Lake Lorraine, Inc. v. American Telephone & Telegraph

378 F. Supp. 13, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7670
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1974
DocketNo. 73C 559 (A)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 378 F. Supp. 13 (Lake Lorraine, Inc. v. American Telephone & Telegraph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Lorraine, Inc. v. American Telephone & Telegraph, 378 F. Supp. 13, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7670 (E.D. Mo. 1974).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HARPER, District Judge.

This is an action in two counts brought by Lake Lorraine, Inc., a Missouri corporation, against the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, a New York corporation (hereinafter referred to as AT&T), and the Natural Pipe Line Company, a Minnesota corporation (hereinafter referred to as Natural Pipe).

In Count I, plaintiff seeks to recover damages for an alleged leak in its lake allegedly caused by blasting operations performed by the defendants on or near plaintiff’s property. In Count II, plaintiff seeks to recover damages for defendants’ alleged destruction of timber and excavation of topsoil while allegedly trespassing on plaintiff’s land. Plaintiff further seeks in Count II to recover treble damages pursuant to R.S. Mo. 537.340 for alleged destruction of trees growing on plaintiff’s land for use, shade and ornament while allegedly trespassing on plaintiff’s land.

This Court has jurisdiction based upon diversity of citizenship and amount under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.

[15]*15The pleadings and testimony reveal that on May 4, 1973, AT&T and Natural Pipe entered into a contract (Plaintiff’s Ex. 2), whereby Natural Pipe was to construct and install approximately 10.2 trench miles of buried telephone cable, a part of which was to run across plaintiff’s land. On May 14, 1973, in American Telephone and Telegraph Company v. Lake Lorraine, Inc., et ah, in Cause Number 44,204, Division Number 2, in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, Missouri, that portion of plaintiff’s land, property and rights described in the petition was ordered condemned for the uses and purposes as set out in the petition, and AT&T was given the right to take possession thereof immediately upon the filing of the Report of the Commissioners and the payment to the Clerk of the amount assessed by the Commissioners. The payment was made to the Clerk as required.

The Petition in Condemnation (Plaintiff’s Ex. 3) shows in paragraph 5(a) that AT&T acquired a thirty-foot easement across plaintiff’s land, plus in paragraph 7, AT&T acquired a temporary easement to clear and use land on each side of the above mentioned thirty-foot easement for the purpose of providing room for men and machinery to work and turn thereon while constructing and installing the communication systems to be located within the easement tract. In paragraph 8 of the petition, AT&T agreed to pay the actual damages to the realty (other than resulting from the clearing of the right of way).

The testimony at the trial establishes that all of plaintiff’s land has been subdivided into lots as part of a lake development called Lake Lorraine, except a 95-acre tract across which AT&T’s easement runs. The lake thereon was created by the construction of an earth-filled dam in the late 1950’s which runs north and south. The dam is built on a bedding plane of impure limestone. The rock formation under the lake and dam consists of a layer of lime shale over a layer of limestone, which in turn is over a layer of lime shale, and so on. Where these different layers of lime shale and limestone come in contact with each other is called a bedding plane or zone of weakness along which water can flow. The layers of lime shale and limestone under the lake and dam are also jointed vertically, which means there are vertical fractures in these layers which could be penetrated by water. Thus, water could go down one of the vertical fractures and move along a bedding plane and could then surface elsewhere.

Plaintiff’s lake has had a history of leaking due to no apparent external causes. Leaks have occurred in 1960, 1965, 1966, and again on two occasions in 1968. Each of these leaks was repaired by a method known as “grouting”, which consists of drilling a hole down to the area of the suspected leak, inserting a pipe in the hole and pumping a substance, usually concrete — although the plaintiff used hot asphalt — down the pipe to block the leak. This method is only a temporry cure and must be repeated when the leaks reappear. Each of the above mentioned leaks was found to be about forty to fifty feet north of the northern end of the dam, and that is where the grouting was performed at a depth of sixty-eight to seventy-three feet.

Toward the end of June and into the first part of July, 1973, defendant, Natural Pipe, dug a seven-foot trench along AT&T’s easement near and on plaintiff’s property and laid a telephone cable pursuant to its contract with AT&T. At various points along AT&T’s easement, as shown by Plaintiff’s Exhibit 18, it was necessary for Natural Pipe to use dynamite to blast out rock in order to achieve a trench with a depth of seven feet.

Beginning on June 28, 1973, and on several occasions thereafter, residents from various points around the lake testified that they heard the defendants blasting and felt turbulence in the air and vibrations described by one witness as earth tremors. One witness at first believed the noise and vibrations to be [16]*16from sonic booms which occurred regularly over the area. The blasting caused dishes and windows to rattle and objects such as pictures to fall off of walls, but the only damage reported besides plaintiff’s alleged damage to its lake was that of a homebuilder in the area, who reported that a rock had gone through the roof of a house that he was building (Plaintiff’s Exhibits 7-11). There were no reports of broken windows, cracked foundations or broken septic tank connections in the area.

The first report that the plaintiff’s lake was leaking was made by the plaintiff’s lake manager who had been present and helped repair four of the prior leaks. He testified that after he heard the blasting on July 2, 1973, he checked the dam with a divining rod which indicated water flowing underground about forty to fifty feet north of the dam, the same area where the prior leaks had occurred and where the prior grouting had been performed. He then checked a creek bed about one-third of a mile northeast of the northern end of the dam which he had checked some two weeks before, and found it to be dry, but this time he found water flowing out of the creek bed as it had during prior leaks. On July 5, 1973, the lake manager and a resident of the lake again checked the creek bed and the manager found the waterflow had increased and that it was coming out of the ground in two different places in the creek bed and that some particles of asphalt were in the creek bed where the water was flowing.

There is conflict in the testimony as to the rate at which the lake is leaking, but everyone who stated an opinion on the subject agreed that it is leaking.

The issues presented to this Court under Count I are twofold. First, was the blasting operation carried on by the defendants in connection with the installation of the above mentioned telephone cable the proximate cause of the present leak or leaks in the plaintiff’s lake ? Second, if defendants’ blasting operation is the proximate cause of the present leak or leaks in plaintiff’s lake, what is the correct measure of damages, and what are the damages ?

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Bluebook (online)
378 F. Supp. 13, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-lorraine-inc-v-american-telephone-telegraph-moed-1974.