OHIO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Appellee, v. THOMAS BROWN, Appellant.
CASE NO. CA2019-11-085
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO CLERMONT COUNTY
6/15/2020
2020-Ohio-3316
PIPER, J.
CIVIL APPEAL FROM CLERMONT COUNTY COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, Case No. 2016CVH00923
Strauss Troy Co., LPA, Brian J. O‘Connell, Joseph J. Braun, Amy L. Hunt, 150 East Fourth Street, 4th Floor, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202, for appellant
PIPER, J.
{1} Appellant, Thomas Brown, appeals a decision of the Clermont County Court of Common Pleas involuntarily dismissing his counterclaims against appellee, the Ohio Department of Agriculture (“ODA“).
{2} The Asian Longhorned Beetle (“ALB“), an invasive insect pest, is capable of causing fatal damage to deciduous hardwood trees located in Ohio. These trees, including
{3} The ODA and United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA“) created the ALB Cooperative Eradication Program (“the ALB Program“) to help eliminate Ohio‘s ALB infestation.1 The ODA has power to enforce Ohio‘s plant pest control laws as enumerated in
{4} Specific to the ALB Program, the ODA oversaw the surveying of trees to identify ALB infestations while the USDA had sole responsibility for the removal of infested trees. Thus, the ODA lacked responsibility for, or oversight of, tree removal from infested properties and its authority was limited to inspection and identification of ALB infestations in Ohio.
{5} In 2012, the ODA identified an ALB infestation of trees on Brown‘s property. These infested trees were removed by Young‘s General Contracting, Inc. (“Young‘s“), which had contracted with the USDA for tree removal. The ODA attempted to perform follow up inspections of Brown‘s property to determine if the ALB infestation had been fully eradicated. However, Brown refused to allow access to his property on three separate occasions in October 2015 and January 2016. Brown refused ODA access for inspections because he believed Young‘s damaged his property during removal of infested trees and
{6} The ODA filed for injunctive relief, asking the trial court to restrain Brown from interfering with efforts to survey and later remove any infested trees. Brown asserted several counterclaims, including a request for injunctive relief and a takings claim in which he alleged destruction of property and failure to remediate his land after the removal of trees.
{7} The matter proceeded to a bench trial during which the ODA presented a case for injunctive relief. Brown then presented his case-in-chief in support of his counterclaims. At the close of Brown‘s case, the ODA made a motion to dismiss Brown‘s counterclaims, which the trial court granted pursuant to
{8} THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY GRANTING THE ODA‘S MOTION FOR INVOLUNTARY DISMISSAL OF BROWN‘S COUNTERCLAIMS PURSUANT TO
{9} Brown argues in his assignment of error that the trial court erred by involuntarily dismissing his counterclaims.
{10} According to
{11} A trial court‘s ruling on a
{12} After reviewing the record, we find the trial court‘s decision was not against the manifest weight of the evidence nor erroneous as a matter of law. As noted above, Brown alleged in his counterclaims to the ODA‘s complaint for injunctive relief that tree removal from his property caused damage. Brown alleged breach of contract, negligence, trespass, and in a fourth claim for relief, petitioned for a writ of mandamus to initiate appropriation proceedings for the taking of his property. Within these counterclaims, Brown alleged that Young‘s improperly removed trees from his land, allowed livestock to escape his property, and failed to remediate the land so that erosion and water run-off destroyed part of his property.
{13} While there is no dispute that the ODA was responsible for determining which trees were infested while the USDA was responsible for tree removal, Brown argues that the ODA was the proper party to bring his counterclaims against because the ODA and USDA were engaged in the “same undertaking.” Within Brown‘s counterclaims, he specifically alleged that the ODA and USDA were “in a joint venture,” and that the ALB
{14} A joint venture is an association of persons with intent, by way of contract, express or implied, to engage in and carry out a single business adventure for joint profit, for which purpose they combine their efforts, property, money, skill and knowledge, without creating a partnership, and agree that there shall be a community of interest among them as to the purpose of the undertaking, and that each coadventurer shall stand in the relation of principal, as well as agent, as to each of the other coadventurers. Hepperly v. Sickles, 12th Dist. Warren No. CA2014-12-147, 2015-Ohio-2223, ¶ 11.
