Poe v. State Road Department
This text of 127 So. 2d 898 (Poe v. State Road Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Leslie N. POE, Appellant,
v.
STATE ROAD DEPARTMENT of Florida, a component agency of the State of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. First District.
MacLean & Webb and Schwartz, Proctor, Bolinger & Austin, Jacksonville, for appellant.
Clyde G. Trammell, Jr., Tallahassee, for appellee.
WIGGINTON, Chief Judge.
Appellant landowner brought suit in equity against appellee State Road Department alleging by his complaint that in reconstructing and rebuilding a section of state highway appellee redesigned and changed the drainage system of the road in such manner as to cast on plaintiff's property *899 quantities of surface water. It is alleged that by so diverting surface waters from their natural drainage course a lake covering approximately ten acres of plaintiff's property is artificially formed during rainy weather which stands for as much as twenty-four hours or more before subsiding, thereby greatly damaging and destroying the land and rendering impossible its use for truck farming. Appellant alleged that the action of appellee constitutes an unlawful appropriation of his land without the payment of compensation, and prays the court to enter a mandatory injunction ordering appellee to cease and desist from its unlawful use and occupancy of plaintiff's land by permitting surface waters to accumulate thereon, or in the alternative to require appellee to condemn an easement over the ten-acre parcel which is subject to periodic flooding, and to pay plaintiff just compensation for such easement.
To the complaint appellee filed an answer asserting the defense of general denial, and in addition plead the affirmative defense of res adjudicata. By this latter defense it is alleged that on a date preceding the filing of this action appellee instituted an eminent domain proceeding in which appellant was joined as a defendant, and by which appellee sought to acquire from appellant a strip of land on the south side of the existing state highway for road purposes, and an easement for a drainage ditch three hundred feet long extending from the existing state road right-of-way in a northerly direction over appellant's remaining land. It is alleged that in that proceeding appellant claimed damages for the flooding of his land which had theretofore resulted, and which would result in the future from the manner in which the state road was rebuilt, as well as the defective manner in which the drainage ditch located on the easement acquired in the suit had been designed and constructed. Appellant claimed in that proceeding that because of the improper construction and design of the highway and drainage ditch his lands adjacent thereto were subject to flooding during the rainy seasons of the year which rendered the ten-acre parcel in the vicinity of the highway and drainage ditch unfit for the purposes of cultivation as part of the appellant's truck farm. It is alleged that these issues were tried and determined by the jury in the eminent domain proceedings wherein appellant was awarded a judgment for the taking of his land and the consequential damages which he claimed he suffered and would continue to suffer as a result of the taking.
After final hearing on the merits of the case now before us the chancellor entered a decree dismissing the complaint with prejudice, finding as a matter of law that appellant's claim to relief was barred under the doctrine of res adjudicata. It is from that decree this appeal has been taken.
Appellant's principal contention is that the trial court erred in holding that the right to relief as prayed for in his complaint is barred under the doctrine of res adjudicata. Appellant correctly points to those factors which must be present before the doctrine of res adjudicata is applicable, namely: (1) identity in the thing sued for; (2) identity of the cause of action; (3) identity of persons and parties to the action; and (4) identity of the quality in the person for or against whom the claim is made.[1] The test to be applied in determining the identity of the cause of action, for the purpose of determining res adjudicata, is the identity of the facts essential to the maintenance of the action.[2]
Appellant urges that the cause of action now sued upon is not identical with the cause of action which formed the basis of the eminent domain proceeding. In the latter suit, the only issue involved was the *900 just compensation to be paid for the taking of appellant's property as described in the complaint, together with the consequential damages suffered by him as a result of the taking. He strenuously contends that in the present suit his cause of action is based upon the theory that there has been an unlawful taking and appropriation of ten acres of his land by appellee for which he is either entitled to be compensated, or he should be awarded a mandatory injunction requiring appellee to take such steps as are necessary in order to prevent the recurrent flooding of his land. If we consider only the allegations of the complaint, we are forced to conclude that appellant's position that the two causes of action under consideration are not identical is correct as a matter of law. The fact that he was compensated for the consequential damages suffered as a result of the taking in the condemnation suit would not bar him from instituting his present suit seeking compensation for the actual taking of ten acres of his property. The appropriation of the ten acres of appellant's property involved in the present action was not an issue in the eminent domain proceeding. It is generally held that a judgment rendered in an eminent domain proceeding is not conclusive as to the items of damage which were not in issue or within the scope of the issues or with respect to which the owner's right to sue was expressly reserved: Thus the condemnation judgment does not preclude a subsequent claim for injuries caused by a new and distinct act of the condemnor or by negligent or wrongful acts, or by unlawful use of the condemned property, or by the construction of the work in question in a manner different from that originally contemplated.[3]
Our decision must necessarily rest upon a determination of what constitutes a taking of private property for public use, as distinguished from what constitutes consequential or resulting damages allowable in an eminent domain proceeding. It seems to be the accepted principle of law that a "taking under the power of eminent domain may be defined as entering upon private property for more than a momentary period and, under the warrant or color of legal authority, devoting it to a public use, or otherwise informally appropriating or injuriously affecting it in such way as substantially to oust the owner and deprive him of all beneficial enjoyment thereof."[4]
Typical of acts which will constitute a taking of private property for public use is the situation involved in Darby.[5] There the act of negligently permitting clay, sand and silt to wash from a road embankment onto adjoining land in such quantities as to permanently damage and render it useless for any practical purposes was held to constitute a taking. Likewise in Tharp[6] the construction of a highway embankment in such manner as to impede the flow and raise the level of a millrace to such an extent as to destroy use of plaintiff's grist mill was held to be a taking.
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127 So. 2d 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poe-v-state-road-department-fladistctapp-1961.