Gordon Berg Garrison v. New Fashion Pork LLP and BWT Holdings LLP ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 21–0652
    Submitted March 23, 2022—Filed June 30, 2022
    Amended August 26, 2022
    GORDON BERG GARRISON,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    NEW FASHION PORK LLP and BWT HOLDINGS LLLP,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Emmet County, Charles Borth,
    Judge.
    A farmer appeals a summary judgment order dismissing nuisance,
    trespass, and drainage claims against a neighboring confined animal feeding
    operation. AFFIRMED.
    Waterman, J.,    delivered   the   opinion   of   the   court,   in   which
    Christensen, C.J., and Mansfield and McDermott, JJ., joined. Mansfield, J., filed
    a concurring opinion, in which Waterman, J., joined. Appel, J., filed a dissenting
    opinion, in which Oxley, J., joined. McDonald, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in
    which Oxley, J., joined.
    2
    Wallace L. Taylor (argued), Cedar Rapids, and David A. O’Brien, Dave
    O’Brien Law, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
    James W. White (argued), James L. Pray, and Jennifer E. Lindberg of
    Brown, Winick, Graves, Gross & Baskerville, P.L.C., Des Moines, for appellees.
    Eldon L. McAfee and Julie Vyskocil of Brick Gentry, P.C., West Des
    Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa Pork Producers Association.
    Christina L. Gruenhagen of Parker & Geadelmann, P.L.L.C., West Des
    Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa Farm Bureau Federation.
    3
    WATERMAN, Justice.
    In this appeal, the defendants and amici curiae renew prior invitations to
    overrule Gacke v. Pork Xtra, L.L.C.’s controversial three-part test under the
    inalienable rights clause, article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution. 
    684 N.W.2d 168
    , 177–79 (Iowa 2004). Gacke created the test to adjudicate
    constitutional challenges to the statutory immunity enacted in our state’s
    “right-to-farm” legislation, Iowa Code section 657.11 (2020).
    The plaintiff in this case sued the neighboring confined animal feeding
    operation (CAFO) twice. The first lawsuit was in federal court and was dismissed
    on summary judgment for lack of expert testimony supporting the plaintiff’s
    claims that the CAFO’s manure runoff caused excessive nitrate levels in an
    ongoing violation of federal law. The federal court declined supplemental
    jurisdiction over his state law claims. The plaintiff then refiled his lawsuit in Iowa
    district court alleging common law nuisance, trespass, and drainage law
    violations. The CAFO defendants moved for summary judgment based on the
    statutory immunity in Iowa Code section 657.11 and the plaintiff’s lack of
    evidence to establish he qualified for an exception to the immunity or prove
    causation or damages. The plaintiff, relying on Gacke, argued section 657.11 as
    applied to him is unconstitutional under Iowa’s inalienable rights clause.
    The district court rejected the plaintiff’s constitutional challenge after
    determining he failed to satisfy the three-part test in Gacke because his own
    CAFO had benefited from the immunity. The court then granted the defendants’
    motion for summary judgment because the plaintiff lacked expert testimony or
    4
    other evidence to support any exception to the statutory immunity defense or to
    prove causation or damages. We retained the plaintiff’s appeal.
    On our review, for the reasons explained below, we affirm the summary
    judgment. We overrule Gacke’s three-part test and apply rational basis review to
    reject the plaintiff’s constitutional challenge to section 657.11 under the
    inalienable rights clause. We conclude the plaintiff failed to preserve error on his
    takings claim under article I, section 18 of the Iowa Constitution and failed to
    generate a question of fact precluding summary judgment on statutory nuisance
    immunity or causation for his trespass and drainage claims. We need not and
    do not reach the plaintiff’s constitutional challenge to the damages limitations
    in section 657.11A(3).
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    In 1972, Gordon Garrison purchased approximately 300 acres of farmland
    in Emmet County. He lives on the property in a home built in 1999. Garrison
    has a bachelor’s of science in agricultural engineering from Iowa State
    University. From the 1970s to 2018, he raised sheep on his property. Garrison
    at one point owned a 500-head ewe flock and could have over 1,000 animals on
    his property each birthing season. The sheep were kept in a barn most of the
    winter. After the 1980s, the size of his flock began to decrease. Garrison initially
    disposed of the sheep manure by spreading it on his fields. He later transitioned
    to using a manure compost pile, which remains on his property.1 Some of his
    1The record did not include any formal complaints Garrison received from nearby
    landowners regarding his manure compost pile. The defendants’ director of environmental
    5
    land continues to be farmed, but most of his acreage “is being cared for in
    restoration of the ‘Prairie Pothole’ ecology that was indigenous to northwest
    Iowa.”
    Garrison, with his family, owns and leases another 260 acres in Kossuth
    County and 360 acres in Wright County. Garrison had a handshake agreement
    allowing the renter in Kossuth County to apply manure to the fields at agronomic
    rates. The renter in Wright County applied manure to fields without Garrison’s
    permission. Neither operation generated any nuisance claims by neighbors.
    In December of 2015, New Fashion Pork (NFP) started operating a CAFO.
    The CAFO is uphill and adjacent to Garrison’s property. NFP’s subsidiary, BWT
    Holdings, owns additional land adjacent to Garrison’s property for disposal of
    manure. The confinement building is approximately a half-mile away from
    Garrison’s property line and is permitted to hold 4,400 to 8,800 hogs depending
    on their weight. The defendants put pattern tiling in the BWT property, which
    Garrison claims led to substantially more drainage flowing to his property.
    According to Garrison, in the fall of 2016, NFP’s “manure application was
    done when the field was saturated with water so the field could not absorb the
    manure and the manure discharged to [his] property.” In December 2018, NFP
    applied manure to frozen ground in violation of state regulations. The Iowa
    Department of Natural Resources entered a consent order under which the
    defendants paid an administrative penalty of $4,800 for that violation.
    services mentioned he could smell manure from Garrison’s property and had considered
    “planting trees on the north property line to protect our residence from his odor.”
    6
    From 2016 to 2020, Garrison documented the times on his property that
    he smelled the CAFO’s odor. He estimated that he could smell its odor more than
    100 days of the year, sometimes all day. The odor interferes with his enjoyment
    of working outdoors, going on walks around his property, and his sleep. His son
    confirmed the odor can be very pervasive depending on the wind direction.
    The defendants undertook several measures to ameliorate the odor. NFP
    adjusted the placement of pit fans. In August of 2016, NFP installed an
    electrostatic precipitating fence on the side of the confinement building facing
    Garrison’s property. That fence was the first of its kind on a hog farm.
    Garrison took water samples from a stream that flows through his land
    from BWT’s property. From 2001 to 2013, Garrison took thirty-two samples at
    irregular intervals in accordance with his training from the IOWATER program.
    From April 15, 2016 to June 20, 2019, Garrison took water samples from the
    same stream at more regular intervals and sent the samples to be tested by the
    Iowa State Hygienic Laboratory. According to Garrison, “[a]ll the samples, with
    one exception when chicken litter was applied to the Sanderson field, had nitrate
    levels of 10 ppm or less.” The samples tested by the Iowa State laboratory have
    on average higher nitrate levels than Garrison’s samples collected before 2013.
    The Iowa State laboratory samples show a substantial, consistent decrease in
    nitrate levels from 2016 to 2019 and do not show a spike in nitrate levels that
    would correlate with NFP’s manure spreading in 2016 or 2018.
    On December 20, 2018, three years after the CAFO began operating,
    Garrison filed a lawsuit against NFP and BWT in the United States District Court
    7
    for the Northern District of Iowa. Garrison alleged the CAFO violated the
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), the Clean Water Act (CWA),
    and multiple state laws. The defendants moved for summary judgment. The
    federal court found that Garrison relied exclusively on his water tests to attempt
    to “create a genuine issue of material fact about the ongoing nature of
    defendants’ actions,” the “water tests do not show a pattern of ongoing
    violations,” the nitrate levels do not correlate with annual or biannual manure
    applications, and the 2016 and 2018 incidents are past (not ongoing) violations.
    Garrison v. New Fashion Pork LLP, 
    449 F. Supp. 3d 863
    , 873–74 (N.D. Iowa
    2020). The federal court elaborated:
    [P]laintiff has not designated any expert to testify about the nitrate
    levels or specifically about the issue of causation. Even if the Court
    allows each of plaintiff’s proposed experts’ testimony in its entirety,
    plaintiff cannot link the nitrate levels in the water tests to
    misapplication of the manure. Plaintiff’s proposed experts discuss
    manure management plans and soil drainage issues, but the Court
    finds no expert testimony in the record linking defendants’ alleged
    overapplication or misapplication of manure to higher levels of
    nitrates in plaintiff’s water tests. Although taking water samples and
    testing them for nitrates may not require scientific or specialized
    skill, interpreting the results does require expert analysis. Here,
    plaintiff has provided no expert testimony, admissible or not, tying
    defendants’ alleged misapplications or overapplications of manure
    to the nitrate levels in the stream on plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff has
    also not established a baseline to show that the nitrate levels are
    occurring at a higher rate than before defendants started spreading
    manure or at a higher rate than would be expected to naturally
    occur. Without an established baseline or metric there is no evidence
    that the nitrate levels are occurring at a higher rate attributed to
    runoff from defendants’ fields.
    
    Id.
     (record citation omitted). Noting “RCRA and the CWA do not support citizen
    suits for wholly past violations,” 
    id. at 874
    , the federal court granted the
    defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing Garrison’s federal claims
    8
    because there was no “genuine issue of material fact as to any current and
    ongoing violations of RCRA and the CWA,” and declined to exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction over Garrison’s state law nuisance, trespass, and drainage claims,
    
    id. at 870
    , 874–75. Garrison did not appeal the federal court judgment.
    On June 1, 2020, four-and-a-half years after the CAFO began operating,
    Garrison filed this civil action in the Iowa District Court for Emmet County
    alleging he is entitled to damages because NFP and BWT created a nuisance,
    trespassed on his property, and violated Iowa’s drainage laws. Under the
    nuisance claim, Garrison alleged he was entitled to damages because of the
    CAFO’s odor for “the devaluation of his property” and his loss of “use and
    enjoyment of his property.” Under the trespass and drainage claims, Garrison
    alleged NFP over-applied manure and the defendants’ increased drainage
    trespassed onto his land. On August 31, the defendants filed their answer and
    alleged, in part, that Garrison’s “claims are barred, in whole or in part, by 
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)” and “barred by res judicata, issue preclusion and/or claim
    preclusion.” The defendants filed an amended answer on January 21, 2021, and
    further alleged that Garrison’s “claims are barred, in whole or in part, by 
    Iowa Code § 657
    .11A(3).”
    Garrison moved to strike the defendants’ affirmative defenses, arguing
    section 657.11(2) and section 657.11A(5) are unconstitutional as applied to him
    under the inalienable rights clause of the Iowa Constitution and that
    section 657.11A(3)’s damage cap is unconstitutional on its face and as applied.
    His motions did not rely on the takings clause in article I, section 18 of the Iowa
    9
    Constitution. Garrison also filed a motion in limine to exclude evidence of his
    ownership of the Kossuth County property and manure spreading at that
    location, and the manure pile on his farmland in Emmet County. The defendants
    resisted the motions and argued that Gacke should be overruled.
    On March 8, the defendants moved for summary judgment arguing that
    they were entitled to the protections in sections 657.11 and 657.11A and that
    Garrison’s trespass and drainage claims fail as a matter of law, as the federal
    court already determined. Garrison resisted by arguing the defendants are not
    entitled to statutory immunity protection, issue preclusion does not apply, and
    the water tests and additional evidence create a genuine issue of material fact.
    On April 6, the district court issued an order denying Garrison’s facial challenge
    to section 657.11A(3)’s cap on damages and denying his motion in limine. The
    court reserved the issue of Garrison’s as-applied challenge under the inalienable
    rights clause. The court held an evidentiary hearing on April 9.
    Garrison submitted several expert reports and affidavits. Roger Patocka, a
    professional engineer, opined that “precipitation does accumulate on the BWT
    Holdings tract, and surface runoff events do discharge to and traverse the
    Garrison property downstream, and eventually reach the West Fork Des Moines
    River and beyond” and BWT’s “[t]ile systems can be more carefully designed to
    match soil and groundwater characteristics to accommodate better manure
    management.” Robert Streit, a consulting agronomist, concluded “[b]ased on the
    application rates of manure in [2017 and 2018], the pounds of nitrogen exceeded
    the appropriate rate for the amount of nitrogen needed by the corn for optimum
    10
    yields for the crop year 2018.” And Paul Kassel, an Iowa State University
    Extension Service agronomist, offered recommendations relying on the Corn
    Nitrogen Rate Calculator.
    On May 4, the district court ruled that section 657.11(2) is not
    unconstitutional as applied to Garrison under the inalienable rights clause of
    the Iowa Constitution under Gacke because Garrison “received some benefit”
    from the statutory nuisance immunity. The court denied Garrison’s motion to
    strike the defendants’ affirmative defenses under sections 657.11(2) and
    657.11A(5). The next day, Garrison filed a motion asking the court to reconsider
    and requested, in part, that the court address his takings challenge and “clarify
    that the ‘as-applied’ analysis only applies to damages other than for diminution
    in value to [his] property.” The district court, without ruling on any takings claim,
    entered a ruling granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on
    May 10, which Garrison appealed before the district court ruled on his motion
    to reconsider. He did not request a limited remand to allow the district court to
    rule on his motion to reconsider.
    We retained the appeal. On appeal, Garrison argues the district court erred
    in finding sections 657.11(2) and 657.11A(5) are constitutional as applied,
    granting summary judgment, and finding section 657.11A(3) constitutional. The
    defendants argue Garrison failed to preserve error “on the issue of whether the
    application of Iowa Code section 657.11 constitutes a ‘taking’ with regard to his
    alleged diminution in property damages” and on his as-applied challenge to
    section 657.11A(3). The defendants further argue the district court correctly
    11
    found section 657.11 is constitutional as applied to Garrison, they are entitled
    to the statutory immunity protections of section 657.11, section 657.11A(3) is
    constitutional on its face, and the district court correctly granted summary
    judgment on the trespass and drainage claims. Alternatively, the defendants
    argue we should overrule Gacke and apply a rational basis test to find
    section 657.11 constitutional.
    We allowed the Iowa Pork Producers Association and Iowa Farm Bureau
    Federation to file an amici curiae brief supporting the defendants’ positions,
    including the request to overrule Gacke. The amici brief argues that “[i]n addition
    to a lack of evidence,” Garrison’s trespass “claim fails because he lacks the
    requisite exclusive possessory interest in the water flowing across his property,
    and because Iowa law contains the required manure land application rate
    calculations rather than a model constructed for inorganic commercial fertilizer.”
    II. Standard of Review.
    “Constitutional claims are reviewed de novo.” City of Sioux City v.
    Jacobsma, 
    862 N.W.2d 335
    , 339 (Iowa 2015). “We review rulings on statutory
    interpretation for correction of errors at law.” EMC Ins. Grp. v. Shepard, 
    960 N.W.2d 661
    , 668 (Iowa 2021).
    We also review rulings granting summary judgment for correction of errors
    at law. 
    Id.
     “On motion for summary judgment, the court must: (1) view the facts
    in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, and (2) consider on behalf of
    the nonmoving party every legitimate inference reasonably deduced from the
    record.” Morris v. Legends Fieldhouse Bar & Grill, LLC, 
    958 N.W.2d 817
    , 821
    12
    (Iowa 2021) (quoting Van Fossen v. MidAmerican Energy Co., 
    777 N.W.2d 689
    ,
    692 (Iowa 2009)). “Summary judgment is proper when the moving party has
    shown ‘there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’ ” EMC Ins. Grp., 960 N.W.2d at 668
    (quoting MidWestOne Bank v. Heartland Co-op, 
    941 N.W.2d 876
    , 882 (Iowa
    2020)); see also Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3).
    III. Analysis.
    We begin with an overview of Iowa’s unique jurisprudence on the
    constitutionality of statutory nuisance immunity for farming operations. We next
    address whether Garrison preserved error on his challenge to Iowa Code
    section 657.11(2) under the takings clause in article I, section 18 of the Iowa
    Constitution, and we conclude he did not. We then analyze whether to retain
    Gacke’s three-part test under the inalienable rights clause in article I, section 1
    of the Iowa Constitution. We overrule the test because it was wrongly decided, is
    difficult to administer, and has been superseded by subsequent decisions using
    the rational basis test. Applying rational basis review, we reject Garrison’s
    inalienable rights challenge to sections 657.11(2) and 657.11A(5). Finally, we
    conclude the district court correctly entered summary judgement because
    Garrison lacked evidence to generate a jury question on any exception to the
    statutory immunity for his nuisance claim or causation for his trespass and
    drainage claims.
    A. Iowa’s Unique Jurisprudence on the Constitutionality of Statutory
    Nuisance Immunity for Farming Operations. This appeal represents a
    13
    recurring challenge to the constitutionality of the immunity provision in Iowa’s
    right-to-farm legislation, Iowa Code section 657.11(2), which provides:
    An animal feeding operation, as defined in section 459.102, shall
    not be found to be a public or private nuisance under this chapter
    or under principles of common law, and the animal feeding
    operation shall not be found to interfere with another person’s
    comfortable use and enjoyment of the person’s life or property under
    any other cause of action. However, this section shall not apply if
    the person bringing the action proves that an injury to the person
    or damage to the person’s property is proximately caused by either
    of the following:
    a. The failure to comply with a federal statute or regulation or
    a state statute or rule which applies to the animal feeding operation.
    b. Both of the following:
    (1) The animal feeding operation unreasonably and for
    substantial periods of time interferes with the person’s comfortable
    use and enjoyment of the person’s life or property.
    (2) The animal feeding operation failed to use existing prudent
    generally accepted management practices reasonable for the
    operation.2
    The legislation codified the purpose of the immunity provision in the preceding
    subsection: to promote agriculture by reducing nuisance litigation costs. 
    Id.
    § 657.11(1).
    2Additionally,   Iowa Code section 657.11A(5) provides:
    This section shall not apply if the person bringing the action proves that the public
    or private nuisance or interference with another person’s comfortable use and
    enjoyment of the person’s life or property under any other cause of action is
    proximately caused by any of the following:
    a. The failure to comply with a federal statute or regulation or a state
    statute or rule which applies to the animal feeding operation.
    b. The failure to use existing prudent generally utilized management
    practices reasonable for the animal feeding operation.
    14
    In 1998, we held a similar nuisance immunity statute enacted by the
    legislature for agricultural operations was in effect “an easement” imposed on
    property owners affected by the nuisance and thereby constituted a “taking” of
    their property in violation of article I, section 18 of the Iowa Constitution.
    Bormann v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    584 N.W.2d 309
    , 316, 321 (Iowa 1998) (en banc)
    (striking down 
    Iowa Code § 352.11
    (1)(a) (1995)). In 2004, in Gacke, we clarified
    Bormann to limit the recovery under a takings theory to the diminution in value
    of the affected property:
    In conclusion, we hold that Bormann and state takings
    jurisprudence requires us to invalidate the statutory immunity only
    insofar as it prevents property owners subjected to a nuisance from
    recovering damages for the diminution in value of their property.
    The Takings Clause does not prohibit the legislature from granting
    animal feeding operations immunity from liability for any other
    damages traditionally allowed under a nuisance theory of recovery.
    Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 175
    . Thus, affected neighbors could not rely on a takings
    theory to recover other noneconomic damages for nuisance, such as loss of
    enjoyment of the property. 
    Id.
     But Gacke also found a different path to challenge
    the statutory immunity as unconstitutional as applied to the plaintiff under the
    inalienable rights clause in article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution. 
    Id.
     at
    175–79. The plaintiffs, who met a new three-part test created in Gacke, avoided
    the statutory nuisance defense in section 657.11(2). 
    Id.
     at 178–79. In 2018, we
    reaffirmed the Gacke test in Honomichl v. Valley View Swine, LLC, stating:
    For    courts     to   determine      whether    section 657.11(2)      is
    unconstitutional as applied to plaintiffs, plaintiffs must show they
    (1) “receive[d] no particular benefit from the nuisance immunity
    granted to their neighbors other than that inuring to the public in
    general[,]” (2) “sustain[ed] significant hardship[,]” and (3) “resided on
    their property long before any animal operation was commenced” on
    15
    neighboring land and “had spent considerable sums of money in
    improvements to their property prior to construction of the
    defendant’s facilities.”
    
