October 29, 2012
Crawford Field oak trees lose protective order
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- After about a century shading what is now the end zone of St. Albans High School's football field, the two pin oak trees that line the field look all but doomed.

Kanawha County Judge Charles E. King on Monday dissolved a temporary restraining order that a St. Albans man had filed against school officials, who had hired crews to remove the trees over concerns that they were rotting. The school system is now free to proceed with the removal.

"I might quit or I'm going to get some legal advice and see if there's another possible legal step that I can take," said Pat O'Reilly, the St. Albans man who filed the restraining order against the school system.

In his ruling Monday, King found that O'Reilly did not have the authority to file a restraining order to protect the trees. Legally, a party must prove that they have standing in a case by demonstrating that he or she suffered an injury or invasion of an interest, along with other factors.

O'Reilly argued that because trees cannot fight for their right to exist, and because his tax dollars support the school system, he has the legal authority to file a restraining order. King did not agree.

"[O'Reilly] has not shown that he will suffer any irreparable injury if the trees are removed," King said in the ruling.

During a hearing last week, Mark Chatfield, the director of the biology department at West Virginia State University testified that the two trees appeared from a distance to be healthy but would require thousands of dollars of upkeep to keep them alive.

Chatfield admitted that he could not get a proper view of the trees because of a fence that the school district had placed around their perimeter during the initial removal phase.

A certified arborist hired by the school district to inspect the trees testified that the insides of the trees were rotted beyond repair and could not be managed.

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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