Regala DENNIS, Appellant,
v.
CITY OF TAMPA, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
*1346 Paul A. Nelson and Kimberly J. Lee of Paul A. Nelson, P.A., Tampa, for appellant.
Pamela K. Akin, City Atty. and Tyron Brown, Asst. City Atty., Tampa, for appellee.
ALTENBERND, Judge.
Regala Dennis, the plaintiff, appeals a final summary judgment in favor of the City of Tampa in her personal injury action. She was injured when she was struck from behind by a passing bicyclist while she was walking in a municipal park. We affirm the summary judgment because the record establishes no breach of any standard of care owed by the City to a park patron. Specifically, we hold that the City had no obligation to supervise a few adults during their personal exercise activities at a public park.
*1347 On Monday, January 20, 1986, Ms. Dennis took a vacation day from her job as a computer technician. In the afternoon, she decided to go for a walk on a path at Horizon Park in Tampa, Florida. She had walked on this path approximately twenty-five times in the preceding two months. She was aware that the path was used by walkers, joggers, and bicyclists. She testified in her deposition that she had been walking for only a short distance on the edge of the path when she was struck from behind by a bicyclist, James Dublin. Ms. Dennis sustained significant injuries.
Mr. Dublin was a twenty-six-year-old student at Hillsborough Community College. He had been riding his ten-speed touring bicycle at the park for approximately ninety minutes prior to this accident. He explained that he saw Ms. Dennis walking on the edge of the path in front of him. He lowered his head because he was fatigued, and the next thing he remembered was striking Ms. Dennis.
Ms. Dennis sued the City on the theory that her injuries were caused in whole or in part by the City's failure to prevent Mr. Dublin from riding his bicycle at an allegedly high rate of speed on the path. Her second amended complaint states that the Tampa Police Department had assigned a police officer as a park ranger to enforce various rules, laws, and ordinances at Horizon Park. The City had posted a speed limit of ten miles per hour applicable to bicycles inside the park. The complaint alleges that the City was negligent because it did not enforce the bicycle speed limit on a regular basis and because it did not enforce the speed limit on this particular occasion. The complaint further alleges that the City was negligent because it had assigned only one officer to this park and because he was off duty on Mondays. Following discovery, the trial court concluded that Ms. Dennis' claim was based on a duty to enforce the law and granted summary judgment under the general rule that a law enforcement officer owes no legal duty to prevent a plaintiff's injuries by arresting a third person or by otherwise enforcing the law. Everton v. Willard,
On appeal, Ms. Dennis forcefully argues that this case is not controlled by Everton. She maintains that the park ranger's alleged obligation to enforce the bicycle speed limit involves a duty to provide supervision of park patrons as an operational aspect of providing general services. She correctly observes that a governmental unit which chooses to operate a swimming pool in a park may have an operational duty to provide reasonable supervision of the pool. Avallone v. Board of County Comm'rs of Citrus County,
Under the analysis in Trianon Park Condominium v. City of Hialeah,
I. Legislative, permitting, licensing, and executive officer functions;
II. Enforcement of laws and protection of the public safety;
III. Capital improvement and property control functions; and
IV. Providing professional, educational, and general services.
As summarized in Trianon Park, discretionary functions contained in categories I and II do not create duties to specific *1348 persons under the common law.[1] Thus, those discretionary functions are not actionable without regard to the defense of sovereign immunity. Categories III and IV, on the other hand, involve many functions that create common law duties. The defense of sovereign immunity has been waived by the legislature for those category III and IV duties which involve operational decisions, as compared to policy-making decisions, under the test described in Commercial Carrier Corp. v. Indian River County,
An established city park seems to involve functions in categories II, III, and IV, as the following discussion illustrates.
CATEGORY II
It is apparent that various governmental employees enforce laws and protect public safety under category II inside parks as well as at other locations. We agree with the trial court that the enforcement of a speed limit is such a function. Under Everton, that function creates no actionable duty under the common law, whether the location for enforcement is or is not owned by a governmental agency. Likewise, the decision not to station police in the park on Mondays is not actionable. Wong v. City of Miami,
CATEGORY III
The decision to build an exercise path and the obligation to maintain it would appear to be category III functions involving capital improvements and property control. After a path is constructed, a city owes a duty to use reasonable care to maintain it and to warn invitees of concealed perils. Broxson. In this case, Ms. Dennis did not allege that the accident occurred because of a defect in the path or because of a failure to warn. Cf. Stahl v. Metropolitan Dade County,
CATEGORY IV
The standards of care owing under any common law duty within the general services concept of category IV are not entirely clear. The First District has concluded that certain functions in parks are category IV general services creating common law duties not protected by the defense of sovereign immunity. Broxson. At least in some circumstances, the supreme court has recognized that a city has a duty to provide supervision for the benefit of invitees at recreational areas in parks. Avallone. Although we are inclined to believe that any such duty is derived from common law concepts of premises liability and, thus, might be appropriately described as a property control function under category III, we discuss any governmental duty to supervise the activities of visitors in a park within this section of the opinion.
