Certiorari was granted to review the decision in
Hibbs v. City of Riverdale,
The Hibbses and Brown sued the City of Riverdale seeking damages and injunctive relief from the repeated flooding of their property caused by a storm drainage system installed in their subdivision. They alleged that the City negligently approved the developer’s plans and construction of the subdivision’s inadequate storm drainage system and was responsible for the maintenance of the nuisance resulting from the faulty system. The trial court granted the City’s motion for summary judgment with respect to the plaintiffs’ claims for negligence, nuisance, and trespass. It concluded that the plaintiffs’ nuisance claims failed because the City never accepted the developer’s dedication of the subdivision’s drainage easement, and, therefore, the City did not have a duty to abate the alleged nuisance. Plaintiffs appealed and the Court of Appeals affirmed the grant of summary judgment to the City, holding that a determination of whether or not the City was responsible for the maintenance of the drainage system was irrelevant because the gravamen of the plaintiffs’ complaints was negligence and negligence is insufficient to support a cause of action for nuisance. Hibbs, supra at 458 (1).
The Court of Appeals erred when it held that a petition founded in negligence cannot support a cause of action for nuisance.
While a municipality enjoys sovereign immunity from liability for negligent acts done in the exercise of a governmental function, it may be liable for damages it causes to a third party from the creation or maintenance of a nuisance. See
City of Thomasville v. Shank,
263
*338
Ga. 624 (
In determining whether the defect or degree of misfeasance rises to the level of a nuisance, the appellate courts have considered whether the conduct or act of the municipality was a single isolated act of negligence. The Court of Appeals in
Johnson v. City of Atlanta,
[t]he petition alleges a single isolated act of negligence, not continuous or recurrent, and this is not sufficient to show such a negligent trespass constituted a nuisance. This is true though damage to the property, as set out in the petition, is of a “more or less permanent nature.”
Id. at 588. Extending the principle, this Court in
Fulton County v. Wheaton,
Thus, the Court of Appeals should have determined whether the City’s actions in regard to the storm drainage system constituted such exercise of control or acceptance so as to establish a duty on the part of the City to adequately maintain it. See Wheaton, supra at 50 (1), and Myszka, supra at 572 (1). Because the Court of Appeals failed to make this determination, we remand the case to the Court of Appeals for consideration consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
Notes
The Bowman court, applying its guidelines, held that because only two hours had passed between the traffic light malfunctioning and the automobile accident, the duration was not sufficient to convert an act of negligence into a nuisance. Id. at 812.