    914 N.W.2d 223
    , 235–36 (Iowa 2018) (alterations in original) (quoting Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    ). We made clear in Honomichl that “the Gacke factors require a
    fact-based analysis that generally requires a trial on the merits, or at least an
    evidentiary pretrial hearing.” 
    Id. at 238
    . Indeed, Honomichl reversed a summary
    judgment and remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing on the Gacke test
    before a trial on the merits on the nuisance claims. 
    Id.
     at 238–39.
    Neither Gacke nor Honomichl cited any authority for adopting the
    three-part test. No other court in any jurisdiction has adopted or used the test.
    The Honomichl majority rejected calls by the defendants and amici to overrule
    Gacke. 
    Id. at 226
    , 236–37. Two justices in Honomichl concluded Gacke should
    be overruled. 
    Id.
     at 239–40 (Waterman, J., concurring specially, joined by
    Mansfield, J.).
    As Honomichl acknowledged, Gacke and Bormann stand alone. 
    Id. at 233
    (majority opinion). “All fifty states have right-to-farm laws that provide farmers
    with various forms of statutory immunity from nuisance claims similar to
    section 657.11(2).” 
    Id. at 232
    . “Iowa is the only state to hold that the statutory
    immunity available under its right-to-farm law is unconstitutional in any
    manner.” 
    Id.
     at 233 & n.2 (collecting cases rejecting constitutional challenges);
    see, e.g., Moon v. N. Idaho Farmers Ass’n, 
    96 P.3d 637
    , 644–45 (Idaho 2004)
    (rejecting Bormann’s easement theory and declining “to hold that the nuisance
    immunity provision [in Idaho’s right-to-farm law] creates an easement in favor of
    16
    the grass farmers” whose smoke from burning stubble drifted onto the plaintiff’s
    land); Lindsey v. DeGroot, 
    898 N.E.2d 1251
    , 1259 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (“[L]ike
    the Idaho and Texas courts, we have found nothing to suggest that Indiana has
    adopted the seemingly unique Iowa holding that the right to maintain a nuisance
    is an easement, and the Lindseys have failed to explain why we should.”);
    Labrayere v. Bohr Farms, LLC, 
    458 S.W.3d 319
    , 327–34 (Mo. 2015) (en banc)
    (rejecting state constitutional challenges to Missouri’s statutory immunity for
    agricultural operations); Pure Air & Water Inc. of Chemung Cnty. v. Davidsen, 
    668 N.Y.S.2d 248
    , 250 (App. Div. 1998) (rejecting due process challenge to New York’s
    right-to-farm statute’s immunity for private nuisance, noting that the plaintiffs
    lack “a vested interest in any rule of the common law”); Barrera v. Hondo Creek
    Cattle Co., 
    132 S.W.3d 544
    , 547, 549 (Tex. App. 2004) (rejecting takings
    challenge to one-year statute of repose for nuisance claims against cattle feed
    lot).
    After Honomichl, additional appellate decisions in other states have
    confirmed that Iowa remains an outlier. The South Dakota Supreme Court
    recently declined to follow our precedent in its decision rejecting constitutional
    challenges to a large-scale wind energy farm with 132 wind turbines spanning
    three counties. Ehlebracht v. Crowned Ridge Wind II, LLC, 
    972 N.W.2d 477
    , 481,
    491–92 (S.D. 2022) (“But the decision in Bormann appears to be an outlier. We
    have never regarded the right to maintain a nuisance as an easement.”); see also
    Marsh v. Sandstone N., LLC, 
    179 N.E.3d 402
    , 426–30 (Ill. App. Ct. 2020)
    (concluding the fee-shifting statute within right-to-farm legislation did not violate
    17
    the special legislation clause, equal protection clause, or separation of powers
    clause in the Illinois Constitution); Himsel v. Himsel, 
    122 N.E.3d 935
    , 945–49
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2019) (holding an Indiana right-to-farm law did not constitute a
    taking or violate its open courts or privileges and immunities clauses); Rural
    Empowerment Ass’n for Cmty. Help v. State, 
    868 S.E.2d 645
    , 655 (N.C. Ct. App.
    2021) (reviewing the constitutionality of amendments to North Carolina’s
    right-to-farm statutes and holding that “[t]he Amendments are a valid exercise
    of legislative and the State’s police powers, do not violate the Law of the Land
    Clause or Due Process, are not a special or private law, and do not deprive a
    prospective plaintiff of the right to a jury trial”).3
    Against this backdrop, we understand why litigants and amici curiae
    persist in calling for Gacke to be overruled. But as we explain next, Gacke’s
    takings holding clarifying Bormann is outside the scope of this appeal.
    3As    noted, the constitutional challenges to the nuisance immunities in right-to-farm
    statutes failed in every other court. The statutes in Indiana, North Carolina, and Texas included
    a one-year statute of repose after the CAFO begins operation, with nuisance claims allowed
    during that one-year time window. 
    Ind. Code § 32
    –30–6–9(d) (2022); 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 106
    –701
    (2022); Tex. Agric. Code § 251.004(a) (2022). The Indiana, North Carolina, and Texas courts
    enforced the statutes of repose, but rejected the constitutional challenges without relying on the
    window of time allowed to sue in those states. See Himsel, 122 N.E.3d at 945–50; Lindsey, 
    898 N.E.2d at
    1257–62; Rural Empowerment Ass’n, 868 S.E.2d at 652–55; Barrera, 
    132 S.W.3d at
    549–50; see also Marsh, 179 N.E.3d at 423, 425–30 (holding attorney fee shifting statute is
    constitutional, which is part of Illinois’s right-to-farm laws that also includes a one-year statute
    of repose). The appellate courts in the other four states adjudicating constitutional challenges
    upheld immunity provisions without any time window for nuisance claims; rather, the immunity
    was immediately available to qualifying farm operations. See Moon, 
    96 P.3d at
    641–42, 646–49
    (citing 
    Idaho Code § 22
    –4803A(6) (2003)); Labrayere, 458 S.W.3d at 326, 327–34 (citing 
    Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.296
     (2012)); Pure Air & Water, 
    668 N.Y.S.2d at
    249–50 (citing 
    N.Y. Agric. & Mkts. Law § 308
    (3) (McKinney 1996)); Ehlebracht, 972 N.W.2d at 487–92 (citing 
    S.D. Codified Laws § 21
    –
    10–2 (2019)). Thus, the constitutionality of these immunity provisions does not turn on the
    availability of a window of time to bring a nuisance action after the CAFO begins operating. In
    any event, Garrison waited three years to file suit in federal court and four-and-a-half years to
    file in state court after the defendants’ CAFO began—his lawsuits would have been time-barred
    under a one- or two-year statute of repose.
    18
    B. Whether Garrison Preserved Error on a Takings Claim. The
    defendants argue Garrison failed to preserve error on his takings claim. We
    agree. The district court never ruled on Garrison’s takings claim before he
    appealed and deprived that court of jurisdiction. “It is a fundamental doctrine of
    appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided by the
    district court before we will decide them on appeal.” Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002). “When a district court fails to rule on an issue
    properly raised by a party, the party who raised the issue must file a motion
    requesting a ruling in order to preserve error for appeal.” 
    Id.
     And the “moving
    party is deemed to have waived and abandoned a posttrial motion when that
    party files a notice of appeal.” Freer v. DAC, Inc., 
    929 N.W.2d 685
    , 687–88 (Iowa
    2019). These basic principles compel the conclusion that Garrison failed to
    preserve his takings claim for appellate review.
    Garrison alleged in his petition that the defendant’s CAFO interfered with
    his “use and enjoyment of his property and result[ed] in the devaluation of his
    property.” The defendants denied this allegation and alleged affirmative defenses.
    Garrison moved to strike the defendants’ affirmative defenses, arguing “
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2) is unconstitutional as applied to the facts of this case pursuant
    to Article I, Section 1, of the Iowa Constitution” under Gacke. In his
    accompanying brief, Garrison quoted Gacke:
    [S]ection 657.11(2) violates article I, section 18 of the Iowa
    Constitution to the extent it deprives property owners of a remedy
    for the taking of their property resulting from a nuisance created by
    an animal feeding operation. In addition, we conclude
    section 657.11(2), as applied under the circumstances of this case,
    19
    constitutes an unreasonable exercise of the state’s police power and
    therefore violates article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution.
    
    684 N.W.2d at 171
    . But Garrison went on to argue the inalienable rights clause—
    not the takings clause. When the defendants opposed his motion, Garrison’s
    response asserted Gacke’s three-part test under the inalienable rights clause
    without even mentioning the takings clause.
    The defendants moved for summary judgment arguing, in part, that they
    “are entitled to nuisance immunity under Iowa Code section 657.11.” In
    Garrison’s resistance to summary judgment, he again failed to raise any
    argument that section 657.11(2) is unconstitutional under the takings clause.
    The district court ruled that section 657.11(2) was constitutional as applied to
    Garrison under Gacke’s three-part inalienable rights clause test because he
    received a benefit from the statutory nuisance immunity. On that basis, the court
    denied Garrison’s motion to strike the defendants’ affirmative defenses under
    Iowa Code sections 657.11(2) and 657.11A(5). The court did not rule on any
    takings claim under article I, section 18.
    Garrison filed a motion to reconsider that for the first time specifically
    asked the district court to rule on his takings claim.
    [T]he Court should clarify that the “as-applied” analysis only applies
    to damages other than for diminution in value to Mr. Garrison’s
    property. The Gacke court reaffirmed the decision in Bormann v. Bd.
    of Supervisors, 
    584 N.W.2d 309
     (Iowa 1998), that statutory
    immunity as to property damages violates the Takings Clause of the
    Iowa Constitution, and to the extent of property damages, there are
    no circumstances under which the immunity would be
    constitutional. As the Gacke court put it:
    In conclusion, we hold that Bormann and state takings
    jurisprudence requires us to invalidate the statutory
    20
    immunity only insofar as it prevents property owners
    subjected to a nuisance from recovering damages for the
    diminution in value of their property.
    So, the Defendants cannot rely on the immunity in §§ 657.11 and
    657.11A with respect to Mr. Garrison’s claim for diminution in value
    of his property. The Court should amend its Order to clarify this
    point.
    A few days later, the court granted the defendants’ motion for summary
    judgment without deciding or even mentioning Garrison’s takings claim. The
    court reaffirmed its ruling that section 657.11(2) is constitutional as applied to
    Garrison under the inalienable rights clause and found the “Defendants are
    therefore entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the Plaintiff’s claim that
    Defendants[’] CAFO is a nuisance and interferes with Plaintiff’s use and
    enjoyment of his property.” Garrison promptly filed his notice of appeal without
    any district court ruling on his pending motion to reconsider the belatedly
    asserted takings claim. His notice of appeal deprived the district court of
    jurisdiction to rule on that motion. See Freer, 929 N.W.2d at 688 (holding the
    plaintiff by filing her notice of appeal “waived and abandoned her posttrial
    motion”).4
    We conclude Garrison failed to preserve error on his takings claim, and for
    that reason we do not reach it.
    C. Whether to Overrule Gacke. The district court ruled that Garrison
    benefited from section 657.11(2)’s statutory immunity when he operated his own
    CAFO and, therefore, could not show the statute was unconstitutional as applied
    4Garrison also failed to file a motion in our court requesting a limited remand to allow
    the district court to rule on his motion to reconsider.
    21
    to him under the first part of Gacke’s three-part test. Garrison argues the court
    erred in ruling that he benefited from the statute without any lawsuit or claim
    against him to trigger its immunity protection. The defendants and amici argue
    the court correctly applied Gacke and, alternatively, argue we should overrule
    Gacke as outdated and wrongly decided.
    We agree Gacke’s three-part test should be overruled. As noted above,
    Gacke is an outlier. This appeal once again illustrates how Gacke’s three-part
    test, which Gacke created out of whole cloth, engenders unnecessary litigation
    and is difficult to administer. See Honomichl, 914 N.W.2d at 239–40
    (Waterman, J., concurring specially). Gacke was wrongly decided in that it failed
    to apply rational basis review to a challenge under article I, section 1 of our
    constitution to section 657.11(2). Our prior and subsequent decisions, as
    discussed below, have made clear that challenges under the inalienable rights
    clause to regulatory statutes must be adjudicated under the highly deferential
    rational basis test. Section 657.11(2) passes muster under that test.
    Gacke itself recognized this statutory immunity falls within the police
    powers of the state:
    The legislature’s objective of promoting animal agriculture in this
    state promotes the interests of the public generally and the
    immunity granted in this statute bears a reasonable relationship to
    this legislative objective. Therefore, even though individual
    producers are the direct beneficiaries of the statutory immunity, we
    think this provision is within the police power of the state.
    
