Bowen v. City of Kansas City

646 P.2d 484, 231 Kan. 450, 1982 Kan. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1982
Docket53,436, 53,437, 53,441
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 646 P.2d 484 (Bowen v. City of Kansas City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. City of Kansas City, 646 P.2d 484, 231 Kan. 450, 1982 Kan. LEXIS 298 (kan 1982).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Holmes, J.:

This appeal involves three cases that were consolidated at the trial court level and they are consolidated on appeal. Plaintiffs in each case are landowners who in Count I of the petitions are claiming damages, due to flooding of their properties, on the theory that the defendants have created and are *451 maintaining a nuisance which results in periodic flooding. The defendants are the City of Kansas City, Kansas (City), the Secretary of Transportation, State of Kansas, and L. Frank Wilcox. Plaintiffs, in Count II of their petitions, also assert a claim against the Secretary of Transportation of the State of Kansas on the theory of inverse condemnation. The trial court sustained motions for summary judgment by all defendants in each case and the various plaintiffs have appealed.

The underlying facts in each case are similar and will be set forth as they apply to all plaintiffs. Additional facts as they apply to the plaintiffs in each separate case will be set forth as the various arguments and points on appeal are considered. The plaintiffs, when referred to individually, will be done so by name and when all of the plaintiffs are being referred to as a group, they will be called the plaintiffs or the appellants.

The plaintiffs are owners of tracts of land located in the vicinity of 55th Street and State Avenue in Wyandotte County. State Avenue runs generally in an east-west direction while 55th Street runs generally in a north-south direction. Plaintiffs separate properties lie to the north and east of the 55th Street and State Avenue intersection and front upon 55th Street. To the rear of the properties is located a natural watercourse or drainage ditch, which runs in a southwesterly direction toward 55th Street where it passes through a box culvert under a bridge and then makes its way to State Avenue where the water passes through a culvert constructed by the State of Kansas in 1934. Thus plaintiffs’ properties lie in a triangular area formed by 55th Street in front and the drainage ditch at the rear. During times of heavy rains, silt and debris, which have accumulated at the culverts and in the ditch bed, block the flow of water under both 55th Street and State Avenue causing the water to back up and flood the properties of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also allege the 55th Street culvert is further obstructed by sewer and other pipes installed by the City. The City is responsible for the maintenance of 55th Street and the Secretary of Transportation, State of Kansas, for the maintenance of State Avenue. Poole and Brunker own two duplexes located on 55th Street north of State Avenue. McGowen owns rental property north of Poole and Brunker and the Bowens own and reside in property just north of the McGowen property.

These actions are based upon flooding of the properties of all of *452 the plaintiffs on August 25,1975, September 10 and 11,1975, and June 28, 1976. The McGowen petition was originally filed February 18, 1976; the Bowen petition on August 20, 1976, and the Poole and Brunker petition on January 13,1977. Various supplemental and amended petitions were filed thereafter.

The various plaintiffs allege that the City has created and maintains a nuisance which obstructs the flow of water under 55th Street; that the State of Kansas has created and maintains a nuisance which obstructs the flow of water under State Avenue and, as an alternative, allege a cause of action for inverse condemnation, asserting that the impounding of water on their premises creates a taking of their property for which they have not been paid just compensation; and finally, that L. Frank Wilcox, a dirt contractor, moved a quantity of rock and dirt in the area between the 55th Street and State Avenue culverts in such a manner that it obstructs the natural flow of water and therefore constitutes a nuisance.

Defendants filed appropriate pleadings asserting various defenses and after some discovery, defendant Wilcox filed a motion for summary judgment on February 15, 1979; the Secretary of Transportation filed a motion for summary judgment on February 16, 1979, and on June 5, 1981, the City filed its motion for summary judgment. No formal response controverting the allegations of Wilcox and the Secretary of Transportation, or request for oral argument was ever filed by the plaintiffs, although the record reflects several letters from various counsel advising the court that the case was ripe for a pretrial conference and reminding the court that there were several motions for summary judgment that should be heard. On June 5, 1981, the same date the City filed its motion for summary judgment, the trial court ruled on all three motions and granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants on various grounds.

It appears that defendant Wilcox, under contract with the then owners of the property west of 55th Street and north of State Avenue, had done some dirt work along the west bank of the watercourse at times between 1962 and 1969. Wilcox owned no part of the property and had no control over it after completing his duties in moving the dirt and rock for the owners. Poole and Brunker, along with the predecessor in title to McGowen, previously sued Wilcox and the City for flooding which occurred in *453 1969. The Honorable Joe Haley Swinehart, now judge of the Court of Appeals, directed a verdict in both cases for Wilcox and entered judgment on a jury verdict that the City was maintaining a nuisance and enjoined the City from the further maintenance of the nuisance.

With the foregoing facts before us we now turn to a consideration of the points on appeal and whether the trial court committed error in granting summary judgment in favor of the various defendants.

At the outset we pause to note that this case is one that could be aptly described as falling in the category denominated by one of our colleagues as a “litigant’s nightmare.” The plaintiffs in these various actions filed their cases in 1976 and 1977, and now over five years later the issues have not been finally resolved.

The first point raised by appellants on appeal is that the trial court committed error in making its rulings on the various motions for summary judgment without hearing oral argument. Insofar as the motions of the defendants Wilcox and the Secretary of Transportation are concerned, plaintiffs’ arguments lack merit. Their motions were filed in February, 1979. Between April of 1979 and June, 1981, very little was done by counsel to get these cases determined. On June 5, 1981, the trial court sustained the motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs argue that under the local rules and customs of the court, they were entitled to oral argument and that the trial court erred in ruling on the motions without first hearing oral argument. Without going into a detailed recitation of the procedural facts over the years these cases have been pending, suffice it to say we have examined the record and conclude the court did not commit error in ruling on the motions for summary judgment of Wilcox and the Secretary of Transportation without first hearing oral argument. See Supreme Court Rules 133 and 141.

The motion of the City for summary judgment raises additional questions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
646 P.2d 484, 231 Kan. 450, 1982 Kan. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-city-of-kansas-city-kan-1982.