In this case we consider whether plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence against defendant Town of Apex (“defendant” or “Apex”) adequately pleaded the element that defendant owed plaintiffs a duty of care. The complaint alleges that plaintiffs’ property was damaged by flooding that resulted when, in response to a telephone call requesting that the water be turned on at the residence on the property, an agent or employee of Apex
Plaintiffs Milton K. Fussell and Teresa Fussell made the following allegations in their complaint. Plaintiffs purchased a house in Apex, North Carolina on 24 June 2004 from Seagroves Farm, LLC (Seagroves). Thomas Cooper, a real estate agent with Pacesetters Realty, Inc. (Pacesetters) represented Seagroves in the transaction. Plaintiffs had refused to close the sale before that date because Seagroves’s tenant, Mary Lois Woodson, had not vacated the residence on the property. On 23 June 2004, as an inducement to complete the transaction, Cooper gave plaintiffs a written statement that Woodson would vacate the residence “as of midnight 6/23/04.” Despite this assurance, Cooper nevertheless authorized, or at least allowed, Woodson to remain in the home as a tenant after 24 June 2004 without plaintiffs’ knowledge or consent.
On 25 June 2004, Cooper telephoned Apex, and the call was answered by the Apex Police Department. Cooper requested that water service be restored at the property, representing that the tenant was preparing for a wedding and had no water. In response, Apex sent an employee or agent to the residence to reconnect the water. Despite having received no answer after knocking on the doors of the residence, Apex’s employee or agent “reconnected the property’s water service, confirmed that the meter was running, and left without taking precautions to ensure that no problems would arise as a result of the unauthorized and unexpected commencement of water service.” A bathtub spigot was open at the time Apex recommenced water service. No one was present in the residence at that time, and water overflowed the tub, and flooded the house for several days, causing substantial damage.
The complaint further alleged in Paragraph 36 that:
Defendant Apex’s agents, servants, or employees were negligent in that the agents, servants or employees:
a. Failed to determine whether defendant Cooper had authority to direct that the water be turned on at the Property;
b. Failed to determine the status or condition of the faucets and other plumbing before turning the water on;
c. Failed to determine whether anyone was present in the house before turning the water on; and
d. Failed to take precautions to ensure that no problems would arise when the water was turned on.
Plaintiffs filed suit in Superior Court, Wake County, against Apex, Pacesetters, Cooper, and North Carolina Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company, Inc. All four defendants filed motions to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. The trial court denied the motions of Pacesetters and Cooper, but granted the motions of Apex and Farm Bureau. Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their claims against Cooper and Pacesetters on 22 February 2008, then timely appealed the dismissal of their claim against Apex. Because Apex is the only defendant pertinent to this appeal, for clarity we will refer to it hereafter as “defendant.”
In a divided opinion, the Court of Appeals reversed the dismissal, holding that the complaint’s allegations sufficiently state a negligence claim on the grounds that defendant owed plaintiffs a duty of care when restoring water service to their property.-N.C. App. at —,
Defendant argues that no law supports plaintiffs’ negligence claim because defendant did not owe plaintiffs a duty of care. We have long held that a municipal corporation selling water for private consumption is acting in a proprietary capacity and can be held liable for negligence just like a privately owned water company. Mosseller v. City of Asheville,
“To state a claim for common law negligence, a plaintiff must allege: (1) a legal duty; (2) a breach thereof; and (3) injury proximately caused by the breach.” Stein,
Whether the harm was foreseeable depends on the particular facts. Stein,
Although Mosseller involves municipality-supplied water, it is at heart a slip-and-fall case factually distinguishable from the case at bar. The leaking water in Mosseller was flowing innocuously along a curb when observed by the defendant’s agent. The water subsequently froze and an unexpected snowfall covered the ice. We found that, while the city had a duty to exercise reasonable care over its streets and that a negligence action against a city or water authority was not foreclosed as a matter of law, under the facts presented in Mosseller, the connection between the leak seen one day and the hidden ice on which the plaintiff fell another day was too tenuous to support the plaintiff’s negligence action. In contrast, the complaint indicates that here the water flowed into plaintiffs’ house, the flow was not directly observed by defendant’s agent to be apparently harmless, and the damage began almost immediately. While the analysis in Mosseller is sound, because of these and other distinctions, the result in Mosseller is not controlling in the case subjudice.
A trial court should not grant a motion to dismiss unless it is certain that the plaintiff could prove no set of facts that would entitle him or her to relief. Meyer,
We reach this determination based on the totality of facts alleged in this particular case, which includes the actions of defendant’s agent or employee at the residence. We do not hold that, in the absence of suspicious circumstances, a water company has a duty to investigate the identity or motives of someone seeking to have water turned on at a property. Nor do we hold that, after receiving a request to turn on water service, such a water company must ascertain that someone is home or that there are no leaks, open faucets, or plugged drains before acting on the request. Accordingly, the allegations in Paragraph 36, parts (a), (b), and (c) of plaintiffs’ complaint, quoted above, fail adequately to allege a duty owed by defendant to plaintiffs.
Nevertheless, any person engaged in an active course of conduct must exercise due care to prevent foreseeable harm. See Stein,
We emphasize that our holding addresses the pleading stage only. We cannot predict whether a developed record will support plaintiffs’ allegations of actionable negligence. Nevertheless, we hold that, under the liberal standards accorded to notice pleading, the complaint has adequately alleged that defendant owed plaintiffs a duty of
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
