Appellant Catherine Hardy appeals from the grant of summary judgment to appellee District of Columbia and dismissal of her case on the ground that the trial judge erred in ruling that her letter of notice to the Mayor under D.C.Code § 12-309 (1989 Repl.) failed to provide sufficient information regarding the location of the accident. We reverse.
I
Appellant Catherine Hardy, through counsel, sent the Mayor of the District of Columbia a letter pursuant to D.C.Code § 12-309 1 that stated in pertinent part:
At approximately 9:30 p.m. on Saturday, August 29,1987, Ms. Hardy was proceeding on foot on the side walk [sic] in close proximity to 1814 Q Street, S.E. As she stepped onto a water meter cover in the sidewalk, the cover “flipped,” causing Ms. Hardy to fall, thereby sustaining injuries to her head and the right side of her body.
Thereafter Ms. Hardy filed a complaint alleging negligence by the District of Columbia and seeking compensatory damages, *340 costs and interest. The District filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, or in the alternative for summary judgment, on the ground that the letter did not sufficiently describe the place and circumstances of Ms. Hardy’s injury as required by § 12-309. The trial judge initially denied the motion for summary judgment without prejudice. On the first day of trial, however, after determining that the meter cover on which Ms. Hardy tripped was located between 1806 and 1804 Q Street, S.E., the judge reconsidered his ruling and granted the District’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that Ms. Hardy had failed to comply with § 12-309 because her letter had not adequately specified the place of her injury, and dismissed the case.
II
On appeal Ms. Hardy contends that the trial judge erred because the information provided in her letter was sufficient to allow the District to conduct a reasonable investigation that could have identified the correct meter cover, and the judge’s view that greater specificity was required is contrary to § 12-309 and the decisions of this court. Tne District responds that Ms. Hardy’s “notice was inaccurate and affirmatively misleading,” and that until her deposition was taken more than three years later, “the District could reasonably believe it [the offending meter cover] was the cover at 1814 Q Street, S.E., or perhaps the one next to it at 1810 Q Street, S.E.”
The requirement under § 12-309 that a letter be sent to the Mayor of the District of Columbia is mandatory as a prerequisite to filing suit against the District.
Pitts v. District of Columbia,
Generally stated, the purposes of § 12-309 are (1) to allow the District to investigate potential claims so that evidence may be gathered while still available, for example before the relevant sidewalk is paved over or the meter cover fixed, (2) to enable the District to correct defective conditions, thus increasing public safety, and (3) to facilitate settlement of meritorious claims and resistance of frivolous ones.
See Pitts, supra,
*341 The en banc court explained in Washington, supra, that:
the purpose of § 12-309 is not to help the District to evaluate known claims by requiring notice complete enough to state a formal cause of action. The statute, rather, “was designed ‘to protect the District of Columbia against unreasonable claims,’ and ‘to give the District officials reasonable notice of the accident so that the facts may be ascertained and, if possible, the claim adjusted.’” Hurd, supra at 704 (footnote omitted) (quoting legislative history). Accord, Pitts, supra at 807; Stone, supra [99 U.S.App.D.C.] at 33,237 F.2d at 29 . Put another way, § 12-309 was intended solely to assure the District opportunity for timely access to all relevant facts about a potential claim, in order to protect the District against an unfair advantage by the eventual claimant.
Ms. Hardy’s § 12-309 letter identified the location of the water meter cover within 75 feet or less of its actual location, indicated the correct block and side of the street, and referenced “close proximity” to an existing street address. This description was more precise and accurate than the locations given in other notice letters that have been found sufficient under § 12-309.
See Gaskins, supra,
Nor did Ms. Hardy’s letter contain any actual misstatement. Her letter described the water meter cover as being “in close proximity” to 1814, rather than stating that it was directly in front of that address.
Compare Winters v. District of Columbia,
This court has made clear that “ ‘precise exactness’ is not absolutely essential with respect to the details of the statement giving notice.”
