Dale Kerbyson v. Elba Township

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 9, 2015
Docket319034
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dale Kerbyson v. Elba Township (Dale Kerbyson v. Elba Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dale Kerbyson v. Elba Township, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DALE KERBYSON, FREDERICK EHMAN, UNPUBLISHED CAROL EHMAN, MORRIS JOHNSON, July 9, 2015 SUZETTE JOHNSON, MICHAEL SHARRARD, ANNETTE SHARRARD and JODIE KERBYSON,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 319034 Lapeer Circuit Court ELBA TOWNSHIP, LC No. 11-043992-NZ

Defendant-Appellee,

and

TETRA TECH, INC.,

Defendant.

Before: WILDER, P.J., and TALBOT, C.J., and OWENS, J.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs appeal as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant Elba Township1 pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) on the basis of governmental immunity. We affirm.

I

This action arises from two sewage backups that occurred on August 8, 2009, and August 9, 2009. Plaintiffs own homes in the Wedgewood subdivision of defendant township. The subdivision is serviced by the township’s sanitary sewer system. Defendant contracted with

1 Plaintiffs’ claims against defendant Tetra Tech were dismissed by stipulation after plaintiffs and Tetra Tech accepted the case evaluation. Therefore, we will refer to defendant Elba Township as “defendant” in this opinion.

-1- Tetra Tech, Inc., (“Tetra Tech”) to operate and service the sewer system. Wastewater from plaintiffs’ homes is conveyed through underground pipes to the Wedgewood lift station (also referred to as a pump station or pump/lift station). The lift station is an underground manhole that has a pumping system that forcibly grinds up and lifts sewage to a higher elevation and then pumps the sewage back into sewer pipes for continued transport to a lagoon. The Wedgewood station pumps are powered by electricity. The lift station is equipped with an automatic dialer (“auto-dialer”), which transmits alarm messages to Tetra Tech, including power outage alarms. The auto-dialer relies on a backup battery system to operate during power outages. The auto- dialer is connected to a telephone line owned and operated by AT&T.

Both parties acknowledge that the pumps at the Wedgewood station stopped operating, or operated intermittently, during a six-hour power outage on August 8. Tetra Tech personnel did not receive an alarm notification from the auto-dialer. That morning, Donald Bicknell, a sewer system operator employed by Tetra Tech, visited the Wedgewood pump station after receiving several calls from Elba Township residents regarding power outages. He observed that the pumps were running normally and left the pump station.

In the afternoon on August 8, sewage backed up from the Wedgewood pump station and surcharged into plaintiffs’ basements through floor drains, shower drains, and toilets in basement bathrooms. At that time, Bicknell was not aware of any particular issues with the Wedgewood station. However, he decided to stop at that station, as well as two other lift stations, on his way home because he was aware that power outages had occurred nearby based on the phone calls that he had received related to malfunctioning grinder pumps in the area and because he had observed DTE Energy trucks near the Wedgewood station. At the Wedgewood station, Bicknell observed, once again, that the power was on and the pumps were running normally. He realized, however, that the power had been off at some point because “there was high water in the lift station,” meaning that there was more water in the lift station than there should have been.

Robert Jones also went to the Wedgewood station after receiving a call that plaintiff Frederick Ehman’s basement had flooded. He arrived after Bicknell and observed that the pumps were working properly, the lift station was in a normal condition, and the system was operating as usual.

Early in the morning on August 9, 2009, plaintiffs’ homes experienced a second surcharge of sewage into their basements. Defendant attributed this event to torrential rains that fell during a 20-hour period between August 8 and August 9. Howard Selover, a plant operations manager for Tetra Tech, responded to the Wedgewood station after receiving calls from the auto-dialer at the Wedgewood station and Tetra Tech’s answering service. Notably, as the phone records confirm, the auto-dialer called out several times in the early morning hours, which included a call to Selover at 1:35 a.m. On his way to the station, Selover noticed that many of the roads in Elba Township were flooded. When Selover arrived at the pump station, the entire area of the station, including the station’s cover, was submerged.

Plaintiffs brought this action against defendant and Tetra Tech for damages arising from the sewer surcharges. With respect to defendant, plaintiffs contended that the infiltration of sewage into their homes resulted from defects in the municipal sewage disposal system as contemplated by the sewage disposal system event exception to governmental immunity, MCL

-2- 691.1417. In particular, plaintiffs alleged in their first amended complaint that the following “defects” were present in defendant’s sewer system, which defendant knew about or should have known about: “a ‘combined’ sewer system, a failure to provide routine maintenance, inadequate repairs and upgrades, as well as the negligent operation of defective pump stations, . . . including permitting excessive infiltration and inflow during moderate to heavy rain events.”2

Defendant moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) on the basis of governmental immunity. Defendant argued that plaintiffs could not establish that their claims were within the sewage disposal exception to governmental immunity because they could not establish a factual basis for all of the requirements under MCL 691.1417(3). In particular, defendant contended that plaintiffs could not prove that defendant had knowledge of a defect in the sewage disposal system under MCL 691.1417(3)(c), or that it failed to take reasonable steps to remedy the defect under MCL 691.1417(3)(d). With its motion for summary disposition,3 defendant provided deposition testimony that the Wedgewood station was routinely inspected at least once a week, and usually three times per week, and that the inspections included checking the operability of the pumps, the electrical panel box, and the auto-dialer. Defendant also provided evidence that plaintiffs had not previously reported any problems related to the sewer system, that neither defendant nor Tetra Tech were aware of any defects in the Wedgewood station before the surcharges, and that the pump station had operated without any significant issues between 2000 and August 2009. Moreover, the documentary evidence submitted with defendant’s motion indicated that the rainfall between August 8 and August 9 constituted a 100- year rain event,4 and that the sewer system was not “combined.” Defendant also noted that plaintiffs’ expert expressly stated during his deposition that he had no opinion on whether the

2 Defendant does not dispute that Tetra Tech’s knowledge of a defect in the Wedgewood station would be imputed to defendant. 3 We note that the evidence submitted with defendant’s motion for summary disposition refuted plaintiffs’ allegations that defendant failed to provide routine maintenance, provided inadequate repairs or upgrades, and negligently operated the Wedgewood station. Thus, the evidence contradicted plaintiffs’ allegations that a construction, design, maintenance, operation, or repair defect existed in the Wedgewood station, which defendant knew about, or should have known about, and which defendant failed to remedy in a reasonable time. Accordingly, the trial court properly considered whether plaintiffs presented evidence of a defect following defendant’s motion for summary disposition.

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Bluebook (online)
Dale Kerbyson v. Elba Township, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-kerbyson-v-elba-township-michctapp-2015.