J-A14026-16
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
JAMES G. WAITE IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
CDG PROPERTIES, LLC.
v.
GRANDVIEW MANAGEMENT, INC. AND
BURNHAM FARMS, LP.
Appellants
STONE VALLEY CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
AND COUNTRY COVE CONDOMINIUM
ASSOCIATION No. 1905 MDA 2015
Appeal from the Judgment Entered October 1, 2015
In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County
Civil Division at No(s): 2013-569
BEFORE: BOWES, OTT AND PLATT,* JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED JANUARY 18, 2017
Grandview Management, Inc. (“Grandview”) and Burnham Farms, LP
(“Burnham”) filed the present appeal after the trial court rendered a verdict
against them and in favor of Appellee, James G. Waite. We affirm.
Mr. Waite owns a 3.02 acre tract of land containing woodland and his
residence that is located at 296 Valentine Hill Road, Bellefonte. Mr. Waite’s
property is at the foot of a parcel of real estate that slopes down to his land
and formerly consisted of a farm, meadowland, and a forest. In 2005, CDG
* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
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Properties, LLC (“CDG”) purchased that adjacent property. CDG, with the
assistance of Grandview and Burnham, constructed a residential
development known as Burnham Farms Estate. As part of that project, a
storm water management system was designed and installed. It consisted
of a swale, conduits, pipes, and a drainage detention basin. Approximately
three years after the construction of Burnham Farms Estate, Mr. Waite
noticed that trees along his property line with the real estate containing the
that residential development began to die. Mr. Waite’s investigation
revealed that the trees’ deterioration was the result of increased subsurface
water drainage onto his land caused by the storm water management
system.
On February 13, 2013, Mr. Waite filed this action against CDG, and he
then filed an amended complaint naming as defendants CDG, Grandview,
Burnham, and Stone Valley Construction, Inc.1 Mr. Waite averred that the
defendants, as the developers and owners of Burnham Farms Estate, were
liable for his property damage because the storm water management system
caused an increase in the subsurface water flow onto his land.
____________________________________________
1
Country Cover Condominium Association, while a named defendant, was
never separately served with the complaint.
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The matter proceeded to a nonjury trial, where the trial court entered
a directed verdict in favor of Stone Valley Construction Inc. and CDG.2 After
consideration of the evidence presented by Mr. Waite, the court awarded
him $43,285.00 in damages against Grandview and Burnham. Damages
were for the removal and replacement of the trees already affected by the
increase in subsurface water flow. The court also directed Grandview and
Burnham to “modify the storm, water drainage system so that water is
conveyed to the storm water [drainage detention] basin as intended and no
longer drains onto Plaintiff's property.” Order of Court, 5/20/15, at 1.
This appeal followed the denial of Grandview and Burnham’s post-trial
motion. They present these issues on appeal:
A. Whether the lower court erred in accepting the testimony of
the plaintiff's two liability experts and committed an abuse of
discretion by regarding this testimony as being credible for
purposes of finding a causal connection between the alleged
harm and the appellants' conduct?
B. Whether the lower court erred in granting mandatory
injunctive relief inasmuch as sufficient evidence was not
presented to support this form of relief and where an adequate
remedy at law is available?
C. The lower court erred in finding that Grandview Management,
Inc., and Burnham Farms, L.P. were liable in this matter as the
parties who were the permittees for purposes of the storm water
management system.
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2
Grandview and Burnham appealed the grant of this directed verdict, which
we affirmed. Waite v. CDG Properties, LLC., 2016 WL 5401842 (Pa.
Super. filed August 15, 2016) (unpublished memorandum).
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Appellants’ brief at 3-4.
Initially, we observe that the following standard of review applies after
a bench trial.
When reviewing the verdict from a bench trial, we must review
the evidence of record in the light most favorable to the verdict
winner to determine whether competent evidence supports the
trial court's findings and whether it erred in reaching its
conclusions of law. McEwing v. Lititz Mut. Ins. Co., 77 A.3d
639, 646 (Pa.Super. 2013). We afford the same weight to the
trial court's findings of fact as we do a jury's verdict. Id. We will
only reverse if the trial court's findings of fact are unsupported
by competent evidence or if it erred as a matter of law. Id.