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    . Despite that acknowledgment, Gacke failed to apply
    traditional rational basis review. Instead of asking whether the law furthers a
    reasonable legislative objective, it asked whether its application to the plaintiffs
    22
    in that particular case did—effectively the opposite of a rational basis test. See
    
    id.
     at 178–79. Gacke thereby broke new ground by sustaining an as-applied
    constitutional challenge to section 657.11(2) under the inalienable rights clause.
    Article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution provides,
    All men and women are, by nature, free and equal, and have
    certain inalienable rights—among which are those of enjoying and
    defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing and protecting
    property, and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness.
    Gacke reiterated that “[t]he rights guaranteed by this provision are subject to
    reasonable regulation by the state in the exercise of its police power.” 
    684 N.W.2d at 176
    . Yet Gacke nevertheless held that section 657.11(2) was unconstitutional
    as applied to the plaintiffs—only the second time in Iowa’s history that a plaintiff
    succeeded in challenging legislation under the inalienable rights clause.5
    In our view, the Gacke test is difficult to administer and requires
    unnecessary and duplicative litigation. By overruling Gacke, we eliminate the
    need to adjudicate its subsidiary issues, such as defining when neighboring
    claimants      who     raise   livestock     personally      receive    a    “benefit”    from
    section 657.11(2) under the first part of Gacke’s three-part test. See 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
     (requiring proof the plaintiff “receive[d] no particular benefit from the
    nuisance immunity”). Is the plaintiff’s own CAFO adjacent to the defendant’s
    sufficient to establish a benefit? What about a plaintiff’s CAFO at another
    location, such as Garrison’s farmland in Kossuth and Wright counties where his
    5Over a century ago, in State v. Osborne, our court relied on both the due process clause
    and the inalienable rights clause to strike down a statute imposing bond and licensing
    requirements on transient merchants. 
    154 N.W. 294
    , 297, 300–01 (Iowa 1915). Garrison has not
    raised a due process challenge to section 657.11(2).
    23
    tenants spread manure on his fields? Is a benefit shown when a neighbor
    refrained from suing the plaintiff because section 657.11(2) is on the books? Or
    is a lawsuit against the plaintiff required? Or a successful motion for summary
    judgment applying section 657.11(2)? Gacke left those questions unanswered
    presumably because the Gackes did not raise livestock. See generally 
    id.
     at 178–
    79.
    The second part of the Gacke test, that the plaintiff “sustain[ed] significant
    hardship,” id. at 178, requires much the same evidence that would prove the
    CAFO is a nuisance as well as meet the statutory exception to immunity. See
    
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)(b)(1) (conditioning an exception to immunity on proof the
    CAFO “unreasonably and for substantial periods of time interferes” with the
    plaintiff’s use and enjoyment of property). And Gacke’s third part of the test, that
    the plaintiff resided on their property before the CAFO commenced, 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    , involves the same evidence required to show the plaintiff did not come to
    the nuisance under common law, see Freeman v. Grain Processing Corp., 
    895 N.W.2d 105
    , 120–21 (Iowa 2017) (discussing “priority of location” as a factor for
    determining the existence of a nuisance). Thus, the Gacke test requires two
    trials, at which the same evidence would be presented to decide functionally
    equivalent, overlapping issues. Indeed, Honomichl candidly acknowledged that
    the Gacke test leads to duplicative hearings: “While a district court may conduct
    a pretrial hearing for the specific purpose of determining the as-applied
    challenge, the plaintiffs can still rely on the exceptions to the immunity under
    sections 657.11(2)(a) and (b) if the district court finds the statute is not
    24
    unconstitutional as applied.” 914 N.W.2d at 238 (majority opinion). Overruling
    Gacke will reduce the cost of CAFO litigation by eliminating this duplicative
    evidentiary hearing and avoiding unnecessary constitutional adjudication.
    “We do not overturn our precedents lightly and will not do so absent a
    showing the prior decision was clearly erroneous.” McElroy v. State, 
    703 N.W.2d 385
    , 394–95 (Iowa 2005) (collecting cases). “[S]tare decisis does not prevent the
    court from reconsidering, repairing, correcting or abandoning past judicial
    announcements when error is manifest . . . .” 
    Id. at 395
     (alteration in original)
    (quoting Miller v. Westfield Ins., 
    606 N.W.2d 301
    , 306 (Iowa 2000) (en banc)). And
    “[s]tare decisis has limited application in constitutional matters.” Goodwin v.
    Iowa Dist. Ct., 
    936 N.W.2d 634
    , 649 (Iowa 2019) (McDonald, J., concurring
    specially) (“Thus, ‘[w]hen faced with a demonstrably erroneous precedent, my
    rule is simple: We should not follow it. This view of stare decisis follows directly
    from the Constitution’s supremacy over other sources of law—including our own
    precedents.’ ” (alteration in original) (quoting Gamble v. United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 1960
    , 1984 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring))). As explained in the Honomichl
    special concurrence, we are convinced Gacke was clearly erroneous when
    decided and has been undermined by our later decisions applying the rational
    basis test. Gacke’s three-part test has not metastasized beyond chapter 657 and
    the test remains an outlier in Iowa jurisprudence, as well as nationally.6
    6Several    of our decisions discussed Gacke without reaffirming, expanding, or even
    applying     its three-part test. In Merrill v. Valley View Swine, LLC, we unanimously
    affirmed     the district court order under Iowa Code section 657.11(5) requiring the
    plaintiffs   to pay the defendant CAFO operator’s costs and expenses incurred defending
    frivolous    claims after the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their nuisance claims. 941
    25
    After Gacke, we have correctly applied the rational basis test to adjudicate
    constitutional challenges to social and regulatory statutes under the inalienable
    rights clause. See Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, Inc. v. Reynolds, 
    962 N.W.2d 37
    , 46 (Iowa 2021) (applying rational basis review to a constitutional
    challenge under both the inalienable rights and equal protection clauses of the
    Iowa Constitution to legislation conditioning grant eligibility); Gray v. Oliver, 
    943 N.W.2d 617
    ,    629–32     (Iowa    2020)    (concluding    a   limitation    on   a
    successor-in-interest’s ability to prosecute another’s claim of legal malpractice
    did not violate the due process clause or the inalienable rights clause under
    rational basis review); Clark v. Ins. Co. State of Pa., 
    927 N.W.2d 180
    , 190–91
    (Iowa 2019) (applying rational basis review to reject an inalienable rights clause
    challenge to statutory immunity for insurance safety inspections); Jacobsma,
    862 N.W.2d at 352–53 (applying rational basis review to a constitutional
    challenge to an automated traffic enforcement ordinance under the inalienable
    rights clause); Midwest Check Cashing, Inc. v. Richey, 
    728 N.W.2d 396
    , 403 (Iowa
    2007) (rejecting inalienable rights clause challenge to payday loan statute and
    equating review to rational basis test, noting the statute “impacts a property
    N.W.2d 10, 12, 18–20 (Iowa 2020). In Board of Water Works Trustees v. SAC County
    Board of Supervisors, we declined to apply or extend Gacke to claims between public
    entities over use of a public resource. 
    890 N.W.2d 50
    , 71–72 (Iowa 2017). In Dalarna
    Farms v. Access Energy Coop., we held an electric utility’s comparative fault defense
    would not reduce a potential “takings” award for a dairy farmer’s diminution of value
    claim from stray voltage, but we also determined the farmer’s inalienable rights claim
    was premature and declined to reach it. 
    792 N.W.2d 656
    , 658, 661–64 (Iowa 2010).
    None of the issues adjudicated in these three cases required a reaffirmation of Gacke’s
    three-part test and none involved a request to overrule it. These decisions remain good
    law.
    26
    right. But it is far removed from the type of legislation that is arbitrary and
    unreasonable.”); see also Atwood v. Vilsack, 
    725 N.W.2d 641
    , 651–52 (Iowa
    2006) (rejecting a challenge to pretrial detention under the Sexually Violent
    Predator (SVP) Act, and stating, “Even if the right to bail in civil commitment
    proceedings pre-existed the Constitution and consequently falls within the ambit
    of the protections afforded by the unenumerated rights and inalienable rights
    clauses, the SVP statute is reasonable and, thus, constitutional.”); Todd E.
    Pettys, The Iowa State Constitution 68 (2d ed. 2018) (“Because the standard of
    review under Section 1 is highly deferential to government actors, it is far easier
    to find cases in which Iowa courts have rejected inalienable-rights claims.”).
    We also note that before Gacke, we consistently applied a highly deferential
    review in rejecting inalienable rights clause challenges to legislation. See, e.g.,
    Bennett v. Guthridge, 
    225 N.W.2d 137
    , 139–40 (Iowa 1975) (“Regulations similar
    to the ordinance involved in this case [governing home construction standards]
    have long been upheld as valid exercises of the police power.”); Diamond Auto
    Sales, Inc. v. Erbe, 
    105 N.W.2d 650
    , 651, 653 (Iowa 1960) (upholding a Sunday
    closing law for car dealers because it was “not an arbitrary and unreasonable
    regulation of plaintiffs’ businesses”). Gacke is an aberration.
    As we observed in Jacobsma, “[s]ome states with inalienable rights clauses
    similar to Iowa’s have found them to be merely hortatory,”7 while “[s]ome courts,
    7See, e.g., Kunkel v. Walton, 
    689 N.E.2d 1047
    , 1056–57 (Ill. 1997) (concluding that its
    inherent and inalienable rights clause does not provide judicially enforceable rights because it
    “is not generally considered, of itself, an operative constitutional limitation upon the exercise of
    governmental powers” (quoting George D. Braden & Rubin Goodman Cohn, The Illinois
    Constitution: An Annotated and Comparative Analysis 8 (1969))); Morris v. Brandenburg, 
    376 P.3d 27
    however, have held that inalienable rights clauses in state constitutions are
    judicially enforceable in a variety of contexts.” 862 N.W.2d at 350; see
    Marshall J. Ray, What Does the Natural Rights Clause Mean to New Mexico?, 
    39 N.M. L. Rev. 375
    , 399–406 (2009) (reviewing the justifications for and against
    New Mexico’s natural rights clause as a source of judicially enforceable
    substantive rights).
    We concluded in Jacobsma that Iowa’s inalienable rights clause must have
    “at least some constitutional bite.” 862 N.W.2d at 351. We equated review under
    that clause to our rational basis test:
    Where liberty or property rights are allegedly infringed by a
    statute or ordinance, our inalienable rights cases have held that,
    even if the plaintiff’s asserted interest is within the scope of the
    inalienable rights clause, the rights guaranteed by the provision are
    subject to reasonable regulation by the state in the exercise of its
    police power. This formulation, of course, is virtually identical to the
    rational-basis due process test or equal protection tests under the
    Federal Constitution.
    Id. at 352 (citations omitted). We reached the same conclusion in Gray. 943
    N.W.2d at 629–32 (reviewing constitutional challenges under the due process
    and inalienable rights clauses together under a rational basis review). And most
    notably, we recently applied rational basis review to reject an inalienable rights
    clause challenge to the statutory immunity for negligent inspections by workers’
    compensation insurers in Iowa Code section 517.5. Clark, 927 N.W.2d at 190–
    91.
    836, 855 (N.M. 2016) (“[T]he Inherent Rights Clause has never been interpreted to be the
    exclusive source for a fundamental or important constitutional right, and on its own has always
    been subject to reasonable regulation.”).
    28
    CAFOs are controversial, but it is not our role to second-guess the
    legislature’s policy choices. See AFSCME Iowa Council 61 v. State, 
    928 N.W.2d 21
    , 26 (Iowa 2019) (“Our role is to decide whether constitutional lines were
    crossed, not to sit as a superlegislature rethinking policy choices of the elected
    branches.”). Shortly after our constitution was ratified in 1857, our court
    concluded:
    The people, then, have vested the legislative authority,
    inherent in them, in the general assembly.
    ....
    Thus, it seems clear by logical deduction, and upon the most
    abundant authority, that this court has no authority to annul an act
    of the legislature unless it is found to be in clear, palpable and direct
    conflict with the written constitution.
    Stewart v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    30 Iowa 9
    , 18–19 (1870); see also Iowa Const.
    art. I, § 2 (“All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted
    for the protection, security, and benefit of the people, and they have the right, at
    all times, to alter or reform the same, whenever the public good may require it.”);
    Honomichl, 914 N.W.2d at 240 (Waterman, J., concurring specially) (“The
    inalienable rights clause should be read together with the clause that
    immediately follows it in the Bill of Rights.”).
    We are to give our legislature the deference it is due under the Iowa
    Constitution. As we recently reiterated,
    [W]e must remember that statutes are cloaked with a presumption
    of constitutionality. The challenger bears a heavy burden, because
    it must prove the unconstitutionality beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Moreover, “the challenger must refute every reasonable basis upon
    which the statute could be found to be constitutional.” Furthermore,
    if the statute is capable of being construed in more than one
    29
    manner, one of which is constitutional, we must adopt that
    construction.
    State v. Kilby, 
    961 N.W.2d 374
    , 377 (Iowa 2021) (quoting State v. Senn, 
    882 N.W.2d 1
    , 6 (Iowa 2016)). Gacke erred by flouting our traditional deferential
    review of legislation affecting tort law and property rights.
    As noted, in Ehlebracht, the South Dakota Supreme Court recently
    overruled constitutional challenges to a large wind energy farm. 972 N.W.2d at
    487–92. The plaintiffs alleged that noise and light flicker from the wind turbines
    constituted a nuisance and that the government permits allowing the wind farm
    created an easement over their adjacent land. Id. at 484. The Ehlebracht court
    rejected their easement theory and described Iowa precedent, particularly
    Bormann, as an “outlier.” Id. at 492.8
    For all these reasons, we overrule Gacke’s three-part test under the
    inalienable rights clause and instead apply rational basis review. Specifically, we
    overrule part IV of Gacke,9 as well as the decisions that followed and applied that
    test, including Honomichl, 
    914 N.W.2d 223
     (majority opinion). 10
    8We caution that an expansive view of Iowa’s inalienable rights clause, as advocated by
    our colleagues in the dissent, would jeopardize the development of wind energy in our state. The
    problems with the dissents are more fully addressed in Justice Mansfield’s concurrence. The
    dissents primarily rely on takings jurisprudence, which leads to cognitive dissonance because
    Garrison failed to preserve his takings claim and Gacke itself disavowed a takings remedy for
    damages apart from the diminution in value. 
    684 N.W.2d at 175
    . The dissents also rely in part
    on the due process clause, but Garrison raised no due process challenge to section 657.11(2).
    9Because Garrison failed to preserve error on his takings claim, we do not address part II
    and III of Gacke.
    10The   court of appeals, in an unpublished decision, affirmed a district court ruling
    applying Gacke in McIlrath v. Prestage Farms of Iowa, L.L.C., No. 15–1599, 
    2016 WL 6902328
    , at
    *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 23, 2016). At the time, the court of appeals was bound to apply Gacke. In
    light of our holding today overruling Gacke, McIlrath is no longer good law.
    30
    D. Application of the Rational Basis Test. We now apply the proper
    rational basis test to resolve Garrison’s constitutional challenge under the
    inalienable rights clause. To adjudicate claims under Iowa’s inalienable rights
    clause, when no fundamental right or suspect class is at issue, we apply rational
    basis review to decide if there is a reasonable fit between the means used to
    advance the government interest and the interest itself. McQuistion v. City of
    Clinton, 
    872 N.W.2d 817
    , 833 (Iowa 2015).
    Statutes are presumed constitutional, and we will not declare something
    unconstitutional under the rational basis test unless it “clearly, palpably, and
    without doubt infringe[s]” a constitutional right. Residential & Agric. Advisory
    Comm., LLC v. Dyersville City Council, 
    888 N.W.2d 24
    , 50 (Iowa 2016) (alteration
    in original) (quoting Racing Ass’n of Cent. Iowa v. Fitzgerald, 
    675 N.W.2d 1
    , 8
    (Iowa 2004)). The state “is not required or expected to produce evidence to justify
    its legislative action.” Ames Rental Prop. Ass’n v. City of Ames, 
    736 N.W.2d 255
    ,
    259 (Iowa 2007). A court needs only to find a “realistically conceivable” basis for
    the statute toward “a legitimate government interest.” Planned Parenthood of the
    Heartland, 962 N.W.2d at 48 (quoting AFSCME Iowa Council 61, 928 N.W.2d at
    32). And that basis need not be supported by evidence in the traditional sense:
    “[A] legislative choice is not subject to courtroom factfinding and
    may be based on rational speculation unsupported by evidence or
    empirical data.” A statute is presumed constitutional and “[t]he
    burden is on the one attacking the legislative arrangement to
    negative every conceivable basis which might support it,” whether
    or not the basis has a foundation in the record.
    Baker v. City of Iowa City, 
    867 N.W.2d 44
    , 57 (Iowa 2015) (alterations in original)
    (quoting Heller v. Doe by Doe, 
    509 U.S. 312
    , 319–21 (1993)).
    31
    Rational basis review, while not toothless, presents a “very deferential
    standard.” AFSCME Iowa Council 61, 928 N.W.2d at 32 (quoting NextEra Energy
    Res. LLC v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 
    815 N.W.2d 30
    , 46 (Iowa 2012)). The party
    challenging the statute “must refute every reasonable basis upon which the
    statute could be found to be constitutional.” Hernandez-Lopez, 639 N.W.2d at
    233 (quoting State v. Keene, 
    629 N.W.2d 360
    , 364 (Iowa 2001)). Garrison cannot
    clear this high bar.
    Protecting and promoting livestock production is a legitimate state
    interest, and granting partial immunity from nuisance suits is a proper means
    to that end. We accept at face value the legislature’s statement of purpose for the
    immunity provision:
    The purpose of this section is to protect animal agricultural
    producers who manage their operations according to state and
    federal requirements from the costs of defending nuisance suits,
    which negatively impact upon Iowa’s competitive economic position
    and discourage persons from entering into animal agricultural
    production. This section is intended to promote the expansion of
    animal agriculture in this state by protecting persons engaged in the
    care and feeding of animals. The general assembly has balanced all
    competing interests and declares its intent to protect and preserve
    animal agricultural production operations.
    
