Theresa Davis and Rich Davis (collectively, “Parents”) appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Lutheran South High School Association of St. Louis (“Lutheran South”), Paul Bue-tow, Daniel Harms, and Kenneth Bauer (collectively, “School”). In Parents’ sole point on appeal, they argue the trial court erred in granting summary judgment by ruling that the School did not have a duty of care to provide school bus transportation or otherwise directly supervise the transportation for student spectators attending the girls’ softball championship game in Columbia, Missouri. We affirm.
Standard of Review
‘When considering appeals from summary judgments, the Court will review the record in the light most favorable to the party against whom judgment was entered.”
ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp.,
(1) facts that negate any one of the claimant’s elements facts, (2) that the non-movant, after an adequate period of discovery, has not been able to produce, and will not be able to produce, evidence sufficient to allow the trier of fact to find the existence of any one of the claimant’s elements, or (3) that there is no genuine dispute as to the existence of each of the facts necessary to support the movant’s properly-pleaded affirmative defense.
ITT Commercial Fin. Corp.,
Facts and Procedural History
The facts in the light most favorable to Parents are as follows: Parents’ son, Lee Michael Davis (“Son”), was a student at Lutheran South. He was killed in a car-tractor trailer collision while traveling to Lutheran South’s championship softball game (“Game”) in Columbia, Missouri on October 19, 2001. Two other students in the car were also killed.
Prior to the accident, the School announced on Wednesday, October 17, that the girls’ softball team had qualified to play in the state championship game to be held that Friday afternoon, October 19, in Columbia, Missouri. The School also announced that (1) the students would be given an excused absence for attending the Game, meaning that full credit for a day’s worth of classes would be given to the students;
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(2) the students had to bring in a permission slip indicating their parents’ permission to attend; (3) classes would be held on Friday for those not attending the Game; (4) the students had to provide their own means of transportation to the Game; and (5) once at the Game, the students had to sign in and out with a faculty member.
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The record reveals that the School had no means to prevent a
The School gave students directions to the Game. The School did not send parents any information regarding these announcements, thereby leaving communication regarding the particulars of the event to the individual student. The members of the softball team were provided bus transportation.
The morning of the Game, Ms. Davis took her youngest son to school. Upon returning home, she was surprised to see Son still at home because he normally would have been at Lutheran South. Son was given access to a car when he turned sixteen and regularly drove himself to and from Lutheran South. Upon questioning, he told her that he had driving school that morning. 3 She noted that his driving school was the following day, not Friday. Son then left home without mentioning the Game. Ms. Davis assumed Son left to attend regularly scheduled classes at Lutheran South.
Son did arrive at Lutheran South premises briefly to meet with a fellow student, Brian Miller (“Miller”). Son then entered Miller’s car. Miller, the driver, and Son drove to the home of Amanda Truss (“Truss”). 4 There, Truss, Timothy Stephens and Alexis Langenbach 5 got into the car with Miller and Son. The students then proceeded to a fast food restaurant for breakfast where they also met with other students. From the fast food restaurant these students proceeded to drive along Interstate 70 toward Columbia. The students intended to caravan in three cars to Columbia. The record reveals that all three drivers were driving at a rate of speed in excess of 85 m.p.h., racing with each other, and getting on and off the highway. Additionally, items were being thrown out of one ear in order to strike another car. At one point, Miller had to pull over because a chocolate shake was thrown onto his car by a passenger of another car. Ultimately, Miller lost control of his car and crossed the median, colliding with a tractor trailer. Miller and Son were pronounced dead at the scene. Truss died in the hospital that day. Stephens and Langenbach were seriously injured.
Parents filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the School on the theory of negligent supervision and/or failure to supervise. The trial court granted the School’s summary judgment motion ruling that the School did not owe a legal duty to supervise Son traveling to Columbia or to provide school bus transportation and therefore, as a matter of law, the School was entitled to summary judgment. This appeal follows.
Analysis
To successfully prove the tort of negligent supervision, a plaintiff must plead and prove the following: (1) a legal duty on the part of the defendant to use ordinary care to protect the plaintiff against unreasonable risks of harm; (2) a breach of that duty; (3) a proximate cause between the breach and the resulting inju
Parents have to prove that a duty existed between the School and Son while Son was traveling to Columbia. This Court has previously found that the acceptance of custody and control of a minor is one relationship that will give rise to a duty of care.
See Hill ex rel. Hill v. Herbert Hoover Boys Club,
The issue before this Court is whether a school owes a duty of care to its students when they are en route to an off-campus school activity and not in the physical custody and control of the school. The existence of a duty is a question of law for the court to determine.
