BUSH v OSCODA AREA SCHOOLS
Docket No. 24334
Michigan Court of Appeals
December 9, 1976
72 Mich App 670
Submitted March 8, 1976, at Lansing. Leave to appeal applied for.
OPINION OF M. J. KELLY, P. J.
- SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-PUBLIC BUILDINGS-DUTY TO MAINTAIN-DEFECTIVE BUILDINGS-USE OF BUILDING-STATUTES.
An allegation that a school district violated its statutory duty to maintain and repair public buildings so that they are free from dangerous or defective conditions, made by a plaintiff student who was injured by an explosion in a classroom which was being used for laboratory work, was properly dismissed because the injury resulted not from a defective condition of the building but from the use to which the classroom was put (
MCLA 691.1406 ;MSA 3.996[106] ). - TORTS-STRICT LIABILITY.
Strict liability in tort is not recognized in Michigan.
- JUDGMENT-SUMMARY JUDGMENT-SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-NEGLIGENCE-DISCRETIONARY ACTS.
Summary judgment was erroneously granted in favor of a defend-
ant teacher and the school‘s principal where the plaintiff, a student injured by an explosion in a classroom being used as a laboratory, alleged personal, actionable negligence on the part of these defendants and where neither of these defendants was involved in the performance of “discretionary acts” as used to define the scope of governmental immunity for public officials.
OPINION OF W. R. PETERSON, J.
- MOTIONS-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-SUMMARY JUDGMENT-COURT RULES.
The appropriate means of presenting a governmental immunity challenge to a complaint is by motion for summary judgment because on facts falling within the doctrine a claimant has no cause of action (GCR 1963, 117.2[1]).
- TORTS-IMMUNITY-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-IMMUNITY FROM SUIT-IMMUNITY FROM LIABILITY.
There is a distinction between governmental immunity from suit and governmental immunity from liability; the state and its political subdivisions and municipal corporations are not immune from suit, nor is any individual working for and representing the government immune from suit except where an action is brought against him solely in a representative capacity.
- TORTS-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-DUTY TO INDIVIDUAL-DUTY TO PUBLIC.
The test by which it is determined that governmental immunity from liability does or does not exist in a particular case is the existence of a duty to one injured as distinguished from duty solely to the public; therefore, governmental immunity from liability is not descriptive of an affirmative defense or defense in bar, but rather characterizes a class of cases in which the law recognizes no cause of action; where there is no duty there can be no actionable breach.
- TORTS-PUBLIC BODIES-DISCRETIONARY ACTIONS-DUTY TO PUBLIC-DUTY TO PRIVATE PERSONS.
A public body which has the power to act or not to act as in its discretion best fulfills the public purpose for which the power exists has a duty in the exercise of that discretion solely to the public and to no private person.
- TORTS-PUBLIC BODIES-GOVERNMENTAL FUNCTIONS-PROPRIETARY FUNCTIONS-DUTY-PUBLIC OFFICERS.
The principle that where a governmental unit is engaged in a
governmental function rather than a proprietary function its duty is purely public and there is no duty to private individuals, applies to governmental units alone and not to individual public officers. - TORTS-GOVERNMENTAL OFFICERS-LIABILITY-DUTY-GOVERNMENTALLY AUTHORIZED CONDUCT.
The inquiry as to the tort liability of an individual governmental officer when an injury has been proximately caused by the act or omission of that officer is whether liability for the injury may be avoided upon the ground that the conduct complained of was governmentally authorized; no one is excepted from ordinary standards of duty and care merely because he is a governmental officer or employee.
- OFFICERS-TORTS-IMMUNITY FROM LIABILITY-SCOPE OF IMMUNITY.
The discretionary acts of executive and administrative governmental officers for which they will be immune from tort liability should be narrowly limited; the claim of an individual for freedom from improper governmental interference should prevail over the claim of a public officer for immunity from the consequences of his acts unless the harm complained of has resulted from the performance of a clearly defined public duty.
- NEGLIGENCE-ADMINISTRATION-SUPERVISORS-PRINCIPAL AND AGENT-RESPONDEAT SUPERIOR.
A person charged with administrative and supervisory duties, public or private, is not thereby liable by application of the doctrine of respondeat superior for the negligence of employees subject to his authority; negligence of an agent may be imputed to a principal, but not to another agent.
- NEGLIGENCE-SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT-NEGLIGENCE OF TEACHER.
