Richard A. HUGHEY, Administrator of the Estate of Rachel Ann Hughey, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. The GRAND RIVER DAM AUTHORITY, a public Oklahoma corporation, Defendant-Appellee. Carl Mack GLIDEWELL, Administrator of the Estate of Larry Mack Glidewell, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. The GRAND RIVER DAM AUTHORITY, a public Oklahoma corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
Nos. 78183, 79649
Supreme Court of Oklahoma
May 30, 1995
As Corrected June 1, 1995.
897 P.2d 1138
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF OKLAHOMA COUNTY, STATE OF OKLAHOMA
Pamela J. Corbit, now Pamela Harris, Plaintiff(s) v. Garry Williams, D.H.S., Defendant(s)
Case No. FD-92-4666
COURT MINUTE
Date: November 16, 1993
Hearing On: Plaintiff‘s Motion For New Trial As Amended and supplemented and Sentencing of Defendant.
Ruling By Court: Supplemented and Sentencing of Defendant.
Judge Wright
The Court‘s Orders are as follows:
(1) The Plaintiff‘s Motion For New Trial as Amended and Supplemented is overruled; exceptions allowed.
(2) The Defendant is sentenced to six months in the County Jail, with no good time; said sentence of confinement is suspended pending the Defendant‘s payments as follows:
(a) Current support of $280.15 per month to Plaintiff commencing December 1, 1993; and
(b) Monthly payment of $214.41 to Plaintiff to apply on child support arrearage of $5145.70, commencing December 31, 1993 and
(c) Payment to the Department of Human Services the sum of $36.94 per month on the arrearage of $886.45, commencing December 1, 1993.
(3) The aforesaid sentence subject to acceleration upon default of Defendant.
(4) The issue of attorney‘s fees and costs is reserved.
(5) The Defendant is released on his current O/R Bond.
/s/ Thornton Wright, Jr.
Thornton Wright, Jr.
Special Judge
John F. McCormick, Jr., William A. Caldwell, Pray, Walker, Jackman, Williamson & Marlar, Tulsa, and Waldo F. Bales and Allen Pease, Gen. Counsel, Grand River Dam Authority, Vinita, for defendant-appellee.
OPALA, Justice.
Certiorari was granted to resolve the first-impression public-law issue whether the Grand River Dam Authority—a public entity1—may claim the cloak of tort immunity from premises liability afforded by Oklahoma‘s Recreational Land Use Act? We answer in the affirmative.
I
ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
The personal representatives [plaintiffs] of the estates of Larry Mack Glidewell and Rachel Ann Hughey [decedents] brought separate2 wrongful death actions against the Grand River Dam Authority [Authority] occasioned by an incident in which decedents drowned after their boat had struck at night an abandoned railroad bridge in the Horsecreek area of Grand Lake. They alleged the Authority (1) had knowledge of the bridge and (2) negligently failed to provide lights or warning signs in the vicinity of the hazard‘s location.
The Authority moved for summary judgment, arguing (1) the Recreational Land Use Act [RLUA]3 shields it from legal responsi
In separate opinions the Court of Appeals affirmed the nisi prius orders. Certiorari was sought to resolve the first-impression7 issues whether (1) RLUA immunity extends to the Authority, (2) certain exceptions to that immunity may be applied to these claims and (3) the Authority is protected by the terms of the GTCA. The two appeals stand consolidated for disposition by a single opinion. Because we answer the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative we need not reach the last issue.
II
UNDER THE GTCA SCHEME OF IMMUNITY, GOVERNMENTAL TORT LIABILITY IS COEXTENSIVE WITH THAT OF PRIVATE TORTFEASORS
Neither the RLUA nor the GTCA was enacted in a vacuum. The former—a statute governing premises liability in tort for harm to recreational users of property—must be construed together with the GTCA to effect that act‘s intent. The overarching principle embodied by the GTCA is that private tort law is neither constricted nor enlarged by that act. Rather, it is made applicable to governmental entities by the state‘s explicit waiver of sovereign immunity, unless otherwise statutorily specified.9 The definitional provisions in the RLUA are sufficient
Notes
III
NO ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE AUTHORITY ON THE LOCUS DELICTI BRING IT WITHIN ANY EXCEPTION TO THE RLUA‘S IMMUNITY GRANT
By its express terms the RLUA withholds immunity from premises liability where (1) entrance fees are charged to recreational users of the land/water areas or activities for profit are conducted within the area14 or (2) the injury for which liability is sought to be imposed was deliberate, willful or malicious.15 The record does not disclose that the Authority charges recreational users of its property an entrance fee. There is no record trail of the variety of commercial or for-profit activity in the Grand Lake area, which are contemplated by the RLUA‘s excep
Nor does the record contain evidentiary material of the Authority‘s deliberate, willful or malicious action toward decedents. In short, no exception from the immunity affordable by the general terms of our RLUA could be made applicable to the claims in suit.
