Katz v. Metropolitan Sewer District

690 N.E.2d 1357, 117 Ohio App. 3d 584
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1997
DocketNo. C-960230.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 690 N.E.2d 1357 (Katz v. Metropolitan Sewer District) 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
Katz v. Metropolitan Sewer District, 690 N.E.2d 1357, 117 Ohio App. 3d 584 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Shannon, Judge.

This is an appeal from the summary judgment entered by the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas in favor of the defendants-appellees upon the complaint of the plaintiffs-appellants brought pursuant to R.C. 5303.03 1 seeking an order to remove an existing sewer line running beneath real estate owned by them.

The complaint was filed August 4, 1995, and alleged, inter alia, that the plaintiffs-appellants had acquired the real estate by purchase from Alfred B. Katz. The record before us indicates that Alfred B. Katz had acquired the property in April 1961, and that it was conveyed to appellants by deed dated August 24, 1976.

In response, the city of Cincinnati and the Board of Commissioners of Hamilton County, as defendants, filed motions to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. On December 22, 1995, the court properly converted the separate motions to dismiss into motions for summary judgment, afforded the parties time to present evidence, and set the matter for hearing. On January 16, 1996, the appellants filed their motion for summary judgment. On March 14, 1996, the court granted summary judgment to the defendants-appellees and denied the appellants’ motion for summary judgment, and an appeal was filed from that order on March 27, 1996.

In ruling upon the opposing motions for summary judgment, the court had before it certain affidavits and a joint stipulation of documents. The facts upon which the resolution of the controversy depends are established by those materials, all of which are cognizable under Civ.R. 56.

In his affidavit, Louis H. Katz, one of the appellants, explained the origins of the litigation. While inspecting the real estate, which consists of several parcels within the city of Cincinnati, Katz noticed a truck on the land, which he found to belong to a contractor who had been employed by the Metropolitan Sewer *587 District to clean a seven-and-one-half-foot sewer, one of the two sewers that ran beneath the property. Accordingly, Katz contacted a representative of the sewer district, which is owned by Hamilton County and managed by the city of Cincinnati. The representative informed Katz that the sewer district had an “easement over the property for purposes of maintaining a sewer line under the property” and that it needed no permission from Katz and the other owners of the land to perform the work on the sewer. Katz responded that he lacked knowledge of any easement. According to Katz’s affidavit, a search of the title to the property failed to reveal any recorded easement, and in his subsequent discussions with representatives of the district, they acknowledged that “there was no easement and no visible way to determine that a sewer was under the. property.”

Katz inquired of an employee of the contractor who was on site about the length of time he would be working on the sewer. That person, Richard C. Evans, explained that he was “doing work for the Metropolitan Sewer District * * * on their combination storm and sanitary sewer beneath Mr. Louis Katz’s parking lot,” that the sewer line was “in extremely bad condition” and that in cleaning the larger sewer he noticed a “smaller abandoned sewer” in a state of at least partial collapse. Katz allowed the contractor to continue the work “until April 14, 1994.” The record is silent as to whether all work was completed.

The initial predicate of the city’s motion to dismiss, one which the county also set forth as an affirmative defense in its answer to the complaint, was that the action was time-barred by R.C. 2305.04, which requires that an action to recover possession of real property be brought within twenty-one years after the cause of action accrued. One of the grounds given by the court in its order granting summary judgment to the defendants and denying it to plaintiffs was that R.C. 2305.04 barred this action.. The twenty-one-year period of time mentioned in the statute was connected intimately with the city’s second proposition, which was that it possessed, upon facts not controverted within this record, an easement by prescription for the sewers.

To support both contentions, the city submitted the affidavit of Anthony Huang, who was identified as Sewers Chief Engineer with the Metropolitan Sewer District. Huang traced the history of the sewer line through “MSD records dating back to the 1800s.” He stated that the sewer 2 originated in 1828 as part of a project by “the Canal Commission” to “protect canal property.” We note, parenthetically, that one edge of the real estate in question abuts Central *588 Parkway, a thoroughfare in Cincinnati which, at the location of the appellants’ property, follows the original route of the Miami and Erie Canal, which, when abandoned as an artificial waterway, was filled in to become a city street.

Huang’s research led him to reach the following conclusions: that the canal commission was entitled to take possession of land for canal improvements; that compensation claims had to be paid within one year of possession; that the Procter and Gamble Company owned the property of record in 1851 and had constructed sewers in the area to the knowledge of property owners affected thereby; that a sewer record index map in use prior to 1912 showed a sewer existing on Katz’s property; that a 1920 transit map showed a sewer there; that a 1921 city field survey report showed an existing sewer there, open on the street surface so that it was available as a latrine; and that a property appraisal made in 1930 showed an existing seven-and-one-half-foot sewer with the notation “this valuation subject to perpetual sewer extending through the property.”

The parties’ joint stipulation constituted a composite of references to documents, some of ancient origin. The first of the series of eight references was to the 1825 Ohio Canal documents, which reflected an act by the General Assembly of Ohio dated February 4, 1825, which empowered the canal commissioners to take possession of any lands necessary to accomplish the improvements intended by the legislation. Subsequent references were to maps and other documents that indicate the presence of two sewers on the property built by Procter and Gamble before 1886, to a report dated March 4, 1852, by the city civil engineer showing sewer lines built and in progress, and a 1919 map updated from the 1852 report showing all the sewers built before 1859.

The appellants’ cardinal proposition is:

“In an action for the recovery of real property under Revised Code § 5303.03, the party claiming the right to the continued use of a sewer line buried beneath the owners’ property is not entitled to summary judgment where the record fails to demonstrate that said use was open, notorious, adverse to the owners’ property rights and for a period of at least twenty-one years.”

To support their thesis, appellants argue that until Louis Katz saw the contractor’s truck and encountered Evans, neither they nor Alfred B. Katz, their grantor, had any knowledge of the existence of the sewer lines. The tenor of that argument, as expanded, is that the statute of limitations governing their recovery of real property did not commence to run until they had actual notice of the subterranean sewers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
690 N.E.2d 1357, 117 Ohio App. 3d 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-metropolitan-sewer-district-ohioctapp-1997.