Newman Dev. Grp. of Pottstown, LLC v. Genuardi's Family Mkt., Inc.,
98 A.3d 645, 652 (Pa.Super. 2014).
The law regarding alteration of surface water is well-ensconced in this
Commonwealth. In 1954, applying prior law on the subject, our High Court
articulated the pertinent principle:
A landowner may not alter the natural flow of surface water
on his property by concentrating it in an artificial channel and
discharging it upon the lower land of his neighbor even though
no more water is thereby collected than would naturally have
flowed upon the neighbor's land in a diffused condition. One
may make improvements upon his own land, especially in the
development of urban property, grade it and build upon it,
without liability for any incidental effect upon adjoining property
even though there may result some additional flow of surface
water thereon through a natural watercourse, but he may not,
by artificial means, gather the water into a body and precipitate
it upon his neighbor's property.
Rau v. Wilden Acres, Inc., 103 A.2d 422, 423 (Pa. 1954); accord St.
Andrew's Evangelical Lutheran Church of Audubon v. Lower
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Providence Twp., 198 A.2d 860 (Pa. 1964); Ridgeway Court, Inc. v.
Landon Courts, Inc., 442 A.2d 246 (Pa.Super. 1981). Subsurface waters
are analogous to surface waters for purposes of this cause of action. Miller
v. C.P. Centers, Inc., 483 A.2d 912 (Pa.Super. 1984).
Herein, Mr. Waite presented the testimony of two expert witnesses,
Eric Chase, a geologist and hydrologist, and Keith Lingenfelter, a
horticulturalist and plant pathologist. Mr. Chase opined that the storm water
drainage system did not function properly and had altered and increased the
water flow underneath the surface of Mr. Waite’s property. That expert
testified that he visited the site, including both Mr. Waite’s property and the
development. He toured the swale and drainage basin, looked for sink
holes, saw the dead or dying trees, and ascertained the soil thickness and
the composition of the underlying rock by reviewing various United States
Geological Surveys. See N.T. Trial, 1/26/15, at 109-115.
Based upon his review of the property, the surveys and his
professional experience, Mr. Chase concluded:
It’s my professional opinion that the storm water swale is not
functioning effectively, allowing the storm water to pond and
infiltrate into the ground, up gradient of the subject property,
which is Jim Waite’s property. And that based on the local site
conditions that I viewed while I was there, the proximity of the
subject property to the swale, which is immediately adjacent to
the swale, the shallow soils, the topography, the local ground
water direction, that the storm water entering the swale is
actually going through the swale into the soils and onto Jim
Waite’s property. And this did not exist previously when it
was a meadow and/or forested area.
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Id. at 115-116.
Based upon his observations, Mr. Chase stated that the storm water
drainage system was designed to channel storm water flowing from the
development’s property into a swale and along that swale into a drainage
detention basin. He reported that the swale was not operating properly.
Specifically, due to the soil conditions and the slope of the rock under the
drainage swale, a significant amount of the water entering the swale drained
into the earth below the swale rather than along the swale and into the
drainage detention basin, as it was supposed to do. The water seeping from
the swale flowed down into Mr. Waite’s property. Mr. Chase noted that,
even after heavy rainfalls, the drainage detention basin was empty.
Mr. Chase's testimony was corroborated by Paul Dembowski, a senior
civil engineer with the Department of Environmental Protection. Mr.
Dembowski oversaw the construction and operation of the storm water
management system, which was permitted by that Department. He visited
the site several times and, during his first inspection, he observed water
draining into the swale and being directly absorbed into the ground instead
of flowing along the swale into the drainage detention basin. He also
observed vegetation growth in the swale and the drainage detention basin
and several large rocks located in the swale. Mr. Dembowski expressed
concern that storm water runoff was not collecting in the drainage detention
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basin, as indicated in the system’s design, and he took several pictures,
which were presented by Mr. Waite at trial.
This proof was thus sufficient to establish liability under the above-
enunciated principles. The natural water flow from the property containing
Burnham Farms Estate was altered by concentrating it into a man-made
channel, the swale, but that swale caused more water to discharge in a
concentrated manner onto the adjacent lower land owned by Mr. Waite. The
property in question was not improved and developed with a resultant
increase in flow of the surface water through a natural watercourse. Diffuse
water was collected and placed in a conduit consisting of a defective swale.
The swale was designed to carry storm water runoff from the development
into the drainage detention basin, and it did not perform that function.
Instead, the water in the swale seeped into the earth and down onto Mr.
Waite’s property.
Mr. Lingenfelter’s opinion related to damages. He opined that tree
death occurring on Mr. Waite’s real estate was the result of the increase in
subsurface water flow occasioned by the alteration of the property when
Burnham Farms Estate was built. He stated that the roots of several of the
trees that bordered the swale suffocated due to the excess water. Mr.
Lingenfelter’s opinion was based upon his personal examination, which
eliminated insects and disease as the cause of the tree death. Mr.