General services involve many functions which are foreign to the private sector. As a result, general services present a difficult area in which to assess governmental tort liability. It is now well established, however, that section 768.28, Florida Statutes (1989), does not create new duties owing by the government, but rather permits recovery under duties the government would owe if it were a "private person." Kaisner v. Kolb,
Although Florida's courts have recognized that a landowner's relationship with persons entering the property creates *1349 a duty which may require people in the private sector to supervise the potentially negligent conduct of third parties, the standard of care owing under that duty has been quite limited. Generally, the standard of care requires only some reasonable response from a possessor of land who has actual or constructive knowledge of a third person's dangerous conduct. See, e.g., Jones v. Dowdy,
At least historically, the law recognized a higher standard of care for "places of amusement" than for other places in which invitees congregated. Panoz v. Gulf & Bay Corp. of Sarasota,
The limited standard of care placed upon private landowners to supervise the potentially negligent conduct of third persons causes us to conclude that the obligation to supervise described in Avallone should not be applied universally to all areas in public parks. When the governmental subdivision sponsors or schedules an unusually dangerous activity at a park or has reason to anticipate a crowd so large that a private landowner would be obligated to provide supervision under like circumstances, the standard of care required of a governmental subdivision may create a jury question. On the other hand, typical recreational activity during low-use hours, without some additional risk factor, does not create a jury question concerning the governmental subdivision's standard of care. A case should not be submitted to a jury merely because an accident in a public park might have been prevented if more tax dollars had been spent on greater supervision. This analysis is not based on the defense of sovereign immunity, but rather on the scope of the standard of care owed by a governmental subdivision under any duty to supervise public facilities.[3]
A clear analysis of the function of the trial judge and the jury in defining standard of care is often difficult in negligence cases. See Cassel v. Price,
We recognize that the specific standard of care owing under a duty typically involves a factual question which must be submitted to a jury. Spadafora v. Carlo,
First, a trial judge is authorized to determine the standard of care as a matter of law under undisputed facts in those rare cases in which the movant carries its heavy burden of proof and convinces the judge that no reasonable jury could decide in favor of the plaintiff on the disputed standard of care. Meyer; Cassel. Whether a court calls the event a "mere accident," or describes the plaintiff's proposed standard of care as that of an "insurer," it is effectively holding that no jury, even under the inferences of fact, could reasonably determine that the defendant owed a standard of care under which the plaintiff could prevail.
We are convinced that no reasonable jury could find that the City is obligated to pay for supervision of park patrons engaged in typical recreational activities in order to prevent negligent conduct during low-use hours or in areas that are not expected to attract crowds. Although juries might reasonably disagree about the specific standard of care owing to children or adults at swimming pools and other premises expected to attract large crowds engaged in potentially dangerous activity, this case does not present such a circumstance.[4]
Second, there are limited occasions when strong factors of public policy permit a trial judge to determine the specific standard of care under undisputed facts.[5] Normally, the public policies which permit a *1351 judge to determine the standard of care at summary judgment are also reasons which would be equally convincing to a jury. On the other hand, one could forcefully argue that occasionally the appellate courts have given greater authority to trial judges to determine the specific standard of care because of valid concerns that reasonable juries could render diverse, unpredictable verdicts in isolated cases and thereby cause unacceptable social or economic response in the community as a whole.
For example, the supreme court clearly relied on such public policies to declare that a police officer's duty to the motoring public did not include a standard of care under which the police officer was obligated to arrest third persons who were guilty of drunk driving. Everton. The supreme court made that decision after a presumably reasonable jury had reached an opposite conclusion. Duvall v. City of Cape Coral,
When a city council or a county commission decides to allocate scarce public resources for a park or similar public facility, this discretionary, policy-making decision is clearly affected by the amount of liability that the city or county may incur for subsequent operational activities at the park. The budget for a park would be dramatically higher if the government were required to provide constant supervision of the activities of third parties occurring in all sections of the park at all times of the day. This is particularly true when the park includes lengthy trails for walking and biking. While the courts have every reason to require cities and counties to operate reasonably safe parks, we have no desire to discourage the development of parks by imposing unrealistic or unpredictable duties. In order to encourage outdoor recreation, the legislature has limited the standard of care of private persons who open land to public use. § 375.251, Fla. Stat. (1989). Although this statutory protection does not extend to the City, Chapman v. Pinellas County,
Thus, although we believe that Everton is not fully dispositive of this case, we affirm. Under the undisputed facts of this case, any duty which the City owed to Ms. Dennis did not, as a matter of law, include a specific standard of care under which Ms. Dennis could recover.
Affirmed.
THREADGILL, A.C.J., and PARKER, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Not all functions under categories I and II are discretionary, but this case does not require consideration of those additional functions. See Kaisner v. Kolb,
[2] Panoz was decided prior to Post v. Lunney,
[3] In Jenkins v. City of Miami Beach,
[4] We note that this case addresses a standard of care concerning supervision of activities of third persons which may result in negligent injury. It does not involve any issue concerning the obligation to protect citizens from criminal misconduct by third persons. Cf. District Bd. of Trustees of Miami Dade Community College v. M.H.,
[5] The discussion of this problem by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., in The Common Law is instructive from a historical perspective.
When a case arises in which the standard of conduct, pure and simple, is submitted to the jury, the explanation is plain. It is that the court, not entertaining any clear views of public policy applicable to the matter, derives the rule to be applied from daily experience, as it has been agreed that the great body of the law of tort has been derived. But the court further feels that it is not itself possessed of sufficient practical experience to lay down the rule intelligently.
O.W. Holmes, Jr., The Common Law 98 (M. Howe ed. 1963). See also W. Prosser, Law of Torts § 37 (4th ed. 1971).
[6] By comparison, the supreme court has relied on such public policies to create a general standard of care under which juries may decide that a school has an obligation to supervise students during school-sponsored, extracurricular activities that occur off the school premises. Rupp v. Bryant,
