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by
Michael A. Pollack
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In 1962, the Wisconsin Supreme Court abolished the common
law doctrine of sovereign immunity for municipalities and their employees
in the landmark
Holytz v. City of Milwaukee 1
decision. Justice Gordon, writing for the court, cited numerous reasons
for rejecting this long-standing doctrine. However, both Justice Gordon
and Justice Currie's concurring opinion left the door open for the legislature
to "restore the court abolished rule if it determines public policy
so requires."
2
Shortly thereafter, the legislature enacted the predecessor of the current
municipal claims statute.
3
That legislation provided immunity for "acts which are done in the exercise
of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial, or quasi-judicial functions."
4
This language merely repeats the exception that Justice Gordon
provided for in
Holytz, which established that "[H]enceforward,
so far as governmental responsibility for torts is concerned, the rule
is liability - the exception is immunity."
5
What remains of municipal immunity is an affirmative defense, which
may be waived if not pleaded in a timely manner.6
Nonetheless, the courts are again referring to the "rule of immunity,"7
making plaintiffs bear the burden of proving they fall within an exception,
even though the legislature has not acted and the supreme court has
not expressly overruled Holytz. Recently, three members of
the supreme court noted, "Wisconsin law has become unintelligible
in explaining what rights and remedies are available to persons who
have been injured by state or local government."8
This article examines the history and current
status of municipal immunity in the courts, and suggests future judicial
and legislative action on this issue. It also shows how recent appellate
court interpretations of the municipal immunity doctrine affected
the recently concluded class action arising out of the 1993 cryptosporidium
contamination of Milwaukee's drinking water. This author, as plaintiff
class co-counsel in that litigation, believes that the change in appellate
court treatment of the municipal immunity doctrine needlessly complicates
and prolongs the proceedings in such cases.
History of Municipal
Immunity after Holytz
Much of Justice Gordon's criticism of municipal immunity focused
on "some highly artificial judicial distinctions" that had grown up
around it, such as the "proprietary or governmental function" test,
or the "governor to governed" relationship test. Cases dealing with
the current immunity statute have avoided those distinctions, but
created new ones to take their place. Today, the courts employ the
"discretionary" (immune) versus "ministerial" (not immune) duty test
when deciding whether a municipality is immune from suit.9
Likewise, cases dealing with municipal liability for accidents caused
by absent or misplaced traffic signs distinguish between placement
decisions (which may be immune) and maintenance issues (which are
not immune).10
The salient issue now is whether these distinctions are any less artificial
or any more necessary and workable than the ones that preceded Holytz.
The "ministerial/discretionary" test can be traced to Lister
v. Board of Regents11,
a 1976 decision that held that state employees were immune from being
sued by former U.W. law students for refunds of tuition overpayments.
The courts first applied this test to a case involving a municipality
in 1980, but held that negligent acts by medical doctors employed
by a municipality were not covered because they were exercising nongovernmental
discretion.12
Later cases held that "quasi-legislative" and "quasi-judicial" were
synonymous with "discretionary" acts, except those performed by medical
professionals.13
At the same time, another court recognized that governmental immunity
does not attach merely because the conduct involves discretion. "The
question is whether the decision involved the type of judgment and
discretion that rises to governmental discretion, as opposed to professional
or technical judgment and discretion."14
Nonetheless, by the mid 1990s, the supreme court made it clear that
the "discretionary/ministerial duty" test applied equally to state
employees and to municipalities and their employees, regardless of
the nature of their jobs or professions.15
Oddly, none of these cases overruled or even criticized a 1984 decision
in Domino v. Walworth County, which found that a municipality
was not immune for failing to dispatch a sheriff's squad to investigate
a fallen tree that caused a motorcyclist to crash and injure himself.16
Arguably, Domino was decided upon the "known danger" exception to
the "rule of immunity." However, application of an exception normally
follows a finding that the rule applies. That did not happen in Domino.
To the contrary, the Domino court criticized the "discretionary" immunity
test, noting, "Nearly every human action involves the exercise of
some discretion."17
Subsequent cases have ignored that observation.
