OPINION
David Long and Connie Long appeal the trial court's grant of summary judgment to IVC Industrial Coatings, Inc. ("IVC"), MacDougall & Pierce Construction, Inc. ("MacDougall"), J.B. Quinn, Feutz Contractors, Inc. ("Feutz"), C.H. Garmong & Son, Inc. ("Garmong"), and Hannum, Wa-gle & Cline Engineering ("Hannum," and together with IVC, MacDougall, Quinn, and Garmong referred to collectively as "TVC/Contractors"). The Longs raise several issues, which we revise and restate as whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to IVC/Contractors. We reverse and remand.
In approximately May of 2001, IVC began construction of a manufacturing facility on its property west of County Road N. 300 E. MacDougall served as IVC's general contractor for the construction project, and Feutz was hired to extend a county road along the southern boundary of IVC's parcel along an abandoned railroad right-of-way in order to provide access to a parking lot of the new manufacturing facility. At that time, J.B. Quinn was employed for Feutz as a project superintendent. The construction project involved earthwork, and "a rather large mound of earth piled up between the building and County Road 300 East." Id. at 201. The mound of surplus dirt was not moved because it was going to be used as part of an expansion project. The record also reveals that the project included the construction of a detention pond on the south end of IVC's property and the construction of a swale.
Between approximately July of 2001 and continuing until approximately June of 2002, when it rained, water, mud, silt, and sediment ran off of the mound of surplus dirt located on IVC's property and eventually flowed to the collection point. From the collection point, the water which contained mud, silt and sediment traveled through the culvert under County Road N. 300 E., along the railroad track, through the second culvert under the railroad grade, and down the ravine to the Longs' two ponds. The mud and sediment settled in the Longs' ponds creating buildup. During that one-year period, the Longs ponds were muddy, which prevented any fishing in them. David Long testified the ponds were "muddy from July to the next June. I could not fish. It was just solid mud. It did not clear up a bit." Id. at 280. Prior to the build-up of mud, silt, and sediment, one of the Long's ponds was about twenty feet deep at its deep end and about ten feet deep at its shallow end. After the mud, silt, and sediment settled in that pond, the pond was about ten feet at its deep end and "about a foot and a half, two feet deep" at its shallow end. Id. at 281. The second pond was about fifteen feet deep prior to the buildup of mud, silt, and sediment and roughly eight feet deep after the buildup. The Longs explained the problems they were having regarding the buildup of mud and sediment in their ponds to IVC and MacDougall, but the erogion and sediment runoff were not controlled.
Dale Walker, a resource specialist for the Indiana State Department of Agriculture, performed on-site inspections in con
In April 2003, the Longs filed a complaint against IVC and MacDougall. In June 2005, the Longs amended their complaint and added Quinn as a defendant. In 2007, IVC began a second construction project to expand its manufacturing facility. Garmong served as the general contractor and Hannum served as the drainage design engineers in connection with the expansion project. As a result of the expansion project, additional sediment from IVC's property was deposited in the Longs' farm ponds.
In December 2007, MacDougall filed a motion for summary judgment. In January 2008, Quinn filed a motion for summary judgment. In March 2008, IVC filed a motion for summary judgment. In May 2008, the Longs. filed a response to the summary judgment motions. In June 2008, the Longs added Garmong and Han-num as defendants, and the Longs filed their Second Amended Complaint alleging that IVC, Macedougall, Quinn, Feutz, Gar-mong, and Hannum were negligent and that the sediment runoff constituted a nuisance and a trespass. In October 2008, the trial court granted the motion of Han-num and Garmong to join in the prior motions for summary judgment. On November 13, 2008, the trial court granted all the defendants' motions for summary judgment. In its order granting summary judgment, the trial court stated: "In reaching this conclusion, the Court finds the Plaintiffs have no cause of action because of the common enemy doctrine of water diversion." Id. at 15. The trial court also stated: "Further, there is no genuine issue of material fact that the mechanism that cast the mud upon Plaintiff's property was surface water and not a natural water course." Id. Additional facts are supplied as necessary.
The sole issue is whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to IVC/Contractors. Our standard of review for a trial court's grant of a motion for summary judgment is well settled. Summary judgment is appropriate only where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 5b6(c), Mangold ex rel. Mangold v. Ind. Dep't of Natural Res.,
The Longs argue that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment to IVC/Contractors. Specifically, the Longs argue that the trial court erred by finding that the common enemy doctrine applies because: (A) the mechanism that cast mud upon the Longs' property was surface water and not a natural watercourse; and (B) the water contained mud, silt, and sediment.
Water classified as surface water is governed by the common enemy doctrine. Argyelan v. Haviland,
In its most simplistic and pure form the rule known as the "common enemy doe-trine," declares that surface water which does not flow in defined channels is a common enemy and that each landowner may deal with it in such manner as best suits his own convenience. Such sanctioned dealings include walling it out, walling it in and diverting or accelerating its flow by any means whatever.
Argyelan,
If the water here is characterized as surface water, then the common enemy rule may apply to preclude the Longs claims for damages caused by rainwater runoff from the IVC parcel. See Trow-bridge,
A. Surface Water or Watercourse
We first address the trial court's finding that there is no genuine issue of material fact that the mechanism that cast mud upon the Longs' property was surface
This court has observed that "surface water" is defined as follows:
As distinguished from the waters of a natural stream, lake, or pond, surface waters are such as diffuse themselves over the surface of the ground, following no defined course or channel, and not gathering into or forming any more definite body of water than a mere bog or marsh. They generally originate in rains and melting snows, but the flood waters of a river may also be considered as surface waters if they become separated from the main current, or leave it never to return, and spread out over lower ground. Water derived from rains and melting snows that is diffused over surface of the ground [is surface water], and it continues to be such and may be impounded by the owner of the land until it reaches some well-defined channel in which it is accustomed to, and does, flow with other waters, or until it reaches some permanent lake or pond, whereupon it ceases to be "surface water" and becomes a "water course" or a "lake" or "pond," as the case may be.
