The City of Independence, Missouri (“the City”) appeals the judgment of the trial court entered in favor of Marianne C. King on her nuisance petition in which she claimed that she experienced on several occasions sewage backing up into her basement and garage. The trial court awarded Ms. King damages in the amount of $20,000. The City raises two points оn appeal, alleging that the trial court erred in finding a permanent nuisance and that the trial court improperly fixed the amount of damages.
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
*338 I.FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Ms. King purchased her home in Independence, Missouri, in July of 1993. She suffered water damage in her basement and garage when the sewer backed up on several occasions after rainfall. The first incident оccurred in July 1998. Sewage came up the floor drains in her basement, and it soaked her carpet and damaged other personal property. The backup also covered the entire floor of her garage and flowed out of her garage door. After Ms. King called the City, a City worker responded and “blew out the line,” and the sewage receded when the rain stopped. The carpet was removed, and the basement was cleaned, dried, and disinfected. Ms. King’s homeowner’s insurance covered this incident.
Later that month, Ms. King suffered another backup, and she believed that the water in her basement appeared deeper than it was from the first backup. Within days after the second backup, mildew began to form in the basement. Subsequent backups occurred in September, October, and November, as well as in January and February of 1999. In all, she experienced seven backups. After each backup Ms. King notified the City, the City responded, the rain stopped, and the sewage receded.
In March of 1999, the City put “Insta-form” in the sewer main that sеrved Ms. King’s home, and she has not experienced any more backups. The repair process took less than a day and involved the placement of a sleeve down the inside of the main. In April of 1999, a City crew ran a camera down her lateral line, and the crew did not indicate that she had a problem with her lateral line.
Ms. King filed her action in nuisаnce against the City in March of 2000, seeking damages in the amount of $50,000. After a bench trial, the trial court found the City “maintained and allowed a permanent nuisance” and entered judgment in favor of Ms. King in the amount of $20,000. No request was made to the trial court for findings of fact and conclusions of law. This appeal followed.
II.STANDARD OF REVIEW
For review purposes, we will be guided by thе principles enunciated in
Murphy v. Carron,
III.LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Permanent or Temporary Nuisance
“Nuisance is the unreasonable, unusual, or unnatural use of one’s property so that it substantially impairs the right of another to peacefully enjoy his property.”
Green Acres Land & Cattle Co., Inc. v. State,
In its first point on appeal, the City contends the trial court erred in finding that the sewer backups constituted a permanent nuisance. The City argues that Ms. King did not plead permanent or temporary nuisance, and, therefore, as a matter of law, the court was required to treat the allegation of nuisance as a temporary nuisance. Further, the City alleges that “this nuisance, if it so was, as a matter of law was temporary” because it was abata-ble.
The questions of whether a use is “unreasonable” and whether it “substantially” impairs the rights of another to use his or her property are questions of fact.
Rosenfeld v. Thoele,
With that in mind, Ms. King’s petition alleged:
4. That on July 7,1998, and on numerous and various dates and occasions thereafter, thе defendant’s sanitary sewer system backed up and caused sanitary sewage to be deposited in plaintiffs residence at 2735 Glendale, Independence, Missouri.
5. That such action and conduct of the defendant constitutes a nuisance.
6. That on each occasion in which the defendant’s sanitary sewage system deposited sanitary sewage intо the plaintiffs residence, the plaintiff notified defendant and demanded defendant correct and end such nuisance.
7. That defendant’s action in maintaining and allowing a nuisance as aforesaid caused damage to plaintiffs residence and denied plaintiff the reasonable use and enjoyment of her residence, all to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of Fifty Thousand and no/100 ($50,000.00) Dollars.
“The distinguishing feature between a permanent and temporary nuisance is the ‘abatability’ of the nuisance.”
Vermillion,
When a nuisance’s abatement is reasonable and practical, it is a temporary nuisance. A temporary nuisance may be abated at any time by a reasonable effort or by an order of the court. A permanent nuisance generally results from a permanent construction which is injurious as installed, rather than injurious through its use, and where abatement would be impracticable or impossible.
Id. (citations omitted).
We agree with the City’s general proposition that “[i]f allegations are doubtful as to whether the pleaded cause of
*340
action is for a permanent nuisancе or a temporary nuisance, courts should treat the nuisance as temporary.”
Id.
This is so “because adjudication of a permanent nuisance amounts to a grant of an easement to the wrongdoer to continue to interfere with the plaintiffs land.”
Scantlin v. City of Pevely,
B. Measure of Damages
The City’s second point attacks the trial court’s award of $20,000 in damages. The measure of damages for a nuisance depends on whether such nuisance is permanent or temporary.
Fletcher,
In a permanent nuisance case, damages are measured by the difference in the fair market value of the property immediately before and after injury.
Id.
Damages caused by a temporary nuisance, however, are referred to as the “diminution in value” of the property during the duration of the nuisance, commonly measured by the reduction in the rental value.
Byrom v. Little Blue Valley Sewer Dist.,
In its first subpoint, the City claims thаt there is no substantial evidence to support the award of $20,000 because Ms. King presented no evidence of diminution in value. In its second subpoint, the City also charges that Ms. King was unqualified to render an opinion as to the value of her home.
