MEMORANDUM OPINION
In a five-count Complaint sounding in common-law negligence, trespass, nuisance, and strict liability, the Plaintiff National Telephone Cooperative Association (“NTCA”) seeks compensatory and punitive damages from Defendant Exxon Corporation (“Exxon”) for gasoline contamination that allegedly has migrated from Exxon’s underground storage tanks to NTCA’s adjacent property. Pending before the Court are Exxon’s Motion for Summary Judgment, NTCA’s Opposition thereto, and Exxon’s Reply. After carefully reviewing the voluminous exhibits, deposition testimony, and controlling law, the Court grants in part and denies in part Exxon’s motion. The Court enters judgment in favor of Exxon on Count II (strict liability), Count III (trespass), Count IV (private nuisance), and Count V (public nuisance). Furthermore, the Court enters judgment in favor of Exxon with respect to Count I’s claim of negligent maintenance and operation. The Court, however, denies summary judgment with respect to Count I’s negligent- *4 remediation claim. Moreover, the-Court holds that NTCA may pursue its economic-damages claims without proof of physical harm to its property, and finds that there exist genuine issues of material fact that preclude summary judgment on NTCA’s prayer for punitive damages.
I. BACKGROUND
Although the parties have thoroughly chronicled all relevant events that span the past few decades, the salient facts necessary to resolve the pending Motion for Summary Judgment may be briefly summarized. Exxon and its predecessors have owned a gasoline service station at 2600 Pennsylvania Avenues, N.W. since the .early 1920s. See Answer ¶ 10; Def.’s Motion fdr Summ.J. (“Def.’s MSJ”) at Ex. 3 (Standard Oil Co., Plat of Service Station, May 1927). Since at least 1953, Exxon has warehoused its gasoline and other petroleum products in underground storage tanks (“USTs”). See Pl.’s Opp’n at Ex.3 (1953 permit to install tanks). Then in February 1971, Exxon installed five new steel USTs. See id. at Ex. 2 (building inspector report). Despite adding these new USTs, Exxon elected not to remove the tanks that it had installed in 1953. See id. at Ex. 6 (Dep. of Yeh at 107-09). In the years that have elapsed, Exxon’s USTs have periodically suffered leaks that have released gasoline into the Exxon property. See id. at Ex. 7 (Dep. of Campbell at 144-46); Def.’s MSJ at 3-4 (admitting that its USTs leaked in 1985 and 1990).
NTCA’s property is located adjacent to the Exxon station. 1 On March 13, 1990, NTCA’s building manager, Theil “Butch” Jackson, witnessed, what an Exxon engineer later described as, “a black waste-oil like substance” leaking through the below-grade basement wall of the NTCA building that abuts the Exxon station. See PL’s’ Opp’n at Ex. 11 (Dep. of Rhodes). When notified of this, Exxon dispatched a company with which it contracts, Handex of Maryland, Inc. (“Handex”), to assess the damage. See Def.’s MSJ at Ex.20 (Dep. of Otwell at 26); id. at Ex. 21 (letter from Handex to NTCA, Apr. 10, 1990). Exxon ultimately decided to repair the NTCA wall at its own cost. Between April 11 and April 16, 1990, Structural Preservation Systems repaired the wall. See PL’s Opp’n at Ex. 17 (Dep. of Kraus at Ex.4). On August 15, 1990, Handex employees “removed [the remaining] oil stain from adjacent building.” PL’s Opp’n at Ex. 20 (Bates HAN 4523).
Approximately five years later, black material again began to leak through the NTCA wall. See PL’s Opp’n at Ex. 36 (Dep. of Jackson at 84-87). During this interim period, NTCA’s building manager has testified that nothing “caused [him] to question whether or not the problem was repaired.” Id. at Ex. 36 (Dep. of Jackson at 88).
Shortly before this incident, NTCA had decided to sell its building and retreat to the Virginia suburbs. See PL’s Opp’n at Ex. 18 (Dep. of Fairhead at 13). Despite overtures from several potential buyers, NTCA maintains that' the gasoline that allegedly continues to migrate from the Exxon station onto its property has diminished its market value. Recently, however, the NTCA property was placed under contract to be sold for $6.6 million despite the present environmental problems. See Def.’s MSJ at Ex. 28 (purchase agreement, Aug. 13, 1998). This figure exceeds the value at which NTCA’s own expert appraised the property in its uncontaminated state. See id. at Ex. 29 (Chaney & Associates’ Limited Appraisal, Update Report, Aug. 24,1998).
