Court Opinion

ID: 9848091
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-24 04:12:38.166977+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:18:00.795837
License: Public Domain

Justice Lake
dissenting.
As the majority opinion states, the evidence indicated that the city’s street maintenance crew caused sand and gravel to fall into the city’s main sewer line, obstructing that line so that sewage backed up and overflowed into the home of the plaintiffs, damaging their property severely. The majority’s sole ground for affirming the allowance of the city’s motion for a directed verdict is the failure of the plaintiffs to give written notice of their claim to the mayor within the time, 90 days, specified therefor in the charter of the city.
The record shows the following, undisputed facts:
Kemp P. Cummings, Jr., is a full time employee of the city, his title being “Claims Investigator.” The scope of his employment includes investigations of and reports on claims filed against the city. After his investigation and report, such claim is presented to the City Attorney for an opinion as to the City’s liability. Mr. Cummings, himself, has no authority to negotiate settlement of claims. He always makes a point of advising claimants that he has no such authority. He is the only employee of the city who carries the title of “Claims Investigator.”
While the flooding of the plaintiffs’ home was still in progress, on Sunday, 4 January 1970, an employee of the city’s water and sewer department went to the plaintiffs’ residence, talked to the male plaintiff and observed the flooding. This employee and the crew under his direction being unable to remove the obstruction from the sewer main with the use of rods, he summoned a second crew of city employees, who, some three hours later, were successful in unstopping the sewer. After the overflow was halted about 3:30 p.m., the crew of city employees assisted until after dark in mopping up the accumulated overflow of water and sewage on the floors and in the basement of the plaintiffs’ home.
While this flooding of the home was still in progress, Mr. Cummings, the city’s only “Claims Investigator,” received notice of it. He went there immediately and observed the condition *525and the city employees cleaning up the house. He talked to the male plaintiff about 30 minutes on that occasion and had several discussions with him since that time “specifically about the damage to his home.” He personally inspected the damage and made photographs of the conditions he observed.
The next day, Monday, 5 January 1970, a crew of city employees returned to the house and cleaned and disinfected it, removing many articles of the plaintiffs’ belongings from the house to their boat shed. On the day of the flooding, or the following day, the male plaintiff made an inventory of the damage to the home and of the articles of personal property damaged by the flooding, showing the original cost and the then present value of each item. A copy of this inventory of damaged articles was mailed by the plaintiffs to Mr. Cummings “as he had suggested,” on 12 February 1970, 39 days after the occurrence. Mr. Cummings, then accompanied by a city attorney, had given the male plaintiff his card and told him where to send the inventory. Later, six or eight weeks after the flooding, two of the city’s attorneys went to the home of the plaintiffs and again discussed the matter with the male plaintiff. He carried them to the boat shed where the damaged articles were stored and they examined them. Having heard nothing further from representatives of the city, the male plaintiff wrote a letter to the mayor on 8 October 1970, more than 90 days after the flooding.
The question which arises upon this evidence is: When, through the negligence of the city, its sewer main becomes obstructed so that the home of the plaintiff is flooded with sewage and the city, with full knowledge of the condition, sends its official “Claims Investigator” and its attorney to inspect the damaged property and to confer with the owner, and the owner, pursuant to the request and suggestion of the “Claims Investigator,” promptly sends to him a written inventory of the damaged articles, showing their value, may the city escape liability for the sole reason that the property owner, thus believing his claim was in process of adjustment, did not hand to the mayor, in person, a written notice of his claim within the time specified in the city’s charter? In my opinion, this question should be answered, “No.”
