ROBERT TECZA VS. JAMES BARONE (L-2278-13, C-000065-16, PASSAIC COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (CONSOLIDATED) ( 2019 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NOS. A-5143-17T1
    A-5306-17T1
    ROBERT TECZA and STELLA
    STEPIEN, husband and wife,
    Plaintiffs-Respondents/
    Cross-Appellants,
    v.
    JAMES BARONE and
    DANA BARONE,
    Defendants/Third-Party Plaintiffs-
    Appellants/Cross-Respondents,
    v.
    AKIN ENTERPRISES, LLC,
    Third-Party Defendant.
    _______________________________
    Argued May 30, 2019 – Decided July 22, 2019
    Before Judges Accurso, Vernoia and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Passaic County, Docket No. L-2278-13
    and Chancery Division, Passaic County, Docket No.
    C-000065-16.
    Marc L. Dembling and Joseph S. Trapanese argued the
    cause for appellants/cross-respondents (Methfessel &
    Werbel, attorneys; Marc L. Dembling and Joseph S.
    Trapanese, of counsel and on the briefs).
    Michael A. Orozco argued the cause for
    respondents/cross-appellants (Price Meese Shulman &
    D'Arminio PC, attorneys; Michael A. Orozco, of
    counsel and on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    These consolidated appeals arise out of a dispute between neighbors
    over surface water runoff. Third-party defendant Akin Enterprises, L.L.C.
    demolished the small house on the lot adjoining plaintiffs Robert Tecza and
    Stella Stepien's home in Wayne and built a much larger house with increased
    impervious coverage. Akin sold that house to defendants James and Dana
    Barone in 2008. Plaintiffs thereafter experienced repeated flooding in their
    basement and yard, with water sometimes standing in their yard for weeks on
    end. Plaintiffs complained about the water inundating their property to
    defendants, and in 2011 had an attorney send an engineering report to them
    detailing the problem. Despite the notice, defendants took no steps to alleviate
    the problem, believing the water on plaintiffs' property to be "normal rain
    water flow," not caused by any condition of defendants' property.
    A-5143-17T1
    2
    Plaintiffs eventually sued defendants to abate the private nuisance.
    Defendants filed a third-party claim against their seller, Akin, which is
    apparently defunct and never appeared in the action. A jury returned a verdict
    for plaintiffs, finding Akin created a private nuisance on plaintiffs' property,
    which defendants negligently maintained by failing to take any affirmative
    action to remedy after notice. The jury awarded plaintiffs $20,000
    compensatory damages for their loss of use of their property, allocated fifty-
    five percent to Akin and forty-five percent to defendants. The Law Division
    increased the award by the $9500 the parties stipulated as property damage,
    allocated in the same manner, and denied plaintiffs' motion for judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict and defendants' motion for a new trial. The matter
    was thereafter transferred to General Equity, where a remediation order was
    entered following a one-day trial by the same judge who presided over the
    matter in the Law Division.
    Both parties appeal. Defendants contend the trial court judge erred in
    failing to dismiss the case following the Supreme Court's issuance of Ross v.
    Lowitz, 
    222 N.J. 494
    (2015); improperly delegated to the jury the question of
    whether defendants had a duty to take positive action to abate a private
    nuisance; and abused his discretion in failing to instruct the jury that there was
    A-5143-17T1
    3
    no dispute as to the proper functioning of the seepage pits on defendants'
    property. Plaintiffs argue the trial court erred in instructing the jury to
    apportion liability between defendants and Akin as they contend defendants
    had a non-delegable duty to abate the nuisance and are thus fully responsible
    for the resulting damages. Defendants also contend the General Equity judge
    erred in relying on the inadmissible hearsay opinions of an expert who did not
    testify at the bench trial, thus rendering the remediation order null and void.
    We find no reversible error in any of these decisions and affirm the judgment
    in its entirety.
    Defendants argue the nuisance claim against them should have been
    dismissed under Ross, issued shortly before the jury trial in this case, because
    they did not create the condition on their property and the director of public
    works for Wayne, George Holzapfel, while conceding there was a drainage
    problem, testified the construction of defendants' home was in accord with
    Township regulations and did not alter the general drainage patterns in the
    area. Defendants reason because they did not create the nuisance and Akin did
    not violate any Township regulations "there could not be [a] claim for
    abatement against them" after Ross. We disagree.