A claim against a school superintendent, arising out of an injury to a student in a classroom, was properly dismissed where there were no allegations of personal neglect on the part of the superintendent and the negligence of the teacher is not imputed to him merely because he is in a superior and supervisory position; the question of immunity is not involved.
- SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-JUDGMENT-SUMMARY JUDGMENT-NEGLIGENCE-ISSUES OF FACT.
Summary judgment in favor of a defendant teacher and the school principal is improper where the complaint, by a student injured in an accident occurring in a classroom being used as a
laboratory, alleged personal negligence on the part of the teacher in the conduct of the class and where the principal had direct responsibility and knowledge of the use to which the classroom was being put; such allegations present issues of fact for the jury. - TORTS-PUBLIC BUILDINGS-GOVERNMENTAL AGENCIES-STATUTES-CAUSE OF INJURY.
A statutory duty is imposed upon all governmental agencies to keep public buildings safe for the users thereof and where there is a breach of this duty the governmental agency loses its immunity from liability to the user; that which is operably defective, out of repair, or improperly maintained is actionable, but there is no cause of action if the thing producing the injury is not a part of the building proper or if the injury is caused by activities within the building rather than by a defect of the building itself (
MCLA 691.1406 ;MSA 3.996[106] ). - SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-JUDGMENT-SUMMARY JUDGMENT-CONDITION OF BUILDING-COURSE OF CONDUCT.
Summary judgment was properly granted in favor of a defendant school district where the plaintiff, who was injured in an explosion of chemicals in a classroom being used for laboratory purposes, asserted a violation of the duty to maintain a safe public building but did not state facts indicating an inherently dangerous condition of the building for the contemplated use, but rather alleged a course of classroom conduct which would be dangerous even in a properly equipped laboratory.
CONCURRENCE BY BRONSON, J.
- SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-FAILURE TO STATE CLAIM.
The question of whether a defendant school superintendent, in an action by a student arising out of a classroom accident, would be protected by governmental immunity need not be considered where the plaintiff‘s complaint fails to state any claim against the superintendent upon which relief can be granted.
- SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL DISTRICTS-NEGLIGENCE-GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY-DISCRETIONARY ACTS.
Summary judgment in favor of a defendant teacher and the school principal was erroneous in an action by a student injured in a classroom accident where the complaint alleged personal, actionable negligence on the part of these defendants and they were not involved in the performance of “discretion-
ary acts” as that phrase is used to define the scope of governmental immunity for public officials.
REFERENCES FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1] 13 Am Jur 2d, Buildings § 44.
[2] 74 Am Jur 2d, Torts § 14.
[3] 68 Am Jur 2d, Schools §§ 320, 321.
[4] 73 Am Jur 2d, Summary Judgment § 17.
[5] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 55.
[6] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 101.
[7] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 48.
[8] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability §§ 31-32.
[9] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 90.
[10] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 46.
[11] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 88.
[12, 16] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 95.
[13, 15, 17] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 74.
[14] 57 Am Jur 2d, Municipal, School, and State Tort Liability § 150.
Appeal from Iosco, Allan C. Miller, J.
Complaint by Annie M. Bush, for herself and as next friend of Tracey A. Foxworth, against the Oscoda Area Schools, Gaye A. Manning, William F. Estes, and T. C. Filppula for damages for injuries caused by an explosion in a school classroom. Summary judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appeals. Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
Boyce, Yahne & Wenzel, for plaintiff.
Robert P. Keil, for defendant Oscoda Area Schools.
Freel & Huck, P. C., for defendants Estes, Manning and Filppula.
Before: M. J. KELLY, P. J., and BRONSON and W. R. PETERSON,* JJ.
M. J. KELLY, P. J. This is an appeal from the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment of no cause for action in favor of all defendants. Plaintiff brought suit for personal injuries against her teacher, school principal, superintendent of the school district and the school district itself. We affirm as to the superintendent and school district but reverse as to the teacher and principal.
On February 3, 1972 plaintiff‘s 14-year-old daughter was attending a physical science class in a mathematics classroom which was neither de-
One count of plaintiffs’ complaint was founded upon negligence, a second on nuisance and a third on violation of the statutory duty to maintain and repair public buildings so they are free from dangerous or defective conditions.
