Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 2015
DocketA139207
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5 (Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 2/10/15 Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

BYRON KELLY et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A139207 v. CONTRA COSTA WATER DISTRICT, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. MSC10-01388) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiffs Byron Kelly and Wayne Kelly filed a civil action against defendant Contra Costa Water District (District) after a leak in a District water pipe damaged their real property. A jury awarded them damages under a cause of action for trespass, but the trial court entered judgment in favor of District on their claim for inverse condemnation. Plaintiffs argue they were entitled to judgment in their favor on the inverse condemnation claim. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Plaintiffs, who are brothers, own and operate Stormaster, a self-storage facility located in Pittsburg, California. Plaintiff Byron Kelly, a licensed contractor, was involved in the development of the property in the 1990’s though he was not the builder. The Stormaster property consists of 415 storage units housed in eight buildings, designated “A” through “H,” as well as a manager’s office and residence. The storage units are built on cement slabs, and portions of them are built on fill.

1 District distributes water from the Contra Costa Canal through a series of 16 lateral pipes. A portion of a 15-inch cement water main known as Lateral 14 (which was originally constructed by the federal Department of the Interior but is now operated and maintained by District) runs under the Stormaster property. In September of 2004, Peter Mom, the resident property manager of Stormaster, noticed water ponding in a flower garden on the property. Mom contacted the City of Pittsburg and, after learning its water department did not have pipes in the area, contacted District in December 2004 to report a possible leak. Michael Bartzi, who worked in District’s Operations and Maintenance Department, was assigned to be the supervisor on the reported leak. He first inspected the property in December 2004 and found a wet spot in the garden. Though he returned several times it was not until February 2005 that he was able to collect enough water for the testing necessary to determine its source. On February 28, 2005, after sufficient water was collected and testing confirmed it came from a District pipe, a District crew removed a section of the Stormaster parking lot and used a backhoe to try to excavate Lateral 14 and find the leak. The crew did not locate the pipe because additional fill had been added to the site, which was not reflected in the plans, and when they tried to reach down farther by probing a piece of rebar into the earth with the backhoe, that effort was also unsuccessful. Bartzi described the dirt in the excavation as a “clean scoop,” not wet and muddy as he would expect with a break in a water main. Bartzi obtained estimates from outside contractors to locate the leak, but these bids were rejected because they were too open ended. In May 2005, District installed a French drain in the flower garden because Mom was concerned about the water being a breeding ground for mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus. In September 2006, District opened Lateral 14 at a different location and conducted a video inspection of the pipe’s interior to find and determine the cause of the leak. District’s principal civil engineer, Dan Owre, did not see a hole in the pipe, but noted a two-inch indentation he could not explain. Owre believed that if this indentation had been a hole, the water would have piped through to the surface of the ground and it

2 would have been easy to locate the leak. He assessed the leak as small and intermittent, and believed it probably came from a mortared joint in the pipe. Because the leak did not appear to be causing damage to the property, District concluded the repair did not need to be performed on an emergency basis, and it was deferred until 2008, when the leak was repaired by sliplining a 172-foot section of the pipe with gasket material. Meanwhile, a crack developed in the concrete slab running under four of the storage buildings. Mom first observed a one-quarter-inch crack in one of the storage units in February 2006, having been awakened the previous night by the sound of the crack opening up with such force that it threw gravel and concrete against the metal roof. The crack eventually extended along the length of Buildings A and D and a portion of the slab under Buildings G and H. Plaintiffs obtained bids to repair the cracks in the slab and the resultant damage. The geotechnical firms initially consulted concluded the buildings had settled. In 2008, geotechnical engineer Daniel Rhoades concluded the damage had actually been caused by the water leaking from Lateral 14, which had traveled to that area of the property via an old road that had since been buried. Plaintiffs filed a complaint against District in May 2010, which included causes of action for inverse condemnation, maintaining a dangerous condition of property, nuisance and trespass. The tort claims were tried to a jury and the inverse condemnation claim was tried to the court in a unified proceeding. After the evidence was complete, District submitted points and authorities to the court arguing plaintiffs had failed to establish the elements of an inverse condemnation claim. The remaining causes of action were submitted to the jury, which returned a verdict finding District liable on the trespass cause of action and awarded damages of $414,000 based on repair costs. The jury further determined plaintiffs and/or their partners and agents were negligent or at fault at the time the property was constructed, and assessed plaintiffs’ percentage of fault at 20 percent. The trial court took the inverse condemnation claim under submission and filed an order on May 8, 2013, purporting to grant a directed verdict in favor of District on that cause of action. Plaintiffs appealed from the court’s order, and the court later entered

3 judgment in conformity with the jury’s verdict and the court’s decision on the inverse condemnation claim.1

DISCUSSION Plaintiffs do not contest any aspect of the jury’s verdict, but argue the trial court erred when it ruled in favor of District on their cause of action for inverse condemnation. They claim the court should have found District was liable under an inverse condemnation theory, because the evidence established their property was damaged for a public use. We disagree.2

A. Standard of Review and Procedural Issues Because it affects the standard of review on appeal, we consider the nature of the trial court’s order rejecting the inverse condemnation claim, which states: “Defendant[] Contra Costa Water District’s Motion for a Directed Verdict re: Inverse Condemnation is GRANTED. Plaintiffs[] have not established a prima faci[e] case for Inverse Condemnation. [Citations.]” The order was a response to District’s Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion for Failure to Establish Inverse Condemnation, which was filed at the close of both parties’ evidence and in which District argued plaintiffs had failed to establish the elements of inverse condemnation. Although the trial court’s order was framed as one granting a directed verdict, the directed verdict procedure is only available in a jury trial and was not an appropriate vehicle for resolving an issue that was tried to the court. (Code Civ.

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Kelly v. Contra Costa Water Dist. CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-contra-costa-water-dist-ca15-calctapp-2015.