Plaintiff appeals as of right the order granting summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) and (10) in favor of defendants on the basis of governmental immunity. Plaintiff filed suit after she allegedly slipped and fell on ice while walking from the Harding school grounds to an immediately adjacent sidewalk. We affirm.
Plaintiff first argues that the trial court erred in holding that the public building exception to governmental immunity, MCL 691.1406; MSA 3.996(106), does not apply where a dangerous condition (ice) exists on school grounds adjacent to a public school building.
The broad construction of the public building exception urged by plaintiff does not comport with
Reardon v Dep’t of Mental Health,
Plaintiff states that her next issue is whether a school custodian, defendant Allan Hall, who performs ice and snow maintenance pursuant to a policy set by his supervisor is performing a ministerial function for which he is not governmentally immune. However, the more relevant question is whether defendant Hall owed a duty to plaintiff to remove the ice and snow. The trial court ruled he did not.
We agree with the trial court’s findings. The natural accumulation doctrine provides that neither a municipality nor a landowner has a duty to a licensee to remove the natural accumulation of ice and snow from any location.
Zielinski v Szokola,
The parties do not dispute that plaintiff, who was injured while dropping her child off at school, was a licensee. However, plaintiff does not allege that either of the exceptions to the natural accumulation doctrine are applicable here, nor do we *472 find them to be applicable in the present situation. Therefore the school owed no duty to plaintiff to remove the ice or snow from the area. The liability of Hall, as a school employee, is derivative of the school’s liability, and since the school is not liable, neither is Hall. Therefore, we find that the trial court properly granted defendants summary disposition on this issue.
Affirmed.
