A contentious legal dispute between the city of Golden Valley and a former homeowner surrounding a 2007 construction project has dragged on as the vacant property falls into disrepair, blighting an otherwise idyllic neighborhood.
Steven and Andrea Dargi sued Golden Valley on Sept. 25, 2008, claiming that the construction of a culvert on Bassett Creek behind their home at 2241 Legend Dr. triggered a slow landslide that rendered the home unsafe and ruined the entertainment business Steven operated out of the home.
"[Golden Valley city engineer] Jeff Oliver did not follow his code of ethics and purposefully and willfully destroyed my property," said Dargi, who covered his home in red stenciled graffiti to bring attention to his case against the city. "[City attorney] Allen Barnard, unfortunately, is an elderly gentleman who has made assumptions and slanderous claims he cannot back up with fact. ... Barnard made this personal."
Barnard says no landslide ever occurred at the Dargi residence and that the city probably will fix the damages caused by Dargi's neglect and sell the property after the court proceedings are over.
Before the Dargis sued, they hired Robert Eric Zimmerman to document the slow destruction of their home. Zimmerman has run an independent engineering consulting firm out of St. Paul since 2007 after decades working as an engineer in Illinois. From April 2008 to October 2011, he made more than 90 site visits and took more than 14,000 photos at the Dargi home, documented in the 17 reports Zimmerman wrote detailing the "slow earth flow landslide" at the residence.
His voluminous testimony proved instrumental in Dargi's victory in court over the city on Jan. 24, 2012. Hennepin County District Judge Bruce Peterson declared that "the extensive observations and data about changes to the house, described in detail by Zimmerman ... show that the residence was damaged beyond repair" and that the city "engaged in physical government activity that caused the damage."
Northwest Asphalt, named as a co-defendant as the company contracted by the city to perform the construction, was cleared of any wrongdoing.
Barnard vehemently disagreed with the decision and pointed to testimony from American Engineering Testing Inc., Wenck Associates Inc., Braun Intertec and Encompass Inc., all of which found that the damage to Dargi's home was not caused by a landslide. Furthermore, a report by Encompass stated that it was "obvious" that a "pry bar and/or hammer had been utilized" to damage the west wall of the home.