Lawrence a Nakfoor v. Our Savior Lutheran Church

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 2018
Docket335257
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lawrence a Nakfoor v. Our Savior Lutheran Church (Lawrence a Nakfoor v. Our Savior Lutheran Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence a Nakfoor v. Our Savior Lutheran Church, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

LAWRENCE A. NAKFOOR and DEBRA L. UNPUBLISHED NAKFOOR, January 30, 2018

Plaintiffs-Appellees/Cross- Appellants,

v No. 335257 Eaton Circuit Court OUR SAVIOR LUTHERAN CHURCH, C & D LC No. 15-001137-CZ HUGHES, and O’HARROW CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,

Defendants,

and

CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF DELTA,

Defendant-Cross-Appellee,

EATON COUNTY DRAIN COMMISSIONER,

Defendant-Appellant/Cross- Appellee.

Before: MURPHY, P.J., and SAWYER and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs’ real property has been flooded on several occasions in the last few years during heavy rains, which flooding plaintiffs attributed to an increase in the elevation of neighboring property during its development and construction and defects in an adjacent storm water drain system. Plaintiffs filed suit against the neighboring property owner, defendant Our Savior Lutheran Church (OSLC), a contractor that delivered and dumped the fill that increased the elevation of OSLC’s land, defendant C & D Hughes, and a construction company involved in earth moving during OSLC’s development of its property, defendant O’Harrow Construction Company. None of these defendants are part of this appeal. Plaintiffs also sued defendants

-1- Eaton County Drain Commissioner (the Drain Commissioner) and Delta Charter Township (the Township), alleging negligence for failing to remedy defects in the storm drain or drain system, negligence in allowing the elevation change in OSLC’s property, and inverse condemnation. The trial court denied the Drain Commissioner’s motion for summary disposition that was based on the invocation of governmental immunity, with the court allowing plaintiffs’ defect and negligence claims to go forward under the “sewage disposal system event” (SDSE) exception to governmental immunity, MCL 691.1416 et seq. The Drain Commissioner appeals that ruling as of right. The trial court granted summary disposition in favor of the Township on the basis of governmental immunity, concluding that the SDSE exception was inapplicable to the Township. That decision is not being challenged on appeal. Finally, the trial court granted summary disposition in favor of the Drain Commissioner and the Township on plaintiffs’ claim of inverse condemnation. Plaintiffs cross appeal that ruling. We affirm the denial of the Drain Commissioner’s motion for summary disposition, affirm the ruling summarily dismissing plaintiffs’ inverse condemnation claim against the Township, and reverse the dismissal of the inverse condemnation claim brought against the Drain Commissioner.

I. FACTS

Plaintiffs reside in the Countryside Estates subdivision in Grand Ledge, Michigan. In 1991, the Drain Commissioner constructed the “Myers & Henderson Drain District Project,” which consisted of a 15-inch drainpipe, catch basins, and a berm that ran on a north-south line along the eastside of the subdivision. Plaintiffs’ property abuts the west side of the drain system. The drain project resolved a flooding problem in the subdivision and was effective for over 17 years. Plaintiffs and other residents claimed that undeveloped property directly adjacent to the east side of the drain and berm was lowland and for years served as an unintentional “de facto retention pond,” preventing flooding in the subdivision.

In 2008, OSLC began its construction of a church, a school, and ball fields on the previously undeveloped property to the east of the storm water drain system. In 2007, the Township had approved OSLC’s site plan, which did not reflect any change in the property’s elevation and referenced proposed storm drainage and grading plans to ensure that storm water would be contained on site and not trespass to the west where the subdivision is located. And the Drain Commissioner had granted OSLC a soil erosion and sedimentation control permit. Despite the fact that increasing the elevation of OSLC’s land was not part of OSLC’s approved site plan, C & D Hughes began openly delivering to and dumping on OSLC’s property extensive amounts of spoil dirt excavated from storm water retention ponds that were part of a project known as the Section 17 Drain Project, which was located in another area of Eaton County. In answers to interrogatories provided by C & D Hughes, it was asserted that the Drain Commissioner had approved the excavation of the spoil dirt from the retention ponds “but had no role in the disposition of the dirt.” According to C & D Hughes, it “receives no income from the disposition of spoil dirt” and numerous entities had requested receipt of the spoil dirt excavated from the Section 17 Drain Project, including OSLC. Interestingly, OSLC, in a response to requests for admissions, denied that it had agreed to or approved of the spoil dirt being dumped on its land. Regardless, the elevation of OSLC’s property was ultimately raised four feet, approximately two feet higher than the berm. Plaintiffs allegedly warned the Drain Commissioner that this change in elevation would result in runoff onto their property. Nothing

-2- was done by the Township or the Drain Commissioner to enjoin, challenge, or reverse the increase in the elevation of OSLC’s property.

From 2009 through 2013, there were several instances of rainfall and spring snowmelt that caused water to overflow the berm and flood the subdivision. In June 2013, a “major rainfall” resulted in water flooding plaintiffs’ property, with over five feet of standing water ending up in their basement, which rendered all of its contents unsalvageable. In April 2014, the Drain Commissioner approved the installation of two additional “catch basins” on the east side of the berm that flowed into the 15” drainpipe. However, in May 2014, water again overflowed the berm.

On June 14, 2015, a heavy rainfall caused flooding once again. Nine days later, another storm caused flooding so severe that emergency personnel were unable to reach plaintiffs’ home, and plaintiffs’ basement was again flooded. Around this time, on or about June 22, 2015, plaintiffs and several other subdivision property owners submitted a “Petition for Cleaning, Widening, Deepening, Straightening and Extending a County Drain” to the Drain Commissioner.

On February 24, 2016, plaintiffs filed their complaint against defendants and eventually filed a second amended complaint. Plaintiffs’ complaint focused quite heavily on the 2007-2008 planning, oversight, processes, and review connected to the development of OSLC’s property and the increase in the land’s elevation. Further, we find especially pertinent here the following allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint, which were set forth in the “claims” section of the complaint:

45. Mr. Graham, Delta Township Planning Manager[,] was at the construction site and witnessed the dumping activity. Mr. Graham was also aware that the site plan showed no change in the site’s elevation. . . . Mr. Graham’s comments at this past June 15, Delta Township Board Meeting evidences the fact that he had reason to believe that the Eaton County Drain Commissioner . . . had “worked out an agreement” to bring the fill to the church site. The fact that Mr. Graham asks for a copy of a soil erosion and fill plan, doesn’t absolve the Township of responsibility. The Township Zoning Ordinance states: “the clearing, grading and balancing of land may commence absent site plan review if all necessary permits have been obtained from the appropriate State and local agencies.” Without evidence that the permits had in fact been obtained, the Township had ample reason to enforce compliance with the approved site plan, and stop the fill activity.

46. Given Mr. Graham’s above comments, combined with the fact that the Eaton County Drain Commissioner doesn’t act to stop the dumping, there is reason to believe that . . .

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