Plаintiffs Gerald and Nellie Smith have appealed from a judgment of the Summit County Common Pleas Court that dismissed their case against defendants Summit County and Gene Esser, the Summit County Engineer. Plaintiffs have argued that the trial court incorrectly held that they could not maintain a mandamus action to require the county to institute eminent domain proсeedings for depriving them of ground water flow under their land. 1 This court affirms the judgment of the trial court because interruption of the flow of ground water is not a taking for which appropriation proceedings must be instituted.
I
Plaintiffs own a house in Franklin Township. During June 1994, the county started construction work on the road running in front of plaintiffs’ house. Aсcording to plaintiffs, the work continued through the summer of 1995. Also according to plaintiffs, the county’s construction work deprived them of ground water flow to a pond on their property. Apparently, the ground water that fed the pond was either diverted or destroyed by the county’s work.
On December 23, 1996, plaintiffs filed a complaint in the Summit County Common Pleas Court, alleging “negligence and appropriation.” On January 6, 1997, the trial court dismissed that action and instructed plaintiffs to file their claim in the probate court. Plaintiffs filed an action in that court, but the probate court dismissed it for lack of jurisdiction. On April 24, 1997, plaintiffs filed this mandamus action in the Summit County Common Pleas Court. They asked the trial court to compel the county to begin appropriation proceedings for deprivation of ground water flow.
On September 23, 1997, the county moved the trial court for judgment on the pleadings. On February 27, 1998, the trial court granted that motion, ruling that an action for appropriation, pursuant to R.C. Chapter 163, applies only to real property and that ground water is not a part of the land subject to appropriation. Consequently, according to the trial court, plaintiffs had no legal right to appropriation proceedings. Plaintiffs timely appealed to this court.
*38 II
. Plaintiffs’ assignment of error is that thе trial court incorrectly found that they could not maintain a mandamus action to require the county to institute eminent domain proceedings for depriving them of ground water flow under their land. They have argued that governmental takings are not limited to estates of title, but may involve any interest in real property. They have рointed to cases in which courts have found a taking to have occurred when, among other things, riparian rights were disrupted or land was flooded. From these cases, plaintiffs have asked this court to reverse the trial court’s ruling and to order that their complaint be addressed on the merits.
When a trial court considers а defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, the plaintiff, against whom the motion is filed, is entitled to have all the material allegations in the complaint, with all reasonable inferences drawn, construed in his or her favor.
Lin v. Gatehouse Constr. Co.
(1992),
Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus to compel the county to institute appropriation proceedings to compensate them for the alleged taking of ground water flow under their land. Mandamus is appropriate when a plaintiff proves that he has a clear legal right to the relief requested, the defendant is under a clear legal duty to perform the requested act, and the plaintiff has no plain and adequate remedy at law.
State ex rel. Westchester Estates, Inc. v. Bacon
(1980),
In their brief to this court, plaintiffs have claimed that the county’s work caused water and debris to run into the pond in front of their house, making it unfit for fish and wildlife. According to рlaintiffs, the county’s actions also caused the level of the water in the pond to decrease, apparently due to the alleged diversion of the flow of ground water to the pond. Plaintiffs’ complaint, however, did not include a claim that the county had caused debris to enter their pond; instead, it alleged оnly that the county had deprived them of “the flow of underground waters to the pond located on their property.” This court will not, therefore, address those claims raised for the first time in plaintiffs’ brief to this' court, that is, that the county caused water and debris to run into their pond. Instead, this court will determine only whether the county should have been *39 required to institute appropriation proceedings, pursuant to R.C. Chapter 163, to compensate plaintiffs for the alleged deprivation of ground water flow under their land.
Section 19, Article I of the Ohio Constitution provides that, whenever private property is taken for a public purpose, its ownеr is entitled to compensation.
J.P. Sand & Gravel Co. v. State
(1976),
A
“Ancient law gave no special consideration to ground water, treating all water like the air, the sea, and wild animals, as the property of no one or the property of everyone.”
