56 Mass. App. Ct. 486 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2002
Following the death of her son, Wilson Ortiz, by drowning at Horseneck Beach, Westport, part of a State land reservation owned and operated by the Commonwealth, the plaintiff commenced this action alleging negligence, gross negligence, conscious pain and suffering, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. A judge of the Superior Court allowed the Commonwealth’s motion to dismiss the complaint, Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), 365 Mass. 755 (1974), on the ground that the plaintiff’s action was barred by the immunity provisions of § 10(/) of G. L. c. 258, the Massachusetts Tort Claims Act (Act).
The plaintiff appeals from the final judgment of dismissal, arguing that (1) G. L. c. 258, § 10(/), immunizes the Commonwealth only with respect to a failure to protect a plaintiff from the violent or tortious conduct of a third person; (2) Wilson Ortiz’s death was brought about by a situation originally caused by public employees, and thus the claim survives under an exception to § 10(/) immunity; (3) his death was brought about by the negligent maintenance of public property, thereby exempting the claim from immunity, G. L. c. 258, § 10(/)(3); and (4) the plaintiff’s claim for her own emotional distress should be permitted to go forward despite the immunity provisions of § 10(/) because of the public employees’ conduct toward her following her son’s disappearance but prior to her learning of his death. We conclude that the judge correctly applied the applicable provisions of G. L. c. 258, as interpreted in Brum v. Dartmouth, 428 Mass. 684, 691-696 (1999). The Commonwealth has not waived sovereign immunity in connection with a case of this kind. We affirm.
1. Material facts. Given that the case was decided on the basis of a motion to dismiss, we take the allegations of the complaint, together with such inferences as may be drawn favorably to the plaintiff therefrom, as true. Eyal v. Helen Bdcst.
The Commonwealth controls and operates Horseneck Beach. On the afternoon in question, Wilson Ortiz, age sixteen, arrived at the beach with friends. At the time of their arrival, they observed that many people were on the beach, but no one was in the water. This apparently resulted from dangerous conditions that day which had in fact required rescues by lifeguards employed by the Commonwealth. A lifeguard told one of Wilson’s friends that the conditions were such that the water would be off limits for about an hour. Wilson and his friends waited a short time, first spending some time on the beach, and then returning to their automobile.
Wilson and his friends soon returned to the beach and observed people in the water. This was prior to 6:00 p.m. No lifeguards were present, despite the fact that signs indicated that lifeguards would be on duty until 6:00 p.m. Wilson and certain of his companions entered the water; a riptide pulled him under the surface and he drowned. At the time of Wilson’s death, the Commonwealth had neither closed the beach nor warned the public, by signs or otherwise, that conditions had been more dangerous than was normally the case.
After Wilson entered the water, one of his companions telephoned the plaintiff to tell her that Wilson had disappeared. The plaintiff rushed to the beach and observed officials conducting a search, presumably for Wilson’s body. She remained at the beach until 10:00 p.m., at which time beach officials directed her to return home. Officials found Wilson’s body during the early morning hours, but did not inform the plaintiff of this discovery at that time. When she returned to the beach the following morning, beach personnel kept her waiting for more than thirty minutes, and then told her that they had located Wilson’s body.
2. Failure to prevent harm. The plaintiff’s claims, as well as the Commonwealth’s defense of immunity thereto, are governed
3. Original cause of condition or situation. The plaintiff next contends that it was the negligence of those in charge of the beach that brought about Wilson’s death by drowning, and that therefore immunity under § 10(j) is unavailable because the “condition or situation” in question was “originally caused by the public employer or any other person acting on behalf of the public employer.” The reference in § 10(j) to an “original cause” means “an affirmative act (not a failure to act) by a public employer that creates the ‘condition or situation’ that results in harm inflicted by a third party . . . .” Kent v. Commonwealth, 437 Mass. 312, 318 (2002). “[T]he principal purpose of § 10(f) is to preclude liability [on the part of the Commonwealth] for failures to prevent or diminish harm.” Brum v. Dartmouth, 428 Mass. at 696. Serrell v. Franklin County, 47 Mass. App. Ct. 400, 403 (1999). For there to be liability despite the protection of § 10 (/), the act of the government’s agent “must have materially contributed to creating the specific ‘condition or situation’ that resulted in the harm.” Kent v. Commonwealth, 437 Mass. at 319.
The plaintiff relies on Bonnie W. v. Commonwealth, 419 Mass. 122, 125, 126-127 (1994), for the proposition that the Commonwealth is liable when its agent takes action that exposes a claimant to risk. That is true, but the argument ignores the different facts of that case and attempts to apply its holding without reference to the principle embodied in § 10(/). In Bonnie W., where the plaintiff was assaulted by a probationer employed as a result of a negligent recommendation by a parole officer, § 10(/) barred the plaintiff’s claim for the probation officer’s negligent supervision, which the Supreme Judicial Court later characterized “only as failure to prevent the assailant from being in a position to attack the plaintiff.” Brum v. Dartmouth, supra at 695. Section 10(/) did not bar a claim arising out of the officer’s negligent recommendation because that recommendation “was an affirmative act on the part of the officer that created a situation in which a sexual predator held a job giving him access to the keys to every trailer in the park.” Ibid. It is within the holding of Brum, not the holding in Bonnie W., that the present case falls.
