Floyd v. City of Butte

412 P.2d 823, 147 Mont. 305, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 384
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1966
Docket10972
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 412 P.2d 823 (Floyd v. City of Butte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd v. City of Butte, 412 P.2d 823, 147 Mont. 305, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 384 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal entered on a motion to dismiss an amended complaint.

Plaintiffs, appellants here, owned an apartment building located at the intersection of West Parle and Clark Streets in Butte. The defendant City of Butte operates, maintains and repairs an underground public sewage and storm system under Clark Street and bordering the plaintiff’s property just east of the east boundary and apartment building wall.

A few months prior to the filing of this action, the plaintiff owners noted that the brick apartment building appeared to be settling and cracking. Upon investigation, it was discovered that the underground lateral and subjacent support for the building on its east side had been and was being sloughed away by seeping, percolating and flowing sewer waters which had escaped and were escaping from the underground storm and sewage sewer. This action was then filed.

The amended complaint states two causes of action. In the first, which is couched in nuisance terms, it is alleged that the sewer is being maintained as a nuisance in that improperly contained sewer waters have been, are and will continue to slough away the foundation and support for plaintiffs’ building and has resulted and will continue to result in a settling, cracking and destruction of the building.

*308 In a second cause of action the same facts are alleged and couched in terms of negligence rather than nuisance. Plaintiffs sought abatement of the nuisance by injunctive relief and incidental damages for past harm to the property.

The defendant City appeared by motion to dismiss on two primary grounds:

(a) That plaintiffs failed to plead that the City had actual notice of the defect in the underground public sewage system and reasonable opportunity to repair the defect before the alleged injury or damage to plaintiffs’ property; and
(b) That plaintiffs failed to allege written notice of the damage within 60 days after the injury to plaintiffs’ property.

The motion was supported by two affidavits, one by the city clerk- to the effect that no defect had been reported and the other by the city supervisor of the underground walk-in sewer system that he had no actual notice of any defect in the sewer.

The motion to dismiss was sustained on the ground that the case was governed by R.C.M.1947, § 11-1305, and this Court’s opinion in Thompson v. City of Shelby, 136 Mont. 562, 323 P.2d 33; and that since no notice (other than the suit itself) was given of the damage, the property owners had forfeited any remedy at equity or law for the abatement of the alleged nuisance and for the incidental damages for the settlement, cracking and subsidence of the building.

. A judgment of dismissal was entered and this appeal followed.

The specification of error is set forth as follows:

“The Court erred in holding that a landowner must give notice to the City within 60 days of the commencement of a continuing and progressive and hidden condition of underground percolation and seepage of improperly-contained sewer waters from a sewer wholly maintained by the City or be barred from complaining of the condition and seeking injunctive relief and incidental damages even though the offending condition is continuing and is progressive and constitutes and will continue *309 to constitute a nuisance and obstruction to the free use of the property.”

R.C.M.1947, § 11-1305, provides:

“Defective highways and public works — notice of claims for injuries. Before any city or town in this state shall be liable for damages to person and/or property for, or on account of, any injury or loss alleged to have been received or suffered by reason of any defect or obstruction in any bridge, street, road, sidewalk, culvert, park, public ground, ferry-boat, or public works of any kind in said city or town, it must first be shown that said city or town had actual notice of such defect or obstruction and reasonable opportunity to repair such defect or remove such obstruction before such injury or damage was received ; the city clerk must make a permanent record of all such reported defects and shall report to the city street commissioner immediately upon notice of such defect or obstruction; and the person alleged to have suffered such injury or damage, or someone in his behalf, shall, give to the city or town council, commission, manager, or other governing body of such city or town, within sixty days after such injury is alleged to have been received or suffered, written notice thereof, which notice shall state the time when and the place where such injury is alleged to have occurred. Provided, however, that this section shall not exempt cities and towns from liability for negligence because of failure to properly place signs, markers or signals to warn persons of excavations or other obstructions existing and caused by said city or town, upon any bridge, street, alley, road, sidewalk, pavement, culvert, park, public ground, ferryboat or public works of any kind.”

Appellant’s position is that the above-quoted statute does not apply to this type of case as pleaded. Respondent’s position is that the statute does apply as a “condition precedent” (for want of a better term); and, since its terms were not complied with, the action must be dismissed.

The issues presented by this appeal both deal with section *310 11-1305. The first is whether the City of Butte had actual notice of the defect. The second is whether the provision of section 11-1305 requiring written notice of injury, within sixty days after the occurrence thereof, applies to a case of this type.

Turning to the first issue, we note that the respondent City in its motion to dismiss alleged that the plaintiffs failed to plead that the City had actual notice of the defect. The language of section 11-1305 is that “it must first be shown that said city or town had actual notice of such defect.” This section does not require that actual notice of the defect be pleaded. It does require that it be shown or proved. In other words it becomes a matter of proof on trial.

In order to show that the City had notice of the defect it must be demonstrated that the City had actual notice thereof, or that the City did not have actual notice only because it negligently failed to inspect the sewer system in question. It is our view that where there rests upon the municipality, as there did in this case, a duty of inspection of a sewer system as an instrumentality under its supervision and control, the municipality becomes chargeable with notice of what a reasonable inspection would disclose: (Yearsley v. City of Pocatello, 71 Idaho 347, 231 P.2d 743; Doud v. City of Cincinnati, 152 Ohio St.

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Bluebook (online)
412 P.2d 823, 147 Mont. 305, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-city-of-butte-mont-1966.