Pubdate: Sat, 10 Sep 2011 Source: Visalia Times-Delta, The (CA) Copyright: 2011 The Visalia Times-Delta Contact: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.visaliatimesdelta.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2759 Author: David Castellon JUDGE HALTS ACTION AGAINST TULARE COUNTY MEDICAL POT FARM A judge has issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Tulare County agencies from removing or destroying medical marijuana from a small farm just north of Visalia. But Superior Court Judge Melinda Reed's order Friday will stay in effect only until Wednesday, when lawyers representing Tulare County are expected to submit their written arguments against the application for a restraining order against the county filed with the court earlier this week by Richard Daleman. He leases five acres of mostly farmland near Highway 63 and the St. Johns River. Daleman rents out portions of that land to 40 people to grow marijuana that they smoke or ingest to treat medical conditions. Daleman, himself a medical marijuana user, said he started the business a couple of years ago and believes he has a right to do so under California's Compassionate Use Act, which legalized the use, possession and growing of marijuana by people with doctors' recommendations. The county Resource Management Agency served Aug. 31 Daleman and his landlord a cease and desist order, claiming the business violates the county's 2009 medical marijuana ordinance. Among its provisions is that medical marijuana can be grown only on commercially zoned land - not land zoned for farming, including Daleman's plot - and the growing has to be done inside buildings with walls and roofs. The order gives Daleman until Saturday to stop allowing the plants to be gown on the land and to clear out the marijuana plants, which number about 3,500. Daleman's lawyer, John Ryan, filed an application with the court claiming the county ordinance violates the state's medical marijuana laws and related court rulings. It also seeks a restraining order to stop the county from shutting down the business. A hearing was scheduled at the Visalia courthouse Friday morning, but the judge assigned the case, Paul Vortmann, was scheduled to be off that day. So the case was moved to an early afternoon hearing in front of Reed, whose first question to the lawyer from the Tulare County Counsel's Office was whether she had a written response to Daleman's application and claims. Attorney Julia Langley said her office only received a copy of Daleman's application Thursday morning and didn't have sufficient time to research and prepare a response. She did tell Reed that Daleman's request "doesn't have a legal basis to go forward." Langley went on to say the county has a right to right to make regulations to protect public health and safety, and the ordinance has been challenged and upheld. Reed said she wanted to give the county time to provide a written response to Daleman's application. The soonest that could happen is Tuesday. Langley said that before Wednesday's hearing, she plans to file a request with the court to issue an injunction ordering Daleman and his landlord to "stop the activity and abate the nuisance on his property," which essentially means removing all the marijuana plants not growing any more on his land. Such an order would include a deadline, along with a provision allowing the county to step in after the deadline and do abatement, if needed, Langley said. Whether that happens will depend on whether Vortmann extends the Reed's restraining order against county agencies. That order doesn't apply to law enforcement agencies conducting an investigation of criminal activity. The county's cease-and-desist order is a civil action, and no accusations of criminal activity have been leveled against Daleman. After Friday's hearing, Ryan said he wasn't surprised at Reed's decision to issue the brief restraining order, considering little time there was between his filing the application Wednesday and Friday's hearing. As for the county's efforts get Daleman to stop the activities on his land, Ryan said,. "I think the order is completely invalid." He added that he and is client believe the county ordinance is intended to drive up costs for medical marijuana users and set obstacles to using the drug despite the fact that it's medicinal use is legal in the state. "I think there's a sort of animus against marijuana users in general," Ryan added. "You do something they don't like, they railroad you," Daleman added. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart