|
Navigation
|
Vol. 72, No. 10, October
1999 |
Government Immunity
for Safe Place Statute Violations
The court of appeals has published conflicting decisions
regarding whether governmental entities are immune from liability
under section 893.80(4) for violations of the Safe Place Statute.
Practitioners handling premises liability cases involving governmental
entities should be familiar
with the case law and consider how public policy factors affect
their arguments for or against immunity.
Links to
Wisconsin statutory materials in this article require
that you have the free Adobe Acrobat
Reader Software on your computer.
By Thomas A. Cabush
onflict exists among
recent published decisions of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
regarding the applicability of the discretionary immunity statute
to actions involving alleged Safe Place Statute violations. Governmental
entities are afforded immunity under section
893.80(4) of the Wisconsin Statutes for the discretionary
acts of their employees. In Anderson
v. City of Milwaukee1
(Anderson I), the District I Court of Appeals held that
a government entity was not immune from liability for alleged
Safe
Place Statute violations. Shortly thereafter, in Spencer
v. County of Brown,2
the District III Court of Appeals held that a government entity
was immune from liability for alleged Safe
Place Statute violations. This article analyzes these conflicting
decisions and attempts to provide some guidance to practitioners
handling premises liability cases involving governmental entities.
General Rules for Determining Immunity
Section
893.80(4) of the Wisconsin Statutes provides immunity to
governmental subdivisions such as towns, counties, and school
districts. Section
893.80(4) states:
"No suit may be brought against any volunteer fire company
organized under ch. 213, political corporation, governmental
subdivision or any agency thereof for the intentional torts of
its officers, officials, agents or employees nor may any suit
be brought against such corporation, subdivision or agency or
volunteer fire company or against its officers, officials, agents
or employees for acts done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative,
judicial or quasi-judicial functions."
The common law has developed some general rules of law that
are applicable in determining whether a specific act of a governmental
entity or its employees will be immune from liability under section
893.80(4).
The courts have interpreted the terms "quasi-legislative"
and "quasi-judicial" as synonymous with the term "discretionary."3 Therefore, governmental entities
and their employees are immune from liability for their discretionary
acts.
A discretionary
act is viewed in contrast to a "ministerial" act. Ministerial
acts are not subject to immunity.4
A ministerial act occurs when the act is "absolute, certain
and imperative, involving merely the performance of a specific
task when the law imposes, prescribes and defines the time, mode
and occasion for its performance with such certainty that nothing
remains for judgment or discretion."5
Therefore, if it is determined that the act involved the exercise
of judgment or discretion, then the governmental entity and its
employees will be entitled to immunity because they are performing
a discretionary and not a ministerial act.
Bauder v. Delevan-Darien
School District6
provides an example of how courts distinguish between discretionary
acts and ministerial functions. Christopher Bauder was injured
during a gym class when a deflated soccer ball struck him in
the eye. The teacher decided to move the class indoors because
of inclement weather. Bauder sued the Delevan-Darien School District
arguing that the school district was required to provide physical
education classes to students and that the teacher's actions
in carrying out this duty were ministerial.
The court of appeals held that the teacher was entitled to
immunity under section 893.80(4).
The court stated "[w]hile the obligation to provide physical
education classes is mandated, and thus ministerial, the manner
in which those classes are conducted is not specified either
by state statute or by the school district." The court noted
that the teacher made a decision to move the class indoors and
deflate the soccer ball, hoping to reduce the chance of injury.
The court concluded that these were judgmental-discretionary
decisions and not ministerial acts.
One exception to the general rule of immunity for discretionary
acts is the "known present danger exception." This
exception applies when there exists a known present danger of
such force that the time, mode, and occasion for performance
is evident with such certainty that nothing remains for the exercise
of judgment or discretion. The known present danger exception
is best illustrated by the facts in Cords v. Anderson.7 The Cords court held
that the immunity defense was not available to a state park manager
who failed to either notify superiors of a hazardous 80-foot
drop along a trail or erect signs that would warn patrons of
the trail's condition. In that case, the manager knew of the
danger, had the authority to act, and failed to act.
Does the Safe Place Statute Impose
a Discretionary or Ministerial Duty?
There is a conflict among published decisions of the Wisconsin
Court of Appeals districts regarding whether the Safe
Place Statute8
imposes a ministerial duty on governmental entities and their
employees. In Anderson I the District I Court of Appeals
held that a city has a ministerial duty to comply with the Safe
Place Statute. In Spencer
the District III Court of Appeals held that the duty imposed
by the Safe Place Statute is discretionary and the county was
immune from liability for allegations of violating the Safe Place
Statute.