II. Disoussion
A. The Standard for Evaluating Motions for Summary Judgment.
A party is entitled to summary judgment if the pleadings, depositions, answers
*5
to interrogatories, and affidavits demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact in dispute and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.CivP. 56(c);
Tao v. Freeh,
B. NTCA’s Claims Are Timely Pursuant to the Continuing-Tort Doctrine
Exxon initially moves to dismiss NTCA’s Complaint in its entirety based on the District of Columbia’s statute of limitations. Although a plaintiff normally must bring suit within three years to recover damages for real-property injuries, see D.C.Code § 12-301(3), District of Columbia law has enlarged the statute of limitations to five years when toxic substances precipitate the injury, see id. § 12-301(10). Moreover, section 12-310(10) explicitly incorporates elements of the common-law discovery rule. Specifically, it provides that the action must be brought within “5 years from the date the injury is discovered or with reasonable diligence should have been discovered.” Id.
Here, NTCA clearly recognized that Exxon’s contaminated property had injured its own land in 1990 when its building manager first noticed a stain on the basement wall adjacent to the gasoline station. While not quibbling over this, NTCA argues that the venerable common-law continuing-tort theory insulates its Complaint from Exxon’s summary-judgment motion. As this Circuit has conceptualized the doctrine’s contours in the District of Columbia: “Under District of Columbia law, a plaintiff establishes a continuing tort by showing ‘(1) a continuous and repetitious wrong, (2) with damages flowing from the act as a whole rather than from each individual act, and (3) at least one injurious act within the limitation period.’ ”
Whelan v. Abell,
While cognizant of the continuing-tort doctrine, Exxon maintains that D.C.Code § 12-301(10) abrogates this well-recognized exception to the statute of limitations. As Exxon has framed the issue: “The question before this Court is one of first impression: whether the continuing tort doctrine is applicable to claims brought under Section 12-301(10).” Def.’s Reply at 8. According to Exxon, by specifically incorporating a portion of the discovery rule and extending the typical limitations period from three to five years, the D.C. legislature sought to vitiate the continuing-tort doctrine of any application to these types of damage actions. Based on subsection 10’s unique formulation, Exxon distinguishes East 56th St. because there the court applied the continuing-tort doctrine under the general three-year provision of section 12-301(3).
Exxon’s entreaty to abrogate the continuing-tort doctrine in certain toxic-tort actions fails because it is not manifestly clear that the legislature intended that , precise result. In the District of Columbia, courts will not interpret statutes to derogate the common law unless the legislature expressly repeals or modifies the particular element of the common law.
See United States v. Jackson,
It has been said that statutes are not presumed to make any alterations in the common law further than is expressly declared, and that a statute, made in the affirmative without any negative expressed or implied, does not take away the common law. The rules of the common law are not to be changed by doubtful implication, nor overturned except by clear and unambiguous language.
Richwind Joint Venture 4 v. Brunson,
C. Strict Liability
NTCA purports to hold Exxon strictly liable for the damages that it has incurred. Arguing that neither the Restatement (Second) of ToRts §§ 519-520 nor the case law that has developed around those provisions establishes a basis for strict liability, Exxon moves for judgment on this count of the Complaint. Although NTCA addresses the
Restatement
factors, it maintains that the ninety-one-year-old decision of
Brennan Construction Co. v. Cumberland,
The first issue to resolve is the extent to which
Brennan Construction
governs NTCA’s strict-liability claim. In doing so, the Court is mindful that its subject-matter jurisdiction rests on diversity, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), and that the substantive law of the District of Columbia therefore applies.
See Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
[e]ven if, in the considered judgment of the federal court or that of the courts of other states, the rule of law that was announced by the forum state’s highest court is anomalous, antiquated, or sim *7 ply unwise, it must be followed by the federal court nonetheless, unless there are very persuasive grounds for believing that the state’s highest court no longer would adhere to the previously announced principle.
