Grigger v. City of North Royalton

394 N.E.2d 353, 59 Ohio Misc. 103, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 21, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 122
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMay 23, 1977
DocketNo. 895610
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 394 N.E.2d 353 (Grigger v. City of North Royalton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grigger v. City of North Royalton, 394 N.E.2d 353, 59 Ohio Misc. 103, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 21, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 122 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

Lawther, J.

Plaintiff lives on the north side of Albion Road in North Royalton, an east-west street, and seeks, to enjoin the city from collecting and discharging surface drainage across his property. He alleges damages due to the depreciated value of his property, destroyed personal property, and attorney fees.

Testimony was presented by plaintiff, and by the mayor and the city engineer of North Royalton. The physical facts are not in dispute. There is no storm sewer sys-tern in the vicinity of Albion Road. There are drainage-ditches on both sides of the road, which drain into three [104]*104other ditches in the general vicinity of plaintiff’s home. These then carry the overflow in a northerly direction until the drainage ultimately reaches Baldwin Creek. The middle ditch of these three is located! on plaintiff’s land near his western boundary line. It is fed by an eighteen-inch concrete culvert which lies under the road and connects the south roadside ditch to the north, by means of manholes on each side of the road, and then extends into plaintiff’s property about four feet.

The evidence indicated, that the original culvert was constructed in 1918 and was replaced in 1946 by the Cuy-ahoga County Engineer. Albion Road is maintained by the county, as are the ditches on both sides of the road, through agreement with the city. There was no evidence, however (and a court search of county records discloses none), of any attempt by the county or the city to acquire any rights by easement or condemnation proceedings, or by the procedure provided for construction of county ditches in R. C. Chapter 6131 to use plaintiff’s land as the repository of' surface water collected in Albion Road ditches and channeled thereon by the concrete culvert. At the end' of the culvert, a ditch approximately one foot deep now receives the overflow drainage and extends north across 800 feet of plaintiff’s land becoming more shallow and less defined as it does so. The evidence disclosed, and a personal visit by the court verified the fact, that the ditch is filled with debris, weeds, cattails, small trees, and other matter which clogs aud impedes whatever flow pattern may have existed at one time. Actual flow takes place only at times of rainfall.

Plaintiff testified that he built his home on the land in I960; that he was aware of the ditch when he did so, but that no difficulty was encountered until the city installed sanitary sewers in the late 1960’s, and in 1968 permitted a property owner on the south side of the road to install an inadequate twelve-inch drain tile in the road side ditch in front of his home and to fill in the area above it for parking purposes. Plaintiff stated that this action effectively blocked proper flow of drainage on the south side and in[105]*105creased the flow through the culvert and onto plaintiff’s land.

Since 1968, plaintiff complains of numerous floods caused by the overflow of the ditch in the area of his backyard, and states that such flooding occurs at any time rainfall amounts to 1/2 inch or more. Photographs introduced into evidence demonstrate plaintiff’s claim that such floods cover almost the entire rear portion of his yard to a depth of several inches. He further states that this water then finds its way into his basement resulting in flooding there to a depth of as much as one foot; that this condition has destroyed books, woodwork, furniture, floor tile, appliances, etc., and so overworked his sump pump that it had to be replaced. Plaintiff testified as to his estimated value of the property destroyed, but presented no verification as to actual costs incurred.

He further testified that the city has never cleaned the ditch, although he has complained about the intolerable conditions on numerous occasions; that he tried to clean it himself at first, but decided that if the city was unwilling to help clean an 800 foot ditch, that he was unable to do so alone.

In 1970, plaintiff attempted to alleviate the problem by installing a metal plate at the end of the culvert to block the drainage emptying on his land. He then received a letter from the city ordering Mm to remove the plate or face arrest under Ordinance No. 2606 which states:

“* * * no person shall, except as provided in Section 3 hereof, obstruct, impede, divert, enclose, or vary the location, direction, size or capacity of any drain, ditch, drainage ditch, culvert, sewer, natural watercourse or. other watercourse, depression or conduit for the drainage of water situated within the Municipality of North Royalton # * -X- J5

Plaintiff then removed the metal plate and filed action for relief.

Paul Frank) .city engineer, testified that he did not know who created the ditch originally, and that it is a “private ditch.’’ ■ When asked why the private property, owner should bear such a burden, he testified: “that’s the [106]*106only place the storm water can go at the present time.” He farther stated that he had recommended in 1970 that the city undertake cleaning of the ditch, or seek easements to maintain the ditch or bnild a sewer. Neither was ever done, bnt the city and county did cooperate on cleaning and maintaining a similar ditch lying to the east of plaintiff’s. No evidence was presented as to why these two ditches were not considered alike and cleaned at the same time. The engineer also stated that installation of a 21 inch pipe to replace the ditch would cost $20 to $25 per foot.

The mayor testified that all Albion Eoad flooding complaints are directed to the county engineer, and that the city does need a plan for storm water drainage; that eventually, Albion Eoad will have storm sewers. He also stated that he would like to enter plaintiff’s property and “clean the ditch under state law, charging the cost to property owners”. No reason was given for expecting plaintiff to bear such costs of public drainage flowing through his land and originating in the roadside ditches on Albion Eoad.

> Furthermore, no reason was given for the city’s failure to' take some action to eliminate this problem by acquiring an easement across plaintiff’s land, installing a sewer, or petitioning the county to construct a drainage ditch in accordance with E. C. Chapter 6131. The city’s position appears to be that plaintiff is the victim of unfortunate circumstances which the city is unwilling to alleviate, and which the city prohibits the- plaintiff from solving due’ to a prohibitive ordinance. ;

The leading Ohio' casé concerning the obligations of a servient landowner, with respect to surface water, is Mason v. Commrs. of Fulton County (1909), 80 Ohio St. 151. The syllabus of that case holds:

“A landowner may, in the reasonable use of his land, drain the 'surface water from it into its natural outlet, a watercourse, upon his own land, and thus increase the volume and accelerate the flow of water without incurring liability for'damages to owners of lower lands ,- -and his land is not Subject to assessment’for the cost of a ditch, or an improvement,'that will not benefit its drainage’but is con-[107]*107strueted to prevent overflow from the watercourse or to benefit the drainage of servient lands.”

This case and the many which have cited it through the years all contain similar holdings relative to the drainr age of surface water into natural outlets or water courses, but do not appear to deal specifically with the questions raised in the instant case.

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Related

Ritchhart v. Gleason
672 N.E.2d 1064 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
394 N.E.2d 353, 59 Ohio Misc. 103, 11 Ohio Op. 3d 21, 1977 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grigger-v-city-of-north-royalton-ohctcomplcuyaho-1977.