Wartensleben v. Willey

415 P.2d 613, 1966 Wyo. LEXIS 149
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1966
Docket3455
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 415 P.2d 613 (Wartensleben v. Willey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wartensleben v. Willey, 415 P.2d 613, 1966 Wyo. LEXIS 149 (Wyo. 1966).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McINTYRE

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Plaintiff, Thomas Wartensleben, brought a tort action against his neighbor, Ralph Willey, and against Willey’s attorney, William D. Redle, for damages which plaintiff claims to have suffered because Willey and Redle caused Sheridan Flouring Mills, Inc., not to complete a contract with Wartensleben pertaining to the establishment of a feed lot for cattle on War-tensleben’s land.

The findings of the trial court included a finding that actions of the defendants were the cause of plaintiff’s failure to secure the contract with Sheridan Flouring Mills, for construction and operation of the feed lot previously staked and contemplated on Wartensleben’s land.

We will not question or disturb this finding. There is no denial that defendants protested the establishment of the feed lot) nor that they threatened by telephone calls and letter to bring an action for injunction on the ground of a nuisance, if the feed lot was constructed and operated at the location selected. The result was that Sheridan Flouring Mills established its feed lot elsewhere, and Wartensleben lost the benefit of a contract he otherwise would have had.

The question for us, on appeal, is this: Under the circumstances of this case were Willey and his attorney privileged to do what they did; or did they unreasonably interfere with the business transaction between plaintiff and a third party, Sheridan Flouring Mills?

*614 The findings of the trial court were against plaintiff-appellant on this issue. It found defendants did not use illegal means, make material misrepresentations, or resort to fraud or intimidation; and that defendants did not employ unreasonable obstructions or molestations in protecting what they believed, in good faith, to be the exercise of their legal rights. On the basis of such findings, judgment was entered for defendants. The plaintiff, Wartensleben, has appealed.

Appellant’s starting premise — that the intentional interference with contractual relations, without justification, creates liability for the harm thereby caused— brings no material disagreement from us. See 4 Restatement, Torts, § 766, p. 49 (1939). But we still must concern ourselves with a determination as to whether defendants were reasonably justified in doing what they did to prevent the establishment of the feed lot on Wartensleben’s land, adjacent to Willey.

On the subject of justification, it is set out in 4 Restatement, Torts, § 773, p. 87 (1939), that:

“One is privileged purposely to cause another not to perform a contract, or enter into or continue a business relation, with a third person by in good faith asserting or threatening to protect properly a legally protected interest of his own which he believes may otherwise be impaired or destroyed by the performance of the contract or transaction.”

In an annotation on the subject of liability for procuring breach of contract in 26 A.L.R.2d 1227, 1234, it is indicated authority supports the rule that a party to a contract has a right of action against a person who has procured a breach of such contract by the other party thereto “otherwise than in the legitimate exercise of his own rights.”

Let us consider, then, what caused Willey to object to the establishment of a feed lot for cattle on Wartensleben’s land and see if there was substantial evidence to support the finding of the trial court that the actions of Willey and his attorney were in the legitimate exercise of Willey’s rights and not illegal or unreasonable. There is very little, if any, conflict in the evidence. However, it is in any event proper for us, under appellate rules, to construe the evidence in the light most favorable to Willey.

The plaintiff, Wartensleben, and defendant Willey own adjoining ranches. The buildings on the Willey ranch, including the family residence, are located near the boundary fence and within 950 feet of the site which had been proposed for the feed lot. Willey had been informed by War-tensleben that 2,000 head of cattle would be fed at the lot.

Mead Creek flows through both places, first across the Wartensleben property and then on to and across Willey’s property. Prevailing winds in the area are such that they blow from the proposed location toward Willey’s residence. In other words, the proposed location for the feed yard was upstream and upwind from the Willey land and residence.

While plaintiff contends the waters from Mead Creek are not used directly by ranchers for domestic purposes, they are used for irrigation and the watering of livestock. Also, the water which the Willey family drinks comes from a well which is only 60 feet deep, and waters from Mead Creek are used to irrigate garden vegetables and produce. Willey claims heavy washing of mud and gravel from the War-tensleben lands in the vicinity of the feed yard location, onto the Willey lands, had been experienced in the past.

At the trial, expert testimony was offered tending to show the incidence of disease is higher among cattle kept in a confined area; that such disease can be communicated through drainage, dust or wind; that flies and rodents are increased; and that manure from cattle fed on typical feed-lot rations is particularly offensive. There was considerable testimony indicating Willey would have had a noise and odor *? problem, if the feed lot had been established where it was proposed. Additionally, evidence was before the court tending to show the establishment of the feed lot at the proposed site would have detracted materially from the monetary value of the Willey ranch.

Thus, the trial court was justified, on the basis of the evidence before it, in finding that Willey was in fact and in good faith fearful that the feed lot would be detrimental and a source of annoyance to him and to his family, and that it would cause a lessening in the value of his own property.

Counsel for Wartensleben argues that a feed lot for cattle in a ranching area cannot be said to be a nuisance per se. We are inclined to agree. The district court found the lot would not have been a nuisance per se, but would have become a private nuisance in fact, or per accidens, by reason of the circumstances and surroundings. It did not pretend to hold that all lots for the feeding of livestock would constitute a nuisance, but rather that each case must be judged individually upon its own facts and circumstances.

The question before the trial court was whether Willey and his attorney honestly and in good faith believed the proposed feed-lot operations would have constituted a nuisance; or whether they had reasonable grounds to believe such operations — under the circumstances here present — could be enjoined as a nuisance. The trial court did not need to decide, and we do not decide, whether Willey and his attorney would or would not have been successful if the lot had been established and they had initiated an injunction action.

However, whether feed-lot operations such as were proposed in this instance (within 950 feet of a neighbor’s dwelling) can be considered an enjoinable nuisance is sufficiently debatable to justify the trial court’s finding of reasonableness and good faith on the part of defendants.

For verification of this statement see Dill v.

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Bluebook (online)
415 P.2d 613, 1966 Wyo. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wartensleben-v-willey-wyo-1966.