Owens v. United States

294 F. Supp. 400, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7998
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedDecember 24, 1968
DocketCiv. A. No. 3968-66
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 294 F. Supp. 400 (Owens v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. United States, 294 F. Supp. 400, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7998 (S.D. Ala. 1968).

Opinion

DANIEL HOLCOMBE THOMAS, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, a citizen and resident of Alabama, seeks to recover damages under the Federal Tort Claims Act, Title 28, United States Code 1346(b) as amended. The plaintiff alleges that agents and employees of the U. S. Agriculture Department poisoned his dairy cattle’s water [402]*402supply and deprived him of useful pasture land by the negligent application of chemical insecticide on neighboring property while acting within the line and scope of their employment as employees of the United States.

This matter came on for trial on the 14th and 15th day of October 1968 without a jury and I make the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

In April 1964, the plaintiff owned a small herd of dairy cattle, numbering approximately 90 head. The plaintiff owned 101 acres of pasture land in western Mobile County on which his cattle grazed. The western boundary line of the plaintiff’s property divided a small lake with approximately one acre, of water actually being located on the plaintiff’s side of the property line. The plaintiff testified that this small lake was the main source of drinking water for his herd. The evidence showed that the pond’s water supply was maintained by rainfall and water drainage. Beginning on property lying to the east of the plaintiff’s property, property hereinafter called the “Dodd Property”, is a dry-bed drainage creek which runs diagonally, east to west, across the land adjoining to the plaintiff’s and divides the plaintiff’s property into north and south sections, finally ending and draining into the plaintiff’s side of the lake. Normally this creek contained no stream hut would become active after a rainfall from the water draining off the surrounding terrain.

On April 10, 1964, employees of the Department of Agriculture had chemically treated the “Dodd Property”, including the banks of the drainage creek, with an insecticide called dieldrin. The majority of the treated property was used for nursery purposes and the chemical treatment of the soil was necessary to destroy and control the white fringed beetles which are harmful to nursery plants. Due to the agriculture department’s skill in soil treatment, it is customary for the government agents to treat the soil and charge the landowner for the services.

The granual or powdered form of dieldrin was used on the treated property and the Department’s regulations call for three pounds of pure dieldrin per acre. When the powdered form of the chemical is used, it is diluted with another granual chemical at a ratio of nine pounds dilution to one pound pure dieldrin. After the chemical is spread on the land, it is required that it be disced into the top three inches of the soil. This is required not only for effective soil treatment, but as a preventive measure against erosion. On the afternoon of the 13th of April 1964 a heavy rainstorm occurred on the area, converting the dry-bed drainage creek into an active stream. Water draining from the treated property carried the chemical into the creek and eventually into the plaintiff’s watering pond. Soon thereafter, at the request of the plaintiff, agents of the Department tested the plaintiff’s water and found it to contain a significant amount of dieldrin, thus poisoned. At the expense of the government, a fence was erected on the plaintiff’s property enclosing the creek and the pond. In total, 10 to 15 acres of the plaintiff’s property was closed off to the dairy cattle.

The Department’s regulations call for chemicals in diluted sprays to be used in land areas situated close to water.1

The plaintiff asserts that the agriculture employees were negligent in treating the soil in close proximity to the drainage creek with the powdered form of dieldrin.

As a direct result of this alleged negligence, the plaintiff claims that he lost the use of good pasture land, suffered a [403]*403reduction in milk production, had to drill a well to supply his herd with water and incurred additional expense in feed cost. The plaintiff also claims that the loss of the acreage, causing a greater concentration of his cattle, was the direct cause of his cattle contracting brucellosis, a disease commonly known as the “bangs disease”. Eighteen or nineteen head of the dairy cattle had to be slaughtered after contracting the disease and the value of the herd was decreased when the plaintiff sold them.

The veterinarian who treated the plaintiff’s diseased cattle testified that the brucellosis germ can be contracted by a concentration of cattle in a small area. The incubation period for the disease is in conflict, but may range from 15 days to as long as 300 days. The main symptom of the disease is the abortion of calves between the 6th and 7th month of pregnancy. Once a milk cow becomes diseased, it must be destroyed. In July 1965, some sixteen months after the chemical treatment of the soil, the disease was first discovered in plaintiff’s herd.

The Government does not deny that the dieldrin poisoned the plaintiff’s water, nor do they deny that the fence was constructed to keep the cattle from the area. The Government does deny negligence by its employees and asserts that the department’s regulations were properly obeyed and only as a result of an unusual and unforeseeable heavy rainstorm, constituting an Act of God, did the water become poisoned. In support of this position, the Government offered evidence that the amount of rainfall in April 1964, as compared with recorded rainfall for April in previous years, was greatly out of proportion.

Alternatively, the Government contends that the lost acreage had no food or water value to the cattle, but contends that the enclosed property was swampy marsh land, thus asserting that the plaintiff suffered no damages and actually profited by the construction of the fence. The Government also denies any causal connection with the lost acreage to the cattle’s contact with the bangs disease and claims that the plaintiff’s pasture land was overstocked prior to this incident.

CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

I.

This Court has jurisdiction to hear this cause under the Federal Tort Claims Act, Title 28, Section 1346(b) U.S.C.A., as amended. It has been previously determined, in connection with the Government’s motion for summary judgment, that the decision, to chemically treat the soil was not a decision made in the exercise of a discretionary function within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a).

II.

In an action by a person in possession of real property against the United States Government for damages caused by the alleged negligence of employees of the Government in failing to exercise due care in the application of a poisonous insecticide, the burden is upon the person in possession to show there was a breach of the duty to exercise due care and that the breach of the duty by the Government was the cause of the plaintiff’s injury or loss. Ray v. United States, 228 F.2d 574 (5 C.A.1956); United States v. Inmon, 205 F.2d 681 (5 C.A.1953). Whether or not the United States was guilty of actionable negligence through the actions of its agriculture employees is determined by the laws of Alabama. United States v.

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294 F. Supp. 400, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-united-states-alsd-1968.