors that might bother his neighbors.

David Holubec testified further as follows: the elevated lights of which the Brandenburgers complained were erected to enable him to observe the lambs in the feedlot in darkness, and to move the animals about in the night; his feedlot and dead pits do not breed flies or produce dust or foul odors, nor do they attract buzzards; the weaning lambs in the feedlot do not bawl; and the flies of which the Brandenburgers complain do not come from his feedlot because he took measures to prevent their breeding. This testimony was contradicted absolutely by other evidence, including testimony given by the Brandenburgers, photographs, and contrary answers to written interrogatories given by David Holubec himself before trial. The contradictory evidence included the testimony of an entomologist who inspected the dead pits, the lagoons, the feedlot, and other aspects of the feedlot *206 operation. In his opinion, the flies were bred in the dead pits and other specified locations in the feedlot. He was unable to find any condition on the Brandenburger property from which the flies might have come.

No evidence was adduced to show the Holubecs could not operate the feedlot elsewhere on their 450-acre tract or on another of their nearby properties where the operation would not bother a neighbor. David Holubec testified he was “not going to change the way” he operated the feedlot unless made to do so by the court; and he intends to keep the feedlot permanently where it is now. He admitted he never replied to inquiries from the Brandenbur-gers seeking to arrive at a mutually agreeable solution to the feedlot problem, and conceded he “ignored” the inquiries.

In response to Questions One and Ten, the jury found the feedlot was a permanent nuisance; in response to Question Three, the jury answered that the Holu-becs had negligently constructed or operated the feedlot; in answer to Question Four, the jury failed to find any sum of money that would fairly and reasonably compensate the Brandenburgers for damages caused them by the nuisance or negligence, considering the elements of personal discomfort, annoyance, inconvenience, sickness, medical care, physical pain, and mental anguish; and, in answer to Questions Five and Six, the jury found the nuisance or negligence proximately caused a $12,932.50 reduction in the market value of the Brandenburger property. In response to Question Nine, the jury found the Holubecs had obstructed the normal flow of air to the Brandenburger land.

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58 S.W.3d 201, 2001 WL 987789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holubec-v-brandenburger-texapp-2001.