Did you know that in 2002, the voters of Florida adopted a “pregnant pig” amendment to the state’s constitution? Well, neither did we. The amendment, effective in 2008, makes it unlawful for “any person to confine a pig during pregnancy in an enclosure, or to tether a pig during pregnancy, on a firm in such a way that she is prevented from turning around freely.”
Farmer Basford’s pig farm used such “gestation crates,” and he was forced by the amendment to go out of business. He tried other things like peanut farming, but those didn’t work, so in 2010, he filed an inverse condemnation claim and a claim under Florida’s Bert Harris Act, arguing that the pig amendment deprived him of all economically viable use of his far. The trial court dismissed the Bert Harris Act claim, and after a trial, held that he was entitled to $505,000
Continue Reading Fla App: “Pregnant Pig” Constitutional Amendment Took Farmer’s Property