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (1).
    Section 657.11(2) does not eliminate nuisance recovery rights altogether.
    Rather, neighboring property owners can recover for nuisance when the damage
    resulted from the CAFO’s failure to comply with a federal or state statute or
    regulation, or when the CAFO “unreasonably and for substantial periods of time
    interferes” with the plaintiff’s use of their property and the CAFO “failed to use
    existing prudent generally accepted management practices reasonable for the
    32
    operation.” 
    Id.
     § 657.11(2). And litigants may continue to seek recovery for
    diminution in property value under a takings theory. See Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at
    174–75.
    The Missouri Supreme Court under rational basis review upheld the
    constitutionality of that state’s right-to-farm law limiting nuisance damages.
    Labrayere, 458 S.W.3d at 331–32. The Labrayere court recognized that
    promoting farming is a legitimate government interest and reducing nuisance
    liability is a proper means to that end:
    “It is within the province of the legislature to enact a statute which
    regulates the balance of competitive economic forces in the field of
    agricultural production and commerce, thereby protecting the
    welfare of its citizens comprising the traditional farming community,
    and such statute is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.”
    Irrespective of the perceived desirability of section 537.296, the
    statute rationally advances the legitimate state interest in promoting
    the agricultural economy by reducing the litigation risk faced by
    Missouri farmers while permitting nearby landowners to recover the
    diminution in property value caused by agricultural operations.
    Id. (citations omitted). We reach the same conclusion here. Indeed, the amici
    observe that liability risk has a chilling effect on the ability of new farmers to
    obtain financing. It is within the legislature’s prerogative to lower the costs of
    litigation.
    Balancing the competing interests of CAFO operators and their neighbors
    is a quintessentially legislative function involving policy choices our constitution
    places with the elected branches. See Honomichl, 914 N.W.2d at 240
    (Waterman, J., concurring specially). “[T]he Constitution presumes that even
    improvident decisions will eventually be rectified by the democratic processes.”
    33
    Sanchez v. State, 
    692 N.W.2d 812
    , 817 (Iowa 2005) (quoting City of Cleburne v.
    Cleburne Living Ctr., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 440 (1985)).
    Common law rights existing in 1857 were not locked in place by the
    ratification of Iowa’s inalienable rights clause. To the contrary,
    [T]he Supreme Court has stated that a litigant does not have a vested
    property right in any rule of the common law. “The Constitution does
    not forbid . . . the abolition of old [rights] recognized by the common
    law, to attain a permissible legislative object . . . .” Thus, if the
    legislature can abolish a cause of action for a legitimate purpose, it
    also may prevent a cause of action from arising by enacting a statute
    of repose.
    Bob McKiness Excavating & Grading, Inc. v. Morton Bldgs., Inc., 
    507 N.W.2d 405
    ,
    410 (Iowa 1993) (omissions and second alteration in original) (citations omitted)
    (quoting Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Env’t Study Grp., Inc., 
    438 U.S. 59
    , 88 n.32
    (1978)). And the legislature is free to enact laws that affect how people use and
    enjoy their land. These laws can alter the common law. For example, in
    Democko v. Iowa Department of Natural Resources, we held the legislature could
    deprive landowners of the common law right to hunt on their property. 
    840 N.W.2d 281
    , 293 (Iowa 2013). We noted that “the nub of the issue is whether,
    under Iowa law, an Iowa landowner has a property right to hunt on his or her
    property. Regardless of what might have been at common law, we conclude the
    legislature has extinguished any such right.” Id.; see also Pure Air & Water, 
    668 N.Y.S.2d at
    249–50 (rejecting challenge to New York’s right-to-farm statute that
    eliminated private nuisance claims because “a person does not have a vested
    interest in any rule of the common law”). The common law is not frozen and it
    34
    can be modified by the legislature so long as the legislation passes the rational
    basis test and does not amount to a taking without just compensation.
    We have applied rational basis review to reject an inalienable rights clause
    challenge to the statutory immunity in Iowa Code section 517.5 for negligent
    inspections by workers’ compensation insurers that led to an employee’s injury.
    Clark, 927 N.W.2d at 190–91. We noted that “there has been no absolute
    elimination of a right of recovery for on-the-job injuries, but only a reasonable
    regulation of it.” Id. at 191. Similarly, the legislature did not absolutely eliminate
    nuisance claims against CAFOs in section 657.11(2), but only imposed
    reasonable limitations on recovery rights.
    We hold section 657.11 survives rational basis review. On that ground, we
    affirm the district court’s denial of Garrison’s motion to strike the defendants’
    affirmative defenses based on that statutory immunity.
    E. Whether the District Court Correctly Granted Summary Judgment.
    “Summary judgment ‘is not a dress rehearsal or practice run’ for trial but rather
    ‘the put up or shut up moment in a lawsuit, when a [nonmoving] party must
    show what evidence it has that would convince a trier of fact to accept its version
    of the events.’ ” Buboltz v. Birusingh, 
    962 N.W.2d 747
    , 754–55 (Iowa 2021)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Slaughter v. Des Moines Univ. Coll. of Osteopathic
    Med., 
    925 N.W.2d 793
    , 808 (Iowa 2019)). The district court granted the
    defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing Garrison’s nuisance,
    trespass, and drainage claims. The court determined that Garrison lacked
    evidence to support any exception to the defendants’ immunity from nuisance
    35
    liability in section 657.11(2). The court further determined that Garrison lacked
    evidence to prove causation for his remaining claims. Garrison largely relied on
    the same evidence for both his trespass and drainage claims, and we will address
    those claims together.
    1. Nuisance for loss of use and enjoyment. The statutory immunity does
    not apply if “[t]he animal feeding operation unreasonably and for substantial
    periods of time interferes with the person’s comfortable use and enjoyment of the
    person’s life or property” and “[t]he animal feeding operation failed to use existing
    prudent generally accepted management practices reasonable for the operation.”
    
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)(b).11 Garrison lacked evidence to establish an exception
    to the statutory immunity. See 
    id.
    Garrison contends the defendants should have planted more trees and
    extended the electrostatic fence around the entire confinement building. But the
    electrostatic fence was state-of-the-art and the defendants used fans to reduce
    the odor. Garrison’s experts Streit and Kassel based their opinions on what
    would be appropriate for an optimum crop yield, not what is necessary for
    responsible manure management to avoid harm to neighboring land. Garrison
    lacked any evidence on generally accepted practices in the field of manure
    management for hog farms or animal feeding operations generally. The district
    11As  noted, the statutory immunity can be overcome if the plaintiff shows the defendants
    failed “to comply with a federal statute or regulation or a state statute or rule which applies to
    the animal feeding operation.” 
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)(a). On appeal, Garrison does not argue this
    exception applies.
    36
    court summarized the record establishing Garrison’s lack of evidence to generate
    a genuine issue of material fact:
    Plaintiff has no witnesses, expert or otherwise, to testify as to
    the prudence or general acceptance of any farm management
    practices. Plaintiff has no witnesses, expert or otherwise, to testify
    as to the prudence or general acceptance of the electrostatic fence.
    Plaintiff has no witnesses, expert or otherwise, to set a standard as
    to existing generally accepted management practices. In addition,
    Plaintiff has failed to identify any alternative technologies and
    approaches that would be considered “existing prudent generally
    accepted management practices.” Plaintiff has identified no evidence
    that Defendants departed from any standard industry practices.
    Plaintiff therefore cannot meet his burden of proving that
    Defendants “failed to use existing prudent generally accepted
    management practices reasonable for the operation.” Without such
    evidence, Plaintiff cannot claim the statutory exception under
    section 657.11(2)(b) as a matter of law.
    We agree. The district court correctly ruled that Garrison lacked any evidence
    that the defendants failed “to use existing prudent generally accepted
    management     practices    reasonable    for   [their]   operation.”   
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)(b)(2). “Summary judgment is an important procedure in statutory
    immunity cases because a key purpose of the immunity is to avoid costly
    litigation, and that legislative goal is thwarted when claims subject to immunity
    proceed to trial.” Nelson v. Lindaman, 
    867 N.W.2d 1
    , 7 (Iowa 2015). The
    defendants were entitled to summary judgment on nuisance as a matter of law.
    2. Trespass and drainage. Garrison argues the defendants over-applied
    manure to BWT’s field and caused excess nitrate to be discharged. The
    defendants moved for summary judgment arguing Garrison lacked evidence to
    prove their actions caused any damage. “On appeal, we consider the evidence
    37
    before the court at the summary judgment stage, not other or additional evidence
    that might have been introduced later in the case.” Buboltz, 962 N.W.2d at 754.
    “The gist of a claim for trespass on land is the wrongful interference with
    one’s possessory rights in property.” Robert’s River Rides, Inc. v. Steamboat Dev.
    Corp., 
    520 N.W.2d 294
    , 301 (Iowa 1994), abrogated on other grounds by
    Barreca v. Nickolas, 
    683 N.W.2d 111
     (Iowa 2004). And for drainage, “[t]he general
    rule is that the dominant owner is entitled to drain surface water in a natural
    watercourse from his land over the servient owner’s land and if any damage
    results the servient owner is without remedy.” O’Tool v. Hathaway, 
    461 N.W.2d 161
    , 163 (Iowa 1990) (quoting Rosendahl Levy v. Iowa State Highway Comm’n,
    
