Spain v. City of Cape Girardeau

484 S.W.2d 498, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 743
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 15, 1972
Docket34240
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 484 S.W.2d 498 (Spain v. City of Cape Girardeau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spain v. City of Cape Girardeau, 484 S.W.2d 498, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 743 (Mo. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

SIMEONE, Judge.

Appeal by the City of Cape Girardeau from a verdict and judgment of $2,500 rendered against it in a suit brought by Earl and Wilma Spain, plaintiffs-respondents, for surface water damage to their property, allegedly caused by the resurfacing of a city street.

The plaintiffs-respondents own a tract of land in an area of Cape Girardeau known as Rodney Vista Park. They own the south one-half of lot 15, block 2. The Spains originally brought suit against the City and one Rickard, the owner of a lot west of them. The plaintiffs alleged in their petition that the City “constructed a concrete street to the west known as East Rodney Drive which runs in a north and south direction. That said street is a curbed street and is constructed in a hilly area. That as a result of this street and other streets in the area waters from a large area are accumulated and carried to a point on East Rodney Drive approximately seventy-five (75) yards west of the plaintiffs’ land,” where they are “collected and impounded and then discharged in concentrated and distructive (sic) quantities by means of a concrete culvert onto the lands of defendant, Dorthy (sic) Rickard” where the waters are further carried by a ditch lined with bricks and then discharged onto the plaintiffs’ land.

There were numerous witnesses for both parties. The evidence shows that a street known as East Rodney Drive runs in a north-south direction and lies west of the Spains’ property. The Spains’ property lies east of Rodney Vista Boulevard, which also runs north and south and parallel with East Rodney Drive, all in the area of Rodney Vista Park. A third street — Adeline Avenue runs east and west and makes a T-intersection with East Rodney Drive, almost due west of the Spains’ property.

In 1963, the City improved East Rodney Drive. The street had been a twenty foot blacktop street, but was improved to a thir *500 ty foot concrete street with curbs, and as a result of the surface and curbing, water that had previously been absorbed in the ground was now gathered in the street and ran to the intersection of East Rodney and Adeline where it was collected in “catch basins” and deposited on the east side of East Rodney by an eighteen inch pipe. The water then ran down across the Rick-ard property which was just west of the Spains’ property and due east of the intersection of East Rodney and Adeline.

In 1961, East Rodney was a blacktop street without curbs, without catch basins and had a six to eight inch pipe which went across the street, presumably east of East Rodney Drive. East Rodney is “hilly” and is about twelve to fifteen feet higher in elevation than Rodney Vista.

As stated, in 1963, the City constructed the concrete street and curbs; it also put in two catch basins about 140 feet west of the property of the Skaggs, the plaintiffs’ next door neighbors. As a result, when it rains, water goes into the pipe “by Mrs. Rickard’s,” and comes down through her lawn and spreads out and flows down on the Skaggs’ and Spains’ property. On the property of Mrs. Rickard, there is a brick-lined ditch or trough about two-three feet across for the water to run on for about thirty feet and when the water gets to the end of this brick-lined trough it spreads out in the Spains’ yard and frequently enters their basement. One of tl^e witnesses, Virgil Skaggs, testified that before the City had widened East Rodney Drive, put in curbs, catch basins and open-ended pipe, he had no water problem. Prior to 1963 the Skaggs’ and the Spains’ property would get a “natural amount” of draining, but wouldn’t get much of it because the “ground absorbed it. . . ”

Earl Spain testified that he purchased the home at 905 Rodney Vista in 1966 from Emory Lincecum who had himself bought the property in 1962. When it rains, Spain testified, the water “comes down and gets all over my yard,” “about six to eight maybe ten inches” in depth and “practically every time it comes a rain” water gets into the basement. Water comes in through the windows, at the west side of the house and gets “ten to twelve inches deep.” As a result plaintiffs had to disconnect the furnace for several hours at a time leaving them without heat and deprived them of the use of appliances located in the basement. The water would often come at a rapid speed.

In an attempt to stem the flow, plaintiffs hauled about nine truckloads of dirt but it washed away. They also built a wall down the side of the house beside the Skaggs house and built a ditch between their home and the Skaggs. Spain testified that the market value of his home without the “water problem” was $13,500 and with the “water problem” he figured “$9,000 would be a nice price for it.” Although the Spains purchased the property directly from Mr. Lincecum, they did not talk to him or ask about “any water problem.”

Other witnesses for the plaintiffs corroborated much of the testimony of Mr. Spain and Mr. Skaggs. Mrs. Spain testified as to the severity of the problem and also testified that “those conditions that existed were in existence at the time” of the purchase. Other witnesses testified that water in the Spains’ basement was “halfway” up to the knees.

The prior owner, Lincecum, testified that the City made the street wider and “curbed” it. Other than one time, he had no water problems prior to 1963 but that after the work was done on East Rodney he began “to have water problems”; the water came in all four window wells and that the water would take anything “that was laying in the yard, baseball bats, wheelbarrow, or anything else.” At the time the Spains purchased the house the basement walls were slightly discolored. Mr. Lincecum did not inform the Spains about the water problem nor did they ask Mr. Lincecum about it. He sold the house *501 for he “believed” $12,500 or $12,300 and he sold it “mainly” because of the water problems.

At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, motions for directed verdicts were made by both the City and Rickard. The motion of Rickard was sustained, but the motion of the City was overruled.

The City’s engineer testified that the lowest elevation on East Rodney Drive was at a point on the north side of Adeline Avenue at the intersection with East Rodney Drive and that there were two catch basins at that point. The “drop” between East Rodney Drive and Rodney Vista Boulevard is twenty feet, and the area that drains to the intersection of Adeline and East Rodney is some four and two-tenths acres. He testified that the effect of paving the street was to increase the flow.

The former city superintendent for public works indicated that the terrain has changed very little since 1955, and that prior to 1963 East Rodney had open ditches on both sides, that the width of these ditches varied depending on the location of the ditch. The ditches channeled water to the intersection of Adeline and East Rodney and a catch basin on the northeast corner of East Rodney and Adeline and then discharged water through a pipe to the valley gutter. Prior to 1963, the area immediately east of the intersection was an open ditch that carried water, but in 1963 pipes were relocated and the outlet to the pipe that discharged the water was changed from corrugated to concrete. That during his tenure with the City the water that flowed from the intersection of Adeline Avenue and East Rodney Drive could go no other place.

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484 S.W.2d 498, 1972 Mo. App. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spain-v-city-of-cape-girardeau-moctapp-1972.