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🚜 Right to Farm/Farm Nuisance Protection

Farm Nuisance Protection: Cedar Hill vs Dallas

How do farm nuisance protection rules compare between Cedar Hill, TX and Dallas, TX?

Dallas has fewer restrictions than Cedar Hill.

Cedar Hill, TX

Dallas County

Some Restrictions

Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 251, the Right to Farm Act, protects established agricultural operations from nuisance suits when neighbors arrive after farming began. Dallas County operations qualify under state law.

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Dallas, TX

Dallas County

Few Restrictions

Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 251 protects farms operating one year or longer from nuisance suits based on changed surrounding conditions. The state shield applies in Dallas but mostly affects edge-of-city agricultural parcels.

View full Dallas rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCedar HillDallas
State lawTX Agriculture Code Ch. 251-
Establishment threshold1 year of operation-
2023 amendmentTX HB 1750 strengthenedHB 1750 strengthened shield
Plaintiff radiusWithin half mile-
County ruleNone layered on state-
Texas statute-Agriculture Code Ch. 251
Protection threshold-One year consistent operation
Loser pays attorney fees-Yes under Sec. 251.004
Dallas local rule-None; state statute controls

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Cedar Hill FAQ

I bought land near a Dallas County farm. Can I sue over odors?

Likely no. Texas Agriculture Code 251 shields a farm operating one year or more before you arrived from nuisance suits over routine activity. Major operational changes after your arrival may reopen liability.

Does the protection cover a new farm starting next door?

No. Chapter 251 shields established operations. A farm starting after homes are built can still face nuisance claims, though Texas courts give substantial weight to the agricultural character of rural areas.

Dallas FAQ

Does Dallas have its own right-to-farm rule?

No. The city relies on Texas Agriculture Code Chapter 251. The state shield protects qualifying farms statewide, though Dallas has very few commercial agricultural operations subject to the rule.

Can a neighbor sue an established Dallas-area farm?

Generally no, if the farm has run the same way for over a year, was lawful when started, and follows proper agricultural practice. Losing plaintiffs must pay defendant attorney fees under HB 1750.

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