Reverie Boutique LLC v. City of Waynesboro, Mississippi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedOctober 29, 2019
DocketNO. 2018-CA-01064-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Reverie Boutique LLC v. City of Waynesboro, Mississippi (Reverie Boutique LLC v. City of Waynesboro, Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reverie Boutique LLC v. City of Waynesboro, Mississippi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-01064-COA

REVERIE BOUTIQUE LLC APPELLANT

v.

CITY OF WAYNESBORO, MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/02/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LESTER F. WILLIAMSON JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WAYNE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: JOHN RAY GUNN PATRICK H. ZACHARY ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: WILLIAM ROBERT ALLEN JESSICA SUSAN MALONE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PROPERTY DAMAGE DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 10/29/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., McDONALD AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Reverie Boutique was flooded by sewage and alleged that it had lost tens of thousands

of dollars of inventory because of it. The business sued the City of Waynesboro based on the

premise that it was negligent in maintaining its sewer. The City conceded that for decades

it had known of breakdowns in the sewage system, never corrected them, and lacked a

written maintenance plan, but the City maintained that this was within its discretion.

¶2. The trial court found that the City was immune from suit and granted summary

judgment. But just a few days before that ruling, the Mississippi Supreme Court overhauled

the test to determine when negligence suits like this one could go to trial. ¶3. In light of the intervening change in the law, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

¶4. The core facts of this case are not in dispute. Reverie Boutique was a family business

owned by three women—two aunts and a niece. The store, located on Wayne Street in

downtown Waynesboro, offered clothing and furniture. In the few years it had been in

business, Reverie’s owners had never had any problems with the toilets or sewer or even had

to call a plumber, and no one could remember the location having problems before they

moved in.

¶5. One week in 2015, the storeowners traveled to Dallas to purchase inventory. There

were heavy rains that week in Wayne County. The store’s salesclerk went in to open Reverie

on Friday morning. After opening the door, she stepped in a puddle. The store was filled

with wastewater. The sewer system had backed up, flooding the store with sewage. The

backflow had come up from the boutique’s toilets, which brought with it toilet paper, grass,

rocks, and dirt.

¶6. The City responded by bringing a pump truck to force pressure through the pipes.

After opening a manhole in front of the store, several city employees saw a commercial

mophead shoot through the pipe, never to be seen again.

¶7. By the time of the foul flood in 2015, parts of the aging sewer system had been

crumbling for decades. The sewer was intended to be a closed sanitary system; it was only

intended to contain what was flushed into it by the homes and businesses of Waynesboro.

That refuse would then flow through pipes to a local treatment center, which was permitted

2 to process 2.25 million gallons of sewer waste a day.

¶8. Although this was the idea, it had not worked like this for many years. There was

testimony that the original pipes of the sewer system were made out of clay, and sometimes

concrete, and were eight inches in diameter. Over the decades, the noxious gases from the

waste in the sewer would cause the pipes to sometimes completely disintegrate.

¶9. A former public-works director Joseph Walley explained that “when they put sewer

lines in back in the ‘40s and ‘50s, they thought it was the best thing in the world. And then

they found out the sewer gas eats the line out of the concrete, and we would dig them up and

actually just have a trough the water would run in.” In place of full pipes running through

the sewer system, “[t]here would be nothing on top other than an open hole.” This blank

space would occasionally collapse like a miniature cave-in.

¶10. When the crumbling happened and was discovered, the City would “dig the pipe up

and replace . . . the section till you got back to where there was a section you could tie into”

with structurally sound pipe, according to Walley. “Sometimes it might be ten feet,” and

“[s]ometimes it might be a hundred feet.” The City would dig until it found a stable section

of pipe and then replace it with a thick PVC pipe. Another former public-works director

Harvey Hull described the replacement pipe as “some of the best they got on the market

now.” Even when parts of a pipe might be missing, Hull explained the sewer might still

generally carry wastewater because “the dirt will form what you have left up there,” unless

the pipe was put under heavy pressure.

¶11. In addition to the concentrated sewer gas, the City struggled against nature’s growth.

3 Roots were a problem for the clay and concrete pipes because the inexorable growth of trees

and plants downward would intrude upon pipes, crack them, and then keep going. According

to Walley, this was the primary problem because the City would “have to pull out sections

of roots and then replace the lines after we got the roots out.”

¶12. There was also the strain of population and business growth. More and more houses

and businesses were hooked into the aging system, so even more waste was being pushed

through pipes that had remained the same size since installation.

¶13. So even though the system was built to be a closed sanitary system, over years of

natural decay and natural intrusion, it no longer worked that way. Multiple city workers

testified that in their careers they had spotted various foreign objects in the “closed

system”—inorganic matter like basketballs, bottles, and cans, and organic matter like turtles,

snakes, frogs, and fish. These visitors could only come through breaches in the ideally closed

system.

¶14. All parties agreed that one problem was runoff water from rain, or stormwater. One

blunt way a city worker explained how to tell if there was stormwater in the drains was that

the flow would run clear—since of course normally it would be a dark color. Waynesboro

had a long history of the sewer system’s manholes “boiling over” and coming up from the

clogged pipes below. Even before Walley began working for the City in the late 1970s he

remembered a manhole running over. In this way the manholes had been acting as release

valves for an overfilled sewer, jammed with excess.

¶15. The City even had a measurement of just how over-filled the ideally closed sanitary

4 system could get. The supervisor of the wastewater treatment plant, Rodney Parker,

explained that the City’s permit allows for a flow of 2.25 million gallons a day. On a usual

day, the flow was only about 800,000 gallons, which was well under the permit. But if there

was “heavy rain” for a couple of days, the flow would “jump up to five million gallons[.]”

It could be higher than that, but the flow meters could not calculate above a certain

measurement. The plant supervisor explained, “I’ve had it so high we couldn’t record it.”

Because this was a violation of their treatment permit, the Mississippi Department of

Environmental Quality (MDEQ) had notified the plant and sent letters to the mayor but had

never threatened to fine the City over the excess.

¶16. In the past, the City had tried to find the infiltration points. It had conducted a smoke

test, pumping smoke through the pipes and hoping to see it puff out aboveground. At the

same time, it ran cameras underground to try to find the breaks.

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Reverie Boutique LLC v. City of Waynesboro, Mississippi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reverie-boutique-llc-v-city-of-waynesboro-mississippi-missctapp-2019.