Lingenfelter articulated:
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And what I saw was mature canopy trees and young canopy
tress exhibiting the very similar characteristics. You have one-
third, one-half of the canopy die back. You have browning. You
have mortality rates that are so high, they shouldn’t be like this
unless you’re in an epidemic situation, like a major insect
infestation. So touring the property, walking around, looking at
adjacent property, and walking around the construction
perimeter kind of when you get up the hill there where the
developments occurred, I came to the conclusion that the insect
and disease pressure in that area was not significant at all. Not
only by the lack of symptoms I saw in any of the trees that I
looked at, but by the general lack of infestation in walking
around.
N.T. Trial, 1/26/15, at 37. That expert opined that the tree mortality was
caused by an excess amount of water resulting from the improperly
constructed storm water management system. See id. at 38-41.
In their first issue on appeal, Grandview and Burnham maintain that:
“The expert witnesses simply did not present a credible and convincing basis
upon which the verdict in favor of Mr. Waite was justified.” Appellants’ brief
at 12. Grandview and Burnham suggest that the “experts’ testimony should
not have been accepted by the fact finder” because that proof was based
upon speculation. Id. at 13 (relying upon Collins v. Hand, 246 A.2d 398
(Pa. 1968) (expert testimony cannot be based upon speculation or
conjecture)).
In Haan v. Wells, 103 A.3d 60, 72–73 (2014), we repeated the oft-
cited principle that “a fact-finder is permitted to accept all, part, or none of
the testimony, and it is within the fact-finder's exclusive province to resolve
conflicts in that testimony.” Therein, we rejected a challenge to the trial
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court’s decision to accept testimony proffered by an expert witness. Further,
this Court “will not reverse the trial court’s credibility determinations absent
an abuse of discretion.” In re Estate of Aiello, 993 A.2d 283, 287 (Pa.
Super. 2010).
Grandview and Burnham assail Mr. Chase’s credulity because he did
not proffer “scientific or technical analysis upon which to base his
conclusions.” Appellants’ brief at 15. However, we conclude that Mr.
Chase’s opinion regarding the increase flow of water onto Mr. Waite’s land
had a firm factual basis and was not speculative. He testified that he viewed
the property after rainstorms and looked at “what was happening with the
swale” and that he knew the geology of the area. He concluded that no
testing was necessary because his conclusions were supported by his view of
the property and the geological surveys. Id. at 122. We reject Grandview
and Burnham’s position that Mr. Chase’s testimony was speculative because
it was firmly premised upon his expert knowledge and examination of the
land, the storm water management system, and geological surveys.
As to Mr. Lingenfelter, Grandview and Burnham maintain that he was
required to provide some scientific proof for his opinion and that he was not
credible because there was a discrepancy between his first and second
expert reports. Mr. Lingenfelter was a certified arborist consultant with an
undergraduate degree from Colorado State University in Forestry
Horticulture. He had worked for the United States Forestry Service and was
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working in private industry when he testified herein. Mr. Lingenfelter had
never operated as an expert witness before this lawsuit.
Mr. Lingenfelter’s opinion as to the cause of tree death was based
upon his observation of the affected trees and the lack of any other
discernable cause for their death. He also relied upon Mr. Chase’s proof that
the storm water management system, due to the malfunctioning swale,
altered the natural water flow and increased the amount seeping onto Mr.
Waite’s property. We therefore find that he had a sufficient forensic basis
for his opinion.
The second aspect to Grandview and Burnham’s challenge to Mr.
Lingenfelter’s credibility relates to the fact that he authored two reports and
that there was an email exchange between their issuance. As noted, Mr.
Lingenfelter had never been an expert witness, and his first report did not
specifically mention the word water in it. Thereafter, Mr. Lingenfelter was
reminded that liability for the tree mortality in this case hinged on the
existence of excess water and that another one of his associates had
mentioned the existence of excess water on Mr. Waite’s land. Mr.
Lingenfelter then issued a second report that was ultimately consistent with
his trial testimony. Mr. Lingenfelter was subjected to vigorous cross-
examination regarding the discrepancy between his first and second reports.
He steadfastly maintained his opinion that water suffocation was the primary
cause of the tree mortality on Mr. Waite’s property below the swale.
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The trial judge accepted both of Mr. Waite’s experts as credible. Trial
Court Opinion, 5/20/15, at 3-4. It was fully aware of the discrepancies
between Mr. Lingenfelter’s two reports. We find no abuse of discretion on
the part of the trial judge in accepting Mr. Lingenfelter explanation and
opinion. Accordingly, Grandview and Burnham are not entitled to relief on
their first issue.