ChaRles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction 2d § 4507, at 141-47 (citations omitted). Of course, where a decision of the forum state’s highest court is distinguishable, it may be instructive, but certainly not dispositive.
Without deciding the modern vitality of
Brennan Construction,
the Court concludes that it is easily distinguishable from the case at bar. There, the defendant “constructed, almost over the bed of the [Potomac River], two large tanks, and stored therein some 14,000 gallons of petroleum residuum, and permitted a considerable quantity to escape to the river, remain thereon for weeks, and injure innocent persons.”
Brennan Constr.,
Although the court applied the strict-liability rule that the English courts first articulated in
Fletcher v. Rylands,
L.R. 1 Exch. 265, it did not establish a universal rule from which one might infer that liability without fault will attach to anyone who stores petroleum products. Rather it carefully noted that its decision was made “[u]nder the circumstances of this case.”
Brennan Constr.,
By contrast to the reckless actions of the defendant in Brennan Construction, Exxon housed it gasoline products in storage tanks buried beneath the ground. The tanks are not located near any potable-water supply, nor are they situated in such a manner that they will likely wrought a public nuisance'. Moreover, unlike the Brennan Construction defendant’s ill-conforming use of its property, the USTs on Exxon’s property rest within a commercial area of the city in which eleven other gasoline stations operate. Accordingly, based on the significant contextual differences between Brennan Construction and the case at bar, that 1907 decision does not *8 provide a basis upon which NTCA may hold Exxon strictly liable for operating USTs.
Turning to strict liability for abnormally dangerous activities under the Restatement (Second) of ToRts §§ 519-20, the Court first observes that it is “a doctrine not yet explicitly adopted in the District of Columbia.”
Delahanty v. Hinckley,
Section 519 of the Restatement sets forth the general principle upon which courts have held defendants liable regardless of fault: “One who carries on an abnormally dangerous activity is subject to liability for harm to the person, land or chattels of another resulting from the activity, although he has exercised the utmost care to prevent the harm.” Restatement, supra, § 519(1). To determine whether a defendant’s actions constitute “abnormally dangerous activities,” the Restatement' enumerates six factors for courts to consider:
(a) existence of a high degree of risk of some harm to the person, land or chattels of others;
(b) likelihood that the harm that results from it will be great;
(c) inability to eliminate the risk by the exercise of reasonable care;
(d) extent to which the activity is not a matter of common usage;
(e) inappropriateness of the activity to the place where it is carried on; and
(f) extent to which its value to the community is outweighed by its dangerous attributes.
Id. § 520.
Where USTs are buried beneath gasoline stations located in commercial settings, the overwhelming majority of courts have concluded that such conduct is not “abnormally dangerous.”
See, e.g., Arlington Forest Assocs. v. Exxon Corp.,
Nothing in
Yommer v. McKenzie,
D. Negligence
1. Negligent storage/operation of USTs
Exxon moves for judgment on Count I’s claim for negligent storage and operation of USTs because NTCA failed to designate an expert witness to establish the applicable standard of care. Although NTCA has designated an expert for its negligent-remediation claim, it does not dispute that it lacks an expert witness for this portion of its negligence claim. NTCA asserts, however, that it need not designate an expert witness in order to establish the standard of care for storing and operating USTs.
In the District of Columbia, “[t]he plaintiff in a negligence action bears the burden of proof on three issues: the applicable standard of care, a deviation from that standard by the defendant, and a causal relationship between that deviation and the plaintiffs injury.”
Toy v. District of Columbia,
While expert testimony regarding the appropriate standard of care is not necessary for acts “within the realm of common knowledge and everyday experience,” District of Columbia v. White,442 A.2d 159 , 164 (D.C.1982), “[a] plaintiff must put on expert testimony to establish what that standard of care is if the subject in question is so distinctly related to some science, profession or occupation as to be beyond the ken of the average person.” District of Columbia v. Peters,527 A.2d 1269 , 1273 (D.C.1987) (citations omitted).
