Seminole County v. Mertz

415 So. 2d 1286
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 1982
Docket81-1115
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 415 So. 2d 1286 (Seminole County v. Mertz) 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.

Bluebook
Seminole County v. Mertz, 415 So. 2d 1286 (Fla. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

415 So.2d 1286 (1982)

SEMINOLE COUNTY, Appellant/Cross-Appellee,
v.
Harold E. MERTZ and Esther M. Mertz, His Wife; the Huskey Company, a Florida Corporation; and Magnolia Service Corporation, a Florida Corporation, Appellees/Cross-Appellants.

No. 81-1115.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.

May 26, 1982.
Rehearing Denied July 2, 1982.

*1287 Clifton A. McClelland, Jr., of Nabors, Potter, McClelland, Griffith & Jones, P.A., Melbourne, and Nikki Clayton, Seminole County Atty., Sanford, for appellant/cross-appellee.

Harlan Tuck of Giles, Hedrick & Robinson, P.A., Orlando, for appellee/cross-appellant Magnolia Service Corp.

Michael J. Sheahan of Maguire, Voorhis & Wells, P.A., Winter Park, for appellee/cross-appellant The Huskey Co.

Emery H. Rosenbluth, Jr., of Subin, Shams, Rosenbluth & Moran, P.A., Orlando, for appellees/cross-appellants Harold E. Mertz and Esther M. Mertz.

COBB, Judge.

Seminole County and Magnolia Service Corporation[1] appeal the granting of a permanent injunction prohibiting the flow of surface water onto appellees' lands. We affirm. For reasons that will be discussed, Magnolia's appeal of the dismissal of its counterclaim is denied.

Harold and Esther Mertz (Mertz), appellees herein, filed a complaint in March, *1288 1978, in the Circuit Court of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit seeking equitable relief and damages against Magnolia Service Corporation (Magnolia) and equitable relief against the Huskey Company (Huskey). Mertz also sought equitable relief from Seminole County (County), which was subsequently added to the complaint.

Mertz's claim for injunctive relief, which is the focus of this appeal, requested that Magnolia, Huskey and County be prohibited from causing further damage to Mertz's property by the flow of surface waters from the residential subdivision upland from the property which Magnolia and Huskey had developed.

A temporary injunction was issued on April 24, 1979, ordering Magnolia to insure that no further damage came from its drainage onto the Mertz property. This temporary injunction was dissolved on July 19, 1979, the trial judge finding that the equities no longer called for such an injunction, particularly since the Mertzes had failed to allow repair of the problem.

Trial was begun by a different circuit judge on August 4, 1980, and continued for eleven days. The court entered its final judgment allowing the injunctive relief sought by Mertz on June 11, 1981. A motion for rehearing was denied on August 4, 1981, and this appeal followed.

This case stems from the development of two adjoining parcels of land in Seminole County. Magnolia is the developer of a planned unit development (PUD) known as Wekiva Hunt Club (Wekiva); Huskey is the developer of Sweetwater Properties, encompassing considerable acreage in Orange and Seminole Counties. This land, which is considered a development of regional impact, is adjacent to Wekiva and to the east and north of Mertz's land.

At the time of trial, there were approximately 1,078 dwelling units in Wekiva, with a plan for 2,928. In addition, some of the streets had been completed, several sections had been platted, and streets and storm drains constructed.

Of the total 1,022 acres, this lawsuit concerned about 200 to 245 acres that form a triangular shaped basin, which contained approximately 109 dwelling units at the time of trial, with plans for an additional 500 in the future. It is the drainage from this basin that is the focus of this action.

The Mertz property was located immediately north and downhill from this basin. Mertz had planned a single-family residence for the land, which he thought contained two lakes, but which in reality were four sinkholes, a fact Mertz discovered as the dry season progressed. Mertz remedied the situation by lining the sinkholes with vinyl, with provisions for percolation into soil when the water rose over a certain level.

Magnolia proceeded with their development, including the building of a retarding dam with an 18-inch and a 36-inch pipe to allow the water to go through, as well as a spillway for heavy rains. Additionally, a 24-inch metal pipe carried water from a marshy area on Magnolia's property into a small pond on the southeast of Mertz's property. During construction of the dam, the concrete pipe was placed approximately ten feet east of where the metal pipe had been, so the stream of water now first flows on the Huskey property rather than directly into Mertz's pond. This water now flows in a new man-made channel just east of the Mertz property and intersects the flow from the 36-inch pipe in the eastern part of the dam, with both entering the Mertz property approximately 115 feet north of its southeast corner, flowing eventually into Mertz's vinyl lined lake across a portion of land which was also vinyl lined to cause a "babbling brook" effect.

The event which instigated this suit occurred on March 8, 1978, when a temporary dam, somewhat to the south of the permanent one being built, discharged a large amount of water through an 18-inch concrete pipe, filling the Mertz pond with sand and sediment and causing dirt and debris to flow onto the Mertz land, turning a crystalclear lake into a sandy one, with erosion damage and destruction continuing through the trial.

*1289 Following eleven days of trial, with considerable expert testimony and the taking of a view by the court, the court entered its final judgment. The court found that the 200-acre area in question was in the form of two basins. Prior to development, the western basin consisting of about three-eighths of the area, drained without going through the marshy area on the east, but rather flowed directly northward onto the western portion of the Mertz land and then into what is now the Mertz lake. The court stated that the development has caused diversion of substantially all of the water from the western basin into the marshy area in the eastern basin. The court found that the western basin had no features that could conceivably be classified as a natural watercourse, and found that the flow instead was in the form of surface sheet flow.

In the eastern basin, the court found that there were no natural flows, and only two short channel areas of approximately 150 yards each, neither of which in the court's opinion was seen as a watercourse. The court did state during the motion for rehearing that the small flow on the golf course may be a watercourse, but in the court's opinion it did not make any difference to the total outcome of the case.

The court found two substantial divisions of water: that from the western basin to the eastern basin, and one in the shift of the western outlet of the marsh by the placing of the concrete pipe some ten feet east of where it had been, having a substantial effect on Mertz's property by causing a channel to be eroded where none had existed previously. The court found these two diversions to have violated the water laws of Florida, entitling Mertz to equitable relief. The solution to the problem, in the court's opinion, especially since further development would only increase the flow, was to have Magnolia use its 75-foot wide drainage easement it had previously acquired from Huskey and that ran along the eastern side of the Mertz property and along its northern border, to divert all the water flow now going onto the Mertz property.

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415 So. 2d 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seminole-county-v-mertz-fladistctapp-1982.