Appellants’ second position is that the trial court erred in awarding
injunctive relief. As noted, supra, they were ordered to rectify the storm
water management system so that it no longer caused excess water to flow
onto Mr. Waite’s land and so that the water traveled into the drainage
detention basin, as intended. Their challenges to the grant of injunctive
relief are as follows 1) the injunction was inappropriate since Mr. Waite has
an adequate remedy at law and any future harm to his trees can be
remedied by an award of damages, Appellant’s brief at 24, 27; 2) Mr. Waite
did not demonstrate the clear right to relief required for the issuance of an
injunction requiring an affirmative act on their part, Appellant’s brief at 25;
3) the trial court’s treatment of the grant of injunctive relief was cursory,
Appellant’s brief at 26; and 4) the testimony of Mr. Waite’s expert witnesses
was insufficient to establish that the factors necessary for the grant of
injunctive relief were present, Appellants’ brief at 26-27. We have already
analyzed and addressed Grandview and Burnham’s challenges to the
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sufficiency of the testimony proffered by Mr. Chase and Mr. Lingenfelter.
Thus, no further discussion of the fourth position is necessary.
There is a fatal flaw in Grandview and Burnham’s first three complaints
about the issuance of the injunction herein. They overlook the specific body
of law applicable to the issuance of an injunction when a person is liable
because he artificially channeled surface water onto the land of an adjacent
property owner. We begin our analysis with the Rau decision, supra, where
our Supreme Court upheld the trial court’s finding that the defendant therein
had artificially altered the course of his surface water and caused it to
discharge more forcefully and in increased quantities on a portion of the land
of a neighboring property owner. Based on these findings alone, the Rau
Court ruled that the “plaintiff was entitled to the injunction which the court
granted and which ordered defendant to cease and desist from collecting and
concentrating the surface water on its land and discharging it in a body
through ditches or artificial channels upon the plaintiff's farm.” Rau, supra
at 424.
In St. Andrew’s, supra, our High Court more fully explored that
nature of the tort in question as well as the availability of injunctive relief.
Therein, a local township paved a road, raising it eight inches and causing
flooding onto property owned by the Schracks. The township then installed
a drainage pipe that concentrated and diverted the surface water from the
Schrack property and another development and discharged it onto property
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owned by the Austins. The water emanating from the pipe increased the
surface water both on the Austins’ property and property owned by a
church. After the church and the Austins sued the township and the
Schracks, the equity court characterized the channeling of the surface
current as a nuisance and ordered the township to abate it.
The township specifically claimed on appeal that the plaintiffs were not
entitled to injunctive relief since they had an adequate remedy at law. In
summarily rejecting that position, our Supreme Court noted that the
“trespass alleged would re-occur with each rainfall” and ruled “no citation of
authority is required for the proposition that equity may restrain a
continuing trespass.” St. Andrew’s, supra at 862. The St. Andrew’s
Court also characterized the artificial discharge of surface water as a
nuisance, and it ruled that the “final decree directing the abatement of the
flow on to the property of Austin and others was a just and equitable
solution to the problem created by the township.” Id.
This Court considered the issue in Ridgeway Court, supra. The
defendant therein owned property adjacent to that of the plaintiff and which
was higher in elevation. Before the defendant developed its property, the
natural flow of water onto that of the plaintiff was diffuse and evenly
distributed. Thereafter, the defendant altered the contour of its land, and
“part of the surface water flow was diverted away from its natural course . .
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. . and re-directed toward and across the northerly portion of [the plaintiff’s]
property,” causing flooding. Id. at 247.
After concluding that the defendant was liable for damages caused by
the increased water run-off onto the plaintiff’s land under Rau, supra, this
Court in Ridgeway Court rejected the defendant’s position that the trial
court was not authorized to enter an injunction ordering it to remedy the
situation. The defendant claimed that the plaintiff was entitled only to the
difference in the value of the property before and after the change in water
flow. We ruled that, since the alteration of the water current was permanent
in nature, the plaintiff was entitled to have the situation corrected.
More recently, in a case relied upon by Mr. Waite, Youst v. Keck's
Food Service, Inc., 94 A.3d 1057 (Pa.Super. 2014), we applied the
principles announced in the above-examined case law. Therein, a jury
rendered a verdict that established the following. Keck’s Food Service, Inc.
(“Keck’s”) owned real estate adjacent to that of three members of the Youst
family (“Yousts”). For one hundred years, Keck’s’ land contained a pond and
dam fed by a creek, and the pond and creek were used as a water
management system in that they captured water when the creek was
overrun and stored the water for use during times that the creek was dry.