    A-5143-17T1
    4
    Ross did not change the law as to private nuisance claims. The plaintiffs
    in Ross asserted a private nuisance claim when home heating oil migrated to
    their property from a leak in a neighbor's underground storage 
    tank. 222 N.J. at 497
    . The Ross Court emphasized that New Jersey "courts have adopted the
    standard of Restatement section 822 to assess liability for private nuisance,"
    which permits recovery "if, but only if," the defendant's
    conduct is a legal cause of an invasion of another's
    interest in the private use and enjoyment of land, and
    the invasion is either
    (a)   intentional and unreasonable, or
    (b)   unintentional and otherwise actionable
    under the rules controlling liability for
    negligent or reckless conduct, or for
    abnormally dangerous conditions or
    activities.
    [Id. at 505-06 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts
    § 822).]
    Finding no evidence in the record that the defendant neighbor, Lowitz,
    or her predecessor in title "acted negligently, recklessly, or intentionally," and
    declining to find that maintaining an underground storage tank for home
    heating oil was an "abnormally dangerous activity," the Court concluded no
    claim for private nuisance could lie against Lowitz or her predecessor. 
    Id. at 511-12,
    521 n.3.
    A-5143-17T1
    5
    Although the majority in Ross acknowledged that section 824 1 of the
    Restatement, on which the plaintiffs relied, "confirms that two categories of
    conduct, an affirmative act and a failure to act in circumstances in which the
    defendant has a duty, can give rise to a claim for private nuisance," it
    concluded that section "does not expand private nuisance claims into settings
    in which there is no showing of fault and no abnormally dangerous activity
    being conducted." 
    Id. at 507.
    Because the plaintiffs in Ross could not
    establish Lowitz' "fault or the conduct of an abnormally dangerous activity" on
    the summary judgment record in that case, "as required by section 822 of the
    1
    Section 824 of the Restatement, which the Ross Court observed was adopted
    in New Jersey in Birchwood Lakes Colony Club v. Borough of Medford
    Lakes, 
    90 N.J. 582
    , 592 (1982), see 
    Ross, 222 N.J. at 508
    , provides:
    The conduct necessary to make the actor liable
    for either a public or private nuisance may consist of
    (a)   an act; or
    (b)   a failure to act under circumstances in
    which the actor is under a duty to take
    positive action to prevent or abate the
    interference with the public interest or the
    invasion of the private interest.
    [Restatement § 824.]
    A-5143-17T1
    6
    Restatement," the Court concluded they did "not have a viable theory of
    liability under Restatement section 824." 
    Id. at 511.
    The three dissenting justices in Ross would have recognized a cause of
    action for the failure to timely abate the nuisance, noting the plaintiffs were
    forced to wait three years after notice for the insurance carriers for the
    individual defendants to finally remediate the contamination of the plaintiffs'
    property. 
    Id. at 515-18.
    The dissenters would have imposed a duty on a
    landowner "to do what is practicable and reasonable under the circumstances"
    to remedy conditions on its land "that are a source of harm to others." 
    Id. at 522
    (quoting Restatement § 839 cmts. d, e).
    Because the "practicable remedy" of removing contaminated dirt is now
    commonplace in environmental spill cleanups, the dissenters would have
    imposed a duty on a landowner to abate in a reasonably timely manner "the
    foreseeable harm to a neighboring landowner from a leaking oil tank spreading
    its contamination onto another's property." 
    Id. at 522
    -23. The majority
    rejected that reasoning, instead hewing to the principle that there can be no
    liability for a private nuisance in this State "unless the defendant's conduct was
    'actionable' within the meaning of section 822 of the Restatement." 
    Id. at 509.
    A-5143-17T1
    7
    This case, of course, does not implicate the obviously vexing problem of
    addressing leaking underground storage tanks, the condition of which are not
    plainly visible, in the context of a private nuisance. Instead, the issue here
    implicates a much older and more common problem, surface water runoff
    inundating neighboring lands. Our courts have for well over a hundred years
    recognized the repeated flooding of another's lands is a private nuisance. See
    Del. & Raritan Canal Co. v. Wright, 
    21 N.J.L. 469
    , 470 (Sup. Ct. 1848);
    Hennessy v. Carmony, 
    50 N.J. Eq. 616
    , 618 (Ch. 1892). In Russo Farms v.