The majority opinion cites in support of its conclusion the following cases: Sowers v. Warehouse, 256 N.C. 190, 123 S.E. 2d 603; Carter v. Greensboro, 249 N.C. 328, 106 S.E. 2d 564; Webster v. Charlotte, 222 N.C. 321, 22 S.E. 2d 900; Foster v. *526Charlotte, 206 N.C. 528, 174 S.E. 412; Dayton v. Asheville, 185 N.C. 12, 115 S.E. 827; Pender v. Salisbury, 160 N.C. 363, 76 S.E. 228. Each of those cases is distinguishable on its facts from the present case. In two of them, Carter v. Greensboro, supra, and Webster v. Charlotte, supra, the plaintiff prevailed, notwithstanding his failure to give the notice required by the city charter. These are discussed below. In none of the cases, with the exception of Pender v. Salisbury, supra, is there any indication in the reported decision that the city had any knowledge whatever of the plaintiff’s alleged injury until it was sued. In Pender v. Salisbury, supra, there is nothing to indicate any knowledge by the city of a contention that there was basis of a claim against it except that the mayor, individually, attempted to assist the deceased at the time and scene of the accident. In none of these cases was there the slightest suggestion that any representative of the city discussed the plaintiff’s claim with him or did anything to cause the plaintiff to believe his claim was under consideration for settlement.
The validity of provisions such as that in the charter of the City of Winston-Salem is unquestionable. As this Court said in Pender v. Salisbury, supra, and again in Foster v. Charlotte, supra, “The purpose is to give the municipal authorities an early opportunity to investigate such claims while the evidence is fresh, so as to prevent fraud and imposition.” This being the purpose, this Court, in Perry v. High Point, 218 N.C. 714, 12 S.E. 2d 275, reversed a judgment of dismissal granted because of failure to comply technically with such a charter provision, saying that such provisions “require only a substantial compliance, without the technical nicety necessary to pleadings.” There, the Court quoted with approval the following statement in 43 C.J., p. 1192 (see 63 CJS, Municipal Corporations, § 925):
“Such statutory requirements being for the benefit of the municipality, in order to put its officers in possession of the facts upon which the claim for damages is predicated and the place where the injuries are alleged to have occurred, in order that they may investigate them and adjust the claim without the expense of litigation, a reasonable or substantial compliance with the terms of the statute is all that is required; and where an effort to comply with such requirements has been made and the notice, statement or presentation when reasonably construed is such as to accomplish the object of the statute, it should be regarded as sufficient.”
*527In Graham v. Charlotte, 186 N.C. 649, 120 S.E. 466, the plaintiff was held entitled to recover on the ground that his notice complied substantially with the statute although the city contended it was defective in content. Thus it has been clearly established by the decisions of this Court that such a provision should not be interpreted or applied so as to convert it into a shield for injustice through the denial by the city of a meritorious claim of which it actually had notice within the time specified in the charter.
In Carter v. Greensboro, supra, a three year old child, horribly burned by negligence of the city employees, was permitted to recover though no notice of his claim was given the city until nine years after the occurrence. There, this Court properly said:
“Ordinarily, the giving of timely notice is a condition precedent to the right to maintain an action, and nonsuit is proper unless the plaintiff alleges and proves notice. * * * However, there is an exception to the rule. The plaintiff may relieve himself from the necessity of giving notice by alleging and proving that at the time notice should have been given he was under such a mental or physical disability as rendered it impossible for him by any ordinary means at his command to give notice; and that he actually gave notice within a reasonable time after the disability was removed. * * *
“In this case the plaintiff, as a part of his cause of action, alleged his failure to file the notice within the time fixed by the defendant’s charter and at the same time he alleged facts which, if true, brought his case within the exception. * * * Under such circumstances is it not the policy of the law and the duty of judges to guard his rights with jealous care and to see that the door of the courthouse is not closed to him when he is without fault? * * * Failure to give earlier notice does not justify nonsuit.” (Emphasis added.)
The foregoing statement in the Carter case is quoted with approval in Sowers v. Warehouse, supra. This exception is also recognized in Foster v. Charlotte, supra, in Pender v. Salisbury, supra, and in Terrell v. Washington, 158 N.C. 281, 73 S.E. 888. This exception is not founded upon any language of the charter provision in any such case. It is engrafted upon the legislative *528provision by judicial action to prevent a statute, designed to shield municipalities against fraud and injustice, from being converted into an instrument of injustice. That is also the purpose of the judicial modification of the statutory provision so as to make substantial compliance therewith sufficient.
Again, in Webster v. Charlotte, supra, this Court, speaking through Chief Justice Stacy, said:
“Undoubtedly, we have decisions to the effect that in the absence of some valid excuse * * * compliance must be shown with the provisions of a city charter requiring notice of claim as a condition precedent to the institution of an action against a municipal corporation for the recovery of damages.” (Emphasis added.)