Yousts’ land, which was used as a farm, always had been served by the pond
and dam through two drainage pipes, which provided a regular, controlled,
and steady source of water.
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Keck’s replaced the pond and dam with a storm water management
system that caused the creek to empty into one drainage pipe that led
directly to the Yousts’ land. These changes altered the water flow to such an
extent that the Yousts’ property either suffered from drought, when the
creek was dry, or flooding, when the creek became overrun with rainwater.
The inconsistent cycle of drought and flooding caused farm animals to die.
The jury awarded the Yousts damages on trespass and nuisance claims
raised in the Yousts’ complaint, and the trial court awarded the Yousts a
permanent injunction.
Against a challenge by Keck’s, we upheld the jury’s finding that it had
committed a nuisance. This Court applied the above-delineated precept that
“the right of the upper landowner to discharge water on the lower lands of
his neighbor is, in general, a right of flowage only, in the natural ways
and natural quantities.” Id. at 1073 (emphasis added; citation omitted).
The Youst Court continued that, when the “the upper landowner alters the
natural conditions so as to change the course of the water, or concentrates it
at a particular point, or by artificial means increases its volume, he becomes
liable for any injury caused thereby.” Id. (citation omitted). We observed
that there was sufficient proof to support that Keck’s diverted the surface
water from its natural course, channeled it unnaturally, and thereby caused
a private nuisance on the Yousts’ real estate.
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This Court then rejected a challenge to the issuance of the permanent
injunction wherein the trial court mandated that Keck’s “abate the nuisance
of the periodic flooding of the Yousts’ property in a manner permitted by
DEP regulations.” Id. at 1079. The Youst Court concluded that, since the
jury found that Keck’s created a private nuisance on the Yousts’ land,
“Undoubtedly, [Keck’s] must abate this nuisance; and, since the nuisance is
continuing, the trial court possessed the authority to issue a permanent
injunction and order Appellant to ‘abate the nuisance.’” Id. (citing Gardner
v. Allegheny County, 114 A.2d 491, 498 (Pa. 1955) (“it is hornbook law
that a Court of Equity possesses jurisdiction to enjoin a nuisance”)). Thus,
the case law uniformly holds that, when a defendant artificially alters the
natural flow of the surface water on his land so as to injure another
property, it is a nuisance or continuing trespass that will be enjoined.
In the present case, the evidence supports the trial court’s
determination that Grandview and Burnham altered the natural flow of the
rainwater from the property in question by channeling it into a storm water
management system consisting of swales, conduits, pipes, and a drainage
detention basin. The evidence submitted by Mr. Waite validated the court’s
conclusion that the system operated improperly and increased the amount of
storm water flowing onto Mr. Waite’s property. Thus, the system caused a
nuisance and continuing trespass onto Mr. Waite’s land. Accordingly, the
trial court was within its power to issue the injunction in question by
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ordering Grandview and Burnham to fix the swale so that the water in it
went, as it was designed to do, into the drainage detention basin. Indeed,
without the injunction, the nuisance/trespass will not abate and the
phenomenon in question will continue to damage to Mr. Waite’s property,
resulting in litigation over the ensuing years. Accordingly, we affirm the trial
court’s issuance of an injunction.
Grandview and Burnham’s final position is that they were not the
permittees of the storm water management system and that Grandview
Development Group, L.P. was the entity that owned the permit. Grandview
and Burnham continue that Grandview Development Group, L.P., as
permittee for the storm water management system, is the liable party
herein. Appellants’ brief at 28-29.
The argument in question is confusing and unsupported by citation to
any legal authority. In its opinion, the trial court never mentioned an entity
that owned the permit for the storm water management system. Instead, it
premised its finding of liability upon the fact that Grandview and Burnham
were involved in the development and construction of Burnham Farms
Estate. Trial Court Opinion, 5/20/15, at 2. Grandview and Burnham do not
refute this fact. Thus, they were not found liable based upon their status as
the entities issued a permit by the Department of Environment Protection for
the system in question. Indeed, Grandview and Burnham have failed to
indicate where in the certified record the trial court based its verdict upon
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identifying them as permittees. Thus, we find this undeveloped argument
waived. Markovsky v. Crown Cork & Seal Co., 107 A.3d 749, 755 n.5
(Pa.Super. 2014) (failure to properly develop argument results in waiver).
Judgment affirmed.
Judge Platt joins the Memorandum.
Judge Ott Files a Concurring and Dissenting Memorandum.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 1/18/2017
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