[Cite as Bales v. Dept. of Agriculture, 2018-Ohio-1312.]
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
Timothy Bales, :
Appellant-Appellant, :
v. : No. 17AP-757
(C.P.C. No. 17CV-4743)
Ohio State Department of Agriculture, :
(ACCELERATED CALENDAR)
Appellee-Appellee. :
D E C I S I O N
Rendered on April 5, 2018
On brief: Critchfield, Critchfield & Johnston, LTD, Eric T.
Michener and Chad Yoder, for appellant.
On brief: Michael DeWine, Attorney General, James R.
Patterson and Lydia Arko Zigler, for appellee. Argued:
James R. Patterson.
APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas
TYACK, J.
{¶ 1} Timothy Bales is appealing from the destruction of his herd of deer which
allegedly was suffering from chronic wasting disease ("CWD"). He assigns two errors for
our consideration:
I. The Franklin County Court of Common Pleas abused its
discretion when it held that ODA's destruction Order No.
2017-092 was supported by reliable, probative and
substantial evidence.
II. The Franklin County Court of Common Pleas erred in
holding that Appellant's due process was not violated when
ODA issued and executed a destruction order of Appellant's
No. 17AP-757 2
deer before a hearing was held and before allowing Appellant
to remedy any alleged risks his deer posed.
{¶ 2} Bales is the owner of Honey Run Farm in Millersburg, Ohio. The farm had a
herd of captive whitetail deer when he bought the farm. The Ohio State Department of
Agriculture ("the Department") has the responsibility for managing wild animals. The
department concluded that the deer on Honey Run Farm suffered from CWD and sought
to have them destroyed.
{¶ 3} Apparently the deer were under quarantine when Bales purchased them. At
the time Bales purchased them he did not have the required license for owning captive deer.
{¶ 4} Bales purchased the farm and deer from a Dan Yoder who owned multiple
herds of deer. Yoder had a bad history of managing the herds, or at least of keeping the
required records for such deer.
{¶ 5} CWD can only be diagnosed post mortem. The deer essentially can be
diagnosed definitively as having the disease only after they have been killed to determine if
the disease killed them. The disease must have progressed to a certain point before it can
be diagnosed even then.
{¶ 6} While owned by Yoder, the deer were already under quarantine. Yoder
nevertheless added two deer to the herd at Honey Run Farm without the knowledge of the
Department.
{¶ 7} At an administrative hearing before a hearing officer addressing the issues
counsel for Bales argued that violating the terms of the quarantine was a
"so what" because the new deer supposedly had not been exposed to CWD. How counsel
could know that is not clear.
{¶ 8} Two of the deer herds owned by Yoder were destroyed earlier. The
Department was concerned that Yoder did not keep records of the interactions among the
herds. The Department also was concerned that once CWD contaminate deer in the herd,
the disease cannot be controlled or eradicated.
{¶ 9} Turning to the assigned errors, we cannot find an abuse of discretion with
respect to the actions of the Department or with respect to the findings of the court of
common pleas. CWD is a very real danger to all deer in Ohio, both captive and non-captive.
No. 17AP-757 3
Diagnosing it is problematic but the damage to the entire deer population in Ohio and
beyond is real.
{¶ 10} Some of Yoder's herds had the disease and Yoder could not prove the herds
were prevented from intermingling. Bales (or a corporation entitled Timothy Bales, Inc.)
purchased one of the herds. Bales was fully aware of the problem and of the risk the Honey
Run Farm herd would have to be destroyed as a result of Yoder's mismanagement. We can
find no fault, let alone an abuse of discretion, by the Department and the common pleas
court.
{¶ 11} The first assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 12} The second assignment of error seems to suggest that somehow Bales could
have remedied the situation. Given the scientific evidence about CWD, it is hard to
understand how that could be possible.
{¶ 13} This is a problem with no easy solution. The longer deer with CWD survive,
the longer the risk exists that those deer will spread the disease to other deer. The captive
deer are still very agile, wild animals. Keeping them confined is a challenge at best. If they
escape into the wild, the thousands of wild deer in Ohio are endangered. We cannot expect
more due process than was provided here.
{¶ 14} The second assignment of error is overruled.
{¶ 15} Both assignments of error having been overruled, the judgment of the trial
court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
DORRIAN and LUPER SCHUSTER, JJ., concur.