New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. New Jersey Department of Agriculture

955 A.2d 886, 196 N.J. 366, 2008 N.J. LEXIS 894
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 30, 2008
DocketA-27 September Term 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 955 A.2d 886 (New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. New Jersey Department of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. New Jersey Department of Agriculture, 955 A.2d 886, 196 N.J. 366, 2008 N.J. LEXIS 894 (N.J. 2008).

Opinion

Justice HOENS

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1996, with little discernable fanfare, the Legislature enacted a new section of the existing statute regulating animal cruelty. Although that statute, since at least 1898, had essentially left animal welfare and the protection of animals to the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (“NJSPCA”) and its related county organizations, the Legislature decreed that the Department of Agriculture (“the Department”) would be vested with certain authority relating to the care and welfare of domestic livestock, commonly referred to as farm animals.

In doing so, the Legislature directed the Department to create and promulgate regulations that would set standards governing the raising, keeping, and marketing of domestic livestock, but it specified that the guiding principle to be utilized in establishing those standards was to be whether the treatment of these animals was “humane.” The statute required the Department to consult with the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station 1 in developing and promulgating the regulations and established a presumption that compliance with those regulations would satisfy the other *371 statutory standards defining animal cruelty. Although vesting the Department with this rulemaking function, the Legislature left the preexisting enforcement mechanisms, which have long relied on the NJSPCA, largely undisturbed.

This matter presents us with a broad challenge to the regulations promulgated by the Department pursuant to this legislative directive. More particularly, we are called upon to consider whether the Department, in promulgating the regulations relating to the care of domestic livestock: (1) failed in general to comply with the mandate of the Legislature that it create standards that are “humane,” either objectively or as tested against the definition that the Department itself adopted; (2) created an impermissibly broad and vague category of permitted practices by referring to “routine husbandly practices” as generally acceptable; (3) failed to create an adequate regulatory scheme by utilizing undefined or ill-defined terms that cannot serve as objectively enforceable standards; and (4) embraced a variety of specific practices that are either objectively inhumane or supported by inadequate scientific evidence as to their usefulness, or that fail to meet any accepted definition of the term humane.

In part, the issues before this Court require us to evaluate the very methodology utilized by the Department in its creation of the challenged regulations; in part, the issues before us raise questions and debates arising from deeply held notions concerning the welfare of animals generally. Nonetheless, the dispute before this Court has nothing to do with anyone’s love for animals, or with the way in which any of us treats our pets; rather, it requires a balancing of the interests of people and organizations who would zealously safeguard the well-being of all animals, including those born and bred for eventual slaughter, with the equally significant interests of those who make their living in animal husbandry and who contribute, through their effort, to our food supply.

In the end, our focus is not upon, nor would it be appropriate for us to address, whether we deem any of the specifically challenged practices to be, objectively, humane. To engage in that *372 debate would suggest that we have some better understanding of the complex scientific and technical issues than we possibly could have, or that we are in some sense better able to evaluate the extensive record compiled by the Department than is that body itself. To engage in that discussion would also suggest that in a realm in which the Legislature has expressed its intention that an administrative agency bring its expertise to bear upon the issues, this Court is better equipped to do so. More to the point, it would suggest that we, rather than the Legislature or the Department, know which farming and livestock practices are objectively humane and which are not.

To accept such a challenge would be to overstep our role in our constitutional system, for it would be little more than our effort to substitute our view for that of the bodies authorized to act. It is, simply put, an invitation that we decline to accept. Rather, we confine our analysis, as we must, to a consideration about whether the agency in question did or did not carry out the function assigned to it by the Legislature, as tested in accordance with our ordinary standard of review of final agency actions and with due deference to the considerable expertise of that agency.

Notwithstanding all of the foregoing, our review of the record compels us to conclude that in its wholesale embrace of the regulations adopted by the Department, the Appellate Division erred. Because we find in those regulations both unworkable standards and an unacceptable delegation of authority to an ill-defined category of presumed experts, we conclude that the Department failed, in part, to carry out its mandate. We therefore conclude that some, but not all, of the regulations are invalid and we reverse only those aspects of the Appellate Division’s judgment that concluded otherwise.

I.

The statute that created the underpinnings for the challenged regulations was first introduced for consideration by the Legislature on March 3,1994. Designated as Senate Bill 713, it proposed *373 the creation of an entirely new statutory section, and was entitled “AN ACT concerning domestic livestock and animal cruelty and welfare laws, amending R.S. 4:22-16, supplementing chapter 22 of Title 4 of the Revised Statutes and making an appropriation.” The bill was designed to construct the framework for the adoption of standards to govern the care of domestic livestock as a part of the existing laws prohibiting cruelty to animals. The statement attached to the bill specified that “[i]t is the intent of this bill that it should be construed to allow the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ... in cooperation with the Department of Agriculture, to continue in the SPCA’s statutory capacity to enforce the State’s animal cruelty laws.” Sponsor’s Statement, Statement to Senate Bill No. 713 (Mar. 3, 1994).

On March 21, 1994, the Assembly Economic and Community Development, Agriculture and Tourism Committee issued a statement to Senate Bill Number 713 using identical language to describe the “intent” of the bill. Thereafter, on June 2, 1994, the Senate Senior Citizens, Veterans Affairs and Agricultural Committee issued a statement “favorably report[ing] [on] Senate Bill No. 713 with committee amendments.” 2 Among other things, the statement specified that “[i]t is the intent of this bill that it should be construed to allow the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals ... in cooperation with the Department of Agriculture, to continue in the SPCA’s statutory capacity to enforce the State’s animal cruelty laws.” Senate Senior Citizens, Veterans Affairs and Agricultural Committee, Statement to Senate Bill No. 713 (June 2, 1994). The bill was passed by the Senate

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

Related

In the Matter of Kevin Norton, Wanaque, Police Department
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission v. Power Motors, LLC
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
New Jersey Black Bears v. Shawn M. Latourette
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
Shawn Hyland v. State Board of Education, Etc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
S.K. v. Newport Gardens Condominium Association
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
In Re Adoption of N.J.A.C. 5:105-1.6
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
Maria Azzaro v. Board of Education of the City of Trenton, Etc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2023
In the Matter of Marilyn Roman and Sudhan Thomas, Etc.
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2023

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
955 A.2d 886, 196 N.J. 366, 2008 N.J. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-jersey-society-for-the-prevention-of-cruelty-to-animals-v-new-jersey-nj-2008.