Plaintiffs’ complaint does not state any claim against the defendant school superintendent upon which relief can be granted. Thus the question of whether he would be protected by governmental
Plaintiffs’ complaint does allege personal, actionable negligence on the part of the defendant teacher and the defendant principal. We find that neither of these defendants was involved in the performance of “discretionary acts” as that phrase has been used to define the scope of governmental immunity for public officials. The trial court therefore erred in granting summary judgment in favor of these defendants. Walkowski v Macomb County Sheriff, 64 Mich App 460; 236 NW2d 516 (1975), Wynn v Cole, 68 Mich App 706; 243 NW2d 923 (1976), Lovitt v Concord School District, 58 Mich App 593; 228 NW2d 479 (1975).
Affirmed as to the defendant school superintendent and the school district. Reversed as to defendant teacher and the defendant principal as to count one only. Costs to plaintiffs.
W. R. PETERSON, J. This is an appeal from the trial court‘s governmental-immunity premised summary judgment in favor of all defendants. The action, for classroom injuries to a student, seeks damages from the class teacher, school principal, superintendent of the district, and the school district. We affirm as to the superintendent and school district but reverse as to the teacher and principal.
On February 3, 1972, Tracey Ann Foxworth, age 14, herein referred to as plaintiff, was a high school student in defendant school district. Among her courses of study was a class in physical science. Although the course involved various scien-
The complaint alleges various acts of negligence, including affirmative acts in leaving spilled alcohol exposed to ignition sources; failure to properly handle and store the methanol when open flame lamps would be in use proximate thereto; and, keeping the methanol in an improper and damaged container. Acts of omission are charged by failure to warn and supervise students in handling methanol around flame, failure to train students and school personnel in use of the fire alarm system and fire extinguisher equipment, and failure to have the fire alarm equipment in working
One count of the complaint was founded upon negligence, a second asserted nuisance,3 a third asserted violation of the statutory duty to maintain safe public buildings for which governmental immunity is waived4 and a fourth asserted the so-called strict liability cause of action which is not recognized in Michigan. Rutherford v Chrysler Motors Corp, 60 Mich App 392; 231 NW2d 413 (1975). The complaint also challenged the constitutionality of the doctrine of governmental immunity.5
At the outset, we must note the lack of consistency in terminology in dealing with “governmental immunity” questions, and in defining the appropriate procedural means for raising and resolving such a defense. Thus, in countless cases, as in the trial court here, the question has been raised and disposed of by motion for summary judgment under GCR 1963, 117.2(1) authorizing judgment without trial where the claimant “has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted“. But in Cibor v Oakwood Hospital, 14 Mich App 1, 3, fn 1; 165 NW2d 326 (1968), where a charitable immunity defense was raised by motion, the majority described immunity as a defense which operated “to extinguish or cut off the right to relief even though the facts pleaded would otherwise state a claim“, and therefore to be appropriately raised by motion for accelerated judgment under
We do concur with the Walkowski disapproval of the seemingly à fortiori language in Nichols v Zera, 33 Mich App 274, 276-277; 189 NW2d 751 (1971), and Lovitt v Concord School District, supra, p 598, language similar to which appears in Rose v Mackie, 22 Mich App 463, 466; 177 NW2d 633 (1970), and Daniels v Grand Rapids Board of Education, 191 Mich 339, 357; 158 NW 23 (1916), that if a governmental unit enjoys governmental immunity, therefore its individual officers and employees also have immunity.16 It is clear in Daniels and Nichols that the breach of duty with which the individuals were charged was the same as that alleged against the school district itself and that the only point being made was simply that if the school district had no liability for the alleged consequences of the legislative decisions of its governing body, neither did the individual members thereof, and in Lovitt and Rose it seems apparent that the stated identity of immunity followed because there was felt to be a governmental duty which was identical for both the individ-
For it is by this test, the existence of a duty to one injured as distinguished from duty solely to the public, that governmental immunity from liability does not or does exist in a particular case.18 Hence our conclusion that the concept of governmental immunity from liability is not descriptive of an affirmative defense or defense in bar, but rather characterizes a class of cases in which the law recognizes no cause of action:19 where there is
And this latter, we think is the most important, if, indeed, it is not a synopsis of all the foregoing; that if a public body has the power to act or not to act as in its discretion best fulfills the public
Also, there are and will continue to be many situations in relation to which real or fancied grievances exist where governmental freedom from liability will persist on wholly different grounds. Legislative bodies, for example, have the right to make many types of decisions which may do harm to some. Subsequent history may clearly demonstrate that some of those decisions were wrong. Discretion implies the right to be wrong. So long as those decisions are within the discretion vested in the legislative body, there is clearly neither breach of duty nor a right to damages. The
instant case, a tort action, does not in any manner alter the fact that actions or decisions of a legislative, executive, or judicial character which are performed within the scope of authority of the governmental body or officer concerned continue to enjoy freedom from liability. The people place great powers of decision making in the hands of their government. In the exercise of discretionary power, governmental duty runs to the benefit of the whole public, rather than to individuals. It is of great importance that this crucial function of democratic decision making be unhampered by litigation.
