Court Opinion

ID: 9953538
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-22 14:19:13.708055+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:40.174041
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: MARCH 15, 2024; 10:00 A.M.
                       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

               Commonwealth of Kentucky
                         Court of Appeals

                            No. 2023-CA-0605-MR

JAMES JONES                                                     APPELLANT

               APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT
v.             HONORABLE PHILLIP J. SHEPHERD, JUDGE
                       ACTION NO. 22-CI-00208

ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT
CABINET; NICK DARNELL;
MICHAEL DARNELL; AND
DARNELL PUMPKINS                                                 APPELLEES

                                  OPINION
                                 AFFIRMING

                                ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; EASTON AND GOODWINE,
JUDGES.

EASTON, JUDGE: This is an administrative appeal of the revocation of Appellant

James Jones’ (“Jones”) construction permit for a Concentrated Animal Feeding
Operation (in this case, “Hog Barns”) by the Energy and Environment Cabinet,

Division of Water (“Cabinet”). After review of the record, and for the reasons

which follow, we affirm the Franklin Circuit Court.

                    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

               In June 2019, Jones filed an application for a permit to construct a

wean-to-finish deep pit hog facility1 consisting of two barns, designed for 7,800

hogs, in Graves County, Kentucky. The Hog Barns would be serviced by animal

waste containment pits, which must be approved by the Cabinet as part of a waste

handling system. In October 2019, the Cabinet issued a construction permit to

Jones for his Hog Barns with waste containment pits.

               The permit application required identification of “significant features”

within one mile of the boundaries of the property where the Hog Barns would be

built. The application process also required siting criteria for certain “setback

features” which must be located at least 1,500 feet away from the Hog Barns

operation. The wording of “setback features” includes a “dwelling not owned by

applicant, church, school, schoolyard, business, park or other structure to which the

general public has access.”

1
  In this model, pigs are brought in at weaning and are housed at the same facility until they have
reached the desired weight.
                                                -2-
             In February 2020, Jones received a letter from the Cabinet that his

construction permit was being revoked. The letter stated two reasons for the

revocation. First, a neighboring farm with a seasonal business, Darnell Pumpkins,

has public access and, if the entire acreage of the Darnell farm is considered, then

Darnell Pumpkins is a business located within the setback of the siting criteria for

the permit. Second, Jones had failed to include a Nutrient Management Plan

(“NMP”) with his application. The letter stated the revocation of the permit is a

final decision, but it would not preclude the submission of an application for the

same site or facility. The letter also gave instructions on how to request a hearing

to challenge the revocation.

             Jones requested such a hearing. In March 2020, he filed a complaint

with the Cabinet’s Office of Administrative Hearings, challenging the revocation

of the construction permit. Virginia Baker Gorley was assigned as the Hearing

Officer. In July 2020, the Hearing Officer allowed Nick Darnell, Michael Darnell,

and Darnell Pumpkins (collectively, “Darnells”) to intervene. Michael Darnell is

the owner of Darnell Pumpkins, and Nick Darnell operates the pumpkin patch part

of the family business. A hearing was held in April 2021.

             The Hearing Officer issued her report in August 2021, recommending

the revocation be upheld on the basis that Jones failed to identify a “significant

feature,” the Darnell Pumpkins patch, which existed within one mile of the

                                         -3-
property boundary of the facility proposed in his application. The Hearing Officer

recommended that the basis of the revocation should not be because Jones did not

submit an NMP with his application, as the Hearing Officer believed the law did

not require an NMP to be submitted for a “construction” application. The Hearing

Officer further stated the Cabinet acted in accordance with the requisite statutes in

revoking Jones’ permit without a prior hearing. Finally, the Hearing Officer

determined that the issues regarding the setback criteria were moot because the

revocation should be upheld for other reasons.

             The Cabinet’s Secretary, Rebecca Goodman (“Secretary”), issued her

Final Order in February 2022. The Secretary partially adopted and partially

rejected the Hearing Officer’s conclusions. The Secretary determined the permit

revocation should be upheld both because Jones failed to identify a significant

feature in his application and because he did not include an NMP with the

application. The Secretary agreed with the Hearing Officer that the setback criteria

finding was moot and that the Cabinet complied with the law in revoking the

permit without a hearing.