Messina v. District of Columbia,
The Court has little difficulty concluding that expert testimony is essential to establish the standard of care for NTCA’s first negligence claim. Numerous technical issues that remain far “beyond the ken of the average layperson” - abound' in this case. Questions regarding the removal and installation of USTs, the materials from which they should be constructed to prevent leaks, how frequently they should be tested for leaks, and where they should be placed — not to mention the more fundamental issue of how they even operate— are “so distinctly related to some science, profession or occupation as to be beyond the ken of the average layperson.”
Peters,
NTCA identifies two factors that it, somewhat incredibly, believes renders Exxon’s putative negligence a “matter of common sense or everyday knowledge.” PL’s Opp’n at 37. According to the plaintiff, “[t]hat Exxon deviated from the standard of care in installing and operating the USTs at its property is evidenced by its admitted failure to remove the old tanks and by its admitted contamination of NTCA’s property.” Id. Both factors underscore NTCA’s misconception of the law of negligence. With respect to Exxon’s failure to remove old tanks, NTCA assumes that it is within the ken of the average layperson to recognize when old USTs should be removed. An expert witness is necessary to illuminate the frequency with which USTs should be replaced, and whether old USTs must invariably be removed whenever a gasoline station elects to install additional USTs. Such knowledge is too specialized and beyond the ken of the average layperson. With respect to Exxon’s admitted contamination of NTCA’s property, NTCA essentially transforms its negligence claim into one for strict liability. While all might agree that proper operation and use of USTs does not “typically” result in “massive contamination in and around the property on which the system is located,” Pl.’s Opp’n at 37, it is an impermissible stretch to conclude that Exxon, ipso fac-to, was negligent. NTCA shoulders the burden of eliciting testimony from an expert witness on what measures actually constitute “proper operation and use” of USTs in order to permit the jury to determine whether Exxon, in fact, deviated from the governing standard of care. 3
NTCA suggests that it should be permitted to present its negligence claim to the jury despite its failure to marshal expert testimony regarding the applicable standard of care because Exxon deviated from its own internal policy documents. Not only does NTCA neglect to cite any cases to support this argument, but the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has indicated that “when the standard of care turns on matters too technical for the average layperson, expert testimony [is] essential.”
Moreno,
Moreover, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has held that although an employer’s internal rules are admissible and offer “some indication of the care required under the circumstances,” they are “not conclusive” evidence of the standard of care.
Garrison v. D.C. Transit Sys., Inc.,
2. Negligent Remediation
Unlike its other negligence claim, NTCA has designated an expert witness to testify about Exxon’s allegedly negligent remediation. Kent Campbell, NTCA’s expert, “is an environmental geologist who is an expert in investigating and remediating environmental contamination, especially from USTs.” Pl.’s Opp’n at 3 n. 2. Exxon does not attack Campbell’s credentials, but asserts that because he “admitted at his deposition that he had not considered the appropriate design of a system to sufficiently remediate the Exxon Property,” NTCA cannot establish the standard of care for remediation. Def.’s MSJ at 25. Exxon’s motion for judgment on this claim is unfounded. First, there is simply no requirement that the plaintiffs expert witness design a superior system to the one that the defendant employed. It is enough that the plaintiffs expert can identify the elements of a remediation system that render it reasonable. This NTCA has done. Campbell testified during his deposition that “Exxon should have employed some more aggressive form of ground water collection to ensure that they could get the hydraulic control that they desired. I don’t have enough data and there haven’t been engineering studies that are in the record to show me whether or not what [sic] technique would be most applicable for doing that.” Pl.’s Opp’n at Ex. 7 (Dep. of Campbell at 522). Moreover, in July of 1995, Handex executed a pilot test that proved that the “soil vapor extraction” system (“SVE”) could remove forty pounds of petroleum per day. See Pl.’s Opp’n at Ex. 30 (Letter from Kathleen M. Wehnes, Handex Senior Hydrologist to Melissa P. Otwell, Exxon Company, Sept. 11, 1995). Despite the seeming success of the SVE system, Exxon elected not to implement it despite the admission of its own in-house engineer that “there [was no] advantage to keeping the SVE system off-line while the other options [were] considered.” Pi’s Opp’n at Ex. 33 (Dep. of Otwell at 84). Whether Campbell convincingly establishes the applicable standard of care remains a question of fact for a jury to resolve. Accordingly, Exxon’s motion for summary judgment as to NTCA’s negligent-remediation claim shall be denied.
