*679 OPINION
By the Court,
Nellie J. Harrigan appeals from an order granting summary judgment which had the effect of releasing the City 'of Reno from any responsibility for hеr injuries which occurred on the municipal parking lot adjacent to the city hall in Reno.
She purchased a parking ticket but it blew out of her car as she placed it on the dashboard. It landed near the edge of the lot close to a dropoff of several feet. No guardrail existed to protect people, nor were there any signs to warn them about the edge, although bumper strips and a six-inch concrete retaining wall had been placed along the edge of the dropoff. When Mrs. Harrigan, who was 74 yeаrs old at the time, bent over to pick up her ticket near the front wheel of a car parked by the dropoff a gust of wind blew her over the edge, resulting in injuries.
The city moved for summary judgment, claiming immunity on the ground that failure to put up a guardrail or warn of the dropoff was an act of discretion for which the city was exempted from liability. While NRS 41.031 constitutes waiver of sovereign immunity by the state, its agencies and рolitical subdivisions, the succeeding section recites an exception if the act complained of is part of the discrеtionary functions of government for which the government does not waive the immunity. NRS 41.032 reads: “No action may be brought under NRS 41.031 or against the employee which is: . . . (2) Based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of the state or any of its agencies or political subdivisions or of any employee of аny of these, whether or not the discretion involved is abused.” The issue then is whether the city can be sued at all.
1. The question concerns thе legal significance of the waiver of sovereign immunity as it applies to a municipality that voluntarily provides a parking lot, althоugh under no obligation to do so.
We eliminate first the concept that the government is amenable to lawsuits when it is engaged in a prоprietary capacity.
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That doctrine was applied in Town of Douglas v. York,
The principle that municipalities are subject to liability is a departure from the historical doctrine of sovereign immunity. The purpose of the waiver of immunity statute was to compensate victims of government negligence in circumstances like thоse in which victims of private negligence would be compensated. Indian Towing Co., Inc. v. United States,
In determining whether this is a proper case for departure from governmental immunity we must first ask what the act of the city was. The answer is, that it built a parking lot. The city need not have constructed the parking lot because that was an exercise of discretion based upon policy, that is, whether or nоt the municipality would provide a public parking facility adjacent to its city hall for the convenience of the people. Its decision to do so was a policy, or discretionary, decision. Once having decided to construct a parking lot the city was obligated to use due care to make certain that the parking lot met the standard of reasonable safety for those who would use it. Such was the operational stage for which the statute does not exempt the city from liability if due care has not bеen used and an injury is caused.
Counsel for respondent refers to Pardini v. City of Reno,
Nevada’s discretionary exception provision is identical to that of the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C., Section 2680 (a) (1965). Federal courts distinguish the policy stage, where the discretionary exception applies, from the actual construction and operation of the project. The latter may subject the sоvereign to liability. United States v. Hunsucker,
While whether or not to put in a parking lot is a policy decision, the rules of safety cannot bе ignored by the government once the affirmative act of construction is undertaken. In this case, because the negligent conduсt of omitting danger signs and guardrails was part of the operational phase, it is actionable.
2. The city also argues that Mrs. Harrigan wаs contributorily negligent because she could have and therefore should have seen the danger of the dropoff and avoided it.
The accident occurred at 11:00 a.m. during the daylight hours when visibility was clear despite hints of impending snow. In Rogers v. Tore, Ltd.,
Because the city was in control of the parking lot it owed to the plaintiff, a business invitee, the duty to use reasonable care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition fоr the invitee’s use. Whether that duty was discharged and whether
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Mrs. Harrigan’s conduct was negligence without which her injuries would not have been suffered are questions of fact for the jury. Dawson v. Payless for Drugs,
3. Although argued by the resрondent, the Reno Municipal Code, Section 11.08.140, and the Uniform Building Code provisions of Reno do not apply, nor does NRS 41.033.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