             Jones then filed an Appeal and Petition for Review in the Franklin

Circuit Court in March 2022. All parties briefed their positions, and oral

arguments were held in November 2022. The circuit court issued its Opinion and

Order on February 24, 2023. From this Order Jones appeals.

                                         -4-
             The circuit court’s Order affirmed the Secretary’s Final Order to

revoke Jones’ construction permit. The circuit court concluded Jones’ permit was

issued prematurely, and the Cabinet acted properly in revoking the permit. The

circuit court also concluded that the post-revocation hearing afforded due process

to Jones. According to the circuit court, Jones’ application was incomplete, as it

did not have the required NMP attached. The circuit court also found Jones’

application deficient as it did not disclose Darnell Pumpkins as a “significant land

feature,” which then should have been identified as being within one mile of the

property boundaries of the Hog Barns operation. The circuit court’s Order did not

address whether the setback criteria issue was moot.

             In the hearings below, Jones challenged the propriety of the Cabinet

revoking the permit prior to an administrative hearing, but he appears to have

abandoned that argument, as it was not addressed in his brief. Failure to address an

issue in an appellant brief is deemed to waive that argument. Grange Mut. Ins. Co.

v. Trude, 151 S.W.3d 803, 815 (Ky. 2004).

            There are essentially three questions. The first two questions were

addressed by the circuit court as a basis for its Order. First, was an NMP required

for a construction permit? Second, was Darnell Pumpkins a “significant feature”

that must be disclosed with the permit application? Finally, was the 1,500 feet set-

                                         -5-
back determination regarding the pumpkin patch rendered moot by the Secretary’s

holdings, or must we decide that question?

                            STANDARD OF REVIEW

             “Generally, our review of the decision of an administrative agency is

highly deferential, and we reverse only if the decision was arbitrary, unsupported

by substantial evidence, or otherwise erroneous as a matter of law. Substantial

evidence means evidence of substance and relevant consequence having the fitness

to induce conviction in the minds of reasonable men. However, we review

questions of law de novo, including the application and interpretation of statutes.”

River City Fraternal Ord. of Police Lodge No. 614, Inc. v. Louisville/Jefferson

Cnty. Metro Gov’t, 664 S.W.3d 486, 493 (Ky. 2022), reh’g denied (Feb. 16, 2023)

(internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In determining arbitrariness, “the

administrative agency must have acted within its statutory authority, afforded the

parties procedural due process, and supported its decision with substantial

evidence.” Drakes Creek Holding Co., LLC v. Franklin-Simpson Cnty. Bd. of

Zoning Adjustment, 518 S.W.3d 174, 179 (Ky. App. 2017).

             “Kentucky courts give substantial deference to an administrative

agency’s construction of applicable statutes and regulations as long as that

interpretation is consistent with the statutory or regulatory language at issue.

Indeed, in the event of any ambiguity, ‘the courts grant deference to any

                                          -6-
permissible construction of that statute [or regulation] by the administrative agency

charged with implementing it,’ regardless of whether the Court would reach the

same conclusion de novo.” Louisville Gas & Elec. Co. v. Kentucky Waterways

Alliance, 517 S.W.3d 479, 489-90 (Ky. 2017) (citations omitted).

                                           ANALYSIS

      Was the NMP required to be submitted with the construction permit
application?

                Jones argues it was arbitrary for the Secretary and the circuit

court to rule that the permit revocation should be upheld on the basis that he did

not attach an NMP to his application. The Kentucky Pork Producers Association,

Inc. (“Association”), filed an amicus brief in support of Jones on this point.

                Kentucky law requires an owner or operator of an “Agricultural

Wastes Handling System” to obtain a permit to construct, modify, or operate the

facility pursuant to the requirements found in 401 KAR2 5:005 Sections 2, 24, 25,

and 30(1). “Agricultural Wastes Handling System” is defined as a structure or

equipment that conveys, stores, or treats manure from an animal feeding operation

prior to land application. 401 KAR 5:002(5). Jones’ proposed Hog Barns included

such a system and thus met this definition subject to the regulations.