    Vineland Board of Education, 
    144 N.J. 84
    , 99 (1996), a flooding case, the
    Court explained
    a nuisance is continuing when it is the result of a
    condition that can be physically removed or legally
    abated. In such a case, it is realistic to impute a
    continuing duty to the defendant to remove the
    nuisance, and to conclude that each new injury
    includes all elements of a nuisance, including a new
    breach of duty. On the other hand, when the nuisance
    cannot physically be removed, it is unfair to impose a
    continuing, impossible to fulfill duty to remove the
    nuisance; when a court will not order defendant to
    abate the nuisance, it is inconsistent to recognize a
    duty to do so.
    [Id. at 103.]
    More recently, the Court in Lyons v. Township of Wayne, 
    185 N.J. 426
    ,
    434 (2005), held clearly "that flooding can constitute a continuing nuisance"
    A-5143-17T1
    8
    and explained in accord with the Restatement that "[w]hen analyzing a
    nuisance, . . . wrongful conduct is not limited to the creation of the condition.
    Rather, a failure to physically remove or legally abate that condition, resulting
    in the physical invasion of another's property, also constitutes wrongful
    conduct."
    In contrast to the record in Ross, plaintiffs in this matter alleged at trial
    that third-party defendant Akin had tortiously, that is negligently, constructed
    defendants' home so as to cause flooding on their adjacent property and
    defendants had wrongfully failed to abate the condition after notice. Plaintiffs
    presented an expert, Matthew Neuls, a civil engineer who testified the
    increased runoff and flooding of plaintiffs' property were caused by the
    regrading of defendants' property in connection with the construction of their
    home. Neuls testified the flooding could be remediated by modification of an
    existing dry well on defendants' property to collect the water and divert any
    overflow away from plaintiffs' land.
    The Law Division judge augmented the model charge on private
    nuisance in order to instruct the jury in strict accordance with Ross.
    Accordingly, the jury was advised it could find for plaintiffs "if, but only if,"
    Akin's and defendants' conduct was a legal cause of an invasion of plaintiffs'
    A-5143-17T1
    9
    interest in the use and enjoyment of their property, and the invasion was either
    intentional and unreasonable, or "[u]nintentional and otherwise actionable
    under the rules controlling liability for negligent or reckless conduct." The
    court made clear the case did not involve intentional conduct or abnormally
    dangerous activities. The judge also instructed the jury on negligence and
    explained defendants could be found liable for an affirmative act or the failure
    to act in the face of a duty. The jury found plaintiffs proved by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the flooding on their property was caused
    by Akin's construction activities; that Akin had created a private nuisance; that
    defendants were negligent in maintaining that nuisance by failing to take
    affirmative action to remedy the problem; and plaintiffs had suffered injury
    and were entitled to damages.
    Although the court erred in asking the jury whether defendants had an
    affirmative duty to abate the private nuisance as the existence of a duty is a
    question of law for the court, see Strachan v. John F. Kennedy Mem'l Hosp.,
    
    109 N.J. 523
    , 529 (1988), the error is harmless because the jury got the answer
    right. Our Supreme Court abandoned the concept of surface water as a
    "common enemy," which permitted landowners to rid their property of it in
    any fashion regardless of the effect on their neighbors, over sixty years ago in
    A-5143-17T1
    10
    Armstrong v. Francis Corporation, 
    20 N.J. 320
    , 327-28 (1956), adopting
    instead a rule of reasonable use. 
    Id. at 329.
    Thereafter, the removal of surface
    waters in this State became "governed by tort rather than property law
    notions." Bd. of Educ. of Manasquan v. N.J. Dep't of Transp., 
    69 N.J. 92
    , 96-
    97 (1976). As there is no question but that defendants owed plaintiffs a duty
    under our law to abate any private nuisance caused by the ridding of surface
    water from defendants' land, see Russo 
    Farms, 144 N.J. at 103
    , putting that
    question to the jury was harmless because its finding was in accord with
    established law, see Mehlman v. Mobil Oil Corp., 
    153 N.J. 163
    , 194 (1998).
    Defendants' claimed error in the judge's refusal to instruct the jury "there
    was no evidence of seepage pit failure" requires only the briefest comment.