*12 E. Trespass
In the District of Columbia, trespass has been defined as “an invasion of the interest in the exclusive possession of land.”
Carrigan v. Purkhiser,
While liability for trespass does not depend on a defendant’s specific intent to invade unlawfully the property of another, “[w]hat is required, however, is volition,
i.e.,
a conscious intent to do the act that constitutes the entry upon someone else’s real or personal property. An involuntary entry onto another’s property is not a trespass.”
Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. Flippo,
More recently, a Maryland court of appeals cited and discussed approvingly a Maryland district court decision that sets forth the modern conception of intent in trespass. See
Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co.,
As leading commentators have summarized, an intentional trespass occurs in “situations where the defendant intended to be where he was but did not intend the harmful consequences of his action. The point is that the defendant intended the intrusion.” ProsseR & KeetoN,
supra,
at 73. When conceptualized properly, it becomes clear that “one who innocently enters upon someone else’s property without intending to trespass and under the mistaken belief that he or she is entitled or authorized to enter is nevertheless a trespasser.”
Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v. Flippo,
Here, the act that Exxon volition-ally intended was to place USTs beneath its property. That act did not result in a trespass. Moreover, with NTCA’s claim for negligent storage and operation of USTs dismissed,
see supra
Subsection II. D.l, there is no basis to hold Exxon liable for negligent trespass; nor is there any indication in the record or the case law that contamination is “the immediate or inevitable consequence of’ simply using USTs.
See Phillips,
F. Nuisance
NTCA’s claims for public and private nuisance are the easiest to dispose of. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has adopted the
Restatement
’s formulation of nuisance. “A public nuisance is an unreasonable interference with a right common to the. general public.”
B & W Management, Inc. v. Tasea Inv. Co.,
In contrast to its public analog, “a private nuisance is a substantial and unreasonable interference with private use and enjoyment of one’s land.” Id. at 882 (quoting Restatement, supra, § 821D). Because the interference must impinge on the plaintiffs “use and enjoyment” of his land, private nuisance is proper when the defendant interferes with “the physical condition of the land, disturb[s] the comfort of its occupants, or threaten[s] future injury or disturbance.” Id.
Diminution of market value alone, buttressed by no accompanying personal or property damage, does not constitute an unreasonable interference with the “use and enjoyment”' of the land. Interestingly, in a case upon which NTCA relies,
Exxon Corp. v. Yarema,
G. Economic Damages
Exxon argues that economic damages are not recoverable in tort when unaccompanied by physical harm to property or persons. The great bulk of cases upon which Exxon relies, however, concern cases in which the parties’ disputes arose out of a commercial transaction.
See Potomac Plaza Terraces, Inc. v. QSC Prods., Inc.,
(1) to maintain the fundamental distinction between tort law and contract law; (2) to protect commercial parties’ freedom to allocate economic risk by contract; and (3) to encourage the party best situated to assess the risk of economic loss, the commercial purchaser, to assume, allocate, and insure against the risk.
Daanen & Janssen, Inc. v. Cedarapids, Inc.,
In its Reply brief, Exxon identifies several additional cases in which courts have barred claims of pure economic injury even in the absence of a commercial setting.
See In Re Wildewood Litig.,
The substantive law of trespass similarly underscores why simple diminution of market value will not suffice. A defendant is hable in trespass for any intentional invasion of the plaintiffs property. Under the common law, any invasion — regardless of how insignificant — constituted a trespass and entitled the plaintiff to nominal damages.
See
PeosseR
&
Keeton,
supra,
at 70 (“Any physical entry upon the surface of the land is a trespass, whether the entry is a walking upon it, flooding it with water, Casting objects upon it, or otherwise.”). Courts • pragmatically modified this common-law principle as an increasing number of trespass claims were brought based on invisible, microscopic invasions of toxins or contaminants. In response, the courts fashioned a rule that required a plaintiff to prove actual harm to the property in order to prevail on a claim for trespass based on invisible particulate deposits. Thus, the tort of trespass, when based on the invasion of gases or microscopic particles, has assumed similar dimensions of nuisance law by requiring an actual showing of harm or interference with land.