2
    Kentucky Administrative Regulations.
                                              -7-
             Jones and the Association insist that the Cabinet’s published

guidelines do not require the submission of an NMP with its application for a

construction permit. They point to the Kentucky Pollutant Discharge Elimination

System Fact Sheet.3 But this Fact Sheet is clearly titled: “General Kentucky No

Discharge Operational Permit (KNDOP) for Small and Medium Animal Feeding

Operations (AFO).” (Emphasis added.) Jones’ application stated the total number

of hogs he was planning to house in the Hog Barns was 7,800, with the

approximate weight of each animal being 140 pounds.

             By the Fact Sheet definition, a “Large Animal Feeding Operation

means an AFO that stables or confines as many as or more than the numbers of

animals specified in any of the following categories: (4) 2,500 swine, each

weighing fifty-five (55) pounds or more.” Jones’ Hog Barns cannot be classified

as a small or medium AFO. The plain language of the Short Form B application,

which is specifically incorporated into the governing regulation, requires that a

large AFO have an NMP attached to the application.

             On the other hand, Jones is correct in that the Cabinet’s witnesses

testified that it was a common practice to allow an NMP to be submitted after the

issuance of the construction permit, but prior to the issuance of the operational

3
 https://eec.ky.gov/Environmental-Protection/Water/PermitCert/KPDES/Documents/
KNDOP(AFO)%20Fact%20Sheet.pdf.
                                          -8-
permit. Jones argues that requiring an NMP prior to the issuance of a construction

permit is a new policy requirement of the Cabinet, contrary to established practice,

and therefore arbitrary. We must disagree.

             Even if some in the Cabinet previously had a practice of not requiring

an NMP to be submitted with a construction permit, this practice was clearly

contrary to the governing regulation. “[A] public officer’s failure ‘to correctly

administer the law does not prevent a more diligent and efficient’ officer’s proper

administration of the law, as ‘[a]n erroneous interpretation of the law will not be

perpetuated.’” Nat. Res. & Env’t Prot. Cabinet v. Kentucky Harlan Coal Co., 870

S.W.2d 421, 427 (Ky. App. 1993) (citing Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Revenue Cabinet,

689 S.W.2d 14, 20 (Ky. 1985)). Adhering to the law as it is written cannot be

arbitrary.

             It is at this juncture we should explain the importance of an NMP for a

large AFO. An NMP is defined as “the plan for an individual operation developed

for the purpose of recycling nutrients from animal waste onto cropland or pasture.”

401 KAR 5:002(119). The previously referenced Fact Sheet further explains:

“The primary purpose of the NMP is to achieve the correct nutrient level (nitrogen

and phosphorus) needed to grow the planned crop by balancing nutrients already in

the soil with nutrients in animal waste that is land applied. The NMP should

                                         -9-
prevent the application of nutrients at rates that will exceed the capacity of the soil

and crops to assimilate them.”

               As argued by the Cabinet, the NMP is more than just “bureaucratic

paperwork.” It is an essential regulatory tool that ensures those wishing to operate

an AFO will have an effective plan in place to prevent eventual pollution because

of the inability of the land to contain the waste. This would include nearby water

pollution.

               An NMP must include “protocols for testing of manure, litter, process

wastewater, and soil; protocols to land apply manure, litter, or process wastewater

in accordance with site-specific nutrient management practices that ensure

agricultural utilization of the nutrients in the manure, litter, or process

wastewater.”4 This practice requires the applicant to test their soil to ensure the

soil will properly absorb the nutrients from the animal waste. If the soil is not

compatible with the waste, it makes sense to have that information prior to the

building of a large AFO.

               The lack of a NMP alone was sufficient reason for the Cabinet to

revoke Jones’ construction permit.

4
    Fact Sheet KNDOP GP for Small & Medium AFOs, pages 8 and 9.
                                           -10-
      Is Darnell Pumpkins a “significant feature” required to be disclosed on
the construction permit application?

             The next question is whether a seasonal pumpkin patch should be

considered a “significant feature” that must be disclosed with a permit application.

The Cabinet and the Darnells argue that it is, while Jones insists it is not.