Tequesta v. Jupiter Inlet Corp.
(Fla.1979),
*40
Important for this case, however, is that in both
Frazier
and Cline, the Ohio Supreme Court еspoused rules of use, rather than rules of title.
Wood v. Am. Aggregates Corp.
(1990),
The interest in the use of ground water in the Restatement is phrased in terms of nonliability, not title or property interests. See Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts (1979) 259, Section 858. In addition, it has been held that, as between competing users of ground water, landowners have no title interest in the ground water underlying their properties.
Wood, supra,
B
Plaintiffs have argued, in reliance upon
Mansfield v. Balliett
(1902),
Traditionally, ground water has been classified in one of two ways: as percolating water or as water that flows in well known or well defined channels. See
Frazier, supra,
“In a few cases the сourts have held that a particular body of ground water constitutes an ‘underground stream’ and have allocated the water to overlying owners as if it were a surface stream. There is little scientific basis for distinguishing an underground stream from any other aquifer * * * and Section 858 gives a modern basis for making an apportionment or аllocation of ground *42 water without resort to unscientific fictions.” Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts (1979) 190, Section 841.
Contrary to plaintiffs’ suggestions that they possessed riparian rights in the ground water feeding their pond, no such rights existed. The county, therefore, cannot be made to institute appropriation proceedings based оn that theory.
C
Plaintiffs have also relied upon
Lucas v. Carney
(1958),
“If the land, ‘in its corporeal substancе and entity,’ is property, still, all that makes this property of any value is the aggregation of rights or qualities which the law annexes as incidents to the ownership of it. The constitutional prohibition must have been intended to protect all the essential elements of ownership which make property valuable. Among these elements is, fundamentally, the right of user, including, of course, the corresponding right of excluding others from the use. A physical interference with the land, which substantially abridges this right, takes the owner’s property to just so great an extent as he is thereby deprived of his right. To deprive one of the use of his land is depriving him of his land; and the private injury is thereby as completely effected as if the land itself were physically taken away. Accordingly it has been held that any use of land for a public purpose, which inflicts an injury upon adjacent land such as would have been actionable if caused by a private owner, is a taking within the meaning of the Constitution and cаn not be authorized by the Legislature without compensation.”
Id.
at 422-423,
In this case, unlike in Lucas, the county has not physically interfered with plaintiffs’ land. Nor have plaintiffs suffered a deprivation of any use of their land. Instead, they have claimed only a deprivation of ground water or, more accurately, deprivation of use of ground water. Lucas provides no support for their claims that a taking has occurred.
D
Similarly, the Ohio Supreme Court has held a taking to occur when low-flying aircraft disturb the use or enjoyment of land. See
State ex rel. Royal v.
*43
Columbus
(1965),
E
This court conсludes that the deprivation of a landowner’s interest in the use of ground water under his or her land does not constitute a taking pursuant to the Ohio Constitution. Therefore, the county was not obligated to institute eminent domain proceedings when its construction work, located off plaintiffs’ land, interfered with the flow of ground water under рlaintiffs’ land. Plaintiffs have not pointed to any authority that provides a landowner with any absolute rights of ownership in ground water. This court does not recognize any such rights. See
Chance v. BP Chemicals, Inc.
(1996),
Ill
Plaintiffs’ assignment of error is overruled. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. The Restatement has adopted the term "ground water” instead of "subterranean waters” or "underground water” to refer to those waters found below the surface of the earth. "The term is the one most frequently used by scientists and expert witnesses and is frequently found in modem cases and statutes.” Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts (1979) 199, Section 845. Accordingly, the term ground water will be used by this court to refer to the underground water that is the subject of this dispute.
. Plaintiffs have not invoked the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prohibits the taking of property without just compensation. This court's analysis will, therefore, be limited to a discussion of plaintiffs’ rights under the Ohio Constitution.
