Hutchinson v. Town of Andover, No. Cv 8636971 S (Jan. 13, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 262
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1997
DocketNo. CV 8636971 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 262 (Hutchinson v. Town of Andover, No. Cv 8636971 S (Jan. 13, 1997)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchinson v. Town of Andover, No. Cv 8636971 S (Jan. 13, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 262 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION In this action commenced by a two count complaint dated September 22, 1986, the plaintiffs, John and Katherine Hutchinson, seek damages and an injunction against the defendant Town of Andover (Town). The plaintiffs claim that the Town has improperly maintained and permitted drainage of surface water onto their property and house lot located on Bunker Hill Road in the defendant Town. In Count One of their complaint, the plaintiffs allege, inter alia, that the Town permits and maintains drainage of surface water onto their property at various locations on the southerly side of Bunker Hill Road, and CT Page 263 that such drainage into, upon, and through the Plaintiffs' property is not done in such a way as to do the least damage to such land. In Count Two, the plaintiff Katherine Hutchinson alleges that she is the owner of land and appurtenances comprising a house lot located on Bunker Hill Road in the defendant Town, and that the Town has permitted and maintained drainage of surface water onto the plaintiff's house lot where it abuts Bunker Hill Road.

Service of process was made on the Town on September 29, 1986, and the defendant filed an answer dated September 2, 1987.

In its answer to Count One of the complaint, the Town admitted the plaintiffs' ownership of the property and the Town's maintenance of Bunker Hill Road as a Town road. Additionally, the Town admitted that it permits and maintains drainage of surface water onto the plaintiffs' property at specified locations on the southerly side of Bunker Hill Road, and that the drainage first occurred prior to October 1, 1981 and continued through the date of the complaint.

As to Count Two, the Town admitted that the lot owned by the plaintiff Katherine Hutchinson is a house lot, and the Town acknowledged that it maintained Bunker Hill Road as a Town Road. The Town also admitted that it permitted and maintained drainage of surface water from Bunker Hill Road onto this house lot.

By pleading dated November 8, 1986, the Town filed a Special Defense alleging that it had acquired a drainage easement by prescription over the plaintiffs' property.

The trial of this action took place over several days during which the court heard oral testimony and received numerous documents into evidence. Based on the evidence adduced at trial, the court makes the following findings and orders.

On August 29, 1959, the plaintiffs acquired several acres of property on Bunker Hill Road in the defendant Town. While it is unnecessary to recite a detailed legal description of the property, a pertinent portion of the plaintiffs' property abuts the southerly edge of Bunker Hill Road, a town road maintained by the defendant Town. Starting from the plaintiffs' property line with an abutting neighbor, MacDonald, the plaintiffs' property runs in a westerly direction for approximately 2300 feet along the southerly edge of Bunker Hill Road to its intersection with CT Page 264 the Hop River. The river crosses Bunker Hill Road and flows in a southerly direction through a westerly portion of the plaintiffs' property.

The plaintiffs' property is located in an area designated R-80 for Town zoning purposes.

Starting from a point approximately 1700 feet east of the plaintiffs' property line with MacDonald, and then continuing along the plaintiffs' northerly boundary, Bunker Hill Road slopes downhill from east to west from an elevation of approximately 546.5 feet to an elevation of approximately 290 feet where it intersects the Hop River.

The Town has periodically resurfaced Bunker Hill Road using a material known as chip seal. In addition, during winter storms, the Town spreads sand mixed with salt on Bunker Hill Road for the safety of motorists.

During 1960 and 1961, the plaintiffs built a house on a portion of this property, and on August 31, 1961, the plaintiff John Hutchinson quit claimed a house lot to the plaintiff Katherine Hutchinson. This lot, which is a portion of the property originally purchased by the plaintiffs in 1959, includes the home built by the plaintiffs and contains approximately 250 feet of frontage on Bunker Hill Road. The plaintiffs occupy the home and house lot as their primary residence.

From the crest of Bunker Hill Road downhill to the MacDonald-Hutchinson property line, the Town has constructed no drainage ditches or catch basins on or near the road to drain surface water off the road or to capture flow from the road and from land north and south of the road.

Prior to 1959, the Town created six drainage sites on Bunker Hill Road which has caused surface water on Bunker Hill Road to drain onto the property subsequently purchased by the plaintiffs. At the trial, the plaintiffs' introduced a map into evidence which shows the location of their property and Bunker Hill Road. cf. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 5, map dated March 6, 1989 and prepared by Holmes Henry Associates. This map also shows the location of the drainage sites constructed and maintained by the Town. Additionally, during the trial, the Town introduced, as an exhibit, a written plan of remediation in the form of a letter authored by Glenn Mirtl of Fuss O'Neill Inc. cf. Defendant's CT Page 265 Exhibit A, letter of July 11, 1996. In this letter, Mr. Mirtl refers to each drainage area by number. For the sake of clarity and consistency, the court follows the numbering system utilized by Mr. Mirtl.

The first area, referred to as drainage area six, is a drainage ditch, or leak off, located on the south side of Bunker Hill Road on the plaintiffs' property approximately 200 feet west of its boundary with MacDonald. This leak off collects surface flow from the southerly edge of Bunker Hill Road. The water that flows into this drainage ditch travels in a westerly direction down Bunker Hill Road from a high point approximately 1500 feet east of the Hutchinson-MacDonald boundary. In the main, this water consists of storm run-off. Water and water-borne road sediment collected at this point enter the plaintiffs' property through the leak off constructed by the Town and then course over the plaintiffs' property. While some of this run-off travels toward and into an existing wetland on the plaintiffs' property, other channels created by this leak off move in a southwesterly direction south of the house lot. The velocity and volume of this flow has caused the removal of top soil, and further soil erosion by scouring and channeling the land. In addition, portions of the road surface, chip seal, and road sediment have been carried by this surface flow more than 400 feet into the plaintiffs' property. One witness, soil scientist John Ianni, testified credibly that on a recent inspection he discovered the presence of pea stone gravel approximately 650 feet from the leak off site on Bunker Hill Road, with pieces of pavement from the road approximately 250 feet into the plaintiffs' property.

Drainage area five consists of a cement culvert running under Bunker Hill Road from its northerly edge to its southerly side and emptying into a drainage pool on the plaintiffs' property adjacent to the road. This site is located approximately 350 feet west of the Hutchinson-MacDonald boundary line. This culvert collects gutter flow which has run along the northern edge of Bunker Hill Road from driveways and land east and north of the plaintiffs' boundary line with MacDonald, as well as surface flow from land north of the plaintiffs' but west of their property line with MacDonald. While the Town maintains the culvert and cleans out the drainage pool annually, evidence adduced at the trial satisfies the court that the drainage pool does not capture and retain the surface water run-off and road sediment at this drainage site.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchinson-v-town-of-andover-no-cv-8636971-s-jan-13-1997-connsuperct-1997.