With all the varying policy considerations of the early cases, the dispositions thereof are in terms of want of liability because of absence of private duty; that absent legislation to the contrary, the imposition of public duty upon a governmental unit or officer carries with it no duty to individual members of the public.27
Subsequently the evolution of the concept of governmental function as distinguished from proprietary functions which might be carried on by governments, confining immunity to the former,28 made no change in the principle; where the gov-
As to the tort liability of individual public officers, we are not concerned with the governmental immunity act nor with considerations of governmental-proprietary functions; we are concerned with determining whether, when an injury has been proximately caused by the act or omission of one who is a governmental officer, liability therefor may be avoided upon the ground that the conduct complained of was, as such, governmentally authorized. The statement of the question posits the answer. No one is excepted from ordinary standards of duty and care merely because they are governmental officers or employees, e.g., the teachers in Lovitt, supra, and the policemen in Sherbutte v Marine City, 374 Mich 48; 130 NW2d 920 (1964). But if a public officer by the exercise of his proper authority, in the manner authorized, causes injury to another he has no liability because his duty lies only to the public. And it matters not whether his duty is ministerial or discretionary.31 In the first case, his duty is defined
The difficult question herein relates to the definition of discretionary powers, particularly in view of three recent decisions involving questions of personal liability of governmental officials, Rose, Lovitt and Walkowski, supra. While it is not difficult to visualize the exercise of discretionary powers in the legislative and judicial branches of government, the quotation from Williams v Detroit, supra, p 261, also speaks of executive acts or decisions as being free from tort liability, seemingly contemplating something more than the immunity of an officer properly performing a ministerial duty. If so, we think it important to narrowly limit the discretionary acts of executive and administrative officers for which they will be immune from tort liability, for as between the claim of the public officer for immunity from the consequences of his acts and that of the individual for what Justice CAMPBELL referred to as the “immunity” of private persons and property from improper governmental interference,34 the latter should prevail unless the harm complained of has resulted from the performance of a clearly defined public duty. There is that class of cases, of course, in which the officer is acting in a quasi-judicial fashion, noted supra, fn 26.35 There is another class
It seems too simplistic and far too broad a construction of discretionary powers to label the duties of public officers as either ministerial or discretionary.37 To conclude that in all areas where a public officer‘s conduct is not precisely ordered by law (ministerial), he is therefore endowed with discretionary power would be erroneous and authoritarian. In the vast governmental operations that affect us all today, most of what happens (or does not happen) is not the result either of ministerially-rote acts or of the exercise of discretionary powers. To do one‘s job, to be efficient and expeditious,38 to assume varying degrees of responsibility in the echelon of administration and supervision, to make decisions for the implementation of objectives, and even in some cases to determine those objectives, may involve the exercise of judgment but not of discretionary powers. The discretionary
“We think it unnecessary to expatiate on the point. The action of a police officer in making an arrest cannot be considered within the broad scope of the discretion allowed a free government in its legislative, executive, or judicial branch.”39
Another look at Rose, Walkowski and Lovitt is in order. In Rose v Mackie, it was alleged that a highway was unsafely designed so that a dangerous condition was created where it reduced from three lanes to two lanes with insufficient warning thereof. Count I of the complaint alleged a supervisory duty on the part of defendant over the highways, negligently breached by allowing the road to remain unsafe “after due notice to his agents“, while Count II alleged negligent design and failure to change the same after knowledge that it was hazardous. The Court‘s reasoning in striking down the second count was that the commissioner‘s public duty to design and maintain highways entailed no private duty to any individual member of
What has been said of Rose is equally true of Lovitt v Concord School District and Walkowski v Macomb County Sheriff in so far as they dealt with the question of responsibility of public officers for acts of those over whom they had supervisory control. There was no reason for discussion of immunity, for the wrongs complained of were not alleged to have resulted from the acts of the supervisory officer,42 and the supervisory officer
So it is in the instant case with regard to the defendant school superintendent. The question of immunity is not involved. We are unable to discern in the complaint any allegations of personal neglect on his part43 and the negligence of the teacher is not imputed to him merely because he is in a superior and supervisory position.