Legislative Intent and
Public Policy Considerations
Missing from
recent cases involving municipal immunity is any discussion or analysis
of the legislative intent behind the municipal immunity law. In Lister,
the supreme court discussed many public policy considerations before
it found the Board of Regents to be immune from the suit for tuition
refunds. Those considerations include:
1) whether public officers
would be influenced in making their decisions by the threat of a lawsuit;
2) the deterrent effect of potential liability on public servants;
3) the drain of public servants' valuable time in defending the
lawsuit;
4) the unfairness of holding public officials liable for
the acts of their subordinates; and
5) the desirability of using
the political process to remedy the harm.
Conspicuously absent
from this list is the desire to protect the public treasury. Nonetheless,
it is difficult to suppress the suspicion that such a desire is behind
recent decisions finding municipalities immune from suit. The courts
also have failed to consider the impact of governmental immunity on
third parties. Therefore, in light of recent cases, an analysis of
all of these public policy considerations and justifications for governmental
immunity is in order.
Would public officers be influenced in making their decisions by
the threat of a lawsuit? Presumably, no one ever wants to be sued,
even when they are negligent and cause injuries. However, we protect
only municipalities and state and municipal employees from such lawsuits.
Why? In the recently settled cryptosporidium litigation in Milwaukee,
the city suggested that "[W]ater treatment is not a fit subject for
a court or jury to substitute its own discretion. ..." There certainly
are governmental decisions that are properly left to one branch of
government, free from judicial second guessing. The amount of supervision
exercised by jailers18,
parole officers19,
gym teachers20,
and foster care workers21
may be among them. Immunity might be especially appropriate in cases
against police officers by plaintiffs who have been injured by criminals
or other third parties who are under government supervision, not by
state or municipal employees themselves.22
Such supervision traditionally has been a uniquely governmental function.
However, one might question why, in this day and age of private (and
"choice") schools and private prisons, only government employees should
be immune from suit. Surely, government employees are not less likely
to be negligent than employees in the private sector.
As a matter of public policy, municipal governments and
their employees should not be immune from being sued for negligence
in situations where their counterparts in private business would not
be immune. Either all teachers should be immune from being sued for
negligence on the job, or none of them should be. Likewise, water
works employees should be liable for their negligence or immune from
suit regardless of whether a municipality or a private company owns
the utility. Municipal immunity should apply only when the government
is providing a uniquely governmental service (that is, there is no
private sector counterpart).
Deterrent effect of lawsuits on public servants. It is not in the
public interest to deter anyone from running for public office because
they might be sued for something the government or its employees do
wrong. But how far down the line do we go? Cabinet officers? Department
heads? Staff and line employees? Since the government normally is
liable for judgments against its employees arising out of actions
performed in the line of duty23,
is this really a legitimate rationale for immunity? There is no evidence
to suggest that immunity is necessary in order to attract quality
municipal employees.
Drain
of valuable time in defending lawsuits. Where defendants are law enforcement
officers, teachers, or foster care workers, courts are reluctant to
take up their time reviewing the myriad of decisions they make in
allocating their time between many competing and urgent demands. Outside
of those occupations, this author cannot think of any other governmental
units or employees who need more protection from lawsuits than private
businesses or their employees have.
Unfairness of holding public
officials liable for the acts of their subordinates. This consideration
is really a restatement of the concerns underlying the three previous
considerations. Again, where is the empirical evidence that municipal
officials are being sued unjustifiably for the acts of their subordinates
or others whose actions they cannot control? Our jurisprudence regarding
negligent hiring and supervision, and the burdens of proving liability
and causation, usually are sufficient to screen out the meritless
cases. Where is the need to provide more protection against legal
action to government officials than to their counterparts in private
business?
Desirability of using the political process to remedy
the harm. Where many citizens are alleged to have been harmed by the
action or inaction of an elected public official, it might properly
be argued that it should be left to the electorate to decide what
to do about it. For example, the Chicago mayor in 1979 was blamed
for not providing enough workers and equipment to clean up after a
New Year's Eve snowstorm, leaving people stranded and businesses closed
for more than a week. A new mayor was elected within a year, largely
due to the snow removal crisis.
The question our courts, and perhaps
the legislature, need to resolve is what to do when the culpable public
employees are merely civil servants, rather than elected officials
or their direct appointees. When lower-level municipal employees (for
example, operators and chemists at the water works) cause the public
harm, should the injured parties be left to their political remedies?