We agree that there was no substantial evidence of diminution in rental value, but we also note that there are some occasions where, regardless of whether the nuisance is permanent or temporary, the proper measure of damages reflects the cost of repair:
*341
Scantlin,
*340 Where the injury is extensive or permanent the measure of damages is the reduction in the overall value of the property as a whole; in contrast, where the injury is slight — -when compared with the overall size and value of the realty — and the injury can readily be remedied by repair, then the measure of damages is the expense of restoration. The latter method is not inconsistent with the former. This, because in the case of slight injury the cost of repair logically reflects the amount the property was reduced in value.
*341 Even so, our review of the record suggests that the trial court did not apply the proper measure of damages. The only evidence presented in support of the $20,000 damages award was Ms. King’s testimony. In fact, Ms. King was the only witness to testify during her case-in-chief. She testified that the value of her home with a finished basement, including a family room, a bedroom, аnd a working room, was “about $90,000.” Ms. King also opined, after the City’s objection was overruled, that the value of her house after the backups and with mildew growing in an unfinished basement “would probably be about $70,000.” To justify these figures, she stated that she arrived at the amounts by examining the cost of other houses in the neighborhood that were bought and sold.
We recognize that an owner is generally presumed competent to testify to the value of his real property even though he does not qualify as an expert.
Sharaga v. Auto Owners Mut Ins. Co.,
Even with this general presumption favoring a landowner’s testimony of value, landowners do not have carte blanche to engage in speculation. We have cautioned:
[WJhen an owner’s opinion is based on improper elements or foundation, his opinion loses its probative value. Or, where the basis for a test as to the reliability of the testimony is not supported by a statement of fаcts on which it is based, or the basis of fact does not appear to be sufficient, the testimony should be rejected. Judicial liberality in permitting an owner to testify as to his opinion of the amount of the loss does not allow an unrestricted right to engage in guesswork.
Carmel Energy, Inc. v. Fritter,
Before concluding that the trial court’s award was improper, though, we must consider whether the evidence supports any reasonable theory, in which case the judgment must be affirmed. The only other evidence of damages offered by Ms. King was an estimate for the repairs of the basement. The “cost of repair” can be an appropriate manner of measuring damages for a temporary nuisance. We have explained:
An exception to the diminution in value measure of damages for damage to real or personal property is the cost of repair test. The cost of repair is competent evidence to be considered when property can be restored to its former condition at a cost less thаn diminution of value. However, the cost of repair is not proper as the measure of damages unless the damage is comparatively insignificant considering total value.
Sharaga,
Even assuming
arguendo
that cost of repair would have been appropriate here, “[a] court ... cannot apply cost of repair damages until after it hears evidence оf value.”
Evans v. Werle,
Based on the foregoing, we are left with the firm impression that the award of $20,000 was unjustified. If the trial court measured damages based on a permanent nuisance, it erroneously applied the law. As unlikely as it may be, if the trial court attempted to apply cost of repair, there is no substantial evidence to support it. Therefore, the trial court’s damages award must be reversed.
The City’s final subpoints concern the fact that Ms. King did not seek recovery for the initial backup. 2 In its third subpoint, the City claims that Ms. King did not establish that the subsequent backups caused the damage. It argues that she did not demonstrate that the first backup did not cause the entirety of her damage. Similarly, the City in its final subрoint contends that the trial court failed to apportion damages by severing out the damages caused by the first backup. After a thorough review of the record, these arguments are without merit.
The evidence established that, after the first backup, the carpet soaked up most of the sewage and was removed. Then the basement was cleaned and disinfected, and the damaged personal property was removed. Thus, with Ms. King’s basement in such condition prior to the second backup, there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s conclusion that the *343 balance of the damage was caused by the subsequent backups, which also means that there was no need for thе court to apportion damages. This conclusion is not against the weight of the evidence.
IV. CONCLUSION
We are confident that the trial court employed great effort in its attempt to determine a fair amount of damages. However, after a thorough review of the record, we are left with a firm impression that its characterization of the nuisancе and its award of damages is wrong. Accordingly, we reverse that portion of the trial court’s judgment finding that the nuisance was permanent and direct the trial court to identify the nuisance as temporary. We further conclude that the case must be remanded for a retrial only on the issue of damages for a temporary nuisance. “A case should not be reversed for failure of proof without remand unless the record demonstrates that all available essential evidence has been presented and that plaintiff could not recover in any event.”
McCardie & Akers Const. Co., Inc. v. Bonney,
VICTOR C. HOWARD, P.J, and PATRICIA A. BRECKENRIDGE, J., concur.
Notes
. Objections to her testimony on redirect were sustained.
. The City claims in their final two subpoints that there was evidence of six backups and that Ms. King sоught recovery for only the last five. Our review of the record, however, revealed evidence of seven backups that occurred, as outlined in the Factual and Procedural Background portion of this opinion. The nucleus of the City’s arguments in these two subpoints is that Ms. King did not seek damages for the initial backup. As such, this inconsistency does not affect our analysis.
