OPINION
In an inverse condemnation case brought under Article 1, sec. 17 of the Texas Constitution, the jury awarded actual ($103,- *527 000.00) and exemplary ($327,000.00) damages in favor of the Appellee property owners against the Appellant City of Odessa (“City”), such damages allegedly resulting from the flow of sewer water discharged by water treatment facilities operated by the City, down a draw to Appellees’ property. From an adverse judgment on the verdict, the City brings this appeal. We affirm in part and reverse and render in part.
The City operates two water treatment plants, one since 1950 and the second since 1982, which discharge “treated” sewer water or effluent into the Monahans Draw, a natural drainage gully located in Ector and Midland Counties. Commencing in November 1980, effluent apparently combined with rainwater began reaching and flooding Appellees’ property, located some fifteen and twenty miles downstream from the two treatment plants. In their fifth amended petition, Appellees alleged that from that time through December 1988, various portions of their acreage was flooded a total of nineteen times for periods varying from a few days to as much as 310 days, with the direct and proximate result that they were frequently unable to plant or harvest crops. The case was submitted to the jury on the theory, and the jury found, that the City by its acts in discharging excessive amounts of effluent, amounting to a nuisance or a trespass, had damaged Appellees’ property for public use without adequate compensation. The jury also found that the damage to the land in question was “temporary,” that Appellees first became aware of damage to their land in March 1981, and that the City’s conduct was done with a malicious or evil intent and was directly imputed to its government.
In its first two points of error, the City contends that, as a matter of law, punitive damages cannot be awarded in an inverse condemnation action against a municipality acting in its governmental capacity, and furthermore, there was either no evidence or insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict awarding punitive damages.
It is settled law that the operation and maintenance of a sanitary sewer system by a city is a governmental function.
Calla-way v. City of Odessa,
In May 1987, the Supreme Court of Texas in
City of Gladewater v. Pike,
Appellees argue that Pike stands for the proposition that exemplary damages can be recovered from a municipality where the claim is not brought under the Tort Claims Act. We find no such broad principle expressed. It merely held that in a case of negligent performance of a proprietary function, which at that time was not covered by the Tort Claims Act, exemplary damages could be awarded under certain very egregious circumstances. As suggested above, with the repeal of Section 101.058, it is doubtful that the holding in Pike as it might apply to the possibility of exemplary damages in negligence cases is still valid.
As Appellees point out, this case is not a negligence action brought under the Tort Claims Act, but is rather a suit for damages under Article 1, sec. 17 of the Texas Constitution, resulting from a nuisance or trespass perpetrated by the City. Article 1, sec. 17 reads in applicable part as follows:
No person’s property shall be taken, damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate compensation being made, unless by consent of such person; _ [Emphasis added.]
The term “adequate compensation” does not encompass exemplary damages since such damages are punitive in nature and have nothing to do with compensating a party for his losses. There is no statutory authority for exemplary damages in cases brought for damage to property under Article 1, sec. 17. Appellees have cited no Texas cases, and we have found none, in which exemplary damages have been allowed to stand against a city in a situation where private property was damaged or taken for public use. In
Holt v.. City of San Marcos,
Despite the holdings in San Antonio River Authority and Ostrom, we have difficulty in hypothesizing a scenario in which the facts would be sufficiently egregious to support an award of exemplary damages, in addition to adequate compensation, for damage to property done by a city within the concept of public use. In these kinds of cases involving the taking or damaging of private property by state or local government, we doubt that the legislature can enlarge the meaning of “adequate compensation” to include exemplary damages without a constitutional amendment. If the people of this state wish to allow for the recovery of exemplary damages in condemnation cases, then a constitutional amendment along those lines should be presented to them. We hold that as a matter of law, a property owner is not entitled to recover exemplary damages in an inverse condemnation case brought under Article 1, sec. 17 of the Texas Constitution for the taking or damaging of property for public use. Point of Error No. One is sustained. Since we have been unable to find any evidence in support of the jury’s findings on exemplary damages, Point of Error No. Two is also sustained.