Id. (quoting Buack's Law Dictionary 1427 (5th ed.1979)) (emphasis in original omitted). Surface water has also been defined simply as "water which is diffused over the natural slope of the ground, not following a defined course or channel." Id. (quoting Gasway,
A natural watercourse is established when "surface water begins to flow in a definite direction and there is a regular channel formed with well defined banks and bottom and water flows therein, not necessarily continually but from time immemorial and for a substantial period of each year." Lowe v. Loge Realty Co.,
Here, the Longs' designated evidence includes affidavits and portions of deposition testimony of David Long, Connie Long, Rick Murphy, William Beverly, and Dale Walker, along with other evidence. In his affidavit, David Long stated that
In his affidavit and deposition testimony, Rick Murphy, a project supervisor for MacDougall, testified that rain falling on the IVC parcel drained into shallow open ditches which would carry the rainwater to a collection point located at the southeast corner of IVC's parcel. Murphy testified that before, during, and after construction of the facility on IVC's property, water which accumulated at the collection point "then flowed via a culvert in an easterly direction under County Road N. $00 E. and then into one of the ponds on [the Longs'] property." Id. at 298. Murphy also testified that the water followed this path during heavy rains. When asked if the water from the culvert under County Road N. 300 E. "flowed through a low place or ditch or water course, into Mr. Long's pond," William Beverly, the general manager of IVC in Brazil, Indiana, responded: "I would say it probably could have. There was a low-where that culvert is ... is a pretty low spot to start with." Id. at 176. Dale Walker also testified during his deposition that water from the collection point goes through a culvert under County Road N. 300 E. and then down "the old railroad grade down to where it crossed under another culvert onto Long's [property]." Id. at 216.
Construing the facts and reasonable inferences drawn from the designated facts in the Long's favor, we cannot say that a jury could not conclude that the rainwater which accumulated at the collection point on the IVC property (or in the ditches that guided the rainwater to the collection point) began "to flow in a definite direction" with "unity, regularity, and dependability" and therefore constituted a watercourse. See Lowe,
B. Water Containing Mud
The Longs also argue that the common enemy doctrine does not apply because the water contained mud, silt, and sediment. In its order granting summary judgment, the trial court cited our decision in Pickett v. Brown,
We acknowledge that the Pickeft decision makes reference to the "flow of water and mud" in the facts of that case. Id. at 707. However, Pickett did not directly address whether the fact that mud along with water flowed onto the plaintiff's property affected the application of the common enemy doctrine. Id. at 707-708. A careful reading of Pickett reveals that it does not stand for the proposition that a landowner may discharge any amount or quantity of mud, silt, or sedimentary material onto a neighboring property without liability. We also note that the common enemy doctrine applies only to surface water. See Trowbridge,
Construing the facts and reasonable inferences drawn from the facts in the Longs' favor, we cannot say that a jury could not determine that the discharge here, with its large content of mud, silt, and sedimentary material, ceased to be mere surface water. From the designated facts, a jury could conclude: that a large mound of surplus dirt was left on the IVC property; that for approximately one year erosion occurred which resulted in extensive amounts of mud, silt, and sedimentary material draining to a collection point, through ditches, culverts, and ravines and into the Longs' two ponds; that IVC/Contractors took no or few steps to prevent the flow of mud, silt, or sedimentary material with water as evidenced by its repeated violations of "Rule 5;" and that a very large flow of mud or sedimentary material was deposited into the Longs' ponds causing one of the ponds to fill approximately ten feet at its lowest elevation and the other pond to fill approximately seven feet at its lowest elevation. See, eg., Wells v. State Highway Comm'n,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment to IVC/Contractors and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded. 5
Notes
. "Rule 5" generally governs storm water run-off associated with construction activity. See 327 Ind. Admin. Code 15-5.
. IVC argues that the water here must be surface water because it "was diffused over the surface then into ditches or, some cases, over County Road 300 East." IVC's Brief at
. In support of its argument that the water at issue is surface water, IVC obsérved that the "ditches did not have water continuously flowing into them, but rather carried only rainwater runoff and were only wet during periods of rain." IVC's Brief at 10. However, as we point out above, a constant water flow is not necessary. Trowbridge,
. The Longs also argue that the mud contained in the water here constituted a pollutant and thus the common enemy doctrine does not apply. The Longs assert that "Since mud was not a point of contention [in Pickett ], and since it was not discussed and had no effect on the Court's decision, the case is not authority for the proposition that the common enemy rule protects pollutants, such as mud, or that mud cannot be a pollutant." See Appellant's Reply Brief at 4. However, we note that a determination of whether mud constitutes a pollutant is not necessary to avoid application of the common enemy doctrine. To avoid application of the doctrine, it is necessary to show only that the water at issue is not surface water. See Trowbridge,
. The Longs also argue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to IVC/Contractors on the basis that the Longs are non-riparian owners. However, because we reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment on other grounds, we need not address whether the Longs are non-riparian owners. Moreover, we note that resolution of this issue may be affected by the fact-finder's determination of whether the water containing mud, silt, and sedimentary material at issue in this case constituted mere surface water.
