Henderson v. Spring Run Allotment

651 N.E.2d 489, 99 Ohio App. 3d 633, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 6131
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1994
DocketNo. 2892.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 651 N.E.2d 489 (Henderson v. Spring Run Allotment) 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
Henderson v. Spring Run Allotment, 651 N.E.2d 489, 99 Ohio App. 3d 633, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 6131 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994).

Opinions

Reece, Presiding Judge.

Appellants, Keith and Pamela Unkefer (“the Unkefers”), brought an action for damages against appellee, Spring Run Allotment (“Spring Run”), 1 for interference with the Unkefers’ pipeline easement rights. The Unkefers’ pipeline easement runs beneath property being developed by Spring Run for residential housing and, at the time of the complaint, was used by the Unkefers to discharge wastewater from their septic tank. Spring Run counterclaimed against the Unkefers for damages, alleging that the Unkefers had created a nuisance by *636 discharging untreated wastewater or raw sewage onto Spring Run’s property. After trial, the jury found against the Unkefers on their easement interference claim and found in favor of Spring Run on its nuisance counterclaim, awarding Spring Run $40,000 in damages. The Unkefers appeal. After reviewing the trial record, we affirm the judgment on the easement interference claim and reverse the judgment on the nuisance counterclaim.

The Unkefers own a home and residential lot fronting the north side of U.S. Route 250 in the village of Apple Creek. The Unkefers’ lot was once part of a larger tract of land owned by Lawrence and Blanche Marthey. In the 1940s, the Martheys divided the larger traet of land. The Martheys sold several parcels as residential lots, which fronted the north side of Route 250, and sold another parcel as farmland, which abutted the rear of the Route 250 lots. The deed conveying the farmland contained easement rights granting the Route 250 lot owners the right to maintain drainage and sewer pipes under the farmland and to connect those pipes to a main drainage line that runs east and west under the farmland. When the Unkefers purchased their home in 1977, household waste was flushed into a septic tank on their lot. The septic tank then discharged the Unkefers’ wastewater into a pipeline that ran north under the farmland and connected to the east/west drainage line.

In 1989, Spring Run purchased the farmland behind the Unkefers’ property in order to develop it into residential lots. During excavation work on the farmland in the summer of 1990, Spring Run unearthed part of the Unkefers’ wastewater pipeline. Spring Run traced the pipeline to the south boundary of its property near the Unkefers’ property. Spring Run then connected a new pipeline to the existing source pipeline at the edge of the south boundary. However, Spring Run did not connect the destination end of new pipeline to the east/west drainage line. Instead, Spring Run left the destination end of the new pipeline open and uncovered on lot 297 of its development, where the pipeline discharged wastewater from the Unkefers’ septic tank.

In November 1990, Spring Run filed a sewage nuisance complaint with the Wayne County Health Department, asserting that the Unkefers were discharging untreated wastewater or raw sewage onto Spring Run’s property. At trial, the environmental health director for the county testified that the health department tested the wastewater and found it to be untreated or contaminated wastewater in violation of state health standards. The health director further testified that he advised Steve Buss, one of Spring Run’s partners, not to reroute or connect the new pipeline to the original discharge destination. Although it is not entirely clear from the trial testimony, the health director apparently gave this advice because the original discharge destination, the east/west drainage line, flowed into a public watercourse.

*637 From the very beginning of Spring Run’s development, Spring Run, the Route 250 lot owners, and the village of Apple Creek clashed over whether the Route 250 lot owners could hook into the village sewer system via the sewer lines being constructed as part of Spring Run’s development. Ultimately, the village had to construct its own sewer line on the south side of Route 250 for the benefit of lot owners on both sides of Route 250. In April 1993, apparently in contemplation of the Unkefers’ eventually hooking into the village’s Route 250 sewer line, the health director permitted Spring Run to connect the Unkefers’ wastewater pipeline to the original discharge destination. Once the wastewater pipeline was connected to the original discharge destination, the pool of untreated wastewater that had accumulated on lot 297 was abated. Because the Unkefers’ sanitary system is now connected directly to the village’s sewer line, their septic tank is no longer used, and the wastewater pipeline on Spring Run’s property is used strictly to discharge surface water runoff from the Unkefers’ gutters and downspouts.

On April 15, 1993, the Unkefers filed a complaint against Spring Run, claiming that Spring Run had interfered with their easement rights. Spring Run counterclaimed, alleging that the Unkefers had created and maintained a nuisance on Spring Run’s property. The case was tried to a jury on March 14, 15, and 16, 1994. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Spring Run and awarded Spring Run $40,000 in damages on its nuisance counterclaim. The Unkefers appeal, asserting twelve assignments of error.

We begin our analysis with the assignments of error addressing the easement interference claim. In their ninth assignment of error, the Unkefers claim that the trial court erred in failing to properly instruct the jury on the law concerning interference with easement rights. The trial court gave the following instruction:

“Now, because this is a particular kind of easement, it’s a pipeline easement, its location is to be determined from the instrument that created it, Exhibit Q, the deed. In this case, the deed does not specifically or definitely locate the pipelines to be used. However, once the location of those pipelines has been determined, the owners of all properties involved in the easement cannot modify or change the location without the consent or acquiescence of the other party or parties who have rights in the property, rights either in the easement or in the property that is subject to the easement. And one who wrongfully interferes or obstructs in an easement is liable to the easement owner for damages caused by such interference or obstruction. If you find that the Defendant, Spring Run Allotment, wrongfully interfered with the easement rights of the [Unkefers] then you should return a verdict in favor of the [Unkefers] and then consider an amount of damages.” (Emphasis added.)

*638 The Unkefers do not contend that the trial court’s instruction was wrong. Indeed, they acknowledge in their brief that the court’s instruction was a correct statement of the law. Rather, the Unkefers claim that the court’s instruction failed to give the jury all the law. Specifically, the Unkefers assert that in addition to the above instruction, the court should have instructed the jury that “[o]ne who changes, moves, or relocates pipes under a pipeline easement is also liable for damages.”

A trial court is not required to give a proposed jury instruction in the precise language requested by its proponent, even if the proposed instruction states an applicable rule of law. Instead, the court has the discretion to use its own language to communicate the same legal principles. Youssefv. Parr, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
651 N.E.2d 489, 99 Ohio App. 3d 633, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 6131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-spring-run-allotment-ohioctapp-1994.