Amish v. Walnut Creek Development, Inc.

631 S.W.2d 866, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2856
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1982
DocketWD 31952
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 631 S.W.2d 866 (Amish v. Walnut Creek Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amish v. Walnut Creek Development, Inc., 631 S.W.2d 866, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2856 (Mo. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

This is an action by residential property owners who suffered water damage to their homes and personal property when a lake and the stream above it overflowed their banks. The claims contended that the dam constructed by defendant to form the lake was negligently designed and maintained and that the flooding of their properties was attributable to these defects. A jury returned verdicts for damages as to all plaintiffs. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was sustained as to some of the plaintiffs and judgment was entered on the verdicts as to others. All plaintiffs and the defendant appeal asserting the various errors hereafter described.

Plaintiffs own and occupy homes in a rural Platte County subdivision near a stream known as Walnut Creek. In early 1974, defendant completed construction of a dam to impound the waters of the creek and form a lake as a feature of a development which defendant projected. Heavy rainstorms occurred in May 1974 and in April 1975 and the water in the lake and in Walnut Creek upstream rose, inundating portions of plaintiffs’ properties and causing the damages asserted in this suit.

The plaintiffs in the case are divided into two groups distinguishable by the location of their property below or above a passageway across Walnut Creek known as the upper reservoir crossing. This structure, built of concrete with barrel-type culverts for the flow of the creek water, is located some distance upstream from the lake itself. It was built long before the lake was formed and was intended to serve traffic crossing Walnut Creek. Group I plaintiffs are those whose properties are located between the dam and the upper reservoir crossing. Group II plaintiffs’ properties are upstream on Walnut Creek above the upper reservoir crossing. Group I plaintiffs had judgment for actual damages in accordance with the jury verdicts. Group II plaintiffs were required to present their cases anew on the order of the trial court awarding defendant a new trial as to them.

Before considering the points on appeal raised by plaintiffs and defendant, it is first necessary to rule on plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss defendant’s appeal for failure of its jurisdictional statement to meet the requirements of Rule 84.04(b). The defect, apparent on cursory examination, is the absence of any statement describing the type of civil action pursued below. In place of the conventional statement of jurisdiction, defendant opens the text of its brief with an “Introduction.” The jurisdictional statement follows. From the content of both, the nature of the action and the judgment appealed may be generally ascertained. While the format defendant adopted is not to be commended, application of the rules must be balanced against the appellate court’s duty to finally dispose of each case on its merits where reasonably possible. Cheatham v. Melton, 593 S.W.2d 900, 903 (Mo.App.1980). Meritorious objection to the adequacy of a brief does not necessarily warrant the drastic remedy of dismissal. General Plywood Corp. v. S. R. Brunn Construction Co., 511 S.W.2d 905, 907 (Mo.App.1974). On these precepts, we deem the defect in defendant’s brief not sufficient to justify dismissal of the appeal. The motion is overruled.

APPEAL OF WALNUT CREEK DEVELOPMENT, INC.

As an aid to clarification of the issues, points on appeal by the several parties will *869 be separated for disposition and relevant additional facts added as appropriate. The contentions by defendant Walnut Creek Development, Inc. are (1) Neither Group I nor Group II plaintiffs made a submissible case as to causation of the flooding, (2) Group I plaintiffs did not prove their damages, (3) Group II plaintiffs are barred from recovery by their own evidence, and (4) Verdict directing and damage instructions for plaintiffs were erroneous and not supported by the evidence.

The first and third points above involve essentially the same question — what features of the terrain both natural and artificial caused or contributed to cause the overflow of the lake and Walnut Creek. The underlying facts were not disputed and these must be recounted as a basis for reviewing the evidence dealing with causation and, in turn, assessing the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ proof to take the issue to the jury.

Before construction of the dam, Walnut Creek was a shallow and narrow stream which meandered through hilly, wooded terrain. Above the site of the upper reservoir crossing, the stream follows an “S” curve nearly doubling back on its path. At the time of the rainstorms in 1974 and 1975, the water quantity in the creek and, consequently, the water discharged into the lake increased and the rate of flow slowed.

The added water in Walnut Creek overflowed on plaintiffs’ properties. Areas adjacent to the creek flooded for a substantial distance upstream, including the area where the “S” curve was located. The culverts in the upper reservoir crossing filled with water and debris and the water over-topped the crossing and spread out to either side. While the evidence was uncontrovert-ed that all plaintiffs suffered damage from the overflow of waters which had remained within the banks of Walnut Creek before the dam was built, issue was joined on the extent to which the obstructions of the “S” curve and the upper reservoir crossing rather than defendant’s dam caused the flooding. Quite apparently, the effect of these obstructions was materially different as to the two groups of plaintiffs, those above and those below the upper reservoir crossing.

The theory of plaintiffs’ claims as tried and submitted to the jury was that their damages were caused by negligent design, construction and maintenance of the dam which lacked the capacity to release the downstream runoff from Walnut Creek. In essence, plaintiffs sought to establish that water backed up from the dam and flooded their lots. The defendant contended that the flooding was caused by blockage of water flow at the upper reservoir crossing and at the “S” curve in a period of abnormal rainfall. Plaintiffs and defendant each therefore relied on an expert witness to evaluate and calculate the volume of water which the dam spillway and an emergency floodway notch would discharge into the continuance of the creek below the dam.

Defendant’s first point centers on the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert witness, Warner. As a civil engineer, Warner evaluated the capacity of the dam spillway structure to convey runoff and expressed it as his opinion that the dam was adequate for a volume of water from storms occurring no more frequently than once in one hundred years. Warner also acknowledged he knew no elevations of the area terrain, that the “S” curve and the upper reservoir crossing contributed to cause the flooding and that the 1974 and 1975 storms were of less frequency than once in one hundred years. Warner, nonetheless, testified that the flooding would not have occurred but for the dam.

From this evidence by plaintiffs on the fundamental element of causation, defendant launches a two-prong argument to demonstrate that plaintiffs made no submissible case. First, Warner’s testimony is characterized as self-contradictory because he concluded that the dam was responsible for the flood while acknowledging at the same time that the “S” curve and the upper reservoir *870

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Bluebook (online)
631 S.W.2d 866, 1982 Mo. App. LEXIS 2856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amish-v-walnut-creek-development-inc-moctapp-1982.