City of Atlanta v. Broadnax

646 S.E.2d 279, 285 Ga. App. 430, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1389, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 26, 2007
DocketA07A0277, A07A0278
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 646 S.E.2d 279 (City of Atlanta v. Broadnax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Atlanta v. Broadnax, 646 S.E.2d 279, 285 Ga. App. 430, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1389, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 452 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Phipps, Judge.

A severe rainstorm on September 21, 2002, resulted in the flooding of streets and homes in an area of southwest Atlanta known as the Booker T. Washington High School (WHS) neighborhood. As a result of the damage caused by the flooding, Brenda Broadnax and other owners of homes in that neighborhood brought this consolidated suit against the City of Atlanta. They charge the city with maintenance of a nuisance resulting from recurrent flooding of the WHS neighborhood through the years due to overflow from the city’s combined system for the drainage of sewer water and storm water from the area.

In Case No. A07A0277, the city appeals judgment entered on a jury verdict awarding the homeowners a total of $1,854,300 in damages. In Case No. A07A0278, the homeowners cross-appeal the trial court’s denial of their motion for new trial and the court’s partial grant of the city’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Although we find no reversible error in the appeal, we do find error in the trial court’s partial grant of the city’s motion for j.n.o.v. We, therefore, affirm in the main appeal, and we affirm in part and reverse in part in the cross-appeal.

The WHS neighborhood is located in a water drainage basin designated by the city as the Proctor Creek Basin. The topography of the neighborhood is in the form of a valley, running downhill in a northerly direction. The slope of the valley is interrupted by a man-made berm running parallel to the neighborhood at its northernmost end. At the time of the flooding, the drainage of both sewer water and storm water was controlled and conveyed by a combined system of piping. The largest of the pipes, into which the smaller pipes fed to carry sewer water and storm water away from the neighborhood, was designated as the Greensferry trunk line. It was built in 1915. Currently, it is standard in the industry for storm water drainage systems in urban residential areas to be designed and constructed to convey the run-off from a 25-year rain event. Because the WHS neighborhood is located in a Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) 500-year designated flood plain, it should not be prone to flooding during any rainstorm less than a 500-year event.

Case No. A07A0277

1. The city contends that the trial court erred in denying its motions for summary judgment and directed verdict on the homeowners’ nuisance claim.

*431 The denial of a motion for summary judgment becomes moot after the case has proceeded to resolution by trial. 1 “[A] jury verdict, after approval by the trial court, and the judgment thereon will not be disturbed on appeal if supported by any evidence, in the absence of any material error of law.” 2

The nuisance claim against the city was grounded on multiple assertions. The homeowners claimed that in the years since the construction of the Greensferry drainage system, there was tremendous growth and development in and around the WHS neighborhood, pursuant to the issuance of building permits by the city; and that this growth led to the addition of impervious materials, such as concrete, blocking the absorption of storm water by natural ground. The homeowners asserted that the city’s drainage infrastructure could no longer convey storm water runoff fast enough to prevent flooding of private property during heavy rains, because the existing pipes had not been replaced with larger pipes and the system lacked a sufficient number of storm drain inlets or catch basins to capture surface water. According to the homeowners, the catch basins became clogged during the September 21, 2002 rain as a result of the city’s chronic failure to make regular pickups of trash and yard debris in the WHS neighborhood despite continuing complaints by residents. And the homeowners asserted that by acting as a dam preventing the natural runoff of surface water, the berm was another major contributing factor to the flood.

Among other things, the city, in reliance on a line of cases represented by Foster v. Crowder, 3 asserted government immunity as a defense. As recognized in Foster, “[t]he construction, installation and maintenance of a sewer-drainage system (including that for surface water) is a governmental function of the city[,]” 4 and “in the negligent performance of its governmental duties a municipal corporation is not liable in damages to one who is injured while the municipality is engaged in the performance of such duties.” 5 Consequently, as held in Rogers v. City of Atlanta 6 and Johnston v. City of Atlanta, 7

[t]he duties of municipal authorities in adopting a general plan of drainage, and in determining when, where, and of *432 what size and at what level drains or sewers shall be built, are of a quasi-judicial nature, involving the exercise of deliberate judgment and wide discretion; and the municipality is not liable for an error of judgment on the part of the authorities in locating or planning such improvements. 8

The Rogers court was, however, careful to note that the gist of that action was negligence and not nuisance.

Amunicipal corporation, like any other individual or private corporation, may be liable for damages it causes to a third party from the operation or maintenance of a nuisance, irrespective of whether it is exercising a governmental or municipal function. . . . While it is true that a municipal corporation is not liable for its acts of negligence in discharging a governmental function, yet a municipal corporation cannot, under the guise of performing a governmental function, create a nuisance dangerous to life or health. ... To be held liable for maintenance of a nuisance, the municipality must be chargeable with performing a continuous or regularly repetitious act, or creating a continuous or regularly repetitious condition, which causes the hurt, inconvenience or injury; the municipality must have knowledge or be chargeable with notice of the dangerous condition; and, if the municipality did not perform an act creating the dangerous condition, . . . the failure of the municipality to rectify the dangerous condition must be in violation of a duty to act. 9

Therefore, “(w)here a municipality negligently constructs or undertakes to maintain a sewer or drainage system which causes the repeated flooding of property, a continuing, abatable nuisance is established, for which the municipality is liable.” 10

Consequently, in City of East Point v. Terhune, 11

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Bluebook (online)
646 S.E.2d 279, 285 Ga. App. 430, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1389, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-atlanta-v-broadnax-gactapp-2007.