Tracy & Baker v. City of Astoria

237 P.2d 954, 193 Or. 118, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 293
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 237 P.2d 954 (Tracy & Baker v. City of Astoria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tracy & Baker v. City of Astoria, 237 P.2d 954, 193 Or. 118, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 293 (Or. 1951).

Opinion

*121 HAY, J.

Action for damages against the City of Astoria for injuries to plaintiffs’ realty by landslides allegedly caused by defendant’s negligence.

The complaint alleges: Plaintiffs own and reside on lot 9, block IB, City of Astoria, Oregon; from Grand Avenue, where plaintiffs’ residence stands, the land rises southerly in a steep incline; Irving Avenue is two blocks south of Grand Avenue; at 18th Street, where Irving Avenue crosses a ravine, defendant has from time to time dumped large amounts of material into the ravine each year, including 1948; such material has materially added to the weight of material which has been washed down upon plaintiffs’ premises; there are numerous springs and water currents in the ground, “the super-added weight of which renders any attempt to make a fill thereon dangerous, all of which facts the defendant well knew;” there is no footing, which fact defendant has known “for years, so that the defendant has known that there was no way of securing the material dumped into said ravine;” “an improper and wholly unserviceable fill” was dumped by defendant into the ravine; defendant well knew that such material must in time be projected upon plaintiffs’ property; the dumped material was of such consistency that the waters flowing down the side of the hill caused it to be washed down so as to damage plaintiffs’ premises; such material accumulated “as a tremendous moving mass and crept down the hillside and onto the premises of the plaintiffs, thereby forcing a change of elevation and exerting a tremendous pressure against the surface ground of the plaintiffs; ’ ’ thereby the trees and foliage and fish pond on plaintiffs’ property were *122 displaced, the foundation of plaintiffs’ house was cracked and “rendered unsatisfactory,” “increasing dirt and encroachments have been completely destroying” the value of the premises as a home, and “have made such dirt encroachment a menace to the habitation of said premises; ’ ’ plaintiffs have notified defendant repeatedly of these circumstances and have requested it to take steps to curb the advance of the fill material before it reached plaintiffs’ property, but defendant failed to take any action in that regard; and plaintiffs have been damaged in the premises in the sum of $6,500, in which amount they demanded judgment.

Defendant made general denial, with specific admissions as follows: That the lands “lying south of Grand Avenue and 18th Street in said city rise in a very steep slope and constitute a ravine, drain and ditch and that Irving Avenue crosses such to the south of Grand Avenue;” that “during the construction of what is known as the Irving Avenue bridge, the defendant did make a small fill on Irving Avenue to the west of the bridge.” Affirmatively, defendant pleaded: Plaintiffs purchased and took possession of lot 9 on or about October 13, 1945, and of adjoining lot 10 on or about June 5,1946; the south boundary of said lots fronts on Grand Avenue immediately east of 18th Street; extending from about the intersection of Grand Avenue and 18th Street southerly, there exists and from time immemorial has existed “a steep slope, gulch or ditch in which the flow of surface water would gather; ’ ’ Grand Avenue east of 18th Street has never been improved, and upon such unimproved part of Grand Avenue and upon said lot 10 there existed “a large amount of soil, rock and other materials that acted as a toe, barrier and support for the hill and slope extending southward *123 therefrom toward Irving Avenue;” defendant from time to time, to control the flow of water in said ravine or gulch, constructed a drain and sewer system, and, at the time of the purchase of said lots by plaintiffs, such system was in good workable condition, and so remained until “disrupted by the acts hereafter alleged ; ’ ’ plaintiffs, or their immediate predecessors as owners of lot 10, while plaintiffs were residing on lot 9, “caused the soil, rock and other materials to be moved by motor power from” lot 10 and from Grand Avenue “southerly adjacent thereto,” without defendant’s knowledge or consent, and thereby removed the lateral support to “such hill and slope to the south,” causing “the soil and lands constituting a part of and adjacent to said ravine, gulch or ditch to move downward,” and said drainage system to become broken, creating “a movement of the lands known as” said lot 9; plaintiffs, at the time of purchasing said lots, knew, “or by the use of ordinary intelligence should have known,” that the lots lay at the bottom of said ravine, that the topsoil and subsoil extending southward therefrom “was such as to create more or less sliding at all times, and that the area immediately adjacent to the south of said lots was and has been for many years subject to slides by reason of surface water as well as subterranean water;” and that the proximate cause of the damage claimed by plaintiffs, if any, was the unauthorized removal of the soil, etc., aforesaid, constituting the lateral support of the slope, combined with the “sliding nature” of said slope or ravine.

Beplying to the affirmative answer, plaintiffs alleged : They purchased lot 9 on or about June 5, 1944, and lot 10 on May 7, 1947; Grand Avenue, east of 18th Street, has been improved only to the extent that a *124 graveled roadway has been in use to the east side of lot 9, where plaintiffs ’ garage was situated until displaced by the slide; denied that lot 10 served or acted as a barrier for the support of the hill or slope south thereof; alleged and admitted that the city constructed a drain system to care for the water from said ravine, and alleged “that the failure of the city to repair and maintain said drainage system in conjunction with the dumping of material into said ravine, as alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, has caused the drainage [sic] to the plaintiffs’ property;” alleged that they repeatedly requested the city to repair the drainage system, but it refused to do so; denied that they ever removed any material from lot 10; alleged that, “although some grading was done by people previously owning lot 10,” at no time was there any substantial change “in the grading” thereof; alleged that lot 10 “was auctioned off by the City of Astoria subsequent to the purchase of” lot 9 by plaintiffs, and that “no restrictions or limitations were placed upon the property concerning the grading of said property nor any caution or admonitions given to the purchaser concerning the use or occupancy of said land;” alleged that the danger to their premises was occasioned “by reason of the failure of the drainage system which the defendant city installed and to the grading done from time to time in connection with Irving Avenue;” that the city well knew that maintenance of the drainage system was essential to the control of said hill and that the placing of material at or incidental to Irving Avenue was hazardous and likely to cause damage on account of its effect upon the drainage of said gulch both in the control of the water and in its effect upon the drainage system; alleged “that the whole fault and dangerous condition arose and existed by reason of the negligence *125 and negligent acts of the City of Astoria;” denied all other allegations of the affirmative answer.

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Bluebook (online)
237 P.2d 954, 193 Or. 118, 1951 Ore. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracy-baker-v-city-of-astoria-or-1951.