Appellant WRB Limited Partnership (Landowner) commenced this inverse condemnation action against respondent Lexington County (County) alleging that methane gas from County’s adjacent landfill contaminated Landowner’s property. 1 The trial judge granted County’s motion for summary judgment and Landowner appeals.
FACTS
The parties submitted affidavits indicating the following. Methane gas is produced as buried waste materials decay. It is a combustible and explosive gas that is hazardous in significant concentrations. To prevent the natural underground migration of methane to Landowner’s adjacent property, County took several actions required by the South Carolina Department of Environmental Control and the Environmental Protection Agency including capping the landfill, installing venting pipes, and digging a trench near the property line where a methane gas recovery system was installed.
Landowner’s expert opined that the migration of methane to Landowner’s property resulted from “the geo-synthetic cap *32 ping of [the landfill] in 2001 and the clay cap installed in 1990.” This capping diverted the vertical migration of methane and caused it to vent laterally onto Landowner’s property. County’s expert- summarily stated a contrary opinion that the capping “was not the cause of the methane gas migrating to [Landowner’s] property.”
The trial judge found that although there was a factual dispute regarding whether capping caused the migration of methane to Landowner’s property, the capping in any event was not “an affirmative, positive, aggressive act” and therefore did not support an action for inverse condemnation.
ISSUE
Is the capping of the landfill an affirmative, aggressive, and positive act to support an action for inverse condemnation?
DISCUSSION
In an action for inverse condemnation, the property owner is the moving party claiming an act of the sovereign has damaged his property to the extent of an actual taking, entitling him to compensation.
Cobb v. South Carolina Dep’t of Transp.,
We find our decisions in
Kline, supra,
and
Berry’s On Main, supra,
controlling on this issue. As in the case before us, these cases involved public improvements that allegedly damaged private property. In
Kline,
the City of Columbia was widening and improving a public street when a gas line was breached causing an explosion and fire on the neighboring property. In
Berry’s On Main,
the City of Columbia undertook an urban redevelopment project that involved excavating a public street. The excavations flooded during heavy rain damaging the property owner’s store. In both these cases we
*33
found an affirmative, aggressive, and positive act by the local government that supported a cause of action for inverse condemnation.
Cf. Collins v. City of Greenville,
Here, County undertook a permanent public project in capping the landfill. Whether this action resulted in a taking is not before us. We simply find on the single element of an affirmative, aggressive, positive act that County’s action meets this requirement and summary judgment should not have been granted.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The landfill closed in 1988.
