676 N.E.2d 609 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1996
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *504 In their consolidated appeal the plaintiffs-appellants, Scott and Vicki Smith and Gregory J. Puthoff ("the property owners"), challenge the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants-appellees, the city of Cincinnati and its Stormwater Management Division ("the city"), and Hamilton County ("the county"), in an action for damages caused by stormwater flooding. The property owners contend that summary judgment was inappropriate because a question of fact existed with respect to whether the appellees were negligent in the construction, operation, and maintenance of the sewer in the area of flooding. For the reasons that follow, we hold that the trial court properly granted summary judgment for the city and the county. *505
In its written decision the trial court found that the allegations of the property owners' complaint were divisible into three categories:
(1) negligence in the design and construction of the sewer,1
(2) negligence in the maintenance, operation, and upkeep of the sewer, and
(3) negligence in the development, improvement, and expansion of the sewer.
With respect to the first category, the trial court ruled that the design and construction of a sewer were "governmental functions" within the language of R.C.
With respect to the second category, the trial court ruled that the maintenance, operation, and upkeep of a sewer were "proprietary functions" within the language of R.C.
Finally, with respect to the third category, the trial court concluded that the decision to make improvements to an existing sewer involves the exercise of judgment and discretion and is therefore a discretionary governmental function within the meaning of R.C.
"Area D-3
"* * * The general configuration of the valley produces a steep slope along the west bank (generally 2:1) and a flat slope to the east (1/2 "/foot). Erosion is evident along the west slopes, particularly at the exit of the 66" culvert as mentioned earlier. Due to the flat slope of the channel (less than 1%) and the restriction created by the entrance flume and culvert under Byrneside Avenue, a flat water surface level exists during flood conditions with the depths varying from 3.5' at the 66" culvert to 12' at the culvert under Byrneside Avenue.
"The City has responsibility for the run-off from the 66" culvert under Kipling Road, a substantial developed area north of Kipling Road and east from Shadymist Drive, and more than half of the stream itself between Kipling Road and Byrneside Avenue.
"* * *
"Item B — Area `B' 66" Culvert, etc.
"The area contributing to this culvert, the culvert itself, and areas downstream require careful consideration. In any attempt to correct or eliminate flooding south of this structure, attention must be given to the effects downstream, north of the structure. Analysis of the downstream channel and the structures therein indicate that all downstream facilities are at or near capacity. Therefore, any modifications of the 66" culvert should not substantially increase downstream *507 flows. The recommendations for correcting the flooding problem in this area require several modifications of the structure and the upstream channel.
"* * *
"Additionally, the City and/or County failed to properly control development of the area serviced by the 66" culvert under Kipling Road, the culverts north of Byrneside Avenue and the stream in between. As a result of overdevelopment and failure to properly regulate development, excessive use of these culverts and stream has placed demands upon them in excess of their capacity. These additional demands and increased flow have increased the amount of debris and other material which occasionally blocks the culverts, resulting in additional flooding and need for additional maintenance.
"* * *
"The City and/or County has failed to properly maintain these culverts, thereby causing additional flooding in this area."
Addressing this argument, we note initially that, by stressing factual issues, the property owners in a large measure overlook the essential legal issue, which is the appellees' amenability to suit as political subdivisions. The basis of the Auble affidavit is the "Storm Water Management Study" prepared for the city by Auble-Mitchell-Burgess Associates ("AMB"). The allegations of negligence set forth by Auble concern the city's and the county's alleged failure to implement its recommendations.2 Because the decision to implement the recommendations involves the exercise of discretion in matters concerning the use of public resources, however, the city and the county are immune from civil liability under R.C.
"The political subdivision is immune from liability if the * * * loss to persons or property resulted from the exercise of judgment or discretion in determining whether to acquire, or how to use, equipment, supplies, materials, personnel * * * and other resources unless the judgment or discretion was exercised with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in wanton or reckless manner."
We agree with and adopt the reasoning of the Ninth Appellate District in Duvall v. Akron (Nov. 6, 1991), Summit App. No. 15110, unreported, 1991 WL 231433, holding that the city's decision not to update a fifty-one-year-old sewer system that failed to meet current demands was an exercise of its "discretionary governmental functions" even in light of a history of flooding. As the court in Duvall stated: *508
"[The property owners] may be correct in asserting that the system altered fifty-one years ago is inadequate to meet the current residential demands and that pumps or a general update of the system are indicated. Nevertheless, these remedies lie within the discretionary governmental functions of Akron. Akron was immune from liability when it exercised its judgment fifty-one years ago and planned sewer construction calling for the sewer tie-in to be altered. Akron remains immune fromliability when it exercises its judgment in determining whetherto acquire equipment, such as pumps, and in determining how toallocate its limited financial resources, with regard to updatingthe sewer system." (Emphasis added.)
We conclude, therefore, that, to the extent that the property owners' allegation of negligence concerns the failure of the city and the county to implement AMB's recommendations, the city and the county were immune from civil liability, as a matter of law, given the lack of any evidence that they acted with a malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton and reckless manner.
Although the property owners included a claim for negligent design and construction, the city and county are also statutorily immune from civil liability under this theory. R.C.
Having thus excluded, as a matter of law, the property owners' claims based upon the city's alleged failure to implement the AMB recommendations, and for negligent design and construction, we are left with the question whether there is contained in the Auble affidavit sufficient evidence to create a triable issue as to whether the city or county negligently failed to properly maintain the sewer. Such a theory remains legally viable since, as the trial court noted, the appellees are amenable to suit for the negligence of their employees in the daily performance of activities involved in proprietary functions. R.C.
A review of the passages excerpted above makes it clear that the Auble affidavit contains allegations of design flaws and suggested modifications to alleviate further flooding. It is difficult to discern anywhere, however, that Auble identified specific acts of negligence in the day-to-day "maintenance" of the sewer so that it could be held that the sewer was in a state of negligent disrepair. *509 While he does suggest that either the city or the county, or both, was negligent in properly regulating the development of the area serviced by the culvert, he does so in a manner which, like the rest of the affidavit, is entirely conclusory. The city, on the other hand, presented evidence that it had required all upstream development located within its territorial limits to include detention facilities designed to release stormwater runoff into the creek at approximately the same rate as before the development was created.3 Furthermore, the Auble affidavit fails to provide any evidence that the object of his concerns proximately caused this particular flooding, which, as noted, was the result of a fifty-year storm.
We also reject the property owners' second issue, in which they argue that the city and the county were not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of sovereign immunity because the stormwater system was an "aqueduct" within the contemplation of R.C.
"Political subdivisions are liable for * * * loss to persons or property caused by their failure to keep * * * aqueducts * * * within the political subdivision open, in repair and free from nuisance * * *."
Other than to delineate this issue below, the appellants did not provide any evidence with respect to the culvert being, in fact, an aqueduct. On appeal they rely upon definitions contained in the Oxford and Webster dictionaries, describing an aqueduct as a water channel and "a conduit or artificial channel conducting water."
We hold that, as the nonmoving parties, the property owners failed to satisfy their reciprocal burden under Civ.R. 56.Mitseff v. Wheeler (1988),
The judgment of the trial court is, accordingly, affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
HILDEBRANDT, P.J., GORMAN and PAINTER, JJ., concur.