In that case, also, a nonsuit of an action for personal injuries to a small child was reversed though notice of the claim was not given until five years after the injury. Again, in Dayton v. Asheville, supra, the Court said that such notice is a prerequisite to an action against the city for the partial taking of or injury to the plaintiff’s land “in the absence of a valid excuse.”
It would be difficult to find a more valid excuse for failure to give written notice to the mayor within the time specified in the charter than the plaintiffs had in this case under the circumstances disclosed by this record. It is not necessary to hold that knowledge of the injury and of the cause thereof, acquired by two full crews of city employees in the course of some six hours of opening the sewer and cleaning up the resulting contamination of the plaintiffs’ home, makes compliance with the charter provision unnecessary. Here, we have far more than that. The official “Claims Investigator” of the city came and investigated the matter while the flooding of the home was in progress, returned on at least one other occasion, and requested the plaintiffs to submit to him their inventory of damage, which written inventory was mailed to him well within the time a1 lowed by the charter for such notice. Thereafter, on at least one occasion, the attorneys for the city came and inspected the damaged articles in the presence of the male plaintiff. Under these circumstances, to permit the city to escape all responsibility for the invasion of the plaintiffs’ home by contaminating filth, due to the city’s negligence, for the sole reason that the plaintiff did not send to the mayor a written communication until some seven months later, is to convert the statutory shield into an *529instrument of harshness and injustice, which we properly refused to do in Carter v. Greensboro, supra.
The charter provision is valid, but the actions of the city Claims Investigator and the City Attorney are such as to estop the city from asserting this defense. Sykes v. Belk, 278 N.C. 106, 179 S.E. 2d 439, is not inconsistent with such a holding. There we said, “It is generally recognized in North Carolina that the doctrine of estoppel will not be applied against a municipality in its governmental, public or sovereign capacity.” What we were talking about there was estoppel of a city to exercise its governmental discretion in the location of a municipal building, but, even so, the statement was dictum for we expressly said that the circumstances of that case did not present facts requiring application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel since there was no showing that the plaintiffs in that case had been prejudicially misled. The operation of a sewer system, being chiefly for the private advantage of the compact community, is a proprietary function for the negligent exercise of which the municipality is subject to liability. See: Clark v. Scheld, 253 N.C. 732, 117 S.E. 2d 838; Carter v. Greensboro, supra.
For the doctrine of equitable estoppel to apply, it is not necessary that the conduct of the defendant be with fraudulent intent. It is sufficient that its “Claims Investigator” and the attorneys misled the plaintiffs into the reasonable belief that the city, aware of their claim, was processing it for settlement and thus further, formal demand was unnecessary. The record clearly shows the plaintiffs were led so to believe.
In Pender v. Salisbury, supra, Justice Brown, speaking for the Court, said, “The town authorities cannot waive this statutory requirement that a demand in writing be made, even if the mayor should have imagined that a suit was to be brought.” Waiver, a voluntary relinquishment of a known right, does not rest on the same basis as an estoppel. In Pender v. Salisbury, supra, the jury actually found the city was not negligent and this Court said there was no error in the trial with respect to that issue. Thus, the reference therein to waiver is in the nature of a dictum. In any event, there was in that case nothing to suggest a waiver and certainly no basis for a claim of estoppel in the mere fact that the mayor, apparently nearby when the deceased fell off the step of the city’s fire wagon and was killed, tried to assist the dying man.
*530After the time for giving notice has expired and the injured party has, with no reasonable excuse, failed to give the required notice, the city’s defense is absolute and no official, employee or attorney may waive it, expressly or by conduct. It is quite a different thing, in my opinion, to say that conduct of the city’s “Claims Investigator” and its attorney, which reasonably leads an uninformed layman to believe that he has given the city all the information it requires for the handling and settlement of his claim, does not affect the city's right to assert that such layman is barred from recovery by his delay in filing a written statement of claim with some other city official.
To reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals, which in turn affirmed the judgment of the district court, does not require the overruling of any decision cited by it or in the majority opinion.
Justice Huskins joins in this dissenting opinion.