City of Wellington v. Kansas Dept. of Health & Environment

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 14, 2018
Docket118591
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Wellington v. Kansas Dept. of Health & Environment (City of Wellington v. Kansas Dept. of Health & Environment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Wellington v. Kansas Dept. of Health & Environment, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

Nos. 118,591 118,603

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

CITY OF WELLINGTON, KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENT, et al., Defendants,

and

STUART SHINLIVER, ANN SHINLIVER, NANCY KOLLMORGEN, and FRANCIS H. ROTH and LETA L. ROTH as Trustees, Appellants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sumner District Court; R. SCOTT MCQUIN, judge. Opinion filed December 14, 2018. Affirmed.

Amy Fellows Cline and Timothy E. McKee, of Triplett Woolf Garretson, LLC, of Wichita, for appellants Stuart and Ann Shinliver and Nancy Kollmorgen.

Joseph A. Schremmer, of Depew Gillen Rathbun & McInteer, LC, of Wichita, for appellants Francis and Leta Roth.

Patrick B. Hughes, of Adams Jones Law Firm, P.A., of Wichita, for appellee.

Before BRUNS, P.J., MCANANY, J., and BURGESS, S.J.

1 PER CURIAM: The appellants are all owners of real property located in the vicinity, but outside the city limits, of the City of Wellington (City). They were supplied untreated water by the City by means of connections to the piping between the City's "A" water well field and its water treatment plant. Under this setup, untreated water from the City's wells was diverted to the appellants before it reached the City's water treatment plant. The City had no water lines for treated water extending to these properties. The practice of supplying rural water users with untreated water began around 1954.

Events leading to the lawsuit

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has adopted administrative regulations governing public water supply systems. The regulation at issue here, K.A.R. 28-15-19, was adopted in 1982 and amended effective September 26, 1994. It requires all drinking water supplied to the public from a public water supply to be disinfected.

In 2006, the KDHE discovered the City's practice of supplying untreated water to 13 rural users, including the landowners involved in this appeal. When the KDHE notified the City of the regulatory violation, the City requested an extension of time to develop a procedure for addressing the affected customers. The City sent the affected customers a letter notifying them of the regulatory violation and informing them that the City would try to resolve the problem by April 1, 2007.

On January 17, 2008, the KDHE sent the City a letter regarding the City's ongoing violation and requested more information. City Attorney Mike Brown responded that the violation had not been resolved and set July 1, 2008, as the date for correcting the violation.

2 On August 4, 2008, the City received from the KDHE a directive that required the City to develop a final action plan that would result in compliance no later than March 1, 2009. Later that month, Brown sent the affected customers a letter asking to discuss the options that would resolve the violation. In October 2008, Brown sent a letter to the KDHE summarizing the City's options and requesting an extension of the compliance deadline to June 1, 2009.

It is unclear what transpired between June 1, 2009, and July 2015.

In July 2015, the City obtained an estimate of the cost to extend its treated water line to the affected customers. The estimated cost was $387,720, though the landowners dispute this amount. For 2016, the City budgeted $150,000 to deal with the untreated water issue, which was spent on bottled drinking water for the affected landowners and for the City's attorney fees.

A sanitary survey inspection conducted in September 2015 confirmed that the City was still in violation of K.A.R. 28-15-19. The survey also identified a direct cross- connection to a finished water distribution line within the treatment plant. The City contacted the affected customers in October 2015 in an effort to resolve the problem.

In January 2016, the KDHE demanded that the City stop delivering untreated water and remove the direct cross-connection to the finished water distribution line no later than May 1, 2016.

On May 3, 2016, the KDHE issued a directive that required the City to do three things: (1) provide quarterly notification to the 13 affected water customers along with certificates of delivery to the KDHE beginning May 1, 2016; (2) supply bottled water to the 13 affected water customers until the customers were disconnected from the untreated 3 water line beginning no later than May 1, 2016; and (3) remove the untreated well water line direct cross-connection or install an approved backflow prevention device and provide proof no later than June 1, 2016.

The City began providing bottled water to all customers being supplied untreated water on May 1, 2016. The City also provided proof that it installed the backflow prevention device on June 13, 2016.

On November 30, 2016, the KDHE and the City resolved the City's regulatory violation by entering into a consent order. Consent Order 16-E-11 required the City to cease providing untreated water to any users, including Francis and Leta Roth, Stuart and Ann Shinliver, and Nancy Kollmorgen. As amended, the consent order required that the customers be disconnected by November 1, 2017. The consent order also provided that in the event the City wanted to rectify the City's regulatory violation through the installation of a new transmission line to provide disinfected water to the customers at issue, standard KDHE review and approval would be required.

The lawsuit

The City filed this action on January 27, 2017, seeking a declaratory judgment that the City may disconnect the defendants from water altogether; that the City is legally prohibited from providing untreated water to the defendants; and that to the extent the City has an obligation to provide to the defendants water for domestic use, it can do so by providing bottled water at the City's expense.

The Roths answered and counterclaimed. They alleged that after a 1987 agreement terminated, the City agreed to furnish water service to the Roths in exchange for the Roths' payment of the ordinary rural residential water rate. The Roths later amended their 4 answer, asserting counterclaims for a declaratory judgment that they have a contractual right to continued water service. They also sought to enjoin the City from terminating water service. In the alternative, the Roths sought damages for breach of contract. The Roths also claimed the City is barred under the doctrine of promissory estoppel from discontinuing their water service.

The Shinlivers and Kollmorgen also filed an answer and counterclaim. They alleged the City owed them an obligation to provide water service under the terms of a 1954 Easement Agreement.

Each of the parties moved for summary judgment.

The district court denied all of the defendants' motions for summary judgment and granted the City's motion in full. The district court found:

 The right to free water created by the easement agreements was personal to the landowners who executed those agreements and did not run with the land and extend to successors-in-interest, including these landowners.  The only obligation the City undertook was to supply untreated water to the defendants' properties.  The City was now legally prohibited from providing untreated water to the defendants.  The City's obligation to supply water to the defendants was discharged by the doctrine of impracticability, citing the Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 261, 264 (1981).

5 The district court concluded that the City may disconnect the City's lines supplying untreated water to the affected landowners and the City had no further obligation or liability with respect to providing water to any of these defendants.

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City of Wellington v. Kansas Dept. of Health & Environment, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-wellington-v-kansas-dept-of-health-environment-kanctapp-2018.