             The undisputed evidence is that the Darnells’ farm consists of

approximately 144 acres, but only a portion of that acreage consists of crops with

seasonal public access. Testimony indicated that the farm includes a pumpkin

patch of approximately seven acres where the public may enter to pick their own

pumpkins. There are also hayrides that take place through the pumpkin patch, and

there is a corn maze which is also open to the public. This is a seasonal operation,

in which this portion of the farm is open from September to the end of October

each year.

             The regulations require an owner or operator of an Agricultural

Wastes Handling System to submit a completed Short Form B. This form requires

several attachments, depending on what the applicant is requesting. As we have

explained, an NMP was required in this case. The first listed requirement under

the attachments portion of the application states:

             Attach a site location map with the facility clearly
             marked. Provide either a U.S. Geological Survey 7 ½ -
             minute quadrangle map, aerial map, topographic map, or
             other map that identifies the site location and significant

                                          -11-
             features within an aerial of at least 1 mile beyond the
             property boundaries.

An instruction sheet is included with the application. Under “Section VI.

Attachments,” a more specific direction is given:

             Attach either a US Geological Survey 7 ½ minute
             quadrangle map, aerial map, topographic map, or other
             map with an area of at least 1 mile beyond the property
             boundaries. Depict or mark the facility and its intake
             structure, treatment system and disposal area. Also, mark
             the locations of the wells, springs, surface water bodies,
             and drinking water wells listed in public records or
             otherwise known to the applicant within one-quarter mile
             of the facility property boundary.

             The dispute between the parties lies in the definition of “significant

features.” There is no definition given in either the regulation or in Short Form B.

Kentucky’s Commissioner of Agriculture (“Commissioner”) filed an Amicus brief

in support of Jones on this issue. The Commissioner argues that a neighboring

landowner’s land usage cannot be determined to be a “significant land feature” as a

matter of law. The Commissioner’s basic argument applies equally to the actual

wording of “significant feature” without the insertion of the word “land.” The

Commissioner, the Secretary (in her revocation letter), and the circuit court

inserted the word “land” in the phrase, although this word is not part of the

phrasing in the regulation or on the form.

             The Cabinet’s letter to Jones which informed him of the revocation of

his construction permit listed two reasons for the revocation, one being Jones’
                                        -12-
failure to name Darnell Pumpkins as a “significant land feature” within one mile of

his property boundary for the proposed facility in his application. The revocation

letter reads:

                The Kentucky Division of Water (DOW) issued a
                Construction Permit (Permit) for the above-referenced
                facility on October 23, 2019. The DOW has recently
                found significant land features that were not identified
                with the application submitted for the Permit received by
                the DOW on June 28, 2019. In particular, a local
                business, Darnell Pumpkins, which has general public
                access, is located within the setback required in the
                Sitting [sic] Criteria of the Permit. Also, for large
                feeding operations, the application form states that a
                Nutrient Management Plan must be attached, but no such
                plan was attached. Therefore, the DOW is revoking the
                issuance of the Permit as of the date of this letter.
                Revocation of this Permit is considered a permit final
                decision and it shall not preclude the submission of an
                application for the same site or facility.

                Jones argues that the Cabinet’s determination that Darnell Pumpkins

was a “significant feature” which must be disclosed is arbitrary because it is

without precedent or logical explanation. Jones and the Commissioner insist that

the phrase “significant features” is limited to permanent significant land features,

such as streams, lakes, or hills – not a seasonal crop grown on the land.

                As previously stated, the phrase “significant features” is not defined in

the application, the form, the regulation, or in any relevant statute. KRS5 13A.222,

5
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.
                                           -13-
entitled “Drafting rules,” explains the process for drafting administrative

regulations. Subsection 4(e)5. states: “Definitions shall be used only: (a) When a

word is used in a sense other than its dictionary meaning, or is used in the sense of

one (1) of several dictionary meanings[.]” Because “significant features” is not

defined anywhere, it was logical to use an ordinary dictionary meaning, which is

what the Hearing Officer attempted to do.

             “[A]n administrative agency’s interpretation of its own regulations is

entitled to substantial deference. A reviewing court is not free to substitute its

judgment as to the proper interpretation of the agency’s regulations as long as that

interpretation is compatible and consistent with the statute under which it was

promulgated and is not otherwise defective as arbitrary or capricious.”

