Dickerson Internationale, Inc. v. Klockner

743 N.E.2d 984, 139 Ohio App. 3d 371
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 2000
DocketC.A. Case No. 99-CA-39 T.C. Case No. 97-464
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 743 N.E.2d 984 (Dickerson Internationale, Inc. v. Klockner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerson Internationale, Inc. v. Klockner, 743 N.E.2d 984, 139 Ohio App. 3d 371 (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Fain, Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants J.W. Dickerson and Dickerson Internationale, Inc. appeal from a judgment rendered against them on their claims for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of warranty against defendants-appellees Richard W. Klockner and Klockner & Associates, arising from civil engineering and surveying services Klockner performed for Dickerson with respect to Dickerson’s development of a residential subdivision known as Pleasant View Estates. Dickerson argues that the trial court erred by finding that none of his land lies within the one-hundred-year flood plain, and by ruling against him on the claims set forth above.

We conclude that the trial court did not err by ruling against Dickerson’s negligent misrepresentation claim because Dickerson failed to present expert testimony concerning the tests and investigations that Klockner should have performed to determine the true location of the flood plain. We further conclude that the trial court did not err in rejecting Dickerson’s breach of warranty claim, since the complaint and evidence adduced at trial showed that Dickerson’s claim sounded in tort, not contract. We also conclude that the trial court did not err in rejecting Dickerson’s fraud claim, since there was sufficient evidence presented to permit the trial court to conclude that any alleged misrepresentation that Klockner may have made to Dickerson about the number of lots that would require flood insurance was merely the result of negligence, and was not made with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard whether it was true or false. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

I

Dickerson is the owner of a thirty-one-acre tract of land located within the city of Troy. Peter’s Creek runs along the northern boundary of Dickerson’s property. In the early 1970s, the city dredged and cleaned the creek and built a levee along its banks to prevent flooding.

*374 In 1982, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (“FEMA”) issued a preliminary Flood Insurance Rate Map for Troy. This preliminary map classified all of Dickerson’s lower land, except for the western one-fourth, as being within “Flood Zone A,” meaning that the property would be subject to flooding in a one-hundred-year storm, which would require any buildings constructed on it to be covered by flood insurance. Troy’s Service Director, Arthur Haddad, challenged the 1982 preliminary map. As a result, FEMA issued a revised final draft of the Flood Insurance Rate Map, removing all of Dickerson’s property from the Flood Zone A classification, except for a portion represented by a “bubble” on the map, which was contiguous to Peter’s Creek on the northern boundary of the property.

In 1992, Dickerson began developing the property as a residential neighborhood, known as the Pleasant View Estates Subdivision. Dickerson hired Klock-ner, a licensed civil engineer and registered surveyor, to perform services for him with respect to the development. In early 1992 or late 1993, Dickerson asked Klockner how many lots in his proposed development would require flood insurance. According to Dickerson and his wife Glenna, Klockner told them that only “two or three” or “three or four” of the lots would require flood insurance. According to Klockner, however, he told Dickerson, “I don’t know. I would guess five or more” lots would require flood insurance.

Also in 1992, government officials from Miami County and the city of Troy asked Dickerson to provide them with an easement allowing them to run a sewer line through his property in order to permit the county and city to provide sewer service to other properties to the south of his. Over the next several years, Dickerson negotiated the terms of the sewer easement with county and city officials, and with Uma Parekh, who owned property to the south of Dickerson’s land, and who desired the sewer easement in order to develop her property. In December 1995, Dickerson and Parekh entered into an agreement whereby Dickerson granted Parekh an easement to run a sewer line through his property, and Parekh, in exchange, agreed to pay for the entire cost of the sewer line, which would also benefit Dickerson’s development. Klockner, who was performing engineering services for Parekh’s development at the same time he was performing similar services for Dickerson’s development, established the location of the sewer line on Dickerson’s property.

In the fall of 1996, after Dickerson’s development of the residential neighborhood had begun, the Flood Administrator for Troy, Frank Davis, determined that approximately thirteen of Dickerson’s lots would require flood insurance. Dickerson and Klockner filed a Letter of Map Revision (“LOMR”) with FEMA, seeking a determination that because of the levee that was constructed in the 1970s, the “bubble” on Dickerson’s, property would not be inundated by a one- *375 hundred-year flood. In January 1998, FEMA sent Dickerson a letter denying his LOMR on the grounds that the levee constructed along Peters Creek in the 1970s did not meet the requirements of Section 65.10, Title 44, C.F.R., insofar as it did not have the necessary three feet of freeboard. Additionally, the letter from FEMA noted that all of Dickerson’s property may be inundated by a one-hundred-year flood from Swailes Creek, located to the south of Dickerson’s property.

In November 1997, Dickerson and his company, Dickerson Internationale, Inc., filed a complaint against Klockner and his company, Klockner & Associates, alleging that Klockner (1) had conspired with others, including Parekh, to defraud him into granting the sewer easement; (2) had been professionally negligent in the performance of his duties; (3) had negligently misrepresented the number of lots that would require flood insurance by failing to make adequate tests or investigations with respect to the true location of the one-hundred-year flood plain; and (4) had “breached his warranty” that Dickerson’s land would be fit for residential development. Klockner filed a counterclaim alleging Dickerson owed him payment for services rendered.

A twelve-day bench trial was held on the matter in July and August 1999. At the close of Dickerson’s case-in-chief, the trial court dismissed' Dickerson’s fraud claim. Following the conclusion of the trial, the trial court entered judgment on September 30, 1999, finding against Dickerson with respect to his remaining claims. Initially, the trial court concluded that none of the existing lots on the Dickerson property was within Flood Zone A, notwithstanding FEMA’s claims to the contrary. The trial court rejected Dickerson’s professional negligence claim because, among other things, Dickerson failed to present expert testimony to establish the standard of care owed by civil engineers. The trial court rejected Dickerson’s negligent misrepresentation claim essentially on the same grounds. The trial court rejected Dickerson’s breach of warranty claim on the ground that the “complaint and evidence produced at trial sounded in tort, not in contract.” The trial court incorporated its July 23 entry, rejecting Dickerson’s fraud claim on the basis that Klockner did not conceal a fact or make a false representation to Dickerson with the intent of misleading him to rely on it.

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Bluebook (online)
743 N.E.2d 984, 139 Ohio App. 3d 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-internationale-inc-v-klockner-ohioctapp-2000.