Caltabiano v. Jimmo, No. Cv 93 0068929 S (May 5, 1995)

1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 4764
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 5, 1995
DocketNos. CV 93 0068929 S, CV 93 0067609 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 4764 (Caltabiano v. Jimmo, No. Cv 93 0068929 S (May 5, 1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caltabiano v. Jimmo, No. Cv 93 0068929 S (May 5, 1995), 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 4764 (Colo. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The above referenced matters were consolidated for trial and in fact tried together. Subsequent to the completion of the trial and the reservation of the decision by the court, the plaintiff, Michael Caltabiano, filed a motion to conform the pleadings to the evidence adduced at trial which motion was argued before the court and allowed on April 5, 1995. The net result is that the amended complaint dated February 15, 1995, the allegations of which will be the subject of this memorandum, is merely a repetition of the prior complaint upon which the actual trial was conducted with the court having allowed the plaintiff to file a sixth count the allegations of which mirror the allegations of the first count of the prior complaint but merely substitute in paragraphs 23 and 24, language that invokes relief under Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec. 22a-44(b).

In these cases the defendant Lois Jimmo, the record owner of the home was living at the premises with her husband the defendant Joseph Jimmo who might be accurately described as the active defendant herein. She knew of the construction being accomplished by her husband on the property, endorsed and approved of it and the court concludes has ratified the actions of her husband in connection with his activities on her property.

Based upon the relevant, credible, and admissible evidence and exhibits the court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to both cases.

The plaintiff, Michael Caltabiano, purchased property known as CT Page 4765 449 Stagecoach Road, Durham, Connecticut in December 1986 and at all pertinent times relative to this complaint has been the owner of said property. The plaintiff's property is located across said Stagecoach Road and to the north of property of the defendant, Lois Jimmo who is the record owner of 452 Stagecoach Road, at all times relevant to these matters. She resides at said premises with husband, the defendant Joseph Jimmo. Shortly after acquiring the property Mr. Caltabiano, the plaintiff, part of whose life's activities include excavating, excavated and constructed a pond on his property. This project was a considerable undertaking by the plaintiff since it measured to a depth of between 15 and 18 feet. The pond was fed basically by underground springs and some moderate degree of run off water which entered his pond through twin culvert pipes running under Stagecoach Road situated at the north west corner of the defendant's property. From early 1987 when the pond was constructed up until construction started on the defendant's property in the spring or summer of 1991, said twin culverts carried a moderate degree of clear non-silted water from defendant's property and entered into the plaintiff's pond. Upon completion of the construction of said pond, the plaintiff stocked it with trout and commenced to use it for several years for fishing and recreational swimming and other family recreational water uses. Prior to 1991, the plaintiff never experienced any difficulty with silted or polluted water entering into his pond through said twin culverts running under Stagecoach Road carrying drain off water from the wetlands on the defendants property. The pond was excavated to this substantial depth in order to provide cool water for the fish and to deter vegetation growth which does not appear to thrive in deeper pools to the extent that it does in shallow pools.

This lawsuit arises out of activities the defendants conducted on their property which the plaintiff alleges have caused damage to his property. Prior to the commencement of the construction by the defendant on their property in the summer of 1991, the plaintiff had used said pond for winter and summer activities and, as previously said, had never experienced any problems with the pond or the water entering it from sources outside the plaintiff's property to wit the defendant's property across the street.

The defendants' property consists of approximately 4 1/2 acres of land, a substantial portion of which property is designated appropriately as wetlands by the Durham Inland Wetlands Agency. Also, as previously alluded to, many of the activities and acts CT Page 4766 which underlay this litigation were taken in the defendant Lois Jimmo's name as the record owner of the property in the nature of applications to perform work, filed with the Inland Wetlands Agency and other agencies of the town. The defendant Joseph Jimmo actually performed and directed the construction which have brought about harm and damage to the plaintiff. The defendant Lois Jimmo was aware of the activities on her property, never did anything to halt them and thus gave her implicit consent by, in her own testimony leaving everything pertaining to the work on the property up to her husband, Joseph. The defendant Joseph Jimmo was in the excavation business and used his own equipment to perform the subsequently-described work on his property.

Prior to the defendant's commencing construction and excavation in the summer of 1991 on their property their engineer, Mr. Lambert, submitted plans as part of the application process to the Durham Inland Wetlands Watercourses Agency, herein after referred to as Agency. The plans were ultimately revised six times over the six months following the commencement of work on the property. The revised plans intended to reflect work that was actually done or which was in process. Much of the work done by the defendant was illegally done to the extend that it was actually accomplished and performed before plans were presented to and approved by the Agency.

A revised drawing indicated only some of the work that the defendants performed on their property. The defendants performed work beyond what is described and never obtained a permit or approval to so do. The plaintiff claims and the court finds that the work described and some of which is not described in said drawing constitutes the source and cause of the damages sustained by the plaintiff herein.

The principal, illegal and/or unreasonable activities undertaken by the defendants on their property were the grading and the filling of wetlands without appropriate permits; installation and origination of an artificial berm along the eastern boundary of the property which substantially interfered with the former prior natural flow of water from the adjacent mountain to the east over their land; the installation of a curtain drain on the eastern boundary which did not conform to plans approved by the Agency; the installation of a trench which also functioned as a curtain drain on the western boundary adjacent to the installation of their raised driveway. Said driveway and utility trench also interfered with the prior natural westerly flow of water through and over the CT Page 4767 defendants property, which areas of the defendants property had been duly designated as inland wetland areas. Furthermore, the defendants installed without appropriate permission a concrete pipe in the northeast corner of their property which localized flow of water in great amounts into the drainage ditch along Stagecoach Road. The defendant blocked the northern ditch along Stagecoach Road at the northwest corner of the property and prevented the flow of water to the westward without appropriate permit from the Agency.

Prior to the construction work of the defendants in the summer of 1991, there was a large wetland area on the defendants property.

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443 A.2d 478 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1982)
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Bluebook (online)
1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 4764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caltabiano-v-jimmo-no-cv-93-0068929-s-may-5-1995-connsuperct-1995.