    Our review of the trial record convinces us there was no evidence in the record
    as to whether the seepage pits on defendants' property were or were not
    functioning as intended. Accordingly, the trial judge was correct to determine
    not to comment on that evidence and leave it to the parties to argue their
    respective positions in their summations. See Bitsko v. Main Pharmacy, Inc.,
    
    289 N.J. Super. 267
    , 294 (App. Div. 1996) (discussing circumstances where
    comment on the evidence is and is not appropriate).
    A-5143-17T1
    11
    Plaintiffs' argument that the trial judge erred in instructing the jury to
    apportion liability likewise requires but brief comment. Section 834 of the
    Restatement provides "[o]ne is subject to liability for nuisance caused by an
    activity, not only when he carries on the activity but also when he participates
    to a substantial extent in carrying it on." Comment e to that section entitled,
    "Continuing liability for harmful physical conditions," explains that
    [a]ctivities that create a physical condition differ from
    other activities in that they may cause an invasion of
    another's interest in the use and enjoyment of land
    after the activity itself ceases. When the invasion
    continues only so long as the activity is carried on, a
    person who ceases to have any part in the activity is
    not liable for the continuance of the invasion by
    others. But if the activity has resulted in the creation
    of a physical condition that is of itself harmful after
    the activity that created it has ceased, a person who
    carried on the activity that created the condition or
    who participated to a substantial extent in the activity
    is subject to the liability for a nuisance, for the
    continuing harm. His active conduct has been a
    substantial factor in creating the harmful condition
    and so long as his condition continues the harm is
    traceable to him. This is true even though he is no
    longer in a position to abate the condition and to stop
    the harm. If he creates the condition upon land in his
    possession and thereafter sells or leases it to another,
    he is subject to liability for invasions caused by the
    condition after the sale or lease as well as for those
    occurring before. When the vendor or lessor has
    created the condition his liability continues until the
    vendee or lessee discovers it and has reasonable
    opportunity to take effective precautions against it. In
    A-5143-17T1
    12
    this respect the duration of the liability differs from
    that stated in § 839. The rule stated in § 373(2) as to
    the liability of the vendor for physical harm is equally
    applicable to this Section, and Comment c under § 373
    applies equally here.
    [Restatement, § 834 cmt. e (emphasis added).]
    New Jersey law has long been in accord. See E. Jersey Water Co. v.
    Bigelow, 
    60 N.J.L. 201
    , 204 (E. & A. 1897) (noting "the general principle is
    clear that one who erects a structure or construction which creates a nuisance,
    and then conveys to another his title, with covenants with the grantee for
    quiet enjoyment and the right to maintain the erection, is liable for its
    continuance upon the ground that by his relations with the occupier he affirms
    the nuisance, and must be regarded in law as continuing it"); see also Cogliati
    v. Ecco High Frequency Corp., 
    92 N.J. 402
    , 414 (1983) (sidewalk liability);
    N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot. & Energy v. Gloucester Envtl. Mgmt. Servs., 821 F.
    Supp. 999, 1001-02, 1012 (D.N.J. 1993) (discussing section 834 of the
    Restatement in the context of municipal liability for maintaining a nuisance at
    the GEMS landfill).
    Given both the substantive law on liability for the creation and
    maintenance of a nuisance and New Jersey's general approach favoring
    apportionment of liability, see N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.1 to -5.4; Kubert v. Best, 432
    A-5143-17T1
    
    13 N.J. Super. 495
    , 508-09 (App. Div. 2013), we agree with the trial court judge
    that an instruction on apportioning liability between defendants and Akin was
    appropriate. Plaintiffs have brought no case to our attention compelling a
    different approach based on defendants' duty to abate the nuisance and our
    own research has not uncovered one.
    Finally, we address defendants' claim that the General Equity judge
    erred in relying on an expert report they produced in discovery in the absence
    of the expert's testimony at trial. Defendants produced the report in response
    to a report prepared by plaintiffs' engineer in 2014. Plaintiffs' report addressed
    the two 1000-gallon pre-cast seepage pits Akin installed on defendants'
    property to contain surface water and prevent runoff. Noting the absence of
    any percolation or soil permeability rating tests, plaintiffs' expert Neuls posited
    inadequate permeability of the soils under the drywells could be contributing
    to their periodic overflow and excessive groundwater affecting plaintiffs'
    property. Neuls recommended an open grate be placed over one of the seepage
    pits and the area regraded to capture more water in the area where the two
    properties meet. Neuls also recommended an overflow pipe be installed in the
    drywells to drain to the street.