Romer, supra,
Even though there were at least three meter covers on the 1800 block of Q Street, S.E., 4 there were not so many possibilities or such a large search area that the District could not investigate Ms. Hardy’s claims. In fact, the meter cover in front of 1806 Q Street, S.E., which the trial judge identified as being the meter on which Ms. Hardy tripped, was only seventy-five feet or less away from 1814 Q Street, S.E. It also appears to have been the only cover on the block which actually had “water meter” stamped on its lid as well as the only meter cover that was almost touching (or actually touching) the sidewalk. 5 Ms. Hardy’s meter cover was the only water meter cover with all of these characteristics. As in Gaskins, supra:
[ajssuming there were multiple broken or eroded sections along the 150-foot stretch of sidewalk,.... [e]quipped with the notice ... an investigator could assess the condition of the sidewalk generally and identify those defects most capable of causing a trip and fall, and so arrive at a reasoned estimate of the District’s liability. We think more is not required, otherwise § 12-309, a provision for ‘early warning ... regarding litigation likely to occur in the future,’ ... would be a substitute for the precision properly expected in discovery after a lawsuit is filed....
Ms. Hardy’s letter, therefore, gave the District a basis for beginning an investigation by inspecting the site and questioning Ms. Hardy about the particulars of her alleged accident. The letter did not indicate a location that the District would have been completely unable to find. Based on this court’s interpretations of the statute, asking the District to examine the meter covers on one side of the street in a single block is not so excessive or unreasonable as to defeat the sufficiency of the § 12-309 notice letter. If the District determined that it required a more precise definition of exactly where on the block Ms. Hardy alleged that she had tripped, it could have asked her for additional information. 6 See supra notes 2, 5. While one purpose of § 12-309 is to enable the District to investigate future claims, a notice is not insufficient because the District does not undertake a full investigation immediately. If the District chooses not to continue with its investigation beyond a preliminary site visit, and waits until suit is filed to question the plaintiff further, that does not defeat the adequacy of the notice.
The District argues, nonetheless, that the notice letter, complaint, hospital records and Ms. Hardy’s testimony “are all different,” without specifying any particular conflicts. It also points to three discrepancies between the notice letter and the complaint, but refers specifically only to the fact that the letter said the meter cover was “in the sidewalk” and the complaint said “adjacent to the sidewalk.” These differences are irrelevant because only the letter is to be considered by the court in determining the sufficiency of the notice under § 12-309.
See Washington, supra,
Accordingly, because Ms. Hardy’s letter described the location of her injury with sufficient precision to enable the District to commence its investigation upon learning of the location, within 75 feet of accuracy, of the water meter cover “in close proximity to 1814 Q Street, S.E.,” we reverse the judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
Notes
. D.C.Code § 12-309 provides in relevant pent:
An action may not be maintained against the District of Columbia for unliquidated damages to person or property unless, within six months after the injury or damage was sustained, the claimant, his agent, or attorney has given notice in writing to the Mayor of the District of Columbia of the approximate time, place, cause, and circumstances of the injury or damage.
.
See Gaskins, supra,
.
See Stone, supra,
. There were the meter covers in front of 1814 and 1810, and the correct cover near 1806. Appellant’s counsel stated before the trial court that there were three covers, including the one on which Hardy fell, within forty yards of each other on the 1800 block of Q Street.
. According to the District's memorandum in support of its motion for dismissal or summary judgment, the meter cover on which Ms. Hardy allegedly tripped and a sewer cover seem to have been the only large, one-piece covers in close proximity to the sidewalk on that block. In her deposition, which was before the trial judge, Ms. Hardy described, according to the District’s memorandum, the size of the meter cover, stated that it was a one-part cover (unlike the two-part cover in one of the photographs she was shown), and rejected two of the meter covers depicted in the photographs — the covers near 1810 and 1814 Q Street.
.The District’s investigator located the correct meter cover ”[i]n revisiting the area with [Ms. Hardy’s] deposition testimony in hand," according to the District’s memorandum in support of its motion for dismissal or summary judgment.
. There was, however, a sewer cover further down the block, near 1828 Q Street, S.E., which was in the sidewalk.
