St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church Vs. City Of Webster City, Iowa

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 12, 2009
Docket07–1752
StatusPublished

This text of St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church Vs. City Of Webster City, Iowa (St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church Vs. City Of Webster City, Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran Church Vs. City Of Webster City, Iowa, (iowa 2009).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 07–1752

Filed June 12, 2009

ST. PAUL’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Appellant,

vs.

CITY OF WEBSTER CITY, IOWA,

Appellee.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Hamilton County,

William J. Pattinson, Judge.

Appellant challenges district court’s judgment notwithstanding the

verdict denying its claim for damages resulting from the negligent

reconnection of its sewer line. REVERSED.

Justin T. Deppe of Deppe Law Office, Jewel, for appellant.

Stephen G. Kersten of Kersten Brownlee Hendricks L.L.P., Fort

Dodge, for appellee. 2

STREIT, Justice.

Some mistakes cannot stay buried. In 1978, during Webster City’s

water main installation project, a city contractor severed and then

negligently reconnected St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church’s gravity-

flow sewer line. Twenty-seven years later, sewage backed up into the

church. St. Paul’s brought a suit against the City to recover damages.

The jury found in favor of St. Paul’s, determining the water main installation project was not an “improvement to real property” under

Iowa Code section 614.1(11) (2003). The district court granted the City’s

motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. St. Paul’s appealed.

Because the negligent reconnection of St. Paul’s sewer line was not an

“improvement to real property,” the statute of repose, Iowa Code section

614.1(11), does not bar St. Paul’s claim. We reverse.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

St. Paul’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (St. Paul’s) was built in

1953 in Webster City. The construction included a gravity-flow sewer

connection to the city’s sanitary sewer line. In 1978, the City of Webster

City (the City) began a multi-million dollar project to upgrade its public

water main system. During the installation of a water main on St. Paul’s property, the City’s contractor severed St. Paul’s sewer line because it

was on the same plane as the water main. In reconnecting the line, the

contractor used a five- or six-foot piece of corrugated tubing (instead of

cast iron pipe or clay tile), which was the wrong material, and re-routed

the line around the water main. The change in material and the way the

line was reconnected interfered with the gravity flow of the sewer line.

Cutting and reconnecting the sewer line was not part of the

improvements being made by the City, i.e., it was not a project to

improve the sewer connection. In June 2005, sewage backed up into St. 3

Paul’s as a result of the faulty reconnection. St. Paul’s incurred more

than $30,000 in damages.

In December 2005, St. Paul’s filed a petition, claiming the City

negligently cut and repaired its sewer line during the water main

installation project in 1978. The City filed a motion to dismiss, asserting

Iowa Code section 614.1(11), a fifteen-year statute of repose for

improvements to real property, bars recovery. The motion was denied. Later, the City filed a motion for summary judgment on the same ground,

which was also denied. The case proceeded to trial in March 2007.

Before the case was submitted to the jury, St. Paul’s objected to special

verdict form question 3, which stated, “Was the City’s water main

installation project, as it pertains to this case, an ‘improvement to real

property,’ ” and requested that the question instead read, “Do you find

. . . that the negligent severing and reconnection of the plaintiff’s . . .

sewer line . . . was an improvement to real property?” The original

question was presented to the jury. The jury found the City negligent,

that the City’s negligence was the proximate cause of St. Paul’s damages,

and that the City’s water main installation project was not an

improvement to real property. The City filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The district court granted the motion,

stating “the water main installation constitutes an improvement and the

Church’s damages flowed from one defect in that improvement” and thus

the claim was barred by the statute of repose set forth in Iowa Code

section 614.1(11). St. Paul’s appealed.

II. Scope of Review.

We review a district court’s ruling on a motion for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict for correction of errors at law. Jasper v. H.

Nizam, Inc., 764 N.W.2d 751, 761 (Iowa 2009). “We inquire whether 4

substantial evidence exists to support each element of the plaintiff's

claim, justifying submission of the case to the jury.” Gibson v. ITT

Hartford Ins. Co., 621 N.W.2d 388, 391 (Iowa 2001). We view the

evidence in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Id.

III. Merits.

Iowa Code section 614.1(11) is a statute of repose that bars a

claimant from bringing “an action arising out of the unsafe or defective condition of an improvement to real property . . . more than fifteen years

after the date on which occurred the act . . . [that] cause[d] . . . the injury

. . . .” Thus, regardless of when an injury occurs, this statute of repose

terminates any right of action fifteen years after the date of the

improvement. If the statute applies, St. Paul’s claim is barred since the

reconnection of St. Paul’s sewer line occurred in 1978, twenty-seven

years before sewage backed up into the church and this action was

commenced.

We have defined an improvement to real property to mean “a

permanent addition to or betterment of real property that enhances its

capital value and that involves the expenditure of labor or money and is

designed to make the property more useful or valuable as distinguished from ordinary repairs.” Krull v. Thermogas Co., 522 N.W.2d 607, 611

(Iowa 1994) (quoting Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1138

(1993)); see also Jarnagin v. Fisher Controls Int’l, Inc., 573 N.W.2d 34, 36

(Iowa 1997).

The parties do not dispute that the water main installation project

was an improvement or that the City’s contractor negligently reconnected

St. Paul’s sewer line. The parties also agree that cutting and

reconnecting St. Paul’s sewer line was not an original part of the

improvement project, but that the damage to, and negligent repair of, the 5

sewer line clearly occurred during, and as a consequence of, the water

main project. The City argues that work on St. Paul’s sewer line should

be considered part of the water main improvement project because

cutting St. Paul’s sewer line would have not been done but for the water

main installation project. St. Paul’s argues that the reconnection of its

sewer line was not an improvement, but rather a repair (resulting from

the water main project) that improved neither the function nor the value of the sewer line. The question is whether we should evaluate the

reconnection of St. Paul’s sewer line as an independent “improvement” or

as a necessary part of the water main improvement project under the

statute of repose.

In the judgment notwithstanding the verdict ruling, the district

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