We affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the City of Rolla based on sovereign immunity under section 537.600. 1
On a sunny day in August 2002, ten-year-old Kody Maune was riding his bike with friends along a path in Rolla’s Green Acres Park. He turned his head to glance back at his friend and ran into a yellow barrier partially blocking the right side of a bridge. The City had erected the barrier to keep automobiles off the bridge, which was 117 inches wide. The barrier was 47 inches wide, extending from the right edge of the bridge toward, but not to, the center.
Plaintiff 2 sued the City to recover for his injuries. The City eventually moved for summary judgment based on sovereign immunity under section 537.600.1. The trial court granted the motion after a hearing, ruling that the City did not waive sovereign immunity “in that the property at issue was not in a dangerous condition.” Plaintiff appeals.
One way that a defendant can prove a right to summary judgment is by showing that, after an adequate period of discovery, the plaintiff is and will remain unable to produce evidence sufficient to establish any one of the plaintiffs required elements. Upon such showing, the plaintiff may not rest upon the mere allegations of his pleading, but must respond by affidavit or otherwise to set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. Unless the plaintiff can do so by affidavit, depositions, interrogatory answers, or admissions on file, summary judgment is proper. ITT Commercial Finance at 381.
The City and other public entities enjoy sovereign immunity as it existed at common law in Missouri prior to September 12,1977, except to the extent waived, abrogated or modified by statute. RSMo § 537.600.1;
Martin v. City of Washington,
1.The property was in a dangerous condition at the time of injury;
2. The injury directly resulted from the dangerous condition;
3. The dangerous condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of harm of the kind of injury that was incurred; and
4. A public employee negligently or wrongly created the condition within the course of employment, or that the public entity had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition in time to have acted.
See also Martin
at 490-91. The plaintiff must establish these elements as part of its own case, because sovereign immunity is not an affirmative defense.
Burke v. City of St. Louis,
Plaintiff misapprehends this burden of proof in Point I of this appeal, which asserts the City failed in its “burden to address all viable theories raised in [Plaintiffs] pleadings, in that [the City] failed to address all such theories.” It was Plaintiffs burden to establish a sovereign immunity waiver as part and parcel of any pleaded theory against the City. Krohn, supra. Plaintiff could not rest on the mere allegations of his pleadings when faced with the City’s summary judgment motion. Rule 74.04(c)(2). Point I is denied.
Plaintiffs Point II is unclear, but seems to claim the trial court could not consider part of Kody Maune’s deposition testimony because he was a minor. Our review of the record fails to show that the trial court
Plaintiffs final point alleges the trial court could not properly determine as a matter of law that there was no dangerous condition given (1) the barrier’s position and (2) the failure to warn of it.
We must strictly construe the statutory provisions that waive a public entity’s sovereign immunity.
O’Dell v. Department of Corrections,
A landowner is not an insurer of the well-being of invitees, and generally is not required as a matter of law to protect invitees against open and obvious conditions. The landowner is entitled to expect that invitees will exercise ordinary perception, intelligence, and judgment to discover open and obvious conditions, appreciate the risk they present, and take the minimal steps necessary to protect themselves. In other words, the landowner may reasonably rely on invitees to see and appreciate risks presented by open and obvious conditions, and may reasonably rely on an invitee’s normal sensibilities to protect against same.
See, e.g., Crow v. Kansas City Power & Light Co.,
The City’s motion included an affidavit from its parks and recreation director identifying and attaching two photos of the barrier. The affidavit noted the barrier was not physically defective nor otherwise damaged at the time of the accident, but was in proper working condition, painted yellow, and extended just 47 inches across a 117-inch bridge entrance. Plaintiff submitted no affidavit, expert testimony or other evidence on these matters nor otherwise in support of Plaintiffs claims. Thus, the uncontradicted evidence indicated the conditions at the bridge entrance were neither defective nor damaged; the partial barrier was open and obvious; and sixty percent of the entrance was open to free passage. Under the foregoing cases and others, there was no “dangerous condition” nor duty to warn for Section 537.600 purposes, at least not pri-ma facie. Plaintiff could not rest upon the mere allegations of his petition, but by affidavit or otherwise was required to set forth specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial. ITT Commercial Finance at 381; Rule 74.04(c)(2). Plaintiff failed to do so.
Plaintiff cites
Kraus v. Hy-Vee, Inc.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to Missouri Revised Statutes (2000), and all references to rales are to Missouri Rules of Court (2006).
. Kody Maune, by and through his next friend, Ayn Maune.
. Although the Western District treated sovereign immunity as an affirmative defense in
Greene County v. State,
