OPINION BY
Darlene Bottoms (Appellant) appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (trial court) entering summary judgment in favor of defendants Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority (SEPTA) and Tom Tomlin (Tomlin) in her negligence claim against them for damages. We affirm the trial court.
On December 7, 1998, Appellant was a passenger on a SEPTA bus, operated by Tomlin, which had stopped to discharge passengers. Appellant was the fourth or fifth person to exit the bus that was positioned approximately a foot and a half to two feet from the curb. Instead of stepping down into the street, Appellant took a “giant step over” directly to the curb and fell, rupturing her Achilles tendon and requiring surgery. Appellant filed a complaint against SEPTA and Tomlin (collectively SEPTA), alleging' that the negligence, carelessness and or recklessness of SEPTA were the cause of her injury. Appellant maintains that she fell because the bus was too far from the curb and because the bus driver failed to kneel 1 the bus.
SEPTA filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that Appellant’s claim was barred by sovereign immunity. The trial court agreed and granted SEPTA summary judgment. Appellant appealed to this court; her sole argument before this court is that the bus driver’s failure to kneél the bus falls within the vehicle liability exception to sovereign immunity set forth in Section 8522(b)(1) of the Judicial Code, 42 Pa.C.S. § 8522(b)(1). Thus, she believes the trial court erred.
SEPTA is an agency of the Commonwealth entitled to sovereign immunity.
Feingold v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority,
The Judicial Code enumerates specific exceptions to sovereign immunity. The vehicle liability exception applies to acts of a Commonwealth agency arising from:
The operation of any motor vehicle in the possession or control of a Commonwealth party. As used in this paragraph, “motor vehicle” means any vehicle that is self-propelled and any attachment thereto, including vehicles operated by rail, through water or in the air.
42 Pa.C.S. § 8522(b)(1). This scope of the vehicle liability exception has been carefully defined by our Supreme Court; generally, a stationary vehicle is not “in operation” within the meaning of 42 Pa.C.S. § 8522(b)(1).
Love v. City of Philadelphia,
In Love, an elderly woman fell as she was alighting from the steps of a city-owned van. In considering whether the vehicle liability exception applied to her claim against the City of Philadelphia, the Supreme Court noted that the statute did not define the word “operation.” Accordingly, it construed the word according to common usage, holding as follows:
[T]o operate something means to actually put it in motion. Merely preparing to operate a vehicle, or acts taken at the cessation of operating a vehicle are not the same as actually operating that vehicle.... Getting into or alighting from a vehicle are merely acts ancillary to the actual operation of the vehicle.
Love,
On the basis of the holding in
Love,
this Court has generally declined to apply the vehicle liability exception in cases that did not involve the actual movement of the vehicle.
See, e.g., First National Bank of Pennsylvania v. Department of Transportation,
However, we do not require that the entire vehicle be in motion and a driver in the seat in order for a vehicle to be “in operation.” Where an injury results from movement of part of the vehicle, this Court has found the vehicle liability exception to apply. In
Sonnenberg v. Erie Metropolitan Transit Authority,
In sum, for the vehicle liability exception to apply, the vehicle owned or possessed by a Commonwealth or local agency must be in operation. To be in operation, generally the entire vehicle is moving, but a moving part, such as a bus door, has been found to be “in operation.” In no case has a plaintiff been successful in showing “operation” in the circumstances of entering or exiting a stopped vehicle.
Notwithstanding this clear body of precedent, Appellant contends that her circumstance involved the “operation” of a SEPTA bus. She does so by arguing that our holding in Cacchione expanded the motor vehicle liability exception in a way that contemplates her cause of action. We disagree.
In Cacchione, a truck driver failed to engage the handbrake on a parked truck, allowing it to roll backwards and crash into the home of the plaintiffs. The Court acknowledged that the failure to secure the handbrake satisfied the first requirement for a claim against a local agency, i.e., establishing a common law or statutory cause of action. However, this finding had no relevance to the second requirement, ie., finding an exception to governmental immunity. On that point, we reasoned that because the movement of the entire truck caused the injury, the truck was “in operation” when it caused the injury. Our decision did not “expand” the meaning of “in operation” announced in Love.
In the case before us, the SEPTA bus was not “in operation.” 5 It was not a movement of the bus itself that caused *51 Appellant her injury. She claims SEPTA’S failure, and that of its employee, to put the kneeling mechanism into operation meets the vehicle liability exception. This calls for a reach we cannot make. The SEPTA bus was standing still, at a curb, discharging passengers; it was not “in operation” as required for the vehicle liability exception to apply. While we are sympathetic to the injuries sustained by Appellant, we are constrained by the dictates of the law. As our Supreme Court has stated:
[W]e wish to emphasize that the issue here is not whether one may be tortiously injured entering or alighting from a stopped vehicle. Rather, the issue is the confining question of whether a political subdivision is immunized from suit when one is so injured, notwithstanding what may be the actual tort of their employees. The legislature, for reasons of policy, reasons we are not entitled to dilute for sympathy or even outrage at specific instances of blatant tort, has decided that such an immunity does exist, and we must abide, sometimes leaving dreadful injuries, negligently inflicted, uncompensated.
The juridical concept that where there is a wrong there must be a right often depends on the wisdom and large responsibility of the legislature. What rights for what wrongs are generally their prerogative and apportioned in the exercise of them many responsibilities and competing needs. Their task, like ours, is never easy. However, it is our duty to respect and enforce their judgment, even with heavy hearts in particular instances.
Love,
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to SEPTA.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 14th day of August, 2002, the November 14, 2001 order of the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas in the above-captioned matter is hereby affirmed.
Notes
. The bus in question was equipped with a mechanism that would allow an operator to make the bus "kneel", z.e., lower steps closer to the ground to allow greater passenger accessibility.
. It states:
Liability imposed. — The General Assembly, pursuant to section 11 of Article I of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, does hereby waive, in the instances set forth in subsection (b) only and only to the extent set forth in this subchapter and within the limits set forth in section 8528 (relating to limitations on damages), sovereign immunity as a bar to an action against Commonwealth parties, for damages arising out of a negligent act where the damages would be recoverable under the common law or a statute creating a cause of action if the injury were caused by a person not having available the defense of sovereign immunity.
42 Pa.C.S. § 8522(a).
. The vehicle liability exception to governmental immunity is identical to the comparable exception to sovereign immunity. The Judicial Code states:
The following acts by a local agency or any of its employes may result in the imposition of liability on a local agency:
(1) Vehicle liability. The operation of any motor vehicle in the possession or control of the local agency....
42 Pa.C.S. § 8542(b).
.
See also Bazemore v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority,
. Appellant claims that because she weighs 300 pounds, Tomlin should have known to put the kneeling mechanism into play. As SEPTA noted, it is not the job of bus drivers to anticipate the needs of individual passengers, and Bottoms did not ask to have the device operated. She has many problems with the first requirement, i.e., showing a breach of the defendant's duty of care to Appellant. However, we need not address those issues since her injury does not fall within the exception of 42 Pa.C.S. § 8522(b)(1).