Commonwealth, Cabinet for Health Servs. v. Fam. Home Health Care, Inc., 98

S.W.3d 524, 527 (Ky. App. 2003) (citations omitted).

             As we have said, we defer to administrative agencies to some degree

when they define a term they must apply. It would not necessarily be out of line to

interpret the phrase “significant features” to refer to “land” features. But even with

this clarification by the Cabinet, the parties present fair arguments about the status

of the pumpkin patch as a land feature.

             We must keep in mind that the government oversight here is by the

Division of Water as part of the Cabinet tasked with legitimate environment

                                          -14-
concerns. It is noteworthy that the application specifies water features (e.g., wells

and streams) as particularly relevant in the process. In keeping with this

understanding, it would be logical to apply the phrase “significant features” to only

features of the land itself. Because of topsoil displacement, significant features

could include buildings and parking lots for businesses. A significant feature may

also be hills or slopes raising concerns about the ability of the land in the vicinity

to contain waste or other water drainage issues. But the mere presence of crops

alone may not be intended to be a “significant feature” relevant to protection of

water or other environmental resources.

             With or without the required deference to the Cabinet, we are

presently unpersuaded that the mere presence of crops on farmland was intended to

be within the definition of significant features. If so, why is the pumpkin patch

different from other crops grown on the Darnell property? Perhaps because of the

business component. The relationship between significant features and setback

features needs to be considered.

             When we examine the interaction of significant features and setback

features, we see that setback features could be considered a subset of significant

features in the application process. If something requires a setback, then it is

significant. On the other hand, a significant feature, like a nearby stream for

example, may not fit within the definition of a setback feature. So, a crop grown

                                          -15-
on land may not be a significant feature impacting the lay of the land itself, but it

could be a setback feature and thus significant if it is part of a business open to the

public.

             Growing of crops alone would not seem to be a significant feature for

the purpose of the use of the phrase in the context of environmental protection.

Agricultural operations have a statutory definition. KRS 224.71-100(1). But this

definition has not been incorporated into the amorphous phrase “significant

features” in any statute or regulation. Because we base this Opinion primarily on

another reason offered by the circuit court, we need not ultimately decide this

question of “significant features” to be disclosed. This should be addressed again

if another application is filed.

             After the filing of a new and complete application, the Cabinet may be

able to show a significant impact of crops being on land as opposed to open fields

or forested areas with respect to land waste containment or water drainage. A

determination that a pumpkin patch or other crops is a significant feature

theoretically might be sustainable. The Cabinet did not ultimately make this

particular finding, again conflating significant feature with setback feature. We

express some concern about the potential impact of such a broad definition of

significant feature as any crops growing in neighboring fields. This could

                                         -16-
significantly and perhaps unnecessarily limit many land uses by Jones, the

Darnells, or anyone else for that matter.

            The conflation by the parties of significant features with a business

requiring a setback is present throughout this case. Both Jones and the Agriculture

Commissioner argue that a business open to the public has never before been

considered a “significant feature” that must be identified in an application. They

argue the Cabinet violated KRS 13A.130 by this interpretation, which states: “(1)

An administrative body shall not by internal policy, memorandum, or other form of

action: (a) Modify a statute or administrative regulation; (b) Expand upon or limit

a statute or administrative regulation[.]” Jones argues the Cabinet’s interpretation

expanded the requirements of the permit application and departed from precedent.

             While it may be the case that a seasonal crop-related business open to

the public has not been required to be disclosed as a significant feature on the

application previously, there was testimony that this particular situation had never

arisen before. The deposition testimony of Jory Becker (“Becker”), the manager of

the Water Infrastructure Branch of the Cabinet, indicated that he could not recall

an instance where a farm that included a business open to the public was within a

mile radius of a proposed large AFO that required a waste handling system permit.

Becker testified that most farms and other agricultural operations are not open to

the public and are therefore not considered a significant feature or subject to the

                                         -17-
setback requirement. He does not believe this is a new condition or way of doing

things; this is just a situation that had not previously been encountered.

             The testimony of Jason Hurt (“Hurt”) supported Becker’s statements.

