Rotella v. McGovern

288 A.2d 258, 109 R.I. 529, 4 ERC (BNA) 1073, 1972 R.I. LEXIS 1215
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 7, 1972
Docket1391-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 288 A.2d 258 (Rotella v. McGovern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rotella v. McGovern, 288 A.2d 258, 109 R.I. 529, 4 ERC (BNA) 1073, 1972 R.I. LEXIS 1215 (R.I. 1972).

Opinion

*530 Powers, J.

Shortly after dinner on the evening of September 13, 1965, Joseph Rotella and his wife, Rocca Rotella, detected an odor in their home and, investigating, discovered what appeared to be water gushing into the basement. Because the water was rising to the level of the oil burner, Joseph called the fire department while neighbors called the sewer department.

Both departments arrived shortly after receiving the calls and the superintendent of sewers advised the men from the fire department that he would take care of the problem. Investigation disclosed that what was flowing into the Rotella basement was sewerage from the sanitation main in Texas Avenue on which street the Rotellas reside. By removing the manhole coyer over the sewer main, the emergency crew from the sewer department was able to determine that there was an accumulation of debris which caused the sewer to block and back up.

This debris consisted of paper, rags, wire and other substances which the sewer emergency crew removed, thus clearing the blockage. Another crew was assigned to pumping the water out of and otherwise cleaning up the Rotellas’ basement. This work took some two days and included the removal and disposal of personal property of the Rotellas which had been rendered useless.

The Rotellas filed a claim with the City Council of the 'City of Providence where they maintain their home. When the city council failed to act thereon, they commenced a civil action in the Superior Court. The case was tried to a Superior Court justice without a jury, solely on the question of liability. At trial, plaintiffs clearly established the causal ’ connection between the damage to their basement and the retroflux of sewage occasioned by the blocking of 'the main.

It was also established that the city óf Providence has some 467 miles of sewer lines with 20,373 manholes and *531 that except for some areas of the city where there is no grade, the city never inspects its sewer lines. The deputy director of public works, who is also chief of the engineering office, explained how, ordinarily, sewer mains are laid so that a gravity flow will keep them clear. It is undisputed that Texas Avenue has a good grade, hence it is never inspected.

The engineer also explained that when private property is to be tied into a sewer main, such work must be done by a licensed drain layer who is required to obtain a permit from the city before the work can be done. It was his testimony that the record showed that no such permit had ever been obtained in connection with the Rotella home.

Joseph Rotella testified that he had contracted to have the house built and, in connection therewith, engaged a plumber who hired a drain layer. He also testified that the house was built in 1954, at which time, according to the deputy director of public works, the sewer main had been in Texas Avenue for some 20 years.

After the parties had rested and the trial justice announced that he would reserve decision, his attention was called to the fact that there had been similar damage to two other homes on Texas Avenue by reason of the back-flow of the sewer on September 13, 1965. The owners thereof had also brought actions which were pending. On stipulation by counsel for plaintiffs and the city solicitor, the trial justice permitted consolidation of the two pending cases with that of the instant case, 1 for decision on the question of liability. The stipulation was on agreement that all ultimate facts as to liability were identical in the three cases except that the city did not contend that con *532 nections to the sanitary sewer by Chiriche and Piccirilli were made without permits.

Thus consolidated, the trial justice rendered a decision in which he found the city to be liable in damages in all three cases. So deciding, he held that in the operation of its sewer system the city was performing a proprietary function; that the backflow into the plaintiffs’ basement was occasioned by the sanitary main in Texas Avenue clogging as a result of the city’s negligence in failure to make periodic inspections and, in the case of the Rotellas, that the assessment of their property and the payment of taxes thereon over the years constituted ratification by the city of what may have originally been an unauthorized connecting of the Rotella home with the Texas Avenue main.

An order was entered to this effect and the three cases were then consolidated for a hearing on damages. In the case of the Rotellas, damages were assessed at $2,536.17 and judgment was accordingly entered.

Similarly, judgments were entered for plaintiffs in the cases of Piccirilli and Chiriche for $2,100 and $1,039.75, respectively. From these judgments, the city seasonably appealed to this court.

Although the question of whether the operation of its sewer system constitutes a proprietary function was involved in the trial justice’s decision in each case, the city makes no contention that his ruling in this regard is contrary to law. Its failure to do so may very well have been prompted by the holding of this court in Prete v. Cray, 49 R. I. 209, 141 A. 609 (1928) wherein it was held that a municipality, permitted but not required to maintain a sewer system, acts in its corporate and not its governmental *533 capacity in maintaining such a system. See also King v. Granger, 21 R. I. 93, 41 A.1012 (1898). 2

In any event the city did not brief the point in its appeal and, in such circumstances, is deemed to have waived it. Clarke v. Sullivan, 103 R. I. 177, 235 A.2d 668 (1967).

Taking as established that the defendant city was performing a proprietary function in the operation of its sewer system, it follows that the city is liable for damages resulting from the tortious acts of its agents or servants committed in connection with the operation of its sewer system. Karczmarczyk v. Quinn, 98 R. I. 174, 200 A.2d 461 (1964) and Aldrich v. Tripp, 11 R. I. 141 (1875).

Applying this rule, the trial justice found that the plaintiff’s in all three cases were entitled to recover for the reason that occasional periodic inspection would reasonably tend to prevent blocking, and the city’s failure in this regard was a breach of its duty to exercise due care. He based this on the undisputed evidence that in the then more than 30 years since the construction of the Texas Avenue sewer line, the line had never once been inspected.

The city does not contend that the rule applied by the trial justice is erroneous per se.

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Bluebook (online)
288 A.2d 258, 109 R.I. 529, 4 ERC (BNA) 1073, 1972 R.I. LEXIS 1215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rotella-v-mcgovern-ri-1972.