    171 N.W.2d 530
    , 536 (Iowa 1969)). The “corollary to the foregoing rule is ‘an
    overriding requirement that one must exercise ordinary care in the use of his
    property so as not to injure the rights of neighboring landowners.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Oak Leaf Country Club, Inc. v. Wilson, 
    257 N.W.2d 739
    , 745 (Iowa 1977)). Thus,
    the dominant owner is liable “if (1) the manner or method of drainage is
    substantially changed and (2) actual damage results.” 
    Id.
    The district court correctly granted summary judgment based on
    Garrison’s lack of evidence on causation. “Generally questions of negligence,
    contributory negligence, and proximate cause are for the jury; it is only in
    exceptional cases that they may be decided as matters of law.” Iowa R. App. P.
    6.904(3)(j). The court determined that Garrison lacked evidence to prove
    causation:
    38
    Plaintiff has yet to provide any analysis as to how the results of the
    water tests establish any violation on the part of Defendants. No
    expert has been disclosed [to] give an opinion as to what the results
    of the water tests mean. Plaintiff has offered no expert evidence as
    to how any resulting inference can be correlated or attributed to
    Defendants. The water test results do not create a genuine issue of
    material fact on any issue. This is a subject that is beyond the
    ordinary intelligence of a layperson and must be supported by expert
    testimony . . . .
    We agree. Garrison’s failure to present expert testimony is fatal.
    The defendants’ properly supported motion for summary judgment
    required Garrison to “set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue
    for trial.” Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(5). He failed to do so. See Buboltz, 962 N.W.2d at
    754–55 (noting summary judgment requires the nonmovant to “put up or shut
    up” (quoting Slaughter, 925 N.W.2d at 808)). Garrison lacked evidence showing
    the defendants’ actions caused any recoverable damage to his property.12
    Without accompanying expert testimony, his water tests do not show an increase
    in nitrate levels nor a spike in nitrate levels that would correlate with manure
    spreading. And even assuming an increase in nitrate levels, Garrison lacked
    expert testimony to attribute or correlate any increase in nitrate levels in the
    stream to the defendants’ actions.
    We agree with the district court that “[w]ithout expert testimony tying
    Defendants’ alleged misapplication or over-application of manure to the nitrate
    levels in the Plaintiff’s stream, Plaintiff cannot, as a matter of law, meet his
    burden of proving that any trespass or drainage violation proximately caused
    12Garrisondid not argue in his resistance to the motion for summary judgment and does
    not argue on appeal that the 2018 consent order proves the defendant’s conduct proximately
    caused harm to his property.
    39
    any damage to the Plaintiff.” Further, the record contains no evidence showing
    Garrison’s property was damaged by any increased drainage or by any excess
    nitrate in the water flowing through his property. The defendants were entitled
    to summary judgment on this record.13
    IV. Conclusion.
    For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s summary judgment
    dismissing Garrison’s action with prejudice.
    AFFIRMED.
    Christensen, C.J., and Mansfield and McDermott, JJ., join this opinion.
    Mansfield, J., files a concurring opinion, in which Waterman, J., joins. Appel, J.,
    files a dissenting opinion, in which Oxley, J., joins. McDonald, J., files a
    dissenting opinion, in which Oxley, J., joins.
    13Garrison  met the same fate in federal court, where his claims against these defendants
    alleging ongoing violations of federal law were dismissed on summary judgment due to his lack
    of expert testimony to prove causation. Garrison, 449 F. Supp. 3d at 873–74. Given the
    differences between the applicable state and federal laws, we do not apply or rely on issue
    preclusion to affirm the Iowa district court judgment.
    40
    #21–0652, Garrison v. New Fashion Pork LLP
    MANSFIELD, Justice (concurring).
    I join the majority opinion. I write separately to respond to the dissents. It
    needs to be reiterated at the outset that Gordon Garrison did not preserve an
    argument against the statutory nuisance immunity under the Bormann-takings
    branch of our jurisprudence. His only timely argument was that the immunity
    should be set aside under the Gacke-inalienable-rights branch.
    There is a crucial distinction between property and common law rules. The
    government can never take property without providing just compensation (and
    then only for a public use). However, the legislature is generally free to modify
    common law rules. Gacke v. Pork Xtra, L.L.C. undermined this important
    distinction by creating a sort of no-man’s land between the two—a common law
    cause of action for noneconomic nuisance damages that wasn’t property, but
    could only be regulated by the legislature subject to a newly minted three-part
    test. And to get to this result, Gacke deployed the very generally worded and
    aspirational inalienable-rights clause, a clause that could be invoked for
    practically any purpose by a court in search of previously undiscovered rights.
    The dissents, if anything, undermine this important distinction between
    property and the common law even further.
    I. The Iowa Constitution Does Not Freeze the Common Law.
    I begin by assuming that in 1857 there was a common law cause of action
    for noneconomic nuisance damages. However, the common law as it existed in
    1857 does not have special constitutional status just because it is the common
    41
    law. “A fundamental assumption of Anglo-American law is that legislatures may
    alter common-law rules.” Stephen A. Siegel, Lochner Era Jurisprudence and the
    American Constitutional Tradition, 
    70 N.C. L. Rev. 1
    , 65 n.339 (1991); see id. at
    65 (“The common law traditionally was subject to legislative control.”). “[T]here
    was broad agreement that Parliament had the ability to displace common law
    through statutes.” Carissa Byrne Hessick, The Myth of Common Law Crimes, 
    105 Va. L. Rev. 965
    , 1009 n.212 (2019). “Where the common law and a statute differ,
    the common law gives place to the statute . . . .” 1 William Blackstone,
    Commentaries *89.
    Consider what would happen if the Iowa Constitution froze the 1857
    common law for all time. If so, we’d still have a cause of action for alienation of
    affections. Private employees would not be able to sue private employers for
    discrimination. Trade unions would be illegal restraints of trade. Comparative
    fault would not exist. The law could not require plaintiffs who recover punitive
    damages to turn over part of their recovery to the state. Simply put, it is the
    legislature’s prerogative to pass laws that change the common law.
    II. Gacke Misapplied Article I, Section 1 to Restrict Legislative
    Authority to Modify the Common Law Even Though No Property Right Was
    Being Taken and the Legislation Met a Rational Basis Test.
    In Bormann v. Board of Supervisors, we held that an Iowa nuisance
    immunity law—which granted property owners immunity from nuisance suits
    under certain conditions—provided the benefited owners with “easements” over
    their neighbors’ property and amounted to an unconstitutional “taking” of
    42
    property under article I, section 18 of the Iowa Constitution. 
    584 N.W.2d 309
    ,
    315–22 (Iowa 1998) (en banc).
    However, in Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d 168
     (Iowa 2004), we qualified Bormann.
    We held that a nuisance immunity law resulted in a taking only to the extent
    that it prevented neighboring landowners from recovering diminution-in-value
    damages. 
    Id. at 175
    . That is because paying diminution in value is the standard
    of compensation for taking an easement. 
    Id.
     at 174–75. So, the initial lesson of
    Gacke is that any property right protected by article I, section 18 is limited to
    diminution-of-value damages. That’s where constitutionally protected “property”
    ends. See 
    id. at 175
     (“Because the recovery of diminution-in-value damages fully
    compensates the burdened property owners for the unlawful taking of an
    easement, the restrictions of the Takings Clause end at that point. The Takings
    Clause does not prohibit limitations on other damages recoverable under a
    nuisance theory.”)
    But we didn’t stop there. We said in Gacke that restrictions on suits for
    noneconomic damages may come into collision with article I, section 1 of the
    Iowa Constitution, even though they don’t amount to a taking of property. 
    Id.
     at
    175–78. This, in my view, is where we went astray.
    Article I, section 1 is essentially a paraphrase of some of the stirring
    language of our Declaration of Independence. It reads as follows:
    All men and women are, by nature, free and equal, and have
    certain inalienable rights—among which are those of enjoying and
    defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing and protecting
    property, and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness.
    Iowa Const. art. I, § 1.
    43
    Article I, section 1 needs to be read along with article I, section 2, which
    also paraphrases some of the stirring prose of the Declaration of Independence.
    Article I, section 2 reads as follows:
    All political power is inherent in the people. Government is
    instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the people, and
    they have the right, at all times, to alter or reform the same,
    whenever the public good may require it.
    Id. art. I, § 2.
    Neither of these provisions can possibly be read literally. Do I have a right
    under section 1 to “obtain[] . . . happiness” from the State of Iowa? Id. art. I, § 1.
    If so, I’d like to sue for specific performance.
    Nor can section 2 be read literally as allowing the people to march on our
    State Capitol and overthrow our government “whenever the public good may
    require it.” Id. art. I, § 2.
    Moreover, we already have language in article I, sections 9 and 18
    expressly limiting the state’s ability to interfere with life, liberty, and property.
    See id. art. I, §§ 9 (“[N]o person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property,
    without due process of law.”), 18 (“Private property shall not be taken for public
    use without just compensation first being made . . . .”). It would be illogical to
    conclude that the general and aspirational statement of rights in article I, section
    1 could trump—or be used to alter the effect of—the more direct and specific
    language in article I, sections 9 and 18.
    Unlike article I, section 1, the meat-and-potatoes provisions of our Bill of
    Rights have operational rather than just aspirational language. See, e.g., id. art.
    I, §§ 6 (“[T]he general assembly shall not grant . . . .”), 7 (“No law shall be passed
    44
    . . . .”), 8 (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers
    and effects, against unreasonable seizures and searches shall not be violated
    . . . .”), 9 (“[N]o person shall be deprived . . . .”), 10 (“In all criminal prosecutions,
    and in cases involving the life, or liberty of an individual the accused shall have
    a right . . . .”), 18 (“Private property shall not be taken for public use . . . .”).
    Notably, once you get past article I, sections 1 and 2, all but one of the twenty-
    two enumerated rights contain the word “shall.” See id. art. I, §§ 3–4, 6–19, 21–
    25.14
    In plain recognition of these points, we’ve historically viewed article I,
    section 1 as simply incorporating a rational basis test. Or to be perhaps more
    precise, we have viewed article I, section 1 as not adding anything to the more
    specific constitutional guarantees elsewhere in the Iowa Bill of Rights.
    Thus, in Gacke we reviewed prior caselaw under article I, section 1, which
    with one ninety-year-old exception had never sustained an article I, section 1
    challenge. 
    684 N.W.2d at
    175–77; see State v. Osborne, 
    154 N.W. 294
     (Iowa
    1915).15 Gacke noted that under prior article I, section 1 caselaw, a “highly
    14Article
    I, section 5 of the Iowa Constitution regarding dueling was repealed in 1992. It,
    too, included “shall.” See Iowa Const. art. I, § 5.
    15Justice Appel’s dissent argues that Coger v. Northwestern Union Packet Co., 
    37 Iowa 145
    (1873), found article I, section 1 to be judicially enforceable. I think the situation is more
    complicated than his dissent lets on. Coger involved discrimination by a private entity—a
    common carrier—that refused to allow a person of color to travel in the first-class
    accommodations for which she had purchased a ticket. 
    Id.
     at 147–48. Our court upheld the jury
    verdict in her favor, citing several sources of authority. 
    Id.
     at 153–60. One was undoubtedly the
    “principle of equality” set forth in article I, section 1. 
    Id. at 153
    . But we went on to cite other
    authority, including perhaps most importantly the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1866, which gave
    all persons regardless of race and color “the same right in every State and Territory in the United
    States, to make and enforce contracts.” 
    Id. at 156
    .
    45
    deferential standard of review” applied and the legislature could pass laws so
    long as they were not “unduly oppressive.” 
    Id. at 177
     (quoting Gravert v.
    Nebergall, 
    539 N.W.2d 184
    , 186 (Iowa 1995)). Essentially, pre-Gacke, we had
    applied rational basis review under article I, section 1. See, e.g., Gravert, 
    539 N.W.2d at 186
     (“Laws enacted by the exercise of a state's police power are
    presumed to be constitutional provided there is some reasonable relation to the
    public welfare, and one challenging the validity of such laws can rebut this
    presumption only by negating every reasonable basis upon which the laws may
    be sustained.”); Gibb v. Hansen, 
    286 N.W.2d 180
    , 186 (Iowa 1979) (“[L]iberty
    implies the absence of arbitrary restraint, not immunity from reasonable
    regulations and prohibitions imposed in the interests of the community.”
    (quoting Benschoter v. Hakes, 
    8 N.W.2d 481
    , 486 (Iowa 1943))); Steinberg–Baum
    & Co. v. Countryman, 
    77 N.W.2d 15
    , 20 (Iowa 1956) (“That a law may be severe,
    drastic or work hardship does not render it unconstitutional in the respect
    claimed.”). And, as the majority persuasively demonstrates, post-Gacke we have
    applied rational basis review.
    Yet we did not apply rational basis review in Gacke. Instead, we decided
    that the nuisance immunity for noneconomic damages would be “unduly
    oppressive” and a violation of article I, section 1 when three conditions were met.
    Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    . First, the neighboring landowner “receive[s] no
    particular benefit from the nuisance immunity granted to their neighbors other
    than that inuring to the public in general.” 
    Id.
     Second, the neighboring
    landowner “sustain[s] significant hardship.” 
    Id.
     And third, the neighboring
    46
    landowner “resided on their property long before any animal operation was
    commenced.” 
    Id.
    This three-part test is something that a philosopher king might devise.
    And if I were the philosopher king of Iowa, I might agree that we should subject
    nuisance immunities for animal feeding operations to this three-part test. But
    this test bears no resemblance to rational basis review. Under rational basis
    review, a law is sustained if it is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.
    E.g., State v. Doe, 
    927 N.W.2d 656
    , 662–63 (Iowa 2019). No one can dispute that
    the promotion of animal agriculture is a legitimate state interest and that
    immunizing animal feeding operations from litigation if they meet certain
    benchmarks is rationally related to that end. Iowa Code section 657.11 (2020)
    satisfies a rational basis test.
    To sum up, Gacke’s inalienable-rights analysis came out of nowhere and
    has no limiting principle. Both dissents therefore try to defend Gacke largely by
    repackaging Gacke as something it wasn’t.
    III. Justice Appel’s Dissent Tries to Save Gacke by Finding Precedent
    Where It Isn’t and Property Where It Isn’t.
    Justice Appel defends the Gacke test on the ground that there needs to be
    some test whenever there is an open-ended constitutional provision. But that’s
    not necessarily true. If the provision is in the form of a command—e.g., “no
    person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”—
    then clearly there needs to be a test to implement that command. Iowa Const.
    art. I, sec. 9. But if the provision is a general statement of principles like article
    I, section 1, then why does there have to be a test at all? If there is going to be a
    47
    test, it should not be more restrictive than the test that would otherwise be
    applied under other, more specific constitutional provisions.
    Even the considerable scholarly talents of Justice Appel cannot uncover a
    plausible precedent for Gacke. Justice Appel says the three-part test “seems to
    have originated” in Lawton v. Steele, 
    152 U.S. 133
     (1894). I doubt it. The Lawton
    opinion uses the phrase “unduly oppressive” but there is no three-part test. 
    Id. at 137
    . The case involved government seizure and destruction of certain nets
    used for illegal fishing. 
    Id. at 139
    . The United States Supreme Court upheld the
    government’s actions. 
    Id. at 143
    .
    Under Gacke, a person can get a law declared unconstitutional that
    wouldn’t otherwise be unconstitutional because they received “no particular
    benefit . . . other than that inuring to the public in general.” 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    .
    If we took the Gacke test and started applying it across the board, this would
    dramatically shift power from the legislative to the judicial branch. Everyone can
    find some law or regulation that works a hardship on them while providing “no
    particular benefit” to them.
    Justice Appel also errs when he asserts that this case presents the
    following question: “Can the government, consistent with article I, section 1 of
    the Iowa Constitution, enact a statute that authorizes a landowner to appropriate
    or take for the landowner’s benefit the property interest of a neighboring
    landowner, without any compensation or benefit to the other owner?” Property
    rights are not at issue in this case because no one is challenging a property
    owner’s ability to recover diminution-of-value damages in a case wherein a
    48
    takings claim is preserved. This case involves only a common law right that was
    afforded special constitutional protection in Gacke.
    IV. Justice McDonald’s Dissent Tries to Save Gacke by Altering What
    Gacke Actually Held.
    Justice McDonald’s dissent is more difficult to pin down. At the beginning
    and at the end of his dissent, Justice McDonald gives prominence to the text of
    article I, section 1, as if to indicate that the section has some independent legal
    force. But in between he acknowledges that article I, section 1 only imposes a
    rational basis test—the same test that we would apply to legislation like Iowa
    Code section 657.11 even if there were no article I, section 1.
    However, Justice McDonald then says that section 657.11 fails a rational
    basis test. Why? Because it takes away property. Except we said otherwise in
    Gacke. We held it did not amount to a taking when the legislature limited the
    right to sue for noneconomic damages. See Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 175
     (“The
    Takings Clause does not prohibit limitations on other damages recoverable
    under a nuisance theory.”).
    As Gacke recognized, not every “stick” in the property owner’s traditional
    “bundle” is beyond the power of the government to regulate. For example, one of
    the classic sticks associated with property ownership is the right to build on
    property. Yet, for the greater good of the community, the government can limit
    what property owners build on their property, and we subject those building
    codes and zoning laws to a rational basis test. See, e.g., Residential & Agric.
    Advisory Comm., LLC v. Dyersville City Council, 
    888 N.W.2d 24
    , 49 (Iowa 2016)
    (“Zoning and land use ordinances that do not impact a suspect classification
    49
    must only meet the rational relationship test.”). So too the government can
    regulate nuisance claims brought by one property owner against another, so long
    as the government is not actually taking away property or acting arbitrarily and
    irrationally.
    As I’ve already noted, there is a crucial distinction between property itself,
    which the government cannot take without compensation, and common law
    rules, which the government can generally modify. Justice McDonald erodes that
    distinction entirely, and would go well beyond Gacke. He would replace Gacke’s
    three-part test with a blanket rule that any limit on recovery of noneconomic
    damages for nuisance is per se unconstitutional. That doesn’t sound anything
    like a rational basis test, and it isn’t.
    Another giveaway that Justice McDonald is not applying a rational basis
    test is his assertion that “[t]he damage, degradation, and destruction caused by
    industrial animal feeding operations [are] well-documented.” This sounds like
    the dissent is expressing its views on a policy matter rather than applying the
    rational basis test. Our state is one of the nation’s leading food producers. See
    Iowa Const. art. IX, 2nd, § 3 (“The general assembly shall encourage, by all
    suitable means, the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricultural
    improvement.”). There is a tradeoff between food production and environmental
    protection. Maximizing food production can adversely impact the environment.
    Maximizing environmental protection can increase the costs of producing food
    and thus increase food prices. Not everyone can afford to buy a steak—or even a
    hamburger.
    50
    The legislature has chosen to balance the two goals of promoting
    agriculture and protecting the environment by providing that the legislative
    nuisance immunity
    shall not apply if the person bringing the action proves that an injury
    to the person or damage to the person's property is proximately
    caused by either of the following:
    a. The failure to comply with a federal statute or regulation or
    a state statute or rule which applies to the animal feeding operation.
    b. Both of the following:
    (1) The animal feeding operation unreasonably and for
    substantial periods of time interferes with the person’s comfortable
    use and enjoyment of the person's life or property.
    (2) The animal feeding operation failed to use existing prudent
    generally accepted management practices reasonable for the
    operation.
    
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2). In other words, the plaintiff has to prove either
    noncompliance with a rule or statute or a failure to use generally accepted
    practices resulting in an unreasonable interference for substantial periods of
    time. This is the kind of policy tradeoff the legislature gets to make unless the
    government is actually taking property, which under Gacke it isn’t.16
    Whatever one may think of Iowa Code section 657.11, it is not being
    described accurately by Justice McDonald’s dissent. Justice McDonald asserts,
    16Some   time ago, our court said,
    It was most effectively demonstrated during the depression of the early nineteen
    thirties that the well-being of the state as a whole is directly dependent upon the
    welfare of agriculture. The prosperity of our basic industry was no less vital when
    this act was passed nor is it less vital now when many other countries look to us
    for food and agriculture must supply their needs.
    Dickinson v. Porter, 
    35 N.W.2d 66
    , 76 (Iowa 1948).
    51
    “The Iowa statute wholly deprives a property owner of the right to assert a private
    nuisance action and seek full compensation.” That is not correct. The Iowa
    statute has exceptions, as just noted.
    Near the end of his dissent, Justice McDonald quotes an earlier dissenter
    on our court, who said, “[T]he end of police power is reached when the rights of
    others have been protected, and when rights are cut down in order that others
    may profit thereby, the limit of police power has been exceeded . . . .” Des Moines
    Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines v. Nordholm, 
    253 N.W. 701
    , 727–28 (Iowa
    1934) (Claussen, C.J., dissenting). But like the text of article I, section 1 itself,
    this quotation doesn’t help you decide a specific case. It begs the question of
    what the “right” is, and whether it is subject to reasonable regulation.
    A final point worth noting is that the two dissents don’t agree on what to
    do about Gacke. Justice Appel would keep the three-part test; Justice McDonald
    would go beyond Gacke and get rid of the three-part test altogether.
    In summary, both dissents try to shore up Gacke, but they both end up at
    sea. Gacke should be overruled.
    Waterman, J., joins this concurrence.
    52
    #21–0652, Garrison v. New Fashion Park LLP
    APPEL, Justice (dissenting).
    The first article in the Iowa Constitution is the Iowa Bill of Rights, and the
    first section of the first article is what has been called the inalienable rights or
    the natural rights clause. Iowa Const. art. I, § 1 (“All men and women are, by
    nature, free and equal, and have certain inalienable rights—among which are
    those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing and
    protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness.”). The
    positioning of the Iowa Bill of Rights in the very first article of the Iowa
    Constitution was not happenstance—it was deliberate. Hoover v. Iowa State
    Highway Comm’n, 
    222 N.W. 438
    , 439 (Iowa 1928) (“Appearing . . . at the very
    threshold of the Iowa Bill of Rights, [article I, section 1’s] constitutional safeguard
    is thereby emphasized and shown to be paramount.”); see State v. Baldon, 
    829 N.W.2d 785
    , 809–10 (Iowa 2013) (Appel, J., specially concurring) (noting the
    priority placement of the Iowa Bill of Rights shows that the Iowa Constitution
    “emphasizes rights over mechanics” (quoting Donald P. Racheter, The Iowa
    Constitution: Right over Mechanics, in The Constitutionalism of American States
    479, 479 (George E. Connor & Christopher W. Hammons eds., 2008))). And the
    placement of the inalienable rights or natural rights clause as the first section of
    the first article was also intentional. See Bruce Kempkes, The Natural Rights
    Clause of the Iowa Constitution: When the Law Sits Too Tight, 
    42 Drake L. Rev. 593
    , 631 (1993) (noting the drafter’s placement of the clause at the very
    beginning of the constitution strongly supports the argument that article I,
    53
    section 1 should be given “substantive meaning”). The Committee on the Bill of
    Rights at the Iowa Constitutional Convention of 1857 desired to have “the best
    and most clearly defined Bill of Rights.” 1 The Debates of the Constitutional
    Convention    of   the   State   of   Iowa   100   (W.   Blair   Lord   rep.,   1857),
    http://publications.iowa.gov/7313/1/The_Debates_of_the_Constitutional_Con
    vention_Vol%231.pdf [hereinafter The Debates]. The Committee aimed “to make
    the Bill of Rights as full and perfect as possible.” Id. at 102. The goal, the
    committee declared, “is to protect every man in the enjoyment of the largest
    liberty consistent with his duties to civil government.” Id.; see also State v.
    Tucker, 
    959 N.W.2d 140
    , 158–59 (Iowa 2021) (Appel, J., concurring specially)
    (discussing the history and importance of article I, section 1 of the Iowa
    Constitution). We must never forget that the Iowa founders presented a rights-
    based constitution to the voters of Iowa. And the rights provided by the Iowa
    Constitution are superior and above the vicissitudes of politics.
    The very purpose of a bill of rights and the inalienable rights clause is to
    ensure that individual liberties are not subject to erosion by an aggressive
    legislative or executive branch. George W. Ells, the chair of the committee
    drafting Iowa’s Bill of Rights, insisted that the safeguard of the Iowa Bill of Rights
    was fundamental, and it was intended “to place the proper restrictions upon the
    powers of the Legislature.” The Debates, at 168. The founders were well aware of
    the capability of special interests to dominate the halls of government. That is
    why, for example, the Iowa founders put sharp restrictions on the passing out of
    privileges and immunities, limits on advancing the credit of the state
    54
    government, and prohibitions on the state paying the debt of corporations. See
    Iowa Const. art. I, § 6; id. art. VII, § 1; id. art. VIII, § 3. Otherwise, special
    interests could dominate the political branches for their own benefit and not the
    public interest. In other words, it sets to establish that the inalienable rights of
    Iowans simply cannot be trampled upon by majority action.
    Nothing in section 2 of the Iowa Bill of Rights undercuts the rights
    established in the inalienable rights clause. Section 2 states that political power
    is vested in the people of Iowa. Clearly, the people of Iowa are not the same as
    the people in the legislature. The people of Iowa are the citizens or, more
    precisely, the voters. And, unlike ordinary legislative enactments, the provisions
    of the Iowa Bill of Rights have been approved by the people. When the court
    enforces the terms of the Iowa Bill of Rights, the court is not subverting the will
    of the people but actually enforcing it. See Timothy Sandefur, The Conscience of
    the Constitution: The Declaration of Independence and the Right to Liberty 120–22
    (2014) (noting that the current trend prioritizing democracy over liberty and
    encouraging courts to defer to lawmakers is a misunderstanding of the Federal
    Constitution and its principles). The Iowa Bill of Rights is a shield that protects
    the people’s rights from the political process. Id. at 94–119 (establishing that
    courts have a duty to protect the individual rights against the majoritarian action
    of the legislature and that to enforce the constitutional guarantees for individual
    rights, governments should not have the unbounded power to act in the name of
    public good). The Iowa Bill of Rights cannot be stood on its head and made into
    a facilitator of legislative domination when its purpose was precisely the opposite.
    55
    Plainly, article I, section 1 was designed to be enforced by the judiciary. Hoover,
    