Stitt v. Raytown Sports Association,
This is a case of first impression in Missouri. However, other jurisdictions have addressed this issue. In accord with those jurisdictions, we find that when a school does not have physical control or custody of its students, the school does not owe a general duty of care to those students.
A case relied upon by many jurisdictions in similar cases and one that is on point here, is
Pratt v. Robinson,
The court in Pratt first analyzed whether a duty existed to transport the student to a location where she did not have to cross the street. Id. It found there was no statutory duty imposed upon the school to bus any child. Id. It further found that the common-law custodial duty of a school toward its students did not supply any basis for liability. Id. Relying on the Restatement (Second) of Torts sections 320 and 315, subd. (b), the court stated “this special duty owed to students requires a school to act when a child, while in its charge, is threatened by the negligence of a third party, and it must make reasonable efforts to anticipate such threats.” Id. (emphasis added). The court also stated:
the duty owed by a school to its students, however, stems from the fact ofits physical custody over them.... The school’s duty is thus coextensive with and concomitant to its physical custody of and control over the child. When that custody ceases because the child has passed out of the orbit of its authority in such a way that the parent is perfectly free to reassume control over the child’s protection, the school’s custodial duty also ceases.
Id. at 853 (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted). Using this reasoning, the court held that the school extended its control over its students from the school door to the bus stop only. Id. At that point, the student is discharged to a safe spot where parental control could be reas-sumed and the school’s duty ceased. Id. The court saw no basis for the creation of a school’s duty to protect its students from hazards which they encounter once they are on their way home and outside the control of the school. Id. at 854.
Likewise, in
Young v. Salt Lake City School District,
Similarly, in
Norton v. Canandaigua City School District et al.,
In a more recent New York case analogous to ours, a seventeen-year-old high school student, Christopher Ramo, sus
The analysis and holdings of the aforementioned cases, while not binding upon this Court, are persuasive. Here, we must look to whether the School had physical custody and control of Son to determine whether the School owed him a duty under the circumstances. 7
Son drove to Lutheran South the morning of the Game to meet Miller. However, it is clear from the record that students were not required to arrive at Lutheran South prior to traveling to Columbia. Miller then drove with Son to Truss’s home to pick up another student and a teenager, who was not a student of Lutheran South. The students then proceeded to a fast food restaurant. These detours demonstrate the School’s lack of control and authority over Son’s driving, his transportation to the Game and his whereabouts on the morning of the Game.
Also, attendance at the Game was not mandatory. Although the School encouraged its students to attend the Game, regularly scheduled classes were being held at Lutheran South. Similar to Ramo, attendance for those attending the Game was taken once the students arrived at the Game. This is when the school day officially started for those students and when the School’s duty of care to those students began. Put another way, once the students arrived at the Game in Columbia and checked-in with the faculty members, the transfer of custody from the parents to the School occurred and the students were then in the custody and control of the School. Finally, the injury did not occur at Lutheran South, but rather the injuries were sustained on a highway while traveling to the Game.
The morning of Son’s accident was no different than any other given day when a student drives himself to school. In fact, here, the record reveals that Son drove himself, with his Parents’ permission, to Lutheran South on a regular basis. A school has no control over a student’s mode of travel to and from school when it does not undertake to provide transportation to and from school for its students.
See O.L.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Receiving an excused absence was significant in that students who received an unexcused absence may receive detentions, a suspension and/or could not participate in any extra-curricular activity that students were involved in at Lutheran South.
. There is no dispute that faculty members were present at the Game to supervise the students and to verify attendance and departure from the Game.
. Son had previously received a speeding ticket and was ordered to attend driving school.
. Amanda Truss's parents gave her permission to attend the Game. The record reveals her parents knew she would be driving with a student of Lutheran South. Her parents filed a wrongful death suit against the School in a separate action. The School was also granted summary judgment in that suit and Truss's parents appealed. The opinion in that case is being handed down simultaneously with this opinion.
.Alexis Langenbach was not a student at Lutheran South.
. This case also involved a New York statute, not relevant to this appeal or the analysis applied therein, whereby bus drivers were instructed to wait to depart from the bus stop until exiting students crossed the street safely.
. Our analysis, here, however, does not foreclose the possible extension of a school’s duty to its students beyond a "safe spot” when school bus transportation to and from school is provided in the normal course of the school’s operation.
See generally, Plummer v. Dace,
. Parents direct this Court to
Whittington v. Sowela Technical Institute,