IV
THERE IS NO EVIDENTIARY MATERIAL RAISING A COMMERCIAL-ACTIVITIES ISSUE
A defendant who moves for summary judgment by interposing an affirmative (absolute) defense against liability must show that there is no substantial controversy over the applicable facts that are material to that defense and that all inferences which may be reasonably drawn from undisputed facts tendered are in the moving party‘s favor.17 Once the moving party has made the required showing, the adverse party must then assume the burden of demonstrating the existence of a material fact that would justify a trial of that issue.18
In an appeal from summary judgment, review is always limited to the issues shown by the record to have been actually presented at nisi prius and actually tendered before the trial judge.19 For support of their commercial-activity-exception claim the plaintiffs relied below and do so here solely on the Authority‘s generation of electricity in the Grand Lake vicinity—the locus in quo. Because they produced no evidentiary material to show the presence upon the critical place of some disputed commercial activity in addition to the Authority‘s admitted generation of electricity, there is no need to theorize about its potential legal effect.
V
PRUDENCE DICTATES THAT THE ABSTRACT QUESTION—WHETHER THE AUTHORITY IS EXEMPTED FROM LIABILITY BY THE TERMS OF THE GTCA—NOT BE REACHED IN THIS CASE
Courts are not allowed to forecast what they might do about an issue that is not before them.20 It is wise that we
VI
CONCLUSION
The Authority is immune from liability for plaintiffs’ loss regardless of whether it is a private person or a governmental entity. This is so because by the provisions of the GTCA the state and any of its political subdivisions bear tort accountability in the same manner and to the same extent as a private entity. Neither the Authority‘s activity on the situs of the injury nor any of its acts (or omissions) toward decedents can bring these two claims within any exception to RLUA-conferred immunity. Today‘s holding makes moot the tendered dispute over the Authority‘s claimed exemption from liability under the GTCA.22
ON CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED, THE MEMORANDUM OPINIONS OF THE COURT OF APPEALS ARE VACATED AND THE TRIAL COURT‘S SUMMARY JUDGMENTS IN CAUSES NO. 79,649 AND NO. 78,183 ARE AFFIRMED.
HODGES, LAVENDER, SIMMS and HARGRAVE, JJ., concur.
ALMA WILSON, C.J., KAUGER, V.C.J., and SUMMERS and WATT, JJ., concur in part and dissent in part.
SUMMERS, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
In Boyd v. U.S. ex rel. U.S. Army Corps, 830 P.2d 577 (Okla.1992) we left unresolved the question of whether the Recreational Use Act (
Prior to the enactment of the Governmental Tort Claims Act the GRDA had its own statutory version of a waiver of sovereign immunity for certain types of actions. The GRDA had the right and privilege: “To sue and be sued in its corporate name in contracts, reverse condemnation, tort, equity, mandamus and similar actions....”
The same holds true as to the Governmental Tort Claims Act. The Governmental Tort Claims Act incorporates the law applicable to private persons and makes it applicable to the State and its political subdivisions. The Governmental Tort Claims Act states that the State and its subdivisions shall be liable for loss, subject to the limitations of that Act, “if a private person or entity, would be liable for money damages under the laws of this state.”
States are divided on this issue. The Supreme Court of Louisiana canvassed the cases and legal articles, and came to the conclusion that those states applying the Recreational Use Act to government agencies did so because in those states a governmental defendant‘s liability was imposed to the same extent that liability was imposed upon private individuals. Monteville v. Terrebonne Parish Consolidated Government, 567 So.2d 1097, 1103 (La.1990). The Tenth and Ninth Circuit federal courts have also stated that the same policy for applying the Recreational Use Act to private persons is present when a government agency is involved. Jones v. United States of America, 693 F.2d 1299, 1302 (9th Cir.1982); Klepper v. City of Milford, Kansas, 825 F.2d 1440, 1444 (10th Cir.1987). What the Court does today is consistent with
Where I must take leave of the Court‘s opinion is in its affirmance of the summary judgment. Summary judgment based on the Recreational Use Act is appropriate in a case where the facts are uncontroverted that no “commercial or other activity for profit is conducted on such park area, or any part thereof.”
I am authorized to state that Chief Justice ALMA WILSON, Vice Chief Justice KAUGER and Justice WATT join in these views.
Jane OWENS, Appellee, v. Clifton L. OWENS, Appellant.
No. 83425.
Court of Appeals of Oklahoma, Division No. 3.
Jan. 24, 1995.
As Corrected on Limited Grant of Rehearing; Rehearing Otherwise Denied March 28, 1995.
Certiorari Denied May 22, 1995.
