How fat is too fat? Who is too fat to be licensed to get behind the wheel and drive an automobile? Plaintiff alleges that the 320-
At what point on the scales does an overweight person suffer a physical disability that prevents him or her from exercising reasonable control over a motor vehicle? The plaintiff answers that the duty to determine when corpulency becomes disabling is on the road test examiner at the time a road test is administered. The plaintiff sues the defendant examiner for breaching a duty owed to the plaintiff passenger when he passed Jeannine M. Yingling in the road test portion of her examination.
The complaint does not allege that Jeannine M. Ying-ling did not successfully complete the written test or the road test as conducted by the defendant. The complaint admits that the defendant, in certifying that Jeannine M. Yingling had passed the test given, acted in good faith. 1 Sole reliance for the claim of breach of a duty owed by this defendant to this plaintiff is on the statute which provides:
“343.06 Persons not to be licensed. The division shall not issue a license:
“(7) To any person who is afflicted with or suffering from any mental or physical disability or disease such as to prevent him from exercising reasonable control over a motor vehicle.”
Therefore, the initial inquiry on this appeal must be the nature of the duty delegated to or devolving upon a road test examiner, a state officer, by virtue of the statute.
As we stated in
Lister,
the general rule in this state is that: “[A] public officer is not personally liable to one injured as a result of an act performed within the scope of his official authority and in the line of his official duty.”
6
In
Lister
we pointed out that the most
The
Lister
holding, as well as earlier cases in accord with it,
10
require that for an act to come within the ministerial or nondiscretionary exception to the civil immunity rule, “nothing remains for judgment or discretion.”
11
It follows that acts which “involve the exercise of judgment or discretion rather than tie mere performance of a prescribed task” do not come within the “ministerial duty” exception to civil immunity rule.
12
It is to be noted that the complaint alleges that: “The act of passing Jeannine M. Yingling in the road test . . . was not an act done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial, or quasi-judicial functions, but was done in the performance of a ministerial function.” The reference to legislative or judicial type functions is from the
Holytz
decision
14
abrogating the doctrine of governmental immunity in this state, but without “imposing liability on a governmental body in the exercise of its legislative or judicial or quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial functions.”
15
Plaintiff contends: “If
Holytz
really means what it says, then there should be no distinction between the liability of the state employee or the private citizen.”
16
That is not what
Holytz
says or means.
Holytz
dealt with the doctrine of sovereign immunity in an action against a governmental body, not
Sec. 895.43(3), Stats., goes further to provide that no suit shall be brought against any political corporation, governmental subdivision or any agency thereof in this state or its officers, officials, agents or employees “for acts done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial functions.” Since the statute as a whole does not apply to the state or state departments, this subsection does not apply to state officers or employees. As to the civil immunity of this defendant, he is liable under Lister in damages only for injuries resulting from his purely ministerial acts. Since we have concluded that the act complained of, passing Jeannine M. Yingling on the road test portion of her examination despite the provisions of see. 343.06(7), Stats., is discretionary as a matter of law, we hold the defendant immune from suit as a matter of law.
Although the plaintiff contends that the defendant is immune from suit only for acts which are legislative, judicial, quasi-legislative or quasi-judicial, we base our contrary conclusion on the principles of official immunity set out in
Lister
that the defendant is not liable for his discretionary acts. To so hold is not to imply that the test for the immunity of a state officer set out in
Lister
is different from the test for the immunity of a municipal officer under sec. 895.43(3), Stats. A quasi-legislative act involves the exercise of discretion or judg
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
On this point the complaint alleges: “Defendant Raymond acted in good faith in passing Jeannine M. Yingling in the road test portion of her examination.”
The trial court concluded that: “[T]he duty created under the statute involved is a duty generally owing to the public, a violation of which confers no cause of action on the plaintiff as an individual and that therefore in the absence of a common law duty, the demurrer to the complaint is sustained. . . .” Citing and quoting
McNeill v. Jacobson,
Lister v. Board of Regents,
See, e.g., Cords v. Ehly,
See, e.g., Lister v. Board of Regents, supra, n. 3, at 299.
Id. at 300, citing 63 Am. Jur.2d, Public Officers and Employees, p. 798, sec. 288.
Id.
at 300, 301, citing
Meyer v. Carman,
Id.
at 301, citing
Meyer v. Carman, supra; Clausen v. Eckstein,
Id. at 301.
See: Druecker v. Salomon,
Lister v. Board of Regents, supra, n. 3, at 301.
Meyer v. Carman, supra, n. 7, at 332.
Sec. 343.06(7), Stats.
Holytz v. Milwaukee,
Id. at 40.
Appellant’s Brief at 19.
Townsend v. Wisconsin Desert Horse Asso.,
In
Weiss v. Milwaukee,
Sec. 895.43(3), Stats.
Compare: Allstate Ins. v. Metropolitan Sewerage Comm.,
