Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs v. Franklin County

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2014
Docket40865
StatusPublished

This text of Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs v. Franklin County (Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs v. Franklin County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs v. Franklin County, (Idaho 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO Docket No. 40865

SPIRIT RIDGE MINERAL SPRINGS, ) LLC, a Wyoming limited liability company, ) Pocatello, May 2014 Term ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) 2014 Opinion No. 106 ) v. ) Filed: October 29, 2014 ) FRANKLIN COUNTY, ) Stephen Kenyon, Clerk ) Defendant-Respondent. ) _____________________________________

Appeal from the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Franklin County. Hon. Mitchell W. Brown, District judge.

The district court’s decision is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to respondent.

Atkin Law Offices, P.C., Clifton, Utah, attorneys for appellant. Blake S. Atkin argued.

Franklin County Prosecuting Attorney, Preston, attorney for respondent. Vic A. Pearson argued. _____________________________ W. JONES, Justice I. NATURE OF THE CASE Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs, LLC (“Spirit Ridge”) appeals a judgment entered in favor of Franklin County dismissing Spirit Ridge’s complaint which had requested abatement of a private nuisance and for an injunction against a gun range operated by Franklin County adjacent to its property. In a bench trial, the district court ruled that Spirit Ridge had failed to demonstrate that there was an ongoing and continuing nuisance at the time of the trial. Spirit Ridge appeals. We affirm. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Franklin County owns and operates a gun range on a plateau adjacent to Spirit Ridge’s property. The gun range generally was open to the public from daybreak until dusk. Franklin County employed a manager of the gun range to supervise the people using the range to some

1 extent, but he was not always present at the gun range. Franklin County posted and continually updated signs with various rules, guidelines, and directions about the use of the gun range. On August 25, 2011, Spirit Ridge, through its manager, James Ridge, filed a complaint against Franklin County alleging that the shooting range was a private nuisance and that Spirit Ridge was entitled to have the shooting range abated. Spirit Ridge also prayed for a permanent injunction preventing Franklin County from using the range or allowing others to use the range. At trial, Spirit Ridge presented evidence of several instances including the following: in 1999, shortly after James Ridge purchased the Spirit Ridge property, he was repairing a fence and was pelted with shotgun pellets. Mr. Ridge stated that he did not believe whoever was skeet shooting at the gun range was properly using the range. He testified that on or near December 23, 2000, he was speaking to his wife on the telephone while she was on the property. Mr. Ridge testified that he heard a loud “booming” in the background. Mr. Ridge walked his property but did not find any shell casings. Mr. Ridge did not know for certain what caused the booming noise in the background. Mr. Ridge testified also that on or near December 23, 2000, two men stepped over the fence on the gun range and onto his property and began firing at him, his wife, and their residence. Mr. Ridge testified that these men appeared to be on his property, not on the property of the gun range. Mr. Ridge stated that sometime around 2007 a neighbor climbed the berms on the gun range and shot across his property to another property two or three miles away. Mr. Ridge testified that he confronted his neighbor and told him that the conduct in shooting across his property was criminal. Mr. Ridge testified that in 2008, two of his horses were shot and killed. He asserted that the evidence clearly showed that bullet wounds were the cause of the horses’ deaths; however, Mr. Ridge acknowledged on cross-examination that he did not know whether the bullets that killed the horses were fired from the vicinity of the gun range. Another witness, Deborah Fischer testified that in 2007 while she was repairing fences on the Spirit Ridge property, she heard ricocheting. The ricochets did not hit near her. She testified that they could have been gravel or sand. The next year, in 2008, someone was shooting a shotgun at the range. Shotgun pellets allegedly hit a truck being driven by Ms. Fischer and broke the windshield. Mr. Ridge and Ms. Fischer confronted a person coming from the gun range about the incident. Finally, before or near 2008, Jim Hull was working in a grove of trees to the north of the gun range when he heard shots fired. It seemed to him as though the shots went into the trees. Mr. Hull related that he has been in the area since that incident and has not had a similar experience.

2 After numerous complaints from Mr. Ridge, Franklin County temporarily closed the gun range. However, the locks were cut and the public began using the range again. Franklin County made some improvements to the gun range around 2008. The north berm of the gun range was improved and “built up a little” in 2008. Improvements were made on the rifle range berm, which included installing a back berm in 2008. The center shooting range was fully enclosed in 2008. Additionally, canopies and benches were installed to contain the shooter’s field of vision. Mr. Ridge contends that the berm improvements did not stop the ricochets onto his property because the berms were not adequate and were made from tires and rubber. Mr. Ridge left Spirit Ridge in 2008 because of the alleged ricochets. He contended that he has been to the property since he left and has continued to experience ricochets. Following Spirit Ridge’s presentation of evidence at the trial, the district court granted Franklin County’s motion for an involuntary dismissal of Spirit Ridge’s complaint on the grounds that Spirit Ridge had failed to show an ongoing and continuing nuisance to be abated. The district court found that “[i]t’s undisputed that on occasion slugs from firearms that have been discharged on the firing range can find their way outside the berms and outside the firing range and ultimately onto Mr. Ridge’s property.” However, the district court ruled that Spirit Ridge failed to show that the nuisance continued beyond 2008. Final judgment was entered on February, 28, 2013, from which Spirit Ridge timely filed a notice of appeal. III. ISSUES ON APPEAL 1. Whether the district court erred when it ruled in favor of Franklin County and against Spirit Ridge on the basis that the evidence did not establish an ongoing and continuous nuisance. 2. Whether Franklin County is entitled to attorney fees on appeal. IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW At the conclusion of Spirit Ridge’s presentation of evidence, Franklin County moved for a directed verdict pursuant to Rule 50(a) of the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure. The district court also granted a directed verdict pursuant to Rule 50(a). We pause to note that, as a matter of procedure, however, a judge does not render a verdict in a bench trial. Therefore, a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence in a bench trial is inappropriate. A directed verdict is defined as “A ruling by a trial judge taking a case from the jury because the evidence will permit only one reasonable verdict.” Black’s Law Dictionary, at 1791 (10th ed. 2014) (emphasis

3 added). The district court’s decision dismissing the case therefore was properly an involuntary dismissal pursuant to I.R.C.P. 41(b). Accordingly, the standard for reviewing a dismissal pursuant to I.R.C.P. 41(b) will be applied in this appeal. Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) empowers a district court to dismiss a case after the plaintiff’s presentation of the evidence at a trial without a jury: After the plaintiff, in an action tried by the court without a jury, has completed the presentation of the plaintiff’s evidence, the defendant, without waiving the right to offer evidence in the event the motion is not granted, may move for a dismissal on the ground that upon the facts and the law the plaintiff has shown no right to relief.

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Spirit Ridge Mineral Springs v. Franklin County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spirit-ridge-mineral-springs-v-franklin-county-idaho-2014.