George R. Caldwell, Jr., et ux v. PBM Properties

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 24, 2005
DocketE2004-02512-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George R. Caldwell, Jr., et ux v. PBM Properties (George R. Caldwell, Jr., et ux v. PBM Properties) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George R. Caldwell, Jr., et ux v. PBM Properties, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE September 12, 2005 Session

GEORGE R. CALDWELL, JR., ET UX. v. PBM PROPERTIES

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County No. 2-711-99 Harold Wimberly, Judge

No. E2004-02512-COA-R3-CV - FILED OCTOBER 24, 2005

George R. Caldwell, Jr. and Angie R. Caldwell (“Plaintiffs” or “Mr. Caldwell” as appropriate) sued PBM Properties (“Defendant”) for nuisance claiming that during Defendant’s development of Blue Grass Heights Subdivision (“Blue Grass”), Defendant denuded the land altering water runoff and causing Plaintiffs’ property to flood. The case was tried before a jury and the jury found that Defendant was 100% liable to Plaintiffs for a temporary flooding nuisance. The jury awarded Plaintiffs $3,820.50 in damages. Plaintiffs appeal claiming that the evidence supported a finding of permanent nuisance, the nuisance had to be abated on Defendant’s property to be considered abated, and, the jury did not award the proper amount of damages. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and CHARLES D. SUSANO , JR., J., joined.

Glenna W. Overton, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellants, George R. Caldwell, Jr. et ux Angie R. Caldwell.

Robert R. Davies, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellee, PBM Properties. OPINION

Background

Mr. Caldwell is a general contractor who built the homes in the Impala Estates Subdivision where Plaintiffs’ home is located. He, his wife, and their two children moved into one of the last houses built in this subdivision. Impala Estates was completed at the end of 1994 or the beginning of 1995.

Plaintiffs sued Defendant in November of 1999, claiming that during the construction and development of Blue Grass, a neighboring property development, Defendant denuded the land altering water runoff and causing Plaintiffs’ property to flood numerous times. The case was tried before a jury in October of 2002.

At trial, Mr. Caldwell testified that before he built Impala Estates, he never saw any water problems with his property. He explained that when he developed Impala Estates, the surrounding land consisted of scattered houses, woods, and grassy areas.

Mr. Caldwell testified that in early 1997, the property at the corner of Hart Road and Blue Grass Road was purchased by John Murphy and the land was developed into the Heartland Subdivision (“Heartland”). Mr. Caldwell testified that during the development of Heartland, “[t]hey denuded and stripped off all the trees, grass, growth on that 10 to 11 acres of ground, built a road in here and started building houses.” He stated: “The problem that I had with Heartland Subdivision building this subdivision was that they came in and they stripped 10 acres of ground and didn’t do anything to stop the water flow off of it.”

Mr. Caldwell testified that his family suffered their first flood on June 14, 1997. He stated that his home had approximately 32 to 34 inches of water in the basement from this flood and that the water damaged automobiles and personal items inside the garage including weapons, tools, a lawnmower, refrigerators in the garage, food in the refrigerators, a heat and air unit, and a water heater. Mr. Caldwell further testified that this flood knocked down a wall and door, and entered the living space destroying furniture, pictures, and clothing.

Plaintiffs sued the Heartland developers and in June of 1999, Plaintiffs and Heartland reached an agreement and settled the case for $82,500 paid to Plaintiffs. As part of that settlement, Heartland increased the size of their detention basin and Plaintiffs released Heartland from both temporary and permanent nuisances and granted Heartland a permanent easement to flood Plaintiffs’ property. Mr. Caldwell testified that before Heartland increased their detention basin,

[i]t didn’t take much rain. It didn’t seem to take much rain at that time to have a flood event at our home, whether it was, you know, 3, 4, 5 inches in the driveway to where my drains were handling the water that came to having 34 to 36 inches of

-2- water into our home, crashing down our garage doors, damaging the garage, again, of course, the interior of the house.

Mr. Caldwell testified that since Heartland enlarged its basin, Plaintiffs have not been flooded by Heartland.

At about the same time Plaintiffs settled with Heartland, Blue Grass was being constructed east of Heartland. Mr. Caldwell testified that after Heartland enlarged their basin, his family got flooding “from an 18-inch pipe that was protruding through the berm, the back side of the berm of the detention basin at Heartland.” Mr. Caldwell testified that the water from the 18-inch pipe was coming from Blue Grass.

Mr. Caldwell testified that “the fourth significant flooding of our home” occurred on June 24, 1999. He stated that “[t]his [flood] water appeared to be coming from that same pipe … coming from Blue Grass Heights Subdivision.” Mr. Caldwell testified that they also suffered floods on July 6; July 7; July 10; July 12; and July 14, of 1999; and on July 3, 2002. He stated: “Those were the horrific floods that we received from all the additional storm waters coming from Blue Grass Heights.”

When asked how the floods affected the use and enjoyment of their home, Mr. Caldwell stated:

You know, we couldn’t go anywhere. We couldn’t do anything hardly. Every time it rained we had to be at home, or at least I had to be at home to make sure that the necessary items were picked up, put up into what I call the dry zone. Of course, I would have to leave work at the time to do it. As I stated also that, you know, a lot of times the floods came at night.…And, you know, just having to go live like that, not to have the use of your home and worrying about it raining and flooding your house, was just - - you know, it was a horrific event that we had to live with.

Mr. Caldwell testified that he contacted Knox County (“the County”) and complained and also wrote letters to Congressman Duncan. He testified that, apparently in response to his complaints, the County installed a storm drainage easement ditch some time before June 14, 2000. Mr. Caldwell stated:

Now all the water that comes from Blue Grass Subdivision runs down the ditch line and runs into this pipe and is carried off through the new 30-inch pipe that the county put in.…[U]p until our latest flood event of July of 2002, it’s carried off all the water. The flooding events at our home have been very minute, if any.…And so the ditch is something that we thought we were finally relieved of any and all flooding, Blue Grass, Heartland, or anybody else. Apparently that did not - - or apparently it was not the truth.

-3- Mr. Caldwell testified that by the later part of 1999,

we were pretty confident that our flood problems were dissipated, and we started the construction project in the basement of the home. And in the process of this I had an architect draw some pictures of plans up of the construction of the basement, how we were going to redesign it, that in fact in the event of a flood event that the money that we were about to spend was not going to get ruined. So we had to take some precautions in that aspect that I spent - - or I should say we spent several thousands of dollars to protect the heated square footage of our home.

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