In its fifth point of error, the City brings a factual insufficiency challenge to the jury finding that the acts of the City proximately caused the damage to Appel-lees’ property. As is well known, an insufficient evidence point requires the court first to examine all of the evidence,
Lofton v. Texas Brine Corporation, et al.,
We have reviewed the testimony of a number of witnesses who were familiar with the water flow of Monahans Draw and with Appellees’ property, as well as the testimony of Appellees’ expert, Tim Kelly. The testimony is voluminous and consistent in the description of increased flow in Mon-ahans Draw and on Appellees’ property with a liquid that had the look, smell and other characteristics of sewer water and was clearly sufficient to support the jury’s finding of cause-in-fact damage to the property. Point of Error No. Five is overruled.
*530
In the City’s third and fourth points, it claims that the damage to Appel-lees’ property was permanent, and since the Appellees had notice of the damage and its cause more than two years before they filed suit, their entire claim is barred. The statute of limitations for such action is two years from the first realization that the damage has occurred.
Atlas Chemical Industries, Inc. v. Anderson,
In considering the City’s factual and legal sufficiency challenges to the finding that the damage was temporary, we must first determine whether there is any evidence of probative force to support the finding, and if so, whether the court is barred by law from giving effect to that evidence. An injury may be found to be either temporary or permanent but not both in the same action, since the concepts are mutually exclusive. Whether an injury is permanent or temporary is determined by its continuum.
Kraft v. Langford,
Permanent injuries to land result from an activity of such a character and existing under such circumstances that it will be presumed to continue indefinitely; the injury must be constant and continuous, not occasional, intermittent or recurrent. Temporary injuries, however, have been found where the injury is not continuous, but is sporadic and contingent upon some irregular force such as rain.
In addition to continuum, some of the older cases have suggested that if the activity causing the damage can be successfully enjoined, then the damage is temporary. “Another characteristic of a temporary injury is the ability of a court of equity to enjoin the injury causing activity. An injury which can be terminated cannot be a permanent injury.”
Kraft,
Having concluded that there is sufficient evidence to support the finding of “temporary,” the City’s fourth point of error becomes moot since the transcript shows that Appellees in their fifth amended petition did not plead for, and the jury in its verdict did not award, any damages for injuries to the land that occurred more than two years *531 prior to March 8, 1983, the date the suit was filed. Therefore, the finding of the jury that Appellees first discovered the damage to their property as a result of the City’s trespass or nuisance in March 1981, even if unsupported by the evidence, represents harmless error and is therefore irrelevant to the disposition of the appeal. The fourth point of error is overruled.
In its sixth and last point of error, the City contends that there is insufficient evidence that it damaged Appellees’ property since once the effluent is discharged into Monahans Draw and becomes intermingled with rainwater, the entire volume of water becomes the property of the state by virtue of Section 11.021(a) of the Texas Water Code. That section provides that “[t]he water of the ordinary flow, underflow, and tides of every flowing river, natural stream, and lake, and of every bay or arm of the Gulf of Mexico, and the storm water, floodwater, and rainwater of every river, natural stream, canyon, ravine, depression, and watershed in the state is the property of the state.” Tex.Water Code Ann. sec. 11.021(a) (Vernon 1988). Other than the statute itself which by its terms applies only to water from natural sources, the City cites no authority for its unique defensive theory. The permits which grant to the City the right to discharge its effluent into the draw specifically do not grant it the right to use or damage private or public property but charge it with the responsibility of acquiring whatever property rights that might be necessary in order to utilize the discharge route. A municipality is prohibited from discharging its waste and sewage except as authorized by its permit, Tex.Water Code Ann. sec. 26.121 (Vernon 1988); and under the code, the right of an individual to pursue any available common-law remedy to abate, or to recover damages for, a condition of pollution or nuisance remains unaffected. Tex.Water Code Ann. sec. 26.133. Point of Error No. Six is without merit and is accordingly overruled.
Appellees have brought five cross-points of error which we must consider. Those cross-points, designated as numbers I-A-1.5, I-B-2.5, II-A-1 and II-B-1 are pointless since they neither complain of any error nor request any relief.
Houston First American Savings v. Musick,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and rendered as to exemplary damages of $327,000.00 and in all other respects is affirmed. Costs of the appeal are to be assessed one-half to each of the parties.