    222 N.W. at 439
     (“These provisions for the security of the rights of the citizen
    stand in the Constitution in the same connection and upon the same ground as
    they regard his liberty and his property. It cannot be denied that both were
    intended to be enforced by the judiciary as one of the departments of the
    government established by that Constitution.” (quoting United States v. Lee, 
    106 U.S. 196
    , 220 (1882))).
    In a parliamentary form of government, the legislature can both enact
    ordinary legislation and determine what is constitutional and what is not. That,
    of course, is the system rejected in the American Revolution. And the
    parliamentary system with legislative dominance was firmly rejected when the
    Iowa constitutional convention proposed—and the citizens of Iowa approved—
    the Iowa Bill of Rights.
    I now consider the central issue in this case: Can the government,
    consistent with article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution, enact a statute that
    authorizes a landowner to appropriate or take for the landowner’s benefit the
    property interest of a neighboring landowner, without any compensation or
    benefit to the other owner? Or, put more simply, can a statute permit a private
    entity to take property from other people without any benefit to the property
    owner? Or, more particularly, can the legislature give a ticket to a large business
    to come to a rural neighborhood, build a huge animal confinement facility that
    creates a common law nuisance through fetid odor, without risk of being sued
    for damages by long-time residential property owners whose right to enjoyment
    56
    of their property has been impaired or destroyed? Or, more rhetorically, can we
    chalk up the nuisance harms in this case that impair the enjoyment of
    neighboring property as a legislatively required contribution to the private good
    of the owners of the hog facility? In other words, are we telling the existing
    property owners that they are required to “take one for the team” as the private
    owners next door emit nuisance odors under a scheme of statutory immunity?
    I now turn to the contents of article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution,
    which provides: “All men and women are, by nature, free and equal, and have
    certain inalienable rights—among which are those of enjoying and defending life
    and liberty, acquiring, possessing and protecting property, and pursuing and
    obtaining safety and happiness.” The provision opens by declaring that all men
    and women are, “by nature,” free and equal. 
    Id.
     And it references “inalienable”
    rights, which government cannot take away, “among which” are those of
    “acquiring, possessing and protecting property.” 
    Id.
    Notably, a provision of this kind is completely absent from the United
    States Constitution. Some might argue that the inalienable rights clause,
    reminiscent of the Virginia Bill of Rights and its derivative Declaration of
    Independence, is not part of the law. See Va. Const. art. I, § 1. According to
    Justice Scalia, the concepts in a declaration of rights provision “is not a legal
    prescription conferring powers upon the courts.” Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    ,
    91–92 (2000) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (acknowledging, however, that in his view, a
    right of parents to direct the upbringing of their children is among the
    “unalienable Rights” referred to in the Declaration of Independence, as well as
    57
    being one of the “othe[r] [rights] retained by the people” under the Ninth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution (alterations in original) (first
    quoting The Declaration of Independence para. 2 (U.S. 1776); then quoting U.S.
    Const. amend. IX)).
    But article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution is a legal prescription
    conferring powers upon the courts. We said so early on in Coger v. North Western
    Union Packet Co., where the equality provision in article I, section 1 was cited:
    “This principle of equality is announced and secured by the very first words of
    our State constitution which relate to the rights of the people, in language most
    comprehensive, and incapable of misconstruction, namely: ‘All men are, by
    nature, free and equal.’ ” 
    37 Iowa 149
    , 154–55 (1873) (quoting Iowa Const. art. I,
    § 1). Relying on article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution, the Coger court
    declared, “The doctrines of natural law . . . forbid that rights be denied on the
    ground of race or color; and this principle has become incorporated into the
    paramount law of the Union.” Id. at 154. “Upon it we rest our conclusion in this
    case.” Id. at 155. Any attempt to render article I, section 1 of the Iowa
    Constitution meaningless is inconsistent with the forceful holding in Coger.
    Decided twenty-three years before the tragic United States Supreme Court
    case of Plessy v. Ferguson, 
    163 U.S. 537
     (1896), overruled by Brown v. Board of
    Education, 
    347 U.S. 483
     (1954), Coger is a great and heroic case, one that
    belongs in the pantheon of Iowa judicial accomplishments. So, the equal rights
    provision of article I, section 1 is a strong and judicially enforceable provision, a
    lesson that should not be lost on the current generation of lawyers and judges.
    58
    If the equality provision of article I, section 1 is strong and judicially enforceable,
    why wouldn’t its protections of life and property of individuals be strong and
    judicially enforceable?
    In Gacke v. Pork Xtra, L.L.C., we considered the application of article I,
    section 1 in a context similar to that presented by this case. See 
    684 N.W.2d 168
    , 175–77 (Iowa 2004). In that case, residential property owners brought a
    nuisance action against the operator of a hog confinement facility. 
    Id. at 171
    .
    Under section 657.11(2), the hog confinement operator was granted immunity
    from nuisance actions. 
    Id.
     at 171–73. While the statute generally barred
    nuisance actions, exceptions to immunity were made when (1) the animal feeding
    operation interfered “unreasonably and for substantial periods of time” with the
    “comfortable use and enjoyment” of the person’s life or property, and (2) “the
    animal feeding operation failed to use existing prudent generally accepted
    management practices reasonable for the operation.” 
    Id. at 173
     (quoting 
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2)(b) (1999)).
    On the nuisance question, we noted that under prior caselaw, article I,
    section 1 was designed “to secure common law rights pre-dating the
    constitution.” Id. at 176. In determining the issue, we focused on three
    questions: The first question, the existence of preexisting common law rights, we
    found that property rights included “the rights of use and enjoyment.” Id. at 177
    (quoting Liddick v. City of Council Bluffs, 
    5 N.W.2d 361
    , 374 (Iowa 1942)). The
    second question, whether the nuisance immunity statute was within the police
    power of the state, we concluded that it was. 
    Id.
     We then turned to the third
    59
    question, whether the statute was a reasonable exercise of police power. 
    Id.
     at
    178–79. In considering whether the statute was a reasonable exercise of police
    power, we cited two traditional Iowa cases for the proposition that restrictions
    that are unduly oppressive may be invalid: Steinberg–Baum & Co. v. Countryman,
    
    77 N.W.2d 15
    , 19 (Iowa 1956) (holding that “restrictions that are prohibitive,
    oppressive or highly injurious . . . are invalid”), and State v. Osborne, 
    154 N.W. 294
    , 300 (Iowa 1915) (holding article I, section 1 includes the right to pursue
    useful and harmless business “without the imposition of oppressive burdens by
    the lawmaking power” (emphasis added)). Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 177
    . Our
    precedent, of course, is not limited to only two cases. In Gravert v. Nebergall, we
    emphasized that for the legislature to exercise the state’s police power, the means
    chosen must not be “unduly oppressive upon individuals.” 
    539 N.W.2d 184
    , 186
    (Iowa 1995) (quoting Lawton v. Steele, 
    152 U.S. 133
    , 136–37 (1894)). In short,
    the three-part Gacke test was not an outlier in Iowa law but represented a
    conventional test for judicial review of property rights issues.
    In considering whether the legislation was unduly oppressive under the
    third part of the inalienable rights test we applied in Gacke, we identified three
    facts that showed it was oppressive to the Gackes: they received no particular
    benefit from the immunity provision other than that inuring to the public in
    general, they spent considerable sums to improve their property prior to
    construction of the facility, and they resided on their property long before the
    animal operation was commenced. 
    684 N.W.2d at 178
    ; see also Honomichl v.
    Valley View Swine, LLC, 
    914 N.W.2d 223
    , 234–35 (Iowa 2018) (explaining that
    60
    “[o]ur holding that section 657.11(2) was unconstitutional under the inalienable
    rights clause as applied in Gacke was primarily based on three facts present in
    that case” and identifying three things a plaintiff needed to show under Gacke).
    The consideration of these facts in determining whether a regulation is
    oppressive was a sound, reasonable approach.
    Now the majority asserts that there is no textual support in article I,
    section 1 of the Iowa Constitution for the three factors utilized in Gacke. But this
    is a meaningless observation. When a court develops legal doctrine under an
    open-textured constitutional provision such as this, there is never express
    textual support. If there is textual support, there is no need to develop doctrine.
    While the majority notes that there is no text in article I, section 1 embracing the
    Gacke test, there is equally no text embracing the federal rational basis test
    dragooned into service by the majority. So, the majority’s “no textual support”
    argument proves too much—if it is correct, then the rational basis test is invalid,
    too.
    That the majority does not like the court’s consideration of the three
    factors in Gacke does not mean it can simply eliminate the unduly-oppressive
    part from the three-part inalienable rights test we used in that case. The majority
    concludes that the consideration of the three factors is unworkable, but then
    proceeds to remove the unduly oppressive element from the overall test. The
    three-part inalienable rights test enunciated in Gacke is a traditional test that
    has been cited many times, not only in Iowa but in the caselaw generally. The
    test seems to have originated in the United States Supreme Court case of Lawton
    61
    v. Steele, 
    152 U.S. at
    136–37, and was applied by multiple courts in the early
    twentieth century. See, e.g., Mack v. Westbrook, 
    98 S.E. 339
    , 341–42 (Ga. 1919);
    In re Boyce, 
    75 P. 1
    , 6 (Nev. 1904); Frank L. Fisher Co. v. Woods, 
    79 N.E. 836
    ,
    837–38 (N.Y. 1907); Froelich v. City of Cleveland, 
    124 N.E. 212
    , 216 (Ohio 1919).
    With the coming of the New Deal and the new approach to government
    regulation adopted by the United States Supreme Court in cases like Williamson
    v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, 
    348 U.S. 483
     (1955), some courts may have been
    tempted to fall in line with changing federal law. An example is Yim v. City of
    Seattle, where the Supreme Court of Washington eliminated the “unduly
    oppressive” test from its takings law and substantive due process law, citing
    evolving Supreme Court precedent. 
    451 P.3d 694
    , 699–702 (Wash. 2019). In the
    State of Washington, for years, courts applied a test when reviewing economic
    regulation that included an “unduly oppressive” formulation like Gacke. 
    Id.
     at
    698–701 (discussing the Lawton “unduly oppressive” test, noticing it is more
    demanding than the ordinary rational basis review).
    But there are cases heading in the opposite direction as well. In Patel v.
    Texas Department of Licensing & Regulation, the Supreme Court of Texas
    concluded that under the “due course of law” provision of the Texas Constitution,
    the cosmetology licensing applied to eyebrow threaders was overly “oppressive.”
    
    469 S.W.3d 69
    , 87–90 (Tex. 2015); see Tex. Const. art. I, § 19 (due course of law
    provision). In Ladd v. Real Estate Commission, the Supreme Court of
    Pennsylvania likewise held that the commonwealth’s police power must not be
    62
    conducted in a manner that is “unduly oppressive” 
    230 A.3d 1096
    , 1106, 1111–
    15 (Pa. 2020).
    The majority asserts that we departed from the traditional approach of
    Gacke in City of Sioux City v. Jacobsma, 
    862 N.W.2d 335
    , 352 (Iowa 2015). The
    majority suggests that in Jacobsma, we held that the rational basis test should
    be applied to article I, section 1 claims. Well, not exactly. In fact, in Jacobsma,
    “we ha[d] not been asked to develop a substantive standard under the Iowa due
    process clause different than the applicable federal standard.” Id. at 347.
    Similarly, although we noted that there was controversy on the standard to apply
    to claims under article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution, we observed in
    Jacobsma that the only argument advanced by the plaintiff was that the
    ordinance being challenged was “not a reasonable regulation and is an arbitrary
    restraint.” Id. at 352. We did not “hold” anything as a result of a contested
    adversary proceeding, but simply accepted the parties’ framing of the issue for
    purposes of that case. And the context in Jacobsma, of course, involving a traffic
    ticket for an infraction, is completely different than the transfer of an interest in
    property from one owner to another. Id. at 337. As a result, Jacobsma featured
    limited advocacy of the parties, the subsequent limitation of the issues by this
    court, and a complete lack of adversarial presentation on the key issue of
    standard of review of article I, section 1 claims. This nonprecedent is a slender
    reed and cannot be used as a lever to overturn the results of the thoroughly
    litigated and highly adversarial processes in Gacke and Honomichl v. Valley View
    Swine L.L.C.
    63
    There is talk in the majority of stare decisis. Gacke has been around,
    however, for almost twenty years and was reaffirmed in 2018 in Honomichl. See
    914 N.W.2d at 236–39. The Honomichl case noted that there had been some
    changes in the legal landscape since Gacke, including legislative amendments to
    the statute requiring a manure management plan and a requirement that the
    Iowa Department of Natural Resources adopt standards related to an application
    for construction or expansion of an animal facility. Id. at 237. Yet, in Honomichl,
    we stated that the analytical framework of Gacke was “still compatible with
    present conditions.” Id. And, although the Honomichl dissent urged adoption of
    the rational basis test, the Honomichl majority noted that “the court is unable to
    discern a satisfactory alternative standard to apply.” Id. We can surely presume
    that the Honomichl majority was familiar with the rational basis test advocated
    by the dissent but nevertheless rejected it. So, not only does the majority today
    abandon the two-decade old traditional test in Gacke, but it also overrules the
    relatively recent case of Honomichl where the rational basis test alternative, now
    adopted by the majority, was necessarily rejected, where changed circumstances
    were not considered sufficient, and Gacke’s principles were retained.
    The suggestion is made that Gacke is an outlier. The cases from Iowa and
    elsewhere described above show that is not the case. Nonetheless, the majority
    cites three intermediate appellate court cases for that proposition: Marsh v.
    Sandstone North, LLC, 
    179 N.E.3d 402
    , 426–30 (Ill. App. Ct. 2020), Himsel v.
    Himsel, 
    122 N.E.3d 935
    , 946–49 (Ind. Ct. App. 2019), and Rural Empowerment
    Ass’n for Community Help v. State, 
    868 S.E.2d 645
    , 655 (N.C. Ct. App. 2021).
    64
    None of the three cited cases involve a challenge to nuisance immunity under a
    declaration-of-rights-type provision in state constitutional law. Marsh involved
    equal    protection   and   separation-of-powers    challenges    to   right-to-farm
    legislation. 179 N.E.3d at 426–30. The musings of the intermediate appellate
    court on these issues are mildly interesting but irrelevant to the application of a
    declaration of rights provision such as that contained in article I, section 1 of the
    Iowa Constitution to a statutory immunity issue. In Himsel, an intermediate
    appellate court found that the right-to-farm law in Indiana was not a taking or a
    violation of the open court or privileges and immunities clauses of the Indiana
    Constitution. 122 N.E.3d at 946–50. Again, the Himsel court did not discuss the
    statutory immunity in the context of constitutional inalienable rights analysis.
    Lastly, Rural Empowerment Ass’n held that there was no violation of the law of
    the land clause or due process clause of the North Carolina Constitution, that
    the challenged legislation was not a special or private law, and that no
    deprivation of the right to a jury trial occurred. 868 S.E.2d at 653–55. Again,
    there was no statutory nuisance immunity and no effort to enforce a declaration
    of rights clause specifically protecting property interests. These court cases are
    doing nothing to undermine Gacke.
    The real question here is whether the unduly oppressive part of the Gacke
    test, firmly rooted in the traditional approach to government regulation and
    reaffirmed only a few years ago in Honomichl, should be abandoned. I say no.
    Overturning Gacke is inconsistent with stare decisis. In any event, oppression of
    a property owner like that which results from the operation of the immunity
    65
    statute in this case should not be permitted because it invades the property
    interest protected by article I, section 1 of the Iowa Constitution.
    For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    Oxley, J., joins this dissent.
    66
    #21–0652, Garrison v. New Fashion Pork LLC
    McDONALD, Justice (dissenting).
    The Iowa Constitution affords strong protection for private property.
    Article I, section 9 of the constitution provides that “no person shall be deprived
    of . . . property[] without due process of law.” Iowa Const. art. I, § 9. Article I,
    section 18 of the constitution provides that “[p]rivate property shall not be taken
    for public use without just compensation first being made . . . as soon as the
    damages shall be assessed by a jury.” Id. art. I, § 18. And article I, section 1 of
    the constitution provides that “[a]ll men and women . . . have certain inalienable
    rights—among which are those of . . . acquiring, possessing and protecting
    property.” Id. art. I, § 1. These interrelated constitutional provisions preclude the
    government from immunizing private nuisancers from having to pay full
    compensation for depriving another of the right to use and enjoy property. At
    least they did until today. The majority overturns well-supported and
    well-established caselaw and eviscerates the right to possess, use, enjoy, and
    protect property. I respectfully dissent.
    I.
    The majority does not faithfully apply our law regarding rational basis
    review. The police power is broad but not unlimited. “[T]he police power, like all
    other powers of the state, is subordinate to the Constitution, and if the
    Legislature, under the guise of police regulation, transgress the express or clearly
    implied limits drawn by the Constitution, the courts will hold the act void and of
    no effect.” McGuire v. Chi., B. & Q. R. Co., 
    108 N.W. 902
    , 907 (Iowa 1906). In
    67
    determining whether the state’s exercise of the police power is lawful, this court
    must analyze the constitutionality of both the end and the means of a statute:
    To justify the state in thus interposing its authority in behalf of the
    public, it must appear, first, that the interests of the public
    generally, as distinguished from those of a particular class, require
    such interference; and, second, that the means are reasonably
    necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose, and not unduly
    oppressive upon individuals.
    Gravert v. Nebergall, 
    539 N.W.2d 184
    , 186 (Iowa 1995) (quoting Lawton v. Steele,
    
