DiMartino v. CITY OF ORINDA

95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 16, 80 Cal. App. 4th 329
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 2000
DocketA085725
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 16 (DiMartino v. CITY OF ORINDA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiMartino v. CITY OF ORINDA, 95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 16, 80 Cal. App. 4th 329 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion

KLINE, P. J.

Introduction

The City of Orinda (City) appeals from a judgment of the Contra Costa County Superior Court, finding the City liable in inverse condemnation for the presence of a storm drainpipe under the residence of plaintiffs, husband and wife Robert B. DiMartino and Lise K. Tong. The City contends the evidence is insufficient to support findings that the City substantially participated in the construction, management or operation of the storm drainpipe or that it exercised dominion or control over the drainage pipe or that the pipe was part of a community-wide public drainage system.

Plaintiffs cross-appeal, arguing the court applied an erroneous measure of damages in awarding them the cost to relocate the pipe, rather than the asserted loss in market value of their property.

Facts and Procedural Background

On October 20, 1995, plaintiffs filed a complaint against the City seeking damages for negligence, trespass, nuisance and inverse condemnation. Trial proceeded only on the inverse condemnation cause of action. The matter was tried to the trial court and the following evidence was presented.

*332 Plaintiffs own lot 37 within Tarabrook Unit No. 2 subdivision, as it appears on the subdivision map recorded with the County of Contra Costa (County) on February 18, 1948. A building permit was issued on May 25, 1956, for construction of plaintiffs’ home. The residence itself is located south of public Tara Road and “sits some distance lower than the surface of Tara Road.” Slightly northeast of plaintiffs’ driveway, Tara Road is joined in a “T” intersection with Monterey Terrace, a private road.

As found by the court, “[ajccess to Lot 37, otherwise described as 86 Tara Road, Orinda, California, is by Tara Road, a public street, 50 feet wide, which was constructed over a swale requiring a corrugated metal culvert beneath the public street to control and manage storm waters collected in an upstream swale and Tara Road.”

Property to the north and uphill from Tara Road and the catch basin within the Tara Road right-of-way is mostly unimproved watershed or open space for a substantial distance up to the ridge line. The surface drainage of that watershed is led by natural topographic contours into the creek which terminates at the catch basin. It was undisputed that the natural flow of water, if unable to enter the catch basin on the north side of Tara Road, would flow across Tara Road and across plaintiffs’ property because of the topography of the area.

The recorded map of the Tarabrook Unit No. 2 subdivision (dated June 1947) reveals five-foot-wide easements on both sides of the property line between lots 36 and 37. The drainage pipe at issue does not exist within those easements except where it “crosses the easement at one spot” in the transition between lots 36 and 37.

Instead, as found by the trial court, “[t]he surface storm water inlets and underground drainage facilities beneath Tara Road include an underground pipe connected to a manhole on Lot 36. [The lot adjacent to plaintiffs’ lot 37.] From there the pipe continues diagonally across the 5 foot wide storm drainage easement and . . . under plaintiffs’ carport, the home, and beneath the remaining unimproved portion of plaintiff’s lot.” The pipe was approximately 10 feet deep at the location of the manhole on lot 36 and came to the surface at its exit into the natural watercourse on the western edge of plaintiffs’ property. The corrugated metal pipe was deteriorated, as its 40-year useful life had passed.

The City was incorporated in 1986. At that time it succeeded to the rights, duties and obligations of the County. In 1947 and 1948, subdivision map approval rested with the Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors. There is *333 no record that the board of supervisors required the subdivision developer to construct any improvements as a condition of acceptance and filing of the subdivision map and there is no record of the board’s formal acceptance for maintenance of any of the streets or drainage easements shown on the map. There are no documents memorializing the construction of Tara Road, or any of the storm drainage facilities. However, it may reasonably be inferred, as the court did, that the underground metal culvert was constructed sometime before May 25, 1956, when the County issued a building permit to construct plaintiffs’ home. It may also be reasonably inferred that “[e]ither the County of Contra Costa constructed the storm drain across plaintiffs’ property, or the developer did at the time prior to the construction of the residence on plaintiffs’ property by plaintiffs’ predecessors” and that “the County of Contra Costa constructed that portion of the drainage under Tara Road, a public street, since it is unlikely that a private contractor did so for the private owner.” 1

In late 1995 or early 1996, during design stages of a planned remodel, plaintiffs discovered the storm drainpipe. Neither plaintiffs, their predecessors in interest in the property, the County, nor the City was aware of the pipe’s location until plaintiffs’ discovery.

The City admitted that the portion of the drainage system directly under the Tara Road right-of-way was constructed to protect Tara Road. Beth Thayer, the City’s public works director and city engineer, testified that the portion of the storm drain running beneath the publicly maintained Tara Road would be maintained by the City. To the extent a pipe might exist south of Tara Road in the manner depicted in exhibit 5 (showing the subject pipe), she testified it was not included in the inventory of public works of the City. The City maintains facilities running from one side of a publicly maintained street to the other, and only within the right-of-way. The City does not consider a pipe on private property to be a public facility and does not maintain it, “unless it is an easement to and accepted by the County or the City for public maintenance . . . .”

Thayer also testified that prior to her coming to work for the City in October 1994, a consulting firm of hydrologists had been employed and was in the process of creating a draft storm drainage master plan for the City. As the new project manager, she reviewed the text and some of its conclusions and determined that “the foundation, the data that the consultant had been given to work with, was not adequate to provide the City with a useful tool, *334 and that substantial work would need to be done in order to create a document that we could use to determine which facilities were in need of upgrading.” The document purported to be a survey of all storm drainage facilities or pipes 24 inches in diameter or more and the basis of the report was from a series of maps obtained by the City from the County, which showed drainage facilities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 Cal. Rptr. 2d 16, 80 Cal. App. 4th 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dimartino-v-city-of-orinda-calctapp-2000.