Kappes v. Village of Moscow, Unpublished Decision (5-4-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1998
DocketNo. CA97-09-078.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kappes v. Village of Moscow, Unpublished Decision (5-4-1998) (Kappes v. Village of Moscow, Unpublished Decision (5-4-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Kappes v. Village of Moscow, Unpublished Decision (5-4-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION
In 1976, the village of Moscow in Clermont County, Ohio, ("village") entered into an agreement ("agreement") with the United States ("Government"). Under the agreement the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ("Corps") was to "establish and conduct a national stream bank erosion prevention and control demonstration program" ("project"). For its part, the village agreed to fulfill certain requirements, including: 1) providing the Government with "all lands, easements, and rights-of-way necessary" to construct and operate the project; and (2) "[o]perat[ing] and maintain[ing] the project upon completion * * * after the [Corps] determines that it is no longer needed for demonstration purposes, not to exceed five years after completion of initial construction * * *."

Plaintiffs-appellants, Allen and Pauline Kappes, Lawrence and Frances Kappes, Otis and Cindie Lanham, Dean and Nancy Bogner, Elizabeth Nevel, and Robert and Kathleen Bare ("owners"), all own residential property that borders on Water Street, "an area of land within the village of Moscow, running * * * parallel to the Ohio River and lying between the Ohio-Kentucky border within the Ohio River and the real property of the plaintiffs." In August 1996, the owners1 filed a complaint alleging that the village had failed to repair and maintain Water Street and that as a result, "the street has essentially been eroded away by the waters and currents of the Ohio River." The owners also alleged that the erosion of Water Street constituted a hazardous nuisance in the form of a thirty-foot cliff, damaged structures and vegetation on their property, and diminished the value of their property in the amount of $508,000 since "it would be apparent to any prospective buyer that the real property is in the process of being eroded into the Ohio River." Some of the owners complained that they had been induced fraudulently to grant perpetual easements across their property to the village. Finally, the owners alleged that the village had breached a promise to maintain and repair the project.

In September 1996, the owners amended their complaint to add Robert and Kathleen Bare as plaintiffs and to add a cause of action complaining that the village had not paid any of the owners the agreed upon sum of $1 in exchange for the easements over their property. The amended complaint also requested that title of the property underlying the easements and "the real property lying between the * * * easements * * * and the Ohio-Kentucky state boundary which lies within the Ohio River" be quieted in the owners' favor.

In June 1997, the village moved for summary judgment on all claims. Following a hearing, the trial court granted that motion. The owners appealed, presenting three assignments of error for review. We affirm.

In their first assignment of error, the owners complain that the trial court erred in finding that the village is not liable to them under the agreement between the village and the Corps. In addressing the owners' breach of contract claim, the trial court found, in part:

Plaintiffs cannot recover under the contract between the Village and the Army corps [sic] of Engineers because they are not intended beneficiaries of the contract. Generally, a person cannot sue on a contract under which he is not a party unless he is an intended, and not mere incidental, beneficiary of the contract * * * Plaintiffs may argue that they are intended beneficiaries of the contract with the Corps. The contract did in fact provide for services which would help in avoiding erosion on Plaintiffs' land. Nevertheless, private citizens have no right to enforce governmental contracts on their own behalf, unless a different intention is clearly manifested in the contract. * * * There is nothing in the contract manifesting an intent to allow private citizens a rights [sic] of action against either the Corps or the Village despite the Village Mayor's individual belief. Therefore, Plaintiffs cannot recover under this contract.

On appeal, the owners challenge this finding by the trial court and assert that they are intended beneficiaries of the agreement between the village and the Government and that as such the agreement clearly manifests an intent to allow them to pursue an action against the village.

It is well-settled that only a party to a contract or an intended third-party beneficiary — and not an incidental beneficiary — may bring an action to enforce a contract. Hill v. Sonitrol of Southwestern Ohio, Inc. (1988), 36 Ohio St.3d 36,40-41; Visintine Co. v. New York, Chicago St. Louis RR. Co. (1959), 169 Ohio St. 505, 507. The third party need not be named in the contract; however, to recover on a breach of contract claim, "it must be shown that the contract was made and entered into with the intent to benefit the third person." Chitlik v. Allstate Ins. Co. (1973), 34 Ohio App.2d 193, 196. Merely conferring some benefit on one who claims to be a beneficiary by performing under the terms of a contract is insufficient, "rather, the performance of that promise must also satisfy a duty owed by the promisee to the beneficiary." Hill,36 Ohio St.3d at 40, quoting Norfolk Western Co. v. United States (C.A. 6, 1980), 641 F.2d 1201, 1208.

In this case, the owners assert that the "purpose of the contract with the Army Corp [sic] of Engineers was to protect the property of the [owners] from the erosion caused by the Ohio River." The owners offer no authority or evidence to support this statement, and we have not found any. To the contrary, our review of both the record and the federal legislation underlying the project supports a conclusion that the purpose of the project was primarily research and demonstration and not to benefit or protect individual private property owners. The agreement between the village and the Government describes the purpose of the project as follows: "to establish and conduct a national stream bank erosion prevention and control demonstration program." (Emphasis added.)

The federal legislation authorizing the project directs the Secretary of the Army through the Chief of Engineers to conduct a program consisting of: "(1) an evaluation of the extent of streambank erosion on navigable rivers and their tributaries; (2) development of new methods and techniques of bank protection, research on soil stability, and identification of the causes of erosion; (3) a report to the Congress on the results of such studies * * *; and (4) demonstration projects, including bank protection works. See Streambank Erosion Control Evaluation and Demonstration Act of 1974, Pub.L. No. 93-251, Section 32,88 Stat. 12, 22-23 (1974). (Emphasis added.) In addition, a public notice from May 1977 stresses concerns other than the owners' private benefit as critical in determining the project's impact on the public interest. These include: "conservation, economics, aesthetics, general environmental concerns, historical and archeological values, fish and wildlife values, flood damage prevention, land use classification, navigation, recreation, water supply, water quality, and, in general, the needs and welfare of the people."

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Bluebook (online)
Kappes v. Village of Moscow, Unpublished Decision (5-4-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kappes-v-village-of-moscow-unpublished-decision-5-4-1998-ohioctapp-1998.