    152 U.S. 133
    , 136–37 (1894)); see State v. Hartog, 
    440 N.W.2d 852
    , 857 (Iowa
    1989). The classical formulation of the test was best articulated by the Great
    Chief Justice: “Let the end be legitimate, let it be within the scope of the
    constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to
    that end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the
    constitution, are constitutional.” M’Culloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat) 316,
    421 (1819).
    The majority conducts only a truncated review of the statutory immunity
    granted certain animal feeding operations. The majority looks at the legislature’s
    end, concludes the end is legitimate, and probes little further. Pursuant to
    Gravert v. Nebergall and Lawton v. Steele and the traditional understanding of
    judicial review, including rational basis review, more is required. The majority’s
    truncated review is not a faithful application of the relevant law.
    II.
    In contrast to the majority’s truncated review, Gacke v. Pork Xtra, L.L.C.
    faithfully applied the relevant law and examined the constitutionality of both the
    end and the means of Iowa Code 657.11. 
    684 N.W.2d 168
     (Iowa 2004). Gacke
    68
    concluded the legislature’s end—the promotion of certain types of animal feeding
    operations—was legitimate but the means—stripping away the constitutional
    right to protect property by way of a private nuisance action—was not. 
    Id. at 179
    .
    Gacke’s conclusion is better supported by the relevant precedents than the
    majority’s view.
    The leading case is Richards v. Washington Terminal Co., 
    233 U.S. 546
    (1914). In Richards, the plaintiff brought a nuisance suit against a railroad where
    “smoke, cinders, and gases enter[ed] the dwelling house and settle[d] upon the
    furniture and other personal property contained in it, contaminat[ed] the air and
    render[ed] the house objectionable as a habitation.” 
    Id. at 550
    . The plaintiff
    sought damages for depreciation of the value of his property, damage to his
    furniture and other belongings, and damage to the structure of his home, as well
    as damages for “disturbing the peace and slumber of the occupants.” 
    Id.
     The
    United States Supreme Court held that “there [was] a right of recovery.” 
    Id. at 551
    . In reaching that conclusion, the Court rejected the railroad’s contention
    that it was immune from suit due to the statute authorizing the construction of
    the railroad. 
    Id.
     at 551–52. The Court explained that “[t]he courts of England”
    had concluded that “Parliament, being omnipotent, may authorize the taking of
    private property for public use without compensation to the owner.” 
    Id. at 552
    (capitalization altered). But, in America, “the legislation . . . must be construed
    in the light of the provision of the 5th Amendment—‘Nor shall private property
    be taken for public use without just compensation’—and is not to be given an
    effect inconsistent with its letter or spirit.” 
    Id.
     at 552–53 (quoting U.S. Const.
    69
    amend. V). The Court recognized that there was no taking of land presented in
    the case. See 
    id. at 552
     (“And since he is not wholly excluded from the use and
    enjoyment of his property, there has been no ‘taking’ of the land in the ordinary
    sense.”). Nonetheless, the Court “deem[ed] the true rule, under the 5th
    Amendment, as under state constitutions containing a similar prohibition, to be
    that while the legislature may legalize what otherwise would be a public
    nuisance, it may not confer immunity from action for a private nuisance.” 
    Id. at 553
     (emphasis added).
    Our decision in Bormann v. Board of Supervisors directly followed from
    Richards. 
    584 N.W.2d 309
     (Iowa 1998) (en banc). Bormann involved a challenge
    to a statute providing private nuisance immunity to farms operated within a
    designated agricultural area. 
    Id. at 313
    . In evaluating the statute, the Bormann
    court explained that under Iowa law, “the right to maintain a nuisance is an
    easement.” 
    Id. at 315
    . The private nuisance immunity provision thus “create[d]
    an easement in the property affected by the nuisance (the servient tenement) in
    favor of the applicants’ land (the dominant tenement). This [was] because the
    immunity allow[ed] the applicants to do acts on their own land which, were it
    not for the easement, would constitute a nuisance.” 
    Id. at 316
    . Thus, the
    Bormann    court   concluded   the   statutory   immunity   provision   was   an
    unconstitutional taking without compensation. 
    Id.
     at 319–20. “[T]he state cannot
    regulate property so as to insulate the users from potential private nuisance
    claims without providing just compensation to persons injured by the nuisance.”
    
    Id.
    70
    Gacke was a logical extension of Richards and Bormann. Under Iowa law,
    the proper measure of damages for a permanent nuisance is not limited to “the
    diminution in the market value of the property.” Weinhold v. Wolff, 
    555 N.W.2d 454
    , 465 (Iowa 1996) (en banc); see Miller v. Town of Ankeny, 
    114 N.W.2d 910
    ,
    914 (Iowa 1962). A landowner is also entitled to “recover such other special
    damages the landowner can prove.” Weinhold, 
    555 N.W.2d at 465
    . This includes
    “the damages he himself suffers from deprivation of the comfortable enjoyment
    of his property, and the inconvenience and discomfort suffered by himself and
    his family, or other affected persons.” 
    Id.
     (quoting 58 Am. Jur. 2d Nuisances
    § 296 (1989)); see Miller, 
    114 N.W.2d at 914
    . Gacke concluded that the immunity
    provision was “unduly oppressive” and thus unconstitutional because it denied
    the owner of the right to full compensation. 
    684 N.W.2d at 179
    . Gacke’s
    conclusion that a landowner is constitutionally entitled to complete relief for
    private nuisance is wholly consistent with and a logical extension of Richards
    and Bormann. See 
    id. at 175
    .
    The majority attempts to justify overruling Gacke on the ground that it has
    been undermined by subsequent decisions. I disagree. This court and the court
    of appeals have explicitly restated, reaffirmed, and expanded Gacke. See, e.g.,
    Merrill v. Valley View Swine, LLC, 
    941 N.W.2d 10
    , 17–18 (Iowa 2020) (concluding
    that the plaintiff’s claim was frivolous under the Gacke three-factor test);
    Honomichl v. Valley View Swine, LLC, 
    914 N.W.2d 223
    , 234–37 (Iowa 2018)
    (applying principles of stare decisis to hold that defendants had not shown Gacke
    should be overruled); Dalarna Farms v. Access Energy Coop., 
    792 N.W.2d 656
    ,
    71
    663–64 (Iowa 2010) (comparing Gacke’s holding to a statute that reduced
    damages based on comparative fault); McIlrath v. Prestage Farms of Iowa, L.L.C.,
    No. 15–1599, 
    2016 WL 6902328
    , at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 23, 2016) (applying
    Gacke’s holding). As we explained just five years ago, the statutory immunity in
    Iowa Code section 657.11 is an unlawful adjustment of the rights between
    private parties that violates the inalienable rights clause of the Iowa
    Constitution:
    In Gacke, we further held the immunity was unconstitutional under
    the inalienable rights clause of the Iowa Constitution, article I,
    section 1. We reiterated that provision “was intended to secure
    citizens’ pre-existing common law rights (sometimes known as
    ‘natural rights’) from unwarranted government restrictions.” We
    concluded the immunity unconstitutionally hindered the Gackes’
    private property rights for the benefit of the defendant’s private
    business operated as a nuisance.
    Bd. of Water Works Trs. v. Sac Cnty. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    890 N.W.2d 50
    , 71 (Iowa
    2017) (citations omitted) (quoting Gacke, 
    684 N.W.2d at 176
    ).
    The majority contends that these more specific cases explicitly reaffirming
    Gacke have been undermined by other cases applying rational basis review. The
    majority’s argument is flawed for several reasons. First, the more specific cases
    explicitly reaffirming Gacke would control over the more general cases. Second,
    and related, none of the cases cited by the majority involve rational basis review
    of a statute allegedly infringing the enumerated right to acquire, possess, and
    protect property. See, e.g., Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, Inc. v. Reynolds,
    
    962 N.W.2d 37
    , 46–57 (Iowa 2021) (addressing equal protection and due process
    claims related to grant funding); Gray v. Oliver, 
    943 N.W.2d 617
    , 629–33 (Iowa
    2020) (addressing due process and equal protection claims related to
    72
    assignments of legal malpractice claims); Clark v. Ins. Co. State of Pa., 
    927 N.W.2d 180
    , 190–91 (Iowa 2019) (addressing constitutional challenges to
    personal injury claims and workers’ compensation law); Midwest Check
    Cashing, Inc. v. Richey, 
    728 N.W.2d 396
    , 402–05 (Iowa 2007) (addressing
    constitutional challenges to payday loan provisions in the Delayed Deposit
    Services Licensing Act (Iowa Code chapter 533D)); Atwood v. Vilsack, 
    725 N.W.2d 641
    , 652 (Iowa 2006) (concluding that “the State’s interests in rehabilitating
    sexually violent predators and protecting the public” outweighed the predator’s
    liberty interest to bail in a civil commitment proceeding).
    The majority also attempts to justify overruling Gacke on the ground that
    other jurisdictions have not followed Gacke. But the majority’s reliance on
    persuasive precedents actually undermines its case that Gacke was wrongly
    decided. Quoting Honomichl v. Valley View Swine, LLC, the majority correctly
    notes that “Iowa is the only state to hold that the statutory immunity available
    under its right-to-farm law is unconstitutional in any manner.” 914 N.W.2d at
    233 & n.2 (collecting cases rejecting constitutional challenges). What the
    majority fails to note, however, is that Iowa property and nuisance law is unique
    insofar as Iowa law recognizes that the right to maintain a nuisance is an
    easement. See Lindsey v. DeGroot, 
    898 N.E.2d 1251
    , 1259 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009)
    (“We note that like the Idaho and Texas courts, we have found nothing to suggest
    that Indiana has adopted the seemingly unique Iowa holding that the right to
    maintain a nuisance is an easement.”); N. William Hines, CAFOs and U.S. Law,
    107 Iowa L. Rev. Online 19, 55 (2022) [hereinafter Hines, CAFOs] (explaining
    73
    Iowa law is unique because, “among the 50 states, only the Iowa courts apply
    this easement analysis” to nuisance claims). Given the unique nature of our
    property and nuisance law, it should be no surprise that constitutional
    protections for property rights apply differently in Iowa.
    The majority also fails to note that Iowa’s immunity provision is an outlier
    when compared to other states. The Iowa statute wholly deprives a property
    owner of the right to assert a private nuisance action and seek full compensation.
    See 
    Iowa Code § 657.11
    (2) (2020). In contrast, other states generally have
    enacted a statute of repose with respect to private nuisance actions. See, e.g.,
    Overgaard v. Rock Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs, No. Civ.A.02–601 (DWF/AJB), 
    2003 WL 21744235
    , at *7 (D. Minn. July 25, 2003) (“In Minnesota, the Right to Farm Act
    creates a two-year window before the immunity from nuisance suit applies. This
    is different from Iowa, where the Right to Farm Act creates immediate immunity
    from nuisance suit.”); Lindsey, 
    898 N.E.2d at 1259
     (discussing the one-year
    period of repose under Indiana law); Terence J. Centner, Governments and
    Unconstitutional Takings: When Do Right-to-Farm Laws Go Too Far, 
    33 B.C. Envtl. Aff. L. Rev. 87
    , 146 (2006) (discussing state right-to-farm laws and stating that
    compared to other states, the “Iowa statutes may have crossed th[e] threshold”
    as an “unconstitutional taking”); Beau R. Morgan, Note, Iowa and Right to Farm:
    An Analysis of the Constitutionality of Right to Farm Statutes Across the United
    States, 
    53 Creighton L. Rev. 623
    , 637 (2020) (surveying right-to-farm statutes,
    stating the “Iowa statute is unlike many other right to farm statutes,” and stating
    74
    “[u]nlike other states, neighboring property owners in Iowa have no opportunity
    or timeframe to bring a nuisance claim”). As one treatise explains:
    The Iowa statutes involved in Bormann and [Gacke] differ from
    most states’ right to farm laws in that they neither required the
    agricultural operation to have been established before the
    neighboring nonagricultural uses, nor provided a statute of repose
    giving neighbors a window of time during which they could bring a
    nuisance claim against a newly established agricultural operation.
    In other words, the statutes granted agricultural operations a
    nearly absolute right to create a nuisance, regardless of whether
    the neighbors “came to the nuisance” or acquiesced in its
    creation. Because of the exceptional nuisance protection
    provided by the Iowa laws, courts have distinguished other
    states’ right to farm laws and found them not to constitute
    unlawful takings.
    Patricia E. Salkin, 4 American Law of Zoning § 33:5, Westlaw (5th ed. database
    updated May 2022) (emphasis added). It should come as no surprise that this
    court in Bormann and Gacke reached a different result than courts in other
    jurisdictions since the Iowa statute at issue is an extreme deprivation of rights
    not even attempted in other jurisdictions.
    III.
    Rather than overruling Gacke, I would reaffirm the core of Gacke and hold
    the private nuisance immunity in Iowa Code section 657.11 is per se unduly
    oppressive under Gacke’s three-part test and is thus per se unconstitutional.
    See Julian Conrad Juergensmeyer et al., Land Use Planning and Development
    Regulation Law § 14:7, Westlaw (3d ed. database updated Nov. 2021) (“[T]he
    legislature is limited in its ability to legalize a private nuisance . . . .”). This
    conclusion arises necessarily out of a proper understanding of fundamental
    75
    principles of property and nuisance law in Iowa and a proper understanding of
    the police power.
    Under Iowa law, property is not merely the corporeal thing itself; it is the
    bundle of rights associated with the corporeal thing. This understanding of
    property is codified at Iowa Code section 4.1(13), which defines “land,” “real
    estate,” and “real property” to “include lands, tenements, hereditaments, and all
    rights thereto and interests therein, equitable as well as legal.” The statutory
    definition merely codified the definition of property repeatedly set forth in our
    precedents:
    “A little reflection, however, will suffice to convince any one that
    property is not the corporeal thing itself of which it is predicated,
    but certain rights in or over the thing. . . . We must, therefore, look
    beyond the thing itself, beyond the mere corporeal object, for the
    true idea of property. Property may be defined as certain rights in
    things which pertain to persons and which are created and
    sanctioned by law. These rights are the right of use, the right of
    exclusion and the right of disposition.” . . . “These rights, wherever
    they exist, and to the extent to which they are secured by law, are
    part and parcel of the owner’s property in land.”
    Harrison–Pottawattamie Drainage Dist. No. 1 v. State, 
    156 N.W.2d 835
    , 838–39
    (Iowa 1968) (first omission in original) (quoting Liddick v. City of Council Bluffs,
    
    5 N.W.2d 361
    , 372 (Iowa 1942)); see Bormann, 
    584 N.W.2d at 315
    ; Simpson v.
    Iowa State Highway Comm’n, 
    195 N.W.2d 528
    , 535 (Iowa 1972); Liddick, 
    5 N.W.2d at 374
    ; Wapsie Power & Light Co. v. City of Tipton, 
    193 N.W. 643
    , 645
    (Iowa 1923).
    The bundle of property rights has been defined and refined over time.
    Included among the intangible property rights in this bundle are “the right of
    user and enjoyment, right of exclusion, right of disposition, and . . . [the right]
    76
    to be protected from unreasonable uses of neighboring property.” Liddick, 
    5 N.W.2d at 374
    . Excluded from the intangible property rights in this bundle is the
    right to use one’s property to injure others. See Gray, 943 N.W.2d at 631–32;
    Snyder v. Bernstein Bros., 
    208 N.W. 503
    , 504 (Iowa 1926); McGuire, 108 N.W. at
    907; In re Ruth, 
    32 Iowa 250
    , 252 (1871); Wallace v. City of Muscatine, 
    4 Greene 373
    , 375 (Iowa 1854). “[E]very holder of property . . . holds it under the implied
    liability that his use of it shall not be injurious to the equal enjoyment of others
    having an equal right to the enjoyment of their property, nor injurious to the
    rights of the community.” McGill v. Pintsch Compressing Co., 
    118 N.W. 786
    , 788
    (Iowa 1908) (quoting Commonwealth v. Alger, 
    61 Mass. (7 Cush.) 53
    , 84–85
    (1851)). This is true even where the offending property owner exercised care to
    prevent injury. See Rhoades v. Cook, 
    98 N.W. 122
    , 123 (Iowa 1904); Millhiser v.
    Willard, 
    65 N.W. 325
    , 326 (Iowa 1895).
    The law of nuisance protects the intangible property right of use and
    enjoyment and the right to be protected from unreasonable uses of neighboring
    property. Iowa Code section 657.1(1) defines a nuisance as “[w]hatever is
    injurious to health, indecent, or unreasonably offensive to the senses, or an
    obstruction to the free use of property, so as essentially to interfere unreasonably
    with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property.” See also 2 William
    Blackstone, Commentaries *215–16 (defining nuisance as a “species of real
    injuries to a man’s lands and tenements” or anything that “worketh hurt,
    inconvenience, or damage” to property).
    77
    The keeping or production of animals that pollute the air is the prototypical
    infringement of private property by nuisance. As explained in the Commentaries,
    “Also if a person keeps his hogs, or other noisome animals, so near the house of
    another that the stench of them incommodes him and makes the air
    unwholesome, this is an injurious nuisance, as it tends to deprive him of the use
    and benefit of his house.” 
    Id.
     at *216–17 (footnote omitted). It is not necessary
    for the injured property owner to show “that the smell should be unwholesome:
    it is enough if it renders the enjoyment of life and property uncomfortable.” 
    Id.
    *217 n.2 (quoting Rex v. White, 1 Burr. 337). The injured party is entitled
    damages “for the injury sustained.” Id. at *220.
    The seminal nuisance case dates from 1610. Aldred’s Case, (1610) 77 Eng.
    Rep. 816 (KB). In that case, William Aldred sued Thomas Benton for injunctive
    relief and for damages arising out of Benton’s keeping of a pigsty. Id. at 816.
    Aldred claimed the odor emanating from the sty made the air unbreathable and
    blocked his natural light. Id. at 817. Benton defended against the suit on the
    ground that his farm operation was “necessary for the sustenance of man” and
    on the ground that Aldred “ought not to have so delicate a nose.” Id. The court
    rejected the defenses, relying on the ancient principle sic utere tuo ut alienum
    non lædas, which means one must use one’s property in a manner that does not
    injure other people’s property. Id. at 821. The court concluded Aldred was
    entitled to damages because Benton’s sty interfered with the basic necessities of
    life, including the ability to breathe “wholesome air.” Id. Aldred was entitled to
    78
    damages even though there was no physical invasion of or damage to Aldred’s
    property. See id.
    Between the time of the Aldred decision and Iowa’s founding, it was black
    letter law in America that offensive smells from animal agriculture could
    constitute both a public and private nuisance. See, e.g., Whitney v. Bartholomew,
    
