Thorson v. City of Minot

153 N.W.2d 764, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 104
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1967
Docket8423-8433
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 153 N.W.2d 764 (Thorson v. City of Minot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorson v. City of Minot, 153 N.W.2d 764, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 104 (N.D. 1967).

Opinion

ERICKSTAD, Judge.

The City of Minot appeals from eleven judgments against it, arising out of actions brought by the plaintiffs in eleven separate complaints and consolidated for purposes of trial.

Through two covenants not to sue, ten of the defendants were released from liability, and, as a result, the trial court dismissed the actions against them. Following the entry of the eleven judgments, the City moved to credit the judgments with the amount of the consideration received for the covenants not to sue. The trial court denied these motions, and it is from the orders denying these motions that the City also appeals.

Trial de novo is demanded. On a trial de novo this court must decide the facts anew. In trying the facts anew, the findings of the trial court are entitled to appreciable weight. This is especially so when the trial court has had the opportunity of seeing and hearing the witnesses and noting their demeanor. Gress v. Gress, 148 N.W.2d 166 (N.D. 1967); Parceluk v. Knudtson, 139 N.W.2d 864 (N.D.1966).

There is even more reason to give the findings of the trial court credence when the issue involves damages caused by changes in the topography of the land, when the court has personally viewed the topography, making possible a clearer perspective than is attainable from a mere review of the record on appeal. In this case the transcript of the trial court proceedings discloses that the trial court in person viewed the topography of the land.

It should be noted that this court on review has been at a considerable disadvantage in attempting to understand the testimony of the witnesses, because much of it has related to locations, directions, and grades which have been described in the transcript by such wording as “([the witness] indicating),” making much of the testimony unintelligible to this court.

Thus, in light of the general rule to be applied in a case tried de novo and in light of the peculiarities of this case, we have reviewed the entire record and conclude that the facts support the trial court’s finding that the City maintained a nuisance in operating its sanitary landfill in the ravine north of the Minot State College property within the city of Minot.

The landfill operation was commenced in 1958 in a ravine which sloped upward from south to north and extended from just north of the campus of Minot State College at 11th Avenue, N.W., to approximately 20th Avenue, N.W. This ravine had formed part of a natural drainage area which ran from the vicinity of 20th Avenue, N.W., through the ravine, south through the college campus to the Spring Lake area, passing to the east of the plaintiffs’ property.

*768 Prior to the beginning of the landfill the college had constructed a football field and an adjacent parking lot which extended east and west across the south end of the ravine and was raised approximately thirty feet above the original elevation of the terrain.

Ryan High School had also constructed a football field northeast of the college ■ football field and parking lot. This football field overlapped the east end of the parking lot.

These two filled sites created a dam across the south end of the ravine; and to allow water to drain from behind this dam, the college had installed two 24-inch culverts under the parking lot portion of the dam. Only one of these culverts, however, projected from the north face of the dam, so water from the ravine flowed only through the one culvert.

Just north of and abutting this dam the City filled dirt the length of the dam, 15 feet wide and 4 feet higher than the dam created by the football fields and the parking lot. It also continued the metal culvert which ran under the college fill by connecting 24-inch concrete drainpipes to it and extending them northward along the floor of the ravine. About fifteen to twenty feet north of the college fill, a 48-inch manhole was installed, rising vertically from the newly placed drainpipe. This manhole was to be used to give access to the drainpipe for cleaning and maintenance. As the level of fill in this area was raised, the manhole was extended upward, and when this area was completed, the top of the manhole was level with the college football field. The drainpipe was then extended 450 feet north, where another manhole was installed by attaching 48-inch pipe vertically to the drainpipe. When this manhole was completed, a reduction cone was inserted in the top of it which reduced its capacity to 24 inches, and a metal grating was placed over the top which further reduced the inflow capacity to 8 inches. This manhole extended 8 to 12 inches above the surface of the completed fill. North of this second manhole the City constructed another dam and installed another manhole to the north of it, approximately 900 feet north of the south dam. During the operation of the landfill north of the third manhole, that manhole would take water only when the water in the pond reached the top of the north dam, unless the City drained the reservoir by tilting the manhole sections so the water would run through.

From 1958 to the summer of 1963 the City operated four compactor garbage trucks and one open-box trash truck. These trucks would bring two and one-half to three loads of garbage and trash apiece to the landfill ravine every working day. Waste lime from the city water treatment plant was also dumped into the ravine. Following each day’s dumping, the debris would be covered with earth which had been scraped from the sides of the ravine by the two crawler tractors and a rubber-tired earth scraper which the City kept for use at the site. This scraping and covering were done in the early evening of every working day. As the garbage was dumped during the day it would be compacted into “cells” by the crawler tractors, and these “cells” were what were covered each evening. The fill was made in a series of wedges which were created by working from east to west and west to east across the ravine.

The City, as a result of this landfill operation, materially altered the natural terrain of the ravine by leveling and filling it with garbage and by scraping and stripping the east and west slopes of the ravine, leaving the subsoil exposed and the ravine devoid of vegetation.

When the lower part of the landfill between the City’s south dam and the north dam was brought up to final grade, it sloped downward to the north so that its most northerly end was four feet below the level of the top of the college fill.

*769 On the south side of the college football field south of the south dam a riprapped drainage ditch ran east and west along the north side of 11th Avenue, N.W. When the rains came in 1962 and 1963, water from the pipe underlying the landfill flowed in this ditch west along 11th Avenue, then south along 7th Street where 11th Avenue takes a jog to the south, then west to 8th Street, where it turned south and ran down 8th Street, spilling over the plaintiffs’ property.

At least five times in the spring and summer of 1962 and seventeen times during the same period in 1963 there was severe flooding on 8th Street south of 11th Avenue, at which times the yards of the plaintiffs were inundated by water up to 14 inches deep.

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.W.2d 764, 1967 N.D. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorson-v-city-of-minot-nd-1967.