See Satterfield,
The lone claim that has survived Exxon’s Motion for Summary Judgment is Count I’s negligent-remediation claim; NTCA has no pending cause of action for trespass or nuisance.
See supra
Subsections II.D.2; II.E; II.F. Negligence, unlike trespass or nuisance, boasts no inherent requirement that a plaintiff prove
*16
actual physical harm. It is perhaps for this reason that the Maryland Court of Special Appeals has permitted plaintiffs to recover for purely economic injuries without physical impact under negligence.
See Yarema,
As already discussed in Subsection II. D.l, a person is liable to another in negligence only if it can be shown that “(1) the defendant owed a duty of care to the plaintiff, (2) the defendant breached that duty, and (3) the breach of duty proximately caused damage to the plaintiff.”
See Powell v. District of Columbia,
[wjoven into this overall consideration is also the question of reasonable foreseeable risk to be perceived by the actor at the time of the incident. Stated another way, we must ask “whether the injury to that individual [to whom a duty was owed] was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant.”
Haynesworth v. D.H. Stevens Co.,
G. Punitive Damages
“The purpose of punitive damages is to punish a person for outrageous conduct which is wanton, reckless, or in willful disregard for another’s rights.”
United Mine Workers of Am. v. Moore,
The Court pauses to indicate that the result might have been different had Exxon framed the issue slightly differently. In the District of Columbia, “proof by clear and convincing evidence must be shown in order to receive an award of punitive damages.”
Jonathan Woodner Co. v. Breeden,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Exxon’s Motion for Summary Judgment shall be granted in part and denied in part. Judgment shall be entered in favor of Exxon on Count II (strict liability), Count III (trespass), Count TV (private nuisance), and Count V (public nuisance). Moreover, judgment shall be entered in favor of Exxon on Count I’s claim for negligent operation and use of USTs. Its motion shall be denied with respect to Count I’s claim for negligent remediation and NTCA’s entitlement to economic and punitive damages. An Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
ORDER
For the reasons expressed in the accompanying Memorandum Opinion, it is, this 18 day of November 1998, hereby
ORDERED that Defendant Exxon Corporation’s Motion for Summary Judgment shall be, and hereby is, GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that JUDGMENT shall be entered in favor of Defendant Exxon Corporation on Count I (negligent use and operation of underground storage tanks (USTs)), Count II (strict liability), Count III (trespass), Count IV (private nuisance), and Count V (public nuisance); and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant Exxon Corporation’s Motion for Summary Judgment shall be, and hereby is, DENIED with respect to Count I (negligent remediation); and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant Exxon Corporation’s Motion for Summary Judgment shall be, and hereby is, DENIED with respect to Plaintiff National Telephone Cooperative Association’s claim for diminution-in-market-value damages and punitive damages.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Before NTCA took title to the land in 1975, a gasoline station called "Snappy Service Station" operated on the property that now houses the NTCA building. See Def.’s MSJ at Ex. 14 (telephone directories from 1956, 1960, 1973).
. It also is worth noting that in a recent opinion, the Maryland Court of Appeals tacitly recognized the limited reach of
Yommer.
In
JBG/Twinbrook Metro Ltd. Partnership v. Wheeler,
. At times, NTCA flirts with a
res ipsa loquitur
theory to establish Exxon's negligence. Nevertheless, NTCA never uses the phrase
res ipsa loquitur ■
nor does it address the three elements necessary to establish
res ipsa
liability. "Before
res ipsa loquitur
can be held to apply to a happening or accident, however, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) an event would not ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence; (2) the event was caused by an instrumentality in defendant’s exclusive control; and (3) there was no voluntary action or contribution on plaintiff's part.”
Bunn v. Urban Shelters Health Care Sys., Inc.,
. Interestingly, NTCA’s counsel rhetorically asks whether "[i]f, in the process of felling a tree on her property, my neighbor causes damages to my roof, is her liability dependent upon her specific intent to have the tree fall upon my roof or merely her general intent to cut the tree?” Pl.’s Opp’n at 39. The answer actually is neither, and without more information, a court would dismiss a complaint alleging only that the neighbor cut the tree. Presumably, NTCA’s counsel harkens back to the quaint case of
Newsom v. Anderson,