    21 Conn. 213
    , 218–19 (1851); Smiths v. McConathy, 
    11 Mo. 517
    , 518 (1848);
    Catlin v. Valentine, 
    9 Paige Ch. 575
    , 576 (N.Y. Ch. 1842); Shaw v. Kennedy, 
    4 N.C. (Taylor) 591
    , 592 (1817); Commonwealth v. Van Sickle, 
    1 Brightly 69
    , 71
    (Pa. 1845); Burditt v. Swenson, 
    17 Tex. 489
    , 502 (1856).
    The law in Iowa was no different. In State v. Kaster, this court upheld a
    verdict finding the defendant’s hog pen was a nuisance. 
    35 Iowa 221
    , 225–26
    (1872). The confinement “occasioned noxious exhalations, offensive smells,
    unwholesome smells, so that the air was then and there greatly corrupted and
    infected thereby, and other annoyances becoming and being dangerous to the
    health, comfort and property of the good people residing in that immediate
    neighborhood.” 
    Id. at 223
    . This court rejected the defendant’s contention that he
    should be allowed to show the public benefitted from his animal operation as a
    defense to the action. 
    Id. at 224
     (stating a nuisance defendant “will not be
    permitted to show that the public benefit resulting from his act is equal to the
    public inconvenience which arises from it” (quoting Rex v. Ward, 4 Adolph. & E.
    384 (31 Eng. Com. L. 92))); see also Valasek v. Baer, 
    401 N.W.2d 33
    , 35 (Iowa
    1987) (“The fact that defendant’s hog operation was a lawful business and was
    being carried on in accordance with accepted standards does not impact on the
    79
    finding of a nuisance. A lawful business, properly conducted, may still constitute
    a nuisance if it interferes with another’s use of his own property.”).
    In Shiras v. Olinger, this court held that a stable was not per se a nuisance.
    
    50 Iowa 571
    , 575 (1879). However, the stable could become a nuisance
    depending on its manner of operation. 
    Id.
     In that case, the evidence was
    sufficient to establish a nuisance:
    [I]n regard to the plaintiff’s house it is clearly established that
    offensive odors were almost constantly perceived within it, and that
    sometimes they were such as to render it necessary to keep the
    doors and windows closed upon the east and south sides. Expert
    evidence was introduced to the effect that while it is not clearly
    established that gases from a livery stable generate any specific
    disease, they are regarded by the medical profession as noxious if
    allowed to permeate residences, increasing exposure to disease,
    especially in case of epidemics, and constituting generally in disease
    an aggravating element. Evidence was also introduced showing that
    sickness in the plaintiff’s family and other families near the stable
    had probably occurred or been aggravated by gases from the stable.
    
    Id. at 573
    .
    In accord with Kaster and Shiras, this court has repeatedly held that
    barns, pens, and other animal operations were nuisances if they caused harm
    or injury to others or otherwise unreasonably interfered with others’ equal right
    to possess, use, and enjoy their property. See, e.g., Patz v. Farmegg Prods., Inc.,
    
    196 N.W.2d 557
    , 559–60, 562 (Iowa 1972) (holding an industrial poultry
    operation was “clearly” a nuisance and stating that “[t]he raising of over 80,000
    chickens in one facility is not incident to rural life”); Rhoades, 98 N.W. at 123
    (“Under our statutes, anything which produces noxious exhalations, offensive
    smells, or other annoyances injurious to the health, comfort, or property of
    individuals, is a nuisance. It is not necessary that these odors be deleterious to
    80
    health. It is sufficient if they offend the senses in such a manner as to produce
    actual discomfort.”); Trulock v. Merte, 
    34 N.W. 307
    , 309 (Iowa 1887) (“The
    evidence shows that they kept the pen as clean as was possible, yet offensive
    smells arose from it, which penetrated plaintiff’s house. The pen, when used for
    that purpose, would necessarily be a nuisance, and plaintiff is entitled to have it
    abated.”); Cook v. Benson, 
    17 N.W. 470
    , 472 (Iowa 1883) (holding the evidence
    was sufficient to establish a nuisance where a barn emitted “smells and vapors”
    and the plaintiff was hindered by “flies and effluvia from that barn”).
    In light of these precedents, this court correctly concluded in Gacke that
    granting certain animal feeding operations immunity from private nuisance
    actions was unduly oppressive and not a constitutional means of exercising the
    police power. “The spirit which pervades the police power is closely related to
    that which is embodied in the common-law maxim, ‘Sic utere tuo alienum non
    lædas.’ ” McGuire, 108 N.W. at 907. That is, the police power, properly
    understood, includes the power to prevent harmful uses of property but not the
    power to facilitate harmful uses of property that infringe on the property rights
    of others. See May’s Drug Stores, Inc. v. State Tax Comm’n, 
    45 N.W.2d 245
    , 250–
    51 (stating the police power includes “such reasonable supervision and
    regulation as the state may impose, to insure observance of the individual citizen
    of the duty to use his property and exercise his rights and privileges with due
    regard to the personal and property rights and privileges of others” (emphasis
    added)). This was the understanding of the police power at the time of Iowa’s
    founding. See Thomas M. Cooley, A Treatise on the Constitutional Limitations
    81
    Which Rest upon the Legislative Power of the States of the American Union 572–
    74 (1868) (“According to the maxim, Sic utere tuo ut alienum non lædas, which
    being of universal application, it must, of course, be within the range of
    legislative action to define the mode and manner in which every one may so use
    his own as not to injure others.” (quoting Thorpe v. Rutland & Burlington R.R., 
    27 Vt. 140
    , 149 (1855))). This maxim is inherent in the very concept of property
    rights: property rights do not include a right to use one’s property to injure
    another. See Gray, 943 N.W.2d at 631–32; Snyder, 
    208 N.W. at 504
    ; McGill, 118
    N.W. at 788; In re Ruth, 
    32 Iowa at
    251–52; Wallace, 
    4 Greene at 375
    ; Aldred’s
    Case, 77 Eng. Rep. at 821. But the statutory immunity granted in Iowa Code
    section 657.11 is wholly contrary to this maxim. It strips one property owner of
    the right “to be protected from unreasonable uses of neighboring property.”
    Liddick, 
    5 N.W.2d at 374
    . And it grants another property owner the right to injure
    his neighbor. This is outside the police power, and this our law does not allow.
    See, e.g., In re Ruth, 
    32 Iowa at 252
     (“[N]either can property be acquired, enjoyed
    and disposed of to the peril of the lives, health, happiness and property of
    others.”).17
    Intimately related to this point, this court correctly concluded in Gacke
    that granting immunity to private nuisancers deprives injured property owners
    of the constitutionally enumerated right to “protect property” through the use of
    the legal process. To flesh out this point further, it is important to distinguish
    17See  generally Sam Spiegelman & Gregory C. Sisk, Cedar Point: Lockean Property and
    the Search for a Lost Liberalism, 2021 Cato Sup. Ct. Rev. 165 (discussing the limits of the police
    power).
    82
    between public nuisances and private nuisances. “There are public nuisances,
    and there are private nuisances. A public or common nuisance is a species of
    catchall criminal offenses, consisting of an interference with the rights of a
    community at large. . . . A private nuisance, on the other hand, is a civil wrong
    based on a disturbance of rights in land.” Guzman v. Des Moines Hotel
    Partners, Ltd., 
    489 N.W.2d 7
    , 10 (Iowa 1992). There can be no doubt that the
    state may define what does and what does not constitute a public nuisance.
    What the state may not do, however, is immunize a private nuisance because
    doing so deprives the injured property owner of the “right of user and enjoyment”
    and the right “to be protected from unreasonable uses of neighboring property.”
    Liddick, 
    5 N.W.2d at 374
    ; see Richards, 
    233 U.S. at 553
     (“[W]hile the legislature
    may legalize what otherwise would be a public nuisance, it may not confer
    immunity from action for a private nuisance . . . .”); Note, Nuisance and
    Legislative Authorization, 
    52 Colum. L. Rev. 781
    , 784–85 (1952) (“[T]he
    legislature has no power whatever to privilege a private nuisance.”).
    Our cases have repeatedly distinguished between public and private
    nuisance and have noted how this distinction limits the state’s exercise of the
    police power with respect to immunizing private nuisance:
    It is sometimes said that that which is authorized by law cannot be
    a nuisance. In one sense, that is true. In another, it is an incorrect
    statement of the law. An act done under such circumstances, and
    within the proper limits of the power given, would not constitute a
    public nuisance for which one might be indicted, but might be a
    private nuisance; and damages resulting therefrom, as a private
    nuisance, might be recovered, and in such a case the legislative
    grant would be no protection.
    83
    Churchill v. Burlington Water Co., 
    62 N.W. 646
    , 646–47 (Iowa 1895) (emphasis
    added); see Richards, 
    233 U.S. at 553
    ; Dalarna Farms, 792 N.W.2d at 663 (“[A]
    statute purporting to immunize a defendant who creates or maintains a nuisance
    from liability to another for the value of the diminution of the property caused
    by the nuisance is unconstitutional.”); Simpson, 
    195 N.W.2d at 535
     (“The State
    is constitutionally prohibited from restricting the rights of adjacent landowners
    or enlarging their duties in the absence of condemnation proceedings which
    would include such restrictions or enlargements.”); Bushnell v. Robeson, 
    17 N.W. 888
    , 890 (Iowa 1883) (“A nuisance may be both public and private. That is to
    say, a nuisance may affect the public, and yet an individual may be injuriously
    affected in such capacity as distinguished from the public at large. When this is
    the case, he is entitled to relief.” (citation omitted)).
    Gordon Garrison has alleged precisely the type of harm necessary to
    support his claim that the defendants infringed his right to be free from
    unreasonable uses of neighboring property. Evidence supporting Garrison’s
    nuisance claim against the defendants included an odor calendar showing his
    property was subject to odor from hogs on about one-third of all days. Garrison
    reported experiencing nausea and dizziness from the odor and reported the odor
    sometimes     forced   him    to   stop   working    outdoors.   Nearby   landowners
    corroborated Garrison’s complaints about the odor. Garrison’s allegations would
    be sufficient to allow a jury to find the defendants’ confined animal feeding
    operation (CAFO) constitutes a nuisance because it interferes with Garrison’s
    84
    “private use and enjoyment of his land.” Larsen v. McDonald, 
    212 N.W.2d 505
    ,
    508 (Iowa 1973).
    Garrison’s experience is not unusual. The damage, degradation, and
    destruction caused by industrial animal feeding operations is well-documented.
    See, e.g., McKiver v. Murphy–Brown, LLC, 
    980 F.3d 937
    , 980–83 (4th Cir. 2020)
    (Wilkinson, J., concurring) (discussing the harms caused by industrial hog
    farming and concluding that “[t]he scale of industrial hog farming is no warrant
    to ride roughshod over the property rights of neighbors, the health of workers
    and community members, and the lives of the hogs themselves”); Hines, CAFOs,
    107 Iowa L. Rev. Online at 21 (“The threats CAFOs can pose to the health,
    property rights, and general well-being of neighboring landowners . . . are well
    described and documented . . . .”); N. William Hines, Here We Go Again: A Third
    Legislative Attempt to Protect Polluting Iowa CAFOs from Neighbors’ Nuisance
    Actions, 103 Iowa L. Rev. Online 41, 44–46 (2018) (discussing public health
    concerns     and   environmental    problems    caused     by    CAFOs);     Michelle
    Johnson-Weider, From Factory Farming to a Sustainable Food System: A
    Legislative Approach, 32 Geo. Env’t L. Rev. 685, 688–701 (2020) (discussing
    harms   to    humans   and    the   environment   caused    by    CAFOs);    Charlie
    Hope-D’Anieri, ‘Towns Just Turned to Dust’: How Factory Hog Farms Help Hollow
    Out        Rural       Communities,          Guardian           (May 5,       2022),
    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/may/05/us-industrial-hog-
    farming-rural-towns [https://perma.cc/V84R-3YRT]; The Economic Cost of Food
    Monopolies:    The   Hog     Bosses,   Food &     Water    Watch      (May    2022),
    85
    https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/2022/05/05/food-monopolies-hog-
    factory-farms [https://perma.cc/CK62-983R].
    The concurrence in this case states that recognition of these harms is
    merely a policy objection to the statutory immunity, but the concurrence misses
    the point. The statutory immunity provided to certain animal feeding operations
    is not unconstitutional because it is bad policy; it is unconstitutional because
    immunizing private nuisancers from paying damages caused by their conduct is
    contrary to Iowa’s legal history, Iowa’s property law, Iowa’s nuisance law, Iowa’s
    precedents regarding the lawful exercise of the police power, and Iowa’s
    interrelated constitutional provisions protecting private property. What other
    state courts have done is immaterial to the question presented in this case.
    Under Iowa law, the state may validly exercise its police powers in a manner that
    “licenses no man to interfere with the lands or goods of another.” McMillen v.
    Boyles, 6 Iowa (Clarke) 304, 315 (1858). But when the legislature exercises its
    police powers to allow one person to profit by damaging, degrading, and
    destroying the property and property rights of another, the legislature has
    exceeded its constitutional authority:
    [T]he exercise of police power to maintain the respective rights of
    men guaranteed by the Constitution has been held to be within the
    contemplation of the makers of the Constitution and permissible
    under its terms, even though rights are thereby restrained and the
    use of property restricted. But the end of police power is reached
    when the rights of others have been protected, and when rights
    are cut down in order that others may profit thereby, the limit
    of police power has been exceeded, for then the guaranty of the
    Constitution has been violated.
    86
    Des Moines Joint Stock Land Bank of Des Moines v. Nordholm, 
    253 N.W. 701
    ,
    727–28 (Iowa 1934) (Claussen, C.J., dissenting) (emphasis added).18
    Quite     simply,     “the    legislature       or   governmental        agencies      cannot
    constitutionally confer upon individuals or private corporations, acting primarily
    for their own profit, although for public benefit as well, any right to deprive
    persons of the lawful enjoyment of their property.” Hyde v. Somerset Air
    Serv., Inc., 
    61 A.2d 645
    , 647 (N.J. Super. Ct. Ch. Div. 1948). “The great principle
    of the common law . . . so to use one’s property as not to injure others, forbids
    any other application or use of the rights and powers conferred.” Balt. & P. R.
    Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, 
    108 U.S. 317
    , 331 (1883).
    IV.
    The Iowa Constitution provides that “[a]ll men and women . . . have certain
    inalienable rights—among which are those of . . . acquiring, possessing and
    protecting property.” Iowa Const. art. I, § 1. In the end, the legal question
    presented in this case is a simple one: does the constitution mean what it says?
    Do the men and women of this state have the constitutional right to protect their
    18Noted  constitutional law scholar Richard Epstein agrees with this view, explaining that
    the grant of immunity from private nuisance suits is wholly inconsistent with the police power
    and the constitutional plan:
    The proper ends under the police power are those of the private law of nuisance,
    no more and no less. . . . It is not acceptable, either politically or constitutionally,
    to limit the pollution from one factory while allowing its next-door competitor to
    operate free of legal restraint. It is instead necessary to make sure that differential
    systems of enforcement do not result in the hidden wealth transfers that are
    prohibited under the Takings Clause. The evenhanded enforcement of the
    nuisance law is an essential ingredient of the proper constitutional plan.
    Richard A. Epstein, The Classical Liberal Constitution: The Uncertain Quest for Limited
    Government 353 (2014).
    87
    property? The text of the constitution, precedent, and history say yes. The
    majority says no. I respectfully dissent.
    Oxley, J., joins this dissent.