News Article

The Road to Justice

by: Chad Herring, NCFF Executive DirectorMany of us are wondering, how was Joey Carter’s hog farm found to be a nuisance in a courtroom in Raleigh?

After all, in many ways, Joey Carter is a model farmer:

  • * his farm is in compliance with all state rules and regulations.

  • a respected scientist who studied the farm found no objectionable odor.

  • and several neighbors, who live closer to the farm than the two people who sued Joey Carter, testified his farm isn’t a nuisance.

Well, here’s how:

  • the jury was told, over and over, the case was against Smithfield Foods, not Joey Carter. But that’s misleading – the jury’s verdict is going to put the Joey Carter farm out of business.

  • the jury was never allowed to visit Joey Carter’s farm. How could they determine a farm’s a nuisance without visiting it?

  • and the respected scientist, who is an expert on odor, was not allowed to give expert testimony regarding her findings at Joey Carter’s farm. (The plaintiffs’ lawyer made a motion to block her testimony and the judge agreed.)

The jury awarded the two people suing Joey Carter’s farm $25,130,000.It’s hard to believe this happened in an American court. But verdicts like this are the reason Americans have the right to appeal to higher courts. And, in this case, the road to justice leads straight to the Court of Appeals. NC Farm Families stands behind Joey Carter – his hog farm is not and has not been a nuisance.

Smithfield Trial: An Odd Development

When you boil away all the motions and counter-motions the second nuisance trial against Smithfield Foods comes down to one question: Odor. Is odor from Joey Carter’s hog farm an unbearable nuisance for the two neighbors suing him?When the lawyers suing Smithfield presented their case they called an expert witness on odor, a professor from Clarkson University in New York, to testify – and Shane Rogers told the jury he’d proved scientifically that odor from hog farms had reached neighbors houses.Then an odd thing happened.When the time came for the lawyers for Smithfield Foods to call their own odor expert, to testify about her own scientific studies, and to explain why Rogers was wrong, the lawyer on the other side, Michael Kaeske, objected – telling the judge that he should not allow Dr. Pamela Dalton to testify about her scientific studies.And the judge agreed. And ruled Dr. Dalton couldn’t tell the jury what she’d found on the Carter farm as a scientist – though she could testify, subjectively, as someone who’d visited the farm.Doesn’t that sound odd? An expert couldn’t testify about her scientific studies measuring odor during a trial about odor?