Hurt is the environmental engineering branch manager at the Cabinet, and he

works in the surface water permits branch. While he agrees the term “significant

feature” is undefined in the regulations, he believes it is a common sense meaning

of the word. He testified that a “significant feature” includes a business open to

the public. Hurt testified that what makes Darnell Pumpkins significant in this

case is that it is open to the public. The previous director of the Division of Water,

Peter Goodmann, also agreed in his testimony that the Cabinet has the right to

interpret its own rules. There cannot be a departure from precedent to complain

about when there is no precedent. A well-reasoned precedent is needed, and that

should follow a proper application, which recognizes the debate by designation in

its attachments, with a record of evaluation of these questions when that

application is evaluated.

        Was the 1,500-feet setback requirement rendered moot by the
Secretary’s other conclusions?

             Finally, Jones argues the circuit court erred in upholding the

Secretary’s finding that his failure to comply with the setback requirement was

moot. He states the 1,500-feet setback requirement was the basis for the permit

revocation, and it therefore cannot be moot. In the alternative, Jones argues that if
                                         -18-
this determination is moot, it should still be reviewed because it meets the

mootness exception of capable of repetition, yet evading review.

             The Hearing Officer explained the reasoning for the mootness finding.

She explained that the initially granted construction permit was written with certain

factual assertions in mind, and these assertions did not include knowledge of the

pumpkin patch. When the Cabinet issued the permit and its conditions, it did so

without knowledge of the pumpkin patch. The application lacked necessary

information – that a business open to the public existed within a mile – in order to

issue the necessary requirements. Had the Cabinet known about the existence of

the pumpkin patch, it could have investigated further and created requirements to

make sure all parties were properly protected. Because the application did not

contain that information, the requirements listed in that permit were null and void.

Therefore, the disagreement as to whether the Hog Barns could meet the setback

requirements was moot.

             Given the conflation we have discussed, it is not obvious to what

extent the setback issue is truly moot, but it is premature for this Court to

determine this on this record. Despite the revocation of Jones’ construction permit

at issue, there is nothing preventing Jones from filing a new application containing

the necessary and required information. Should Jones wish to do so, the Cabinet

must then determine if the Pumpkin Patch is a significant feature and a setback

                                         -19-
feature and whether Jones’ proposed Hog Barns operation is able to meet any

setback requirement. From the record, we now know that the actual area used for

the seasonable activities (as opposed to the entire Darnell farm) is in fact beyond

the 1,500-foot minimum for a setback. But all this should be reconsidered upon a

new application.

             In this context, we note how the wording of setback features suggests

the presence of a “structure” or other alteration of the land itself which impacts the

land in conjunction with a business, not necessarily a crop, which might be

seasonally sold to the public. Is the Cabinet going to apply this rule to every road-

side corn stand where farmers sell some of their corn in season? These questions

were rendered moot due to the lack of an NMP with Jones’ application. But the

question will arise again. We should await evaluation first by the Cabinet when a

proper application is filed. Rather than deciding on an ad hoc basis that a

significant feature, perhaps including setback features, is whatever someone wants

it to be in a particular case, it may well be time for more specific regulatory

definitions to be drafted with input from all those affected.

                                       CONCLUSION

             Because of the absence of the required NMP with Jones’ application,

we affirm the Franklin Circuit Court’s order upholding the Cabinet Secretary’s

revocation of a construction permit.

                                         -20-
          ALL CONCUR.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:         BRIEF FOR APPELLEE ENERGY
                              AND ENVIRONMENT CABINET:
John W. Walters
Gary W. Thompson              Leilani K. M. Martin
Lexington, Kentucky           Frankfort, Kentucky

AMICUS BRIEF FOR KENTUCKY     BRIEF FOR APPELLEES NICK
PORK PRODUCERS                DARNELL, MICHAEL DARNELL,
ASSOCIATION, INC.:            AND DARNELL PUMPKINS:

Michael W. McCain, Jr.        Tom FitzGerald
Springfield, Kentucky         Frankfort, Kentucky

                              AMICUS BRIEF FOR JONATHAN
                              SHELL, COMMISSIONER OF
                              AGRICULTURE:

                              Joseph A. Bilby
                              Frankfort, Kentucky

                            -21-