Two municipal elections have been held since the 1993 crypto outbreak
in Milwaukee, and no one has been able to make it into a campaign
issue against either the incumbent mayor or any alderperson. In this
situation, the political process has failed to bring about accountability.
Immunity from liability for damages in tort would remove the only
other available recourse.
Protecting the public treasury. Ideally, governmental immunity would
provide municipalities and their employees with a quick and inexpensive
means for obtaining dismissal of civil lawsuits upon a motion to dismiss
at the outset of the case.24
In practice, Wisconsin's immunity statute has required most cases
to be litigated through discovery and resolved only upon a motion
for summary judgment or following a trial.
In the cryptosporidium cases,
counsel for the city of Milwaukee argued in court and in public statements
that a settlement or judgment against the city would only take money
from all taxpayers' pockets and put it into the pockets of some of
those taxpayers. This ignores the fact that many of those who were
sickened by the contaminated water were not Milwaukee residents, but
drank the water at the airport, hospitals, restaurants, schools, or
other businesses in the service area. More importantly, if this argument
were true, it would be only because the city of Milwaukee is "self-insured."
Milwaukee could have protected itself (and its taxpayers and water
utility ratepayers) by buying general liability insurance, as other
water utilities and other municipalities have done. Municipalities,
like other defendants in civil lawsuits, should not be allowed to
argue that they should be immune from suit merely because they are
"self-insured" or uninsured.
In the crypto cases, six years of motions and discovery (including
hundreds of depositions of lay and expert witnesses) passed before
defense counsel felt comfortable enough to file a motion for summary
judgment on the immunity issue. Defense counsels' fees and costs exceeded
$1.5 million.25
In the absence of liability insurance, that money obviously came from
taxpayers' pockets. Thus, the immunity defense did very little to
protect the public treasury in those cases. It did multiply the time,
effort, and costs of litigating the case for all parties.
In addition, even when immunity has been applied to protect municipal
employees, the municipality itself has been held liable for its own
negligence.26
Municipalities also are not immune from suits for breach of contract27
or for maintaining a nuisance.28
Thus, in the universe of things for which a municipality may be sued,
immunity against suits for damages in tort provides very limited protection.
Further, Wisconsin's municipal claims statute is a three-headed hydra.
In addition to the immunity provision, the statute imposes notice
requirements and a damage cap that is among the lowest in the nation.29
If immunity did not exist, the gates holding back a flood of municipal
tort claims would hardly be budged.
Effect
of governmental immunity on third parties. A frequently overlooked
side effect of any immunity doctrine is that the injured parties inevitably
look to viable nonimmune parties for compensation. In the crypto case,
it was the private company that sold a water treatment chemical to
the city that eventually came up with the lion's share of the settlement
money. It is companies like this (and their insurers) who should be
leading the attack on the governmental immunity doctrine. If Wisconsin
municipalities continue to insist that all of their activities involving
some discretion are immune from suit, regardless of how tangentially
they may or may not be related to legislative or judicial functions,
then private companies doing business with them had better take precautions
against being sued as the only viable parties connected with the incident.
Contractual provisions for indemnification or waiver of the immunity
defense may be necessary to protect relatively innocent private companies
whose products are misused by municipal employees, like the chemical
company in the crypto case.
Other grounds for dismissal of cases against municipalities. Sometimes,
immunity has been unnecessarily employed instead of other, more conventional,
means of defending municipalities and their employees. For example,
in one recent case, a man sued a school district because it gave him
bad advice regarding insurance and retirement benefits resulting from
the death of his wife, who had been a schoolteacher.30
The court held that the school district was immune from being sued
for giving the bad advice because it was a "discretionary" function.
This holding was unnecessary because the case could have been resolved
on other grounds.
The case was based
solely on negligence and involved only monetary loss (not personal
injury or public safety, the traditional concerns of tort law). The
defense should have based its motion on the economic loss doctrine.
Alternatively, it could have argued that the school district had no
duty to render what was essentially legal advice to the widower. He
paid nothing for the advice and the information he needed was easily
obtainable from other sources, like the public statutes, regulations,
or a lawyer. There was no contractual obligation to provide this advice,
and no guarantee that it would be correct. Under either theory, the
case could and should have been disposed of upon a motion to dismiss
for failure to state a claim at the outset.
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