4. Negligent maintenance of public property. In the altema-
Apart from the exceptions to liability enumerated in § 10 of the Act, the Commonwealth is hable for injury to persons on its land in the same manner as is any private property owner. See Dinsky v. Framingham, 386 Mass. 801, 804 (1982). A landowner is obligated to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition. If it does not do so, it must at least warn a visitor of dangers of which the landowner is aware or should be aware. Oliveri v. Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy., 363 Mass. 165, 167 (1973).
The Commonwealth presses the contention that the judgment on this claim below can be affirmed on the basis of how the plaintiff pleaded the case, given that she alleged a failure to warn but did not allege negligent maintenance, and thus did not bring her claim within the ambit of G. L. c. 258, § 10(/)(3). We do not decide the case on this ground. We will construe the allegation of a failure to fulfil a duty to warn, at least for purposes of this proceeding, as implicitly incorporating an allegation that the Commonwealth had a duty to maintain property and that, having failed or refused to do so, a duty to warn the visitor of nonobvious dangers arising from the unmaintained conditions came into being.
However, even treating the plaintiff’s pleading in this fashion, the complaint does not state a cause of action under § 10(/)(3)
5. Emotional distress. The plaintiff asserts that she suffered emotional distress negligently inflicted by the Commonwealth’s employees, and that such distress occurred both as a result of the Commonwealth’s negligence toward her son and as a result of the Commonwealth’s negligence toward her. With respect to the former claim, § 10(f) bars the claim for the reasons set forth in sections 2 and 3 above. In addition, it is doubtful that the complaint states a cause of action in this regard given the absence of allegations that the plaintiff sustained “physical harm manifested by objective symptomatology,” see Payton v. Abbott Labs, 386 Mass. 540, 557 (1982), as a result of severe mental distress arising from witnessing the negligently caused harm to the child or from arriving on the scene while the child was still there. See Dziokonski v. Babineau, 375 Mass. 555, 568 (1978); Ferriter v. Daniel O’Connell’s Sons, Inc., 381 Mass. 507, 517-518 (1980).
With respect to the claim that the Commonwealth negligently inflicted emotional distress on the plaintiff directly, the complaint alleges that, upon hearing of Wilson’s disappearance, the plaintiff rushed to the beach. She observed that officials were conducting a search. With members of her family, she stayed at the beach until 10:00 p.m., at which time beach officials directed her to return to her home. By that time, officials had not recovered Wilson’s body. They found the body during the night, but did not notify the plaintiff. The plaintiff returned
At the outset, we have difficulty in accepting that these allegations state a claim of negligence under any circumstances. While conducting the search, the public employees did nothing that the complaint calls into question. It was only when they found the body that, according to the plaintiff, those employees failed in their obligation to notify her, then aggravated the failure by keeping her waiting for more than thirty minutes the following morning before informing her that they had recovered Wilson’s body. Even if the Commonwealth’s employees did not display the sensitivity that might be thought desirable in such circumstances, we are hard pressed to identify what legal duty it is that the Commonwealth is alleged to have breached. Furthermore, we do not see how the plaintiff at trial could conceivably demonstrate that, apart from her obvious emotional distress brought about by the loss of her son, she experienced additional emotional distress attributable not to Wilson’s death, but rather to the Commonwealth’s employees’ delay in informing her that they had located the body.
Nevertheless, we do not rely exclusively on those considerations, because we conclude that the motion judge correctly held that § 10(/') also barred the plaintiff’s emotional distress claim. The plaintiff’s claim arises out of circumstances directly related to Wilson’s death. As we have set forth above, the Commonwealth did not originally cause the condition or situation which brought about the harm, and thus was immune from suit for the loss. Hence, claims arising from circumstances intimately related to that condition or situation, and the resulting harm, are also barred. The alternative would be to permit imaginative pleading and the fractionalizing of claims that would undo the immunity that § 10(j) preserves. Here, the alleged infliction of emotional distress, while arguably caused by the public employees, arises so directly out of the circumstances for which the Commonwealth has immunity that that claim is barred as well.
Judgment affirmed.
In her brief, the plaintiff argues that the statements and actions of the Commonwealth’s employees were such that Wilson reasonably relied on them in believing that it was safe to enter the water. However, the plaintiff never alleged this in her complaint. The complaint states only that Wilson and his
The landowner has no duty to warn where the danger would be obvious to persons of average intelligence. O’Sullivan v. Shaw, 431 Mass. 201, 204 (2000). Barnett v. Lynn, 433 Mass. 662, 666 (2001).
Our disposition of this claim makes it unnecessary to consider either (a) the possibility that the Commonwealth’s agents in fact gave Wilson an adequate warning that Wilson disregarded or (b) the question whether dangers inherent in ocean swimming are sufficiently obvious that no duty to warn was present under the principle set forth in O’Sullivan v. Shaw, 431 Mass. at 204.