    A-5143-17T1
    14
    Defendants produced a responsive report by their own civil engineer,
    David E. Behnken. Behnken recommended installation of a stormwater
    management system to collect and route excessive runoff along the property
    line separating plaintiffs' and defendants' properties. He recommended
    installation of a system similar to the one Neuls proposed or construction of
    additional drywells. Behnken recommended permeability and groundwater
    testing in the event additional seepage pits were installed. Neuls issued
    subsequent reports agreeing generally with Behnken's recommendations,
    including soil testing before any modification of the seepage pits, and
    estimating the costs associated with all the recommended improvements.
    At the trial before the Chancery judge to address the equitable remedy,
    defendants presented a different expert who testified defendants' property was
    not the source of flooding on plaintiffs' property and therefore no alterations
    on defendants' property would be effective or necessary. Neuls testified for
    plaintiffs in accordance with his reports. Asked on cross-examination if,
    following his visual inspection of the seepage pits he agreed with defendants'
    new expert that the seepage pits were functioning at over ninety percent of
    capacity, Neuls responded that a visual inspection would permit no opinion on
    that point. All of the expert reports were admitted in evidence, with Behnken's
    A-5143-17T1
    15
    report being admitted over defendants' objection that the report constituted
    inadmissible hearsay under N.J.R.E. 808.2
    The Chancery judge rendered an opinion adopting the recommendations
    set forth by Neuls and Behnken, including the two new drywells estimated by
    Neuls to cost $6800. Defendants argue the Chancery judge's reliance on the
    Behnken report was error as it was inadmissible hearsay, rendering the
    judgment "null and void." Having reviewed the record, we disagree.
    We review a trial court's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion,
    Hisenaj v. Kuehner, 
    194 N.J. 6
    , 12 (2008), and disregard any error we deem
    harmless, Higgins v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., 
    282 N.J. Super. 600
    , 609
    (App. Div. 1995). Only those errors "clearly capable of producing an unjust
    result," will result in a reversal of the judgment. R. 2:10-2.
    Plaintiffs having prevailed at trial on their private nuisance claim, they
    were entitled to equitable relief abating the nuisance, which right defendants
    do not challenge on appeal. See Sheppard v. Twp. of Frankford, 261 N.J.
    Super. 5, 10-11 (App. Div. 1992). It was the Chancery judge's obligation to
    2
    In the colloquy over admission of the reports, the Chancery judge advised
    the parties he had already read all of them in preparation for the trial as they
    had been submitted by counsel as part of their pre-trial submissions without
    objection.
    A-5143-17T1
    16
    fashion an effective remedy to end the excessive surface water inundating
    plaintiffs' property. That task, involving modification of existing stormwater
    management features, is rarely simple as there are often a variety of measures
    that might be tried to alleviate the problem and experts often disagree. See 
    id. at 11.
    As the Chancery judge noted, defendants' did not present testimony at
    the remediation trial as to how the nuisance could be abated. Instead, they
    presented an expert who opined the problem was with plaintiffs' property and
    not surface runoff coming from defendants' land. The judge characterized the
    approach as "an attempt at nullification of what the jury already found in the
    Law Division trial." Left with only the opinion of plaintiffs' expert, including
    his incorporation of certain recommendations of a defense expert defendants
    elected not to call at trial, the judge endorsed plaintiffs' approach. As we are
    confident the learned Chancery judge made no inappropriate use of the
    evidence, see Williams v. Illinois, 
    567 U.S. 50
    , 69-70 (2012) ("There is a well-
    established presumption that the judge [has] adhered to basic rules of
    procedure, when the judge is acting as a factfinder." (alteration in original));
    State v. Kern, 
    325 N.J. Super. 435
    , 444 (App. Div. 1999) (noting "[a] judge
    sitting as the fact finder is certainly capable of sorting through admissible and
    A-5143-17T1
    17
    inadmissible evidence without resultant detriment to the decision-making
    process"), we find no error in the court's admission of the report and certainly
    not one clearly capable of producing an unjust result.
    Affirmed.
    A-5143-17T1
    18