679 N.E.2d 36 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1996
Plaintiffs, Robert and Joanne Alden, appeal the Summit County Court of Common Pleas' grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant, Summit County. We affirm.
Since the beginning of its operation, the sewer system has periodically overflowed. The cause of the overflow has been storm water rushing through the sewer system after heavy rains. The overflowing sewage and storm water have drained directly into Mud Brook. This overflow has deposited into Mud Brook and onto the Aldens' land the attendant components of sewage: hypodermic needles, used condoms, sanitary napkins, and fecal material. This waste has polluted a portion of the Aldens' land, rendering it unusable by them.
Fed up with the pollution, the Aldens sued the county for various violations including statutory infractions, constructive trespass, nuisance and negligent maintenance and repair of the sewer system. The county moved for summary judgment. It argued that it possessed sovereign immunity against the lawsuit because designing the sewer system with the bar screen and with its current line capacity constituted a governmental function. The county also argued that the "public duty" doctrine barred the lawsuit because the act of providing a sewer system was for the benefit of the public as a whole and because the county did not assume a special duty toward the Aldens. The Aldens opposed the motion for summary judgment. They argued that the negligent maintenance of the sewer system caused the pollution, and because maintenance was a proprietary function, the county was liable for its negligent acts. Moreover, the Aldens argued that because the county's actions violated several statutes, the county committed negligence per se. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the county based on the arguments it raised. The Aldens now appeal, raising two assignments of error.
R.C.
In its motion for summary judgment, the county filed the affidavit of Jeffrey Lintern, an environmental engineer and director of environmental services for Summit County. In his affidavit Lintern stated that the sewer system was designed to include the bar screen and bypass line. The reason for this was to prevent the main sewer line from clogging by releasing excess rainwater and sewage, which in turn would prevent backups into residential basements and out of manhole covers. Furthermore, Lintern stated that the overflows occur due to severe rain storms and that these overflows occur even though the county routinely inspects and cleans the sewer system. Lastly, Lintern stated that the original design of the sewer system contained a flaw in the calculations as to how much water could pass through the system per day. He said that the original calculations anticipated a flow rate of twenty-one to twenty-seven million gallons per day. In actuality, only fourteen to fifteen million gallons per day can pass through.
In response to the county's motion for summary judgment, the Aldens argued that the county had negligently maintained the sewer system. The Aldens relied on the affidavit of Robert Alden, documentary evidence, pictures of the sewer *464 system, and Lintern's deposition testimony. However, none of this evidence rebutted the assertion that the sewer system was designed to include the bar screen and bypass to provide access for overflows. The fact that the county designed the sewer system with the bar screen and bypass as part of the system, with the intent to allow water and sewage to escape onto land, supports the determination that this decision was exercised as part of the county's governmental function. It is apparent that the sewer system needs this type of mechanism to accommodate the overflow. The decision to have the bar screen and bypass and place it near Mud Brook was committed to the governmental, and thus discretionary, function of the county.
Moreover, concerning the Aldens' claim of negligence, the trial court found that:
"Plaintiffs' affidavits fail to establish that Defendant's maintenance and repair of the bar screen, including Defendant's failure to clean the bar screen as often as twice a week, causes the overflow of sewage."
This court's review of the record leads us to the same determination. The record before us indicates that the condition of Mud Brook is caused by the operation of the bar screen as it was intended to operate. The Aldens have not established how the county's maintenance was negligent, and even if negligent, how this negligence caused the overflows.
Furthermore, we note that the Aldens' claim would not fit any of the enumerated exceptions to sovereign immunity. The most likely exception to apply is contained in R.C.
"[P]olitical subdivisions are liable for injury, death, or loss to persons or property caused by their failure to keep public roads, highways, streets, avenues, alleys, sidewalks, bridges, aqueducts, viaducts, or public grounds within the political subdivisions open, in repair, and free from nuisance * * *."
The Aldens have alleged that the county failed to keep the sewer system free from nuisance by allowing the overflow to escape into Mud Brook. However, R.C.
This court does recognize that R.C.
Therefore, the trial court properly granted summary judgment as to the issues raised by the Aldens' second assignment of error.
Inasmuch as we have already determined that the Aldens cannot maintain their lawsuit for monetary damages against the county for violations of this statute, there is no need to rule on this assignment of error.
Judgment affirmed.
QUILLIN, P.J., and BAIRD, J., concur. *466