The Safe
Place Statute provides, in relevant part, that "[e]very
employer and every owner of a place of employment or a public
building now or hereafter constructed shall so construct, repair
or maintain such place of employment or public building as to
render the same safe."9
Anderson I involved
the defective design and construction of a walkway at a farmer's
market owned, constructed, and operated by the City of Milwaukee.
Anderson tripped and fell on a raised line of bricks on the market's
walkway path, thereby suffering a transverse fracture of her
right knee. Anderson commenced a negligence action against the
city alleging inter alia that the city violated the Safe
Place Statute and was negligent in the design, construction,
and maintenance of the walkway. Anderson alleged that the city
was not immune from liability because the negligence and Safe
Place Statute violations constituted breaches of ministerial
duties on the part of the city.10
The court of appeals held that once the city exercised overall
discretion and decided to design and construct the walkway, it
was under a ministerial duty to comply with the Safe
Place Statute mandates.11
The Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed
Anderson I on other grounds.12
The Wisconsin Supreme Court held that the City of Milwaukee
waived its discretionary immunity defense because it did not
raise the immunity defense as an affirmative defense. The court
did not reach the issue of whether the city had a ministerial
duty to comply with the Safe
Place Statute ; however, the court stated "we do not
reach the ministerial duty-safe place issue, we emphasize that
our decision should not be taken as approval of the reasoning
of the Court of Appeals on that issue."13
In Spencer the
District III Court of Appeals held that the duty imposed by the
Safe
Place Statute was discretionary.14
Spencer, an inmate at the Brown County Jail, claimed that he
suffered injuries to his head and body when he slipped and fell
in the jail shower area. He brought suit against the county and
the sheriff for damages resulting from his fall. The trial court
granted summary judgment to the defendants finding that the county
and the sheriff were immune from liability under section 893.80(4).
The court of appeals affirmed the decision.
The District III Court of Appeals analyzed the Anderson
I and Anderson II decisions
in its opinion. The court recognized that holdings not specifically
reversed on appeal generally retain precedential value. However,
the court of appeals declined to follow the Anderson
I holding. The court stated "based on the status
of the Anderson decisions, we declined to follow Spencer's
invitation to apply the reasoning that has not been approved
by our state supreme court, though not specifically overruled,
to the factually distinct situation of an inmate's fall in the
shower area of a correctional facility."15
The court went on to analyze whether the design, equipment,
and maintenance of the jail shower facilities entailed acts within
the exercise of discretion or ministerial functions. The court
concluded that the duty imposed by the Safe Place Statute was
discretionary. Under the Safe
Place Statute, the defendants were required to use reasonably
adequate methods to make the shower area safe, and to do every
other thing reasonably necessary to protect the safety of individuals
like Spencer. The court noted that this language implied the
exercise of discretion and judgment by government officials in
determining what measures were reasonably necessary to make the
shower facility safe. The Safe
Place Statute does not impose the duty to perform an act
with specificity as to time, mode, and occasion "with such
certainty that nothing remains for judgment or discretion."
The court stated that the Safe
Place Statute imposes a duty on owners of public buildings
to maintain safe premises for employees and frequenters, but
the duty is not ministerial for purposes of analysis under section
893.80(4).16
In December 1998 the District I Court of Appeals issued an
unpublished decision, Rilla
Howard v. Milwaukee Area Technical and Adult Educ. Dist.,17 in which it followed the
holding set forth in Spencer
that the Safe
Place Statute imposes a discretionary not ministerial duty.
This unpublished decision confirms that District I does not view
its prior decision in Anderson I as controlling. However,
it must be noted that unpublished opinions are of no precedential
value and may not be cited in any Wisconsin court as precedent
or authority.18
In Howard,
the plaintiff was injured when she walked by a cashier's booth
in the cafeteria and a half-door on the booth fell off of its
hinges and struck her in the leg. The facts established that
an MATC supervisor knew the door was loose and advised the cashier
to be cautious when using the door.
The District I Court of Appeals relied on the Spencer
decision and concluded that the MATC employee's negligent
effort to repair the door or failure to immediately arrange for
its repair was immune from liability because the method and timing
of repair were discretionary decisions that were not specifically
directed by the Safe Place Statute. The court of appeals also
held that the danger presented by the loose door was not so compelling
as to rise to the level of a ministerial duty to repair under
the known present danger exception to immunity.
Next Page
|