As to the defendant teacher, she, like the teachers in Lovitt, is charged by the complaint with personal negligence in the conduct of her class, both in acts of omission and commission, including conducting the class under inadequate and unsafe conditions, allowing storage of alcohol in a damaged container, leaving spilled alcohol exposed to ignition sources, failure to properly handle and store the alcohol when open flame lamps were in use proximate thereto, and failure to warn and supervise the students in handling alcohol and flame. We think there is a fact issue for the jury as to the conclusions that may be drawn regarding her conduct.
As to the defendant principal, we reach the same result, not because of the allegations of in-class negligence of the teacher, but because of the risks inherent in conducting a class of this kind in a room which is not equipped for the purpose. As principal of the high school, curriculum, schedul-
These acts of the individual defendants cannot be imputed to the school district under the governmental immunity act since classroom activity is clearly the governmental function for which schools exist. The question, however, is whether the complaint states a cause of action under § 6 of the act wherein the state imposes a duty on all governmental agencies to keep public buildings safe for the users thereof and waives immunity from liability for breach thereof:
“Governmental agencies have the obligation to repair and maintain public buildings under their control when open for use by members of the public. Governmental agencies are liable for bodily injury and property damage resulting from a dangerous or defective condition of a public building * * *.”
MCLA 691.1406 ;MSA 3.996(106) .
What must be “wrong” with a public building to make injuries caused thereby actionable? Clearly that which is operably defective, out of repair or44
Likewise, if the injury is caused by activities within the building rather than by a defect of the building itself, the injury is not actionable.47 This statement, however, is more easily enunciated than applied, for nothing in a building is ordinarily dangerous except with regard to the building‘s use, and the activities within it. An insecure railing is not dangerous save as people use the stairs. Where there is such use, is the stairway any less dangerous if, instead of a defective railing, it has no railing whatever? There are, thus, some cases, described in Zawadzki v Taylor, supra, fn 46, as “failure to provide” cases, in which it may be said that a defective or dangerous condition exists in a building, otherwise sound and well maintained, because of the lack of something that would have prevented the complained-of injury.
So, in Smith v Clintondale School District, supra, fn 44, the absence of the customary latching mechanism on a commode door, freeing it to swing
In Lockaby, plaintiff was jailed, evaluated as having a mental problem, confined in a segregated ward of the jail designated for inmates with such problems and allegedly received injuries from running into a wall. In a split decision, the Court‘s majority held that the failure to provide a padded cell did not create “a dangerous condition” within the meaning of the statute. The cell padding which wasn‘t there wasn‘t part of the building, citing Cody. The dissent said that bare walls and iron bars were there, were part of the building, were dangerous to mental patients, and emphasized that the statute authorizes actions not merely for injuries from defective conditions but from dangerous conditions.
Zawadzki arose from the adaption of a school gymnasium to tennis courts. Plaintiff, using one court, suffered an eye injury when struck by a
This does not mean that everything possible must be built in to prevent injury, or to make injury less likely or less serious. So, in the instant case, safety showers might have reduced injury from the events which happened, but the explosion did not happen because of their absence. Notwithstanding the lack of exhaust vents, fixed desks with gas outlets and a segregated chemical storage area in the classroom, the class could have been safely conducted by proper supervision. Rather than stating facts indicating an inherently danger-
Remanded accordingly, with costs to plaintiff.
BRONSON, J. (concurring). I agree with the results reached in both of the opinions filed by my brothers in this case, but find myself in the position of being unable to sign either opinion. I leave the task of forging precedent in this area to the Supreme Court.
As the author of Walkowski v Macomb County Sheriff, 64 Mich App 460; 236 NW2d 516 (1975), I cannot join in Judge WILLIAM R. PETERSON‘S discussion of the underpinnings, rationale and scope of the doctrine of immunity from tort liability as it protects individual public officials.
I do agree that plaintiffs’ complaint fails to state any claim against the defendant school superintendent upon which relief can be granted and that the question of whether he would be protected by governmental immunity need not be considered.
I agree that plaintiffs’ complaint does allege personal, actionable negligence on the part of the defendant teacher and the defendant principal. I concur with Judge KELLY‘s conclusion that neither of these defendants was involved in the performance of “discretionary acts” as that phrase has been used to define the scope of governmental immunity for public officials and that the trial court therefore erred in granting summary judgment in favor of these defendants.
Finally, I concur in that part of Judge PETERSON‘s opinion which discusses the “public building”
