delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from a judgment in favor of a defendant municipal corporation in a personal injury action involving a “slip and fall” accident on snow and ice in a city-owned parking lot. The dispositive issue is whether the circuit court erred in sustaining the defendant’s plea of sovereign immunity. We consider whether, at the time of the plaintiff’s fall, the municipality was exercising a “governmental function” during snow removal operations after a snowstorm and, therefore, was immune from liability for the plaintiff’s injuries.
The following facts are relevant to this appeal. Daniell E. Gambrell was an employee of Bank of America (the Bank) at one of its offices in the City of Norfolk (the City). The Bank leased for its employees’ use about 900 out of 1100 available parking spaces in a parking lot owned and operated by the City (the parking lot). The Bank paid the City $375,000 per year for the lease. The Bank’s employees parked their vehicles in the parking lot and traveled to and from their place of employment in a “shuttle” bus.
On January 25, 2000, a snowstorm in the City resulted in an accumulation of 4.7 inches of snow. On January 26 and 27, 2000, the City closed the parking lot and instructed the Bank’s employees to park their vehicles at a parking garage in a nearby shopping mall.
The following day, January 28, 2000, the City reopened the parking lot after informing the Bank that its employees could resume parking their vehicles there. On that date, as Gambrell was walking from her parked vehicle in the parking lot to the “shuttle bus pick-up area,” she allegedly “slipped and fell” on “snow and ice” and sustained “serious and permanent injuries.”
Gambrell filed a motion for judgment against the City alleging that she was injured as a result of the City’s negligent failure to remove snow and ice from the parking lot and its failure to place warning signs “around said area.” The City responded by filing, among other things, a “Special Plea of Governmental Immunity.” The City contended that it was Immune from liability for Gambrell’s alleged injuries because they occurred during the City’s exercise of its governmental function of “emergency snow and ice removal activities necessitated by a severe snowstorm.”
John D. Snowden, Jr., the operations manager for the Division of Streets and Bridges of the City’s Department of Public Works, testified regarding the City’s snow removal plan. He explained that the snow removal plan, found in the City’s Emergency Operations Manual, is activated when there are snow accumulations between one and two inches or whenever there is a possibility that the surfaces of the City’s roads and bridges may freeze. Snowden stated that the City activated the snow removal plan from January 25 through January 28, 2000, and that the City’s work crews were assigned only to snow and ice removal tasks during that entire time period.
Snowden also testified that the work crews worked 24 hours per day in two 12-hour shifts through January 27, 2000. The length of the work crews’ shifts was reduced on January 28, 2000, because the main arteries of the City’s roadways were clear and the work crews had begun to remove snow from the secondary streets. Snowden stated that no personnel could be allocated to remove snow from the City’s public parking lots on January 28, 2000, because the secondary streets still needed to be cleared and freezing temperatures had prevented the snow from melting on those streets. Snowden also stated that the City lacked sufficient snow removal equipment to clear all the City’s streets within a few days after a “major snowstorm,” and that he considered a snowfall of 4.7 inches to be a “major snowstorm.”
Linda C. Davis, administrator of the City’s Division of Parking, also testified at the hearing on the special plea. She stated that the City and the Bank agreed to reopen the parking lot on January 28, 2000, with the “stipulation that all employees were [to be] told [that] there [were] still icy spots on the lot and that they should exercise caution when parking there.”
Gambrell testified at the hearing that when she entered the parking lot in her vehicle on January 28, 2000, she observed that there was “ice and snow everywhere” in the parking lot. Gambrell stated, “[A]ll I saw was ice and snow. I didn’t see any cleared areas whatsoever.” Gambrell also stated that it was daylight outside and that she could see where she was walking.
The circuit court sustained the City’s special plea. In explaining its ruling, the circuit court stated that the City’s “continued effort to dig out from the storm was a governmental function and subject to governmental immunity.” Gambrell appeals from the circuit court’s judgment.
Gambrell argues that the circuit court erred in sustaining the special plea. She asserts that the City’s lease of spaces in the parking lot for pecuniary benefit and the City’s maintenance of the lot are proprietary functions that do not immunize the City from tort liability. Gambrell contends that the governmental function of snow and ice removal was not the proximate cause of her injuries because the City had failed to clear the parking lot of snow and ice at the time she was injured. Gambrell further contends that any emergency situation that may have existed was no longer present on January 28, 2000.
In response, the City argues that the circuit court correctly sustained the special plea because the emergency removal of snow from the City’s streets and public parking lots is a governmental function. The City contends that emergency conditions still existed on January 28, 2000, because three inches of snow remained on the ground and temperatures remained at or below the point of freezing.
In considering the issue presented, we are guided by established principles. A plea of sovereign immunity presents distinct issues of fact that, if proved, create a bar to a party’s alleged right of recovery.
Whitley v. Commonwealth,
In Virginia, municipal corporations exercise two types of functions, governmental and proprietary.
Harrell v. City of Norfolk,
A municipality is immune from liability for negligence in the exercise of a governmental function, as well as for negligence in the failure to exercise a governmental function.
Harrell, 265
Va. at 502,
Gambrell alleged in her motion for judgment that the City “negligently allowed snow and ice to remain on the [parking] lot, and negligently failed to place any warning signs or markings around said area.” At the hearing on the special plea, the City did not dispute Gambrell’s contentions that at the time of the accident, the parking lot had not been plowed and warning signs had not been placed in the lot. Thus, our consideration of the circuit court’s ruling on the special plea is limited to the question whether the removal of snow and ice from a municipal parking lot and the placement of warning signs at the location of such snow and ice are governmental or proprietary functions.
We previously have considered cases in which a municipality was engaged in emergency snow removal operations at the time a plaintiff sustained an alleged injury. In
Stanfield
v.
Peregoy,
Shortly before our decision in
Stanfield,
we reached the same conclusion in our holding in
Bialk
v.
City of Hampton,
The case before us also involves the actions of a municipality in the course of emergency snow removal operations. The evidence showed that the City activated its emergency snow removal plan after a major snowstorm occurred. Because freezing temperatures for three days after the snowstorm prevented the snow from melting, the City’s work crews had to spend all their time clearing snow from the City’s streets and were not able to remove snow from the City’s public parking lots.
The City’s decision to restrict its snow removal operations to its public streets, and its failure to place emergency warning signs in the parking lot, involved the City’s exercise of a governmental, rather than a proprietary, function. We reach this conclusion because these actions and omissions occurred in the context of an extended period of snow emergency and dealt with the determination of priorities directly related to the general health, safety, and welfare of the citizens.
See Niese,
Our conclusion that the City was exercising a governmental, rather than a proprietary, function at the time of Gambrell’s fall is not changed by the fact that the City charged the Bank fees for use of parking spaces in the parking lot. The charging of fees did not alter the fundamental character of the municipal function at issue, because that function was not one of routine maintenance but one of implementation of an emergency snow removal plan for the general safety and welfare of the citizenry. Thus, the governmental nature of the City’s actions following the snowstorm is controlling.
See Carter,
For these reasons, we will affirm the circuit court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
Based on our determination that the City was immune from liability for the injuries alleged by Gambrell in her motion for judgment, we need not consider Gambrell’s additional claim that the circuit court erred in sustaining the City’s demurrer to the motion for judgment.
