Smith v. Wright

2013 Mass. App. Div. 24, 2013 WL 1042544, 2013 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 6
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 6, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2013 Mass. App. Div. 24 (Smith v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Wright, 2013 Mass. App. Div. 24, 2013 WL 1042544, 2013 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 6 (Mass. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Swan, J.

The greenhouse was unsightly, to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that. But what then ensued was sheer rancor over everything else, resulting in a three-day trial in the Lowell District Court in which a jury returned a verdict and awarded damages in favor of Kimberly Smith (“Smith”) and Kevin Riley (“Riley”) against Eric Wright (‘Wright”) and Komeeka Farm & Equestrian Center (“Komeeka Farm”) for trespass, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and nuisance. On this appeal, Wright and Komeeka Farm contend that Smith and Riley failed to present a legally sufficient case, and that the trial judge erroneously precluded a defense witness from testifying, denied their request to reread certain instructions to the jury, denied their various motions for judgment and other relief, and declined to dismiss Komeeka Farm as a party having no independent legal identity.

The jury could have found the following. In May, 2006, Smith purchased a house in Tyngsboro for herself and her fiancé, Riley.2 Shortly after moving in, she installed an above-ground swimming pool. Wright owned a home abutting the rear of Smith’s property. Wright’s property consisted of a pork-chop shaped lot, with a driveway parallel to Smith’s driveway and separated from it by a grassy strip; on his lot was a house, a shed, a barn and paddocks, from which he ran Komeeka Farm for the boarding of horses and riding lessons. Komeeka Farm was already an operating enterprise when Wright acquired his property.

Located on Smith’s back lot was a greenhouse, which had been used by the prior owner for growing orchids. The greenhouse was eighty by twenty-seven feet in size; was made of wood, steel piping, and a plastic cover; was furnished with heating, an oil tank, electricity and an alarm system; and had an industrial appearance. The greenhouse was visible from Wright’s property. Both Smith and Wright agreed that [25]*25the greenhouse was an eyesore. Both agreed that it should be removed from Smith’s lot. As will be seen, they disagreed only as to how.

Smith wanted to sell the greenhouse, and conferred with a number of potential buyers or renters, but without success. After an initial neighborly introduction, Wright offered several times to remove the greenhouse himself. He said he could plow it down with his tractor and dump the materials on a slope on his property. Each time Smith or Riley declined the offer, telling him that they were trying to sell the greenhouse, and that they had just moved in and had other more pressing concerns, including their full-time jobs. On September 12, 2006, while Smith and Riley were at work, Wright sent Richard Linnell (“Linnell”) and two helpers to Smith’s property, where they partially dismantled the greenhouse, and moved parts of it off-site. Smith had given neither Wright nor Linnell permission to enter her property or remove the greenhouse. When Smith and Riley came home, all that was left of the greenhouse were hanging plumbing, cut "wires, and a mangled mess. When asked why he had done it, Wright said, “I thought you were throwing it out.” Smith asked Wright, ‘Well, since your friend started taking the greenhouse down, what will he give us for the rest of it?” Wright answered, “Nothing.” After a lull in the conversation, Wright said, “Oh, I can’t do anything right,” walked ten feet away, sat down on Smith’s lawn and started to cry. That was their last conversation — and the end of neighborly relations.

Riley tried to remedy the situation temporarily by covering the remains of the greenhouse and the exposed heating, oil tank, fans, and other equipment with a tarpaulin, but a storm blew away the tarpaulin. Smith received estimates of $7,000.00 to remove the greenhouse remains and $3,000.00 to landscape the damaged area, and $30,000.00 to rebuild the greenhouse.

Things turned ugly with Wright. One Sunday, shortly after the greenhouse incident, Smith and Riley were pulling out of their driveway and saw Wright in his truck coming the other way. They waved; he grimaced. Wright “floored” the truck and crossed the center line toward Smith and Riley, hitting the brakes at the last minute and turning into his driveway, leaving Smith and Riley shaken, scared, and reluctant to return home. The following February, Wright gathered snow in his tractor from across the street and dumped it in Smith’s driveway. The next spring, Wright began spreading dirt and manure with his tractor, starting at 5:30 AM., with headlights on, and at night until 11:00 P.M. He would often wait to start this work until after Riley arrived home from work, and on weekends when he saw Smith’s and Riley’s cars and knew they were home. Wright was simply thinning out dirt and manure — in Riley’s words, “killing time” and engaging in “excessive tractor usage.” It shook their house and was very loud. To Smith, it was like “a constant earthquake”; she became anxious and lost sleep.

In May, 2007, a survey revealed that Wright’s post and rail fence encroached on Smith’s property. Wright removed the fence, leaving six-to-twelve inch deep holes, which he eventually filled.

One day, Smith was in her pool when Wright and “a group of guys” came to the nearby fence to clear the area and began “cursing and heckling and also spitting in her direction. “Scared to death,” she went into the house and called Riley, who told her to lock the doors. On another day, Smith was cleaning the pool when one of Wright’s workers made a loud “man spit” noise — “hockin’ loogies” in Riley’s phrase [26]*26— to get her attention and stared at her while she worked. Smith felt intimidated and called Riley, who came home, by which time the man had gone. It made Riley “feel a failure.... I was defenseless.” On June 18, at 6:30 A.M., Wright began to mow the grass between the driveways, but nowhere else on his property. Two days later, at 6:45 A.M., he mowed the same area, waking Smith and Riley. On June 21, while Riley was cleaning the pool, Wright jumped on his lawn mower, and sprayed dirt, manure, and debris onto Smith’s property. On June 24, Smith’s parents, brother, and sister-in-law came over for an outdoor barbecue to celebrate Father’s Day. Wright started up a leaf blower around his driveway, blowing dirt over Smith’s yard and the food, forcing the party inside. Only when the wind changed and started blowing dirt at Wright did he stop.

On two days in July, one of Wright’s farm hands stalked and “glared” at Riley, who was “scared to death.” At another outdoor party in August, this one to celebrate Riley’s father’s seventy-fifth birthday, thirty guests came, some from Vermont and Florida. It was windy, and Wright started an industrialized leaf blower where there were no leaves, and blew dirt into Smith’s pool and onto food tables, again sending the partygoers into the house. Smith felt angry, humiliated, and “shattered” and that she “couldn’t have people over.” Riley, in turn, felt that his family watched him get “kicked by the neighborhood bully and all I could do was walk in the house and hide — humiliated.” Smith and Riley held no more family events at Smith’s home.

The following year brought little relief. One day in July, 2008, Riley and Smith were watching a Rambo DVD when Wright started playing rock ‘n’ roll music “very loud” from his barn so that they could no longer hear the television through the thumping vibration in the house. Riley went outside; seeing him, Wright turned up the music and started to dance. In November, 2008, Wright again cut Smith off in her car.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2013 Mass. App. Div. 24, 2013 WL 1042544, 2013 Mass. App. Div. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wright-massdistctapp-2013.