{15} After reviewing the record, we find that the ODA and USDA were not engaged in a joint venture. The agreement between the ODA and USDA specifically enumerates each department‘s role in the process of eradicating the ALB threat. According to the agreement, the USDA is the only party responsible for tree removal contracts. As expressed within a memo addressing delegation of duties, the ODA and USDA determined that the USDA
will be responsible for securing and administering any contractual arrangements with third party contractors which may include the following: ALB host tree cutting and removal; stump grinding and/or herbicide treatments of stumps from the removed trees; chipping of removed host material; transportation and disposal of the chips; chemical treatments of non-infested host trees and other similar and related measures as necessary.
{16} The roles expressly assigned to each department are distinct, rather than interchangeable or implementable by either party. The USDA could not remove the infested trees and remediate the land without the ODA first identifying which trees were infested. Nor could the ODA remove the trees of its own accord, as that authority was exclusive to the USDA.
{18} Nor did their agreement grant the ODA authority over the USDA or provide for reciprocal authority between the departments. This is especially true where the ALB Program was essentially federally funded, and the federal government directly indicated what the ODA could and could not do with the funding.2 For example, within a memo between the federal ALB Eradication Program Director and the Chief of Ohio‘s Division of Plant Industry, the ODA agreed that it had to obtain “prior approval from the ALB Director or her designee prior to commitment of any Federal funds to include but not limited to all procurement actions and travel.” The ODA was also required to identify and account for all equipment, supplies, and materials purchased.
{19} Moreover, there was no sharing of profits and losses, as the purpose of the agreement between the two departments was to protect Ohio‘s trees against the ALB threat, not to profit from individual landowners trying to rid their properties of ALB infestations. Any funds not expended in the fight against the ALB would be returned to the federal government, not shared with Ohio‘s treasury. Thus, the record does not support the
{20} In addition to the lack of joint venture, the trial court properly determined that the ODA was not the proper party against which to allege breach of contract, given that ODA never signed a contract with Young‘s for tree removal. Young‘s contracted to be responsible for property damage and agreed to return land to its original conditions after tree removal. Thus, the ODA is not the proper party against which to allege breach of contract where there is simply no privity between the ODA and the alleged damage to Brown‘s property. For these same reasons, the ODA could not have committed negligence, trespass, or a taking where it had no role in, nor was responsible for, the tree removal.
{21} The trial court also found, and we agree, that there was no agency relationship between the ODA and the USDA. The agreement between the two never provided for any “agency” rights or responsibilities, and neither department had control over how the other completed its role of either surveying trees for removal or removing the identified trees.
{22} According to their agreement, the relationship between the two departments is described as a “mutually beneficial cooperative effort” rather than vesting either entity with principal or agent responsibilities or authorities. In fact, the ODA and USDA expressly agreed to “work cooperatively in carrying out the goals and objectives” of the ALB Project. The roles, responsibilities, and actions of the ODA and the USDA were separate from each other and lack any indicia of agency.
{23} In a similar case, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts determined that the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (“MDCR“) and the USDA did not enter an agency relationship during their combined efforts to eradicate ALB infestations in Massachusetts. Evans v. United States, D.Mass. No. 14-40042-DHH, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 135979, at *19-20 (Sep. 30, 2016). The court first determined that
{24} The agreement between the MDCR and the USDA, similar to the one reached between the ODA and USDA, addressed that “eradication is achieved through the cooperative efforts of federal, state and local governments,” and that federal and state agencies would work together “through this mutually beneficial cooperative effort,” to address the dangers posed by the ALB. Given the language of the controlling federal statute and the agreement reached, the Evans Court held that no agency relationship existed. We agree with the reasoning of the federal court, and find that no agency relationship existed between the ODA and USDA for similar reasons.
{25} We also note that the trial court‘s ultimate decision granting a permanent injunction speaks directly to the separate actions and authority of the ODA and the USDA. In its judgment entry granting the permanent injunction, the trial court limited the scope of the injunction in favor of the ODA for the purposes of “surveying and tagging (if applicable) the trees” on Brown‘s property. However, the trial court specifically noted that “this Order does not require Brown to allow access to his property to the United States Department of Agriculture, its employees and contractors.”
{26} The trial court‘s decision thus recognizes the limited scope of the ODA‘s injunctive relief specific to its singular role in the ALB Program; surveying and tagging trees for removal. Whether the USDA, through Young‘s, is liable for damage to Brown‘s property or whether the USDA is entitled to injunctive relief to allow tree removal on Brown‘s property were questions not raised to the trial court given the sperate positions of the ODA and the USDA.
{27} After reviewing the record and considering all of Brown‘s arguments, we find
{28} Judgment affirmed.
S. POWELL, P.J., and RINGLAND, J., concur.
