This case arose from an accident which killed seven persons and injured two more. *710 All of the victims were struck by an automobile while standing at a bus stop at Third and M Streets, S.E. The injured parties and representatives of the deceased victims filed negligence actions against the driver of the car, the owner of the car (the driver’s brother), and the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMA-TA). The District of Columbia was later added as a co-defendant. Included in one complaint was a claim by a relative of two of the victims for negligent infliction of emotional distress. The claims were eventually consolidated in an amended complaint, and after extensive discovery and the filing of several motions, the trial court granted WMATA’s and the District’s motions ■ for summary judgment. The court then granted a motion for entry of judgment under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 54(b), thereby making its order appealable, 1 and stayed the proceedings with respect to the other defendants pending the outcome of this appeal by all of the plaintiffs. Appellants contend that the court erred in ruling (1) that WMATA and the District were immune from tort liability for their injuries, (2) that the driver of the car was an unforeseeable intervening cause of the accident, and (3) that no recovery could be had for emotional distress against WMATA and the District. We reject all their arguments and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
I. Factual Baokground
The pertinent facts are undisputed. At about 6:15 p.m. on August 25, 1984, Robert Lee Williams, while under the influence of alcohol and drugs, was driving a car in the 200 block of M Street, S.E. At that point M Street is a six-lane thoroughfare with a concrete median strip, approximately six inches high and four feet wide, separating the eastbound lanes from the westbound lanes. Williams, driving at more than twice the posted speed limit, was on the wrong side of the street, headed eastward into westbound traffic. Trying to steer into the proper lane through a gap in the median, Williams hit the median instead. The car lurched out of control, crossed over to the far curb, and struck nine persons waiting at a bus stop at the corner of Third and M.
Of the nine, only Charron McKethean and Willie Calliham, Jr., survived. The others — Theodore and Sandra Chrisp and their three children, Charron McKethean’s six-month-old daughter Charquita, and Linda Taylor — were all killed. John McKethean, Charron’s father, was at his home a block away when he heard the crash and ensuing screams. He ran to the bus stop and saw his severely injured daughter and the body of his granddaughter. He also saw the bodies of the other victims, all of whom he knew. Criminal charges were brought against Williams, and eventually he pleaded guilty to two counts of manslaughter while armed, five counts of manslaughter, and driving while intoxicated. The consecutive sentences he received on those convictions were affirmed by this court in
Williams v. United States,
The bus stop at Third and M Streets had been established in 1952 by the Capital Transit Company, a predecessor of WMA-TA, under an administrative order of the District of Columbia Public Utilities Commission. Originally the stop was located on a seven-foot-wide grassy strip between the curb and the sidewalk, owned by the District of Columbia. On the other edge of the sidewalk stands a brick wall belonging to the federal government, behind which lies the Washington Navy Yard. In 1967 M Street was widened to three lanes in each direction, and the grassy section was removed, leaving only four to six feet of sidewalk between the curb and the brick wall. There has been no change since. Prospective passengers now must either stand on the sidewalk or lean against the brick wall while waiting for the bus.
Appellants filed suit against Robert Williams, his brother Bernard, who owned the ear, WMATA, and the District of Co *711 lumbia. Their complaint alleged that WMATA and the District were jointly and severally liable for the deaths and injuries because they were responsible for the location and maintenance of the bus stop and had negligently failed to follow applicable safety standards in placing it at Third and M Streets and in allowing it to remain there after the street was widened. This negligence allegedly was a proximate cause of their injuries, since the 1967 street widening had made the bus stop a hazard, leaving it too close to a busy street with no way for persons waiting there for a bus to escape oncoming traffic. Appellants also alleged that the District’s negligent maintenance of the median strip was a proximate cause of their injuries. Finally, appellant John McKethean sought recovery from all the defendants for negligent infliction of emotional distress, claiming that witnessing the deaths and injuries of his family and friends caused him severe and continuing emotional injury.
Following discovery, each of the parties moved for either partial or total summary judgment. The court granted WMATA’s and the District’s motions as to all of appellants’ claims. The court said first that it could not determine from the record whether WMATA, the District, or both bore any actual responsibility for the accident. This did not matter, however, for the court went on to hold that both were immune from liability. The court reasoned that neither could be liable for the original placement of the bus stop because it was located in compliance with an administrative order. With respect to any decision about relocation or redesign of the stop after the 1967 street widening, the court ruled that the District was immune from liability because its actions were committed in the exercise of a discretionary function. Similarly, WMATA was immune from liability because its actions were governmental in nature.
As to the allegedly negligent maintenance of the median, the court ruled that Williams’ criminal conduct was an unforeseeable intervening cause of the accident which absolved the District of liability. Finally, the court held that WMATA and the District were not liable for infliction of emotional distress since neither appellee’s conduct was sufficiently extreme or outrageous to allow for recovery absent physical injury, although Williams’ conduct could be so characterized. Consequently, in its order the court granted WMATA’s and the District’s motions for summary judgment as to all claims, but denied the motion of Robert and Bernard Williams for summary judgment on John McKethean’s claim. 2
II. WMATA
Appellants do not here argue that either WMATA or the District is liable for the original decision to locate the bus stop at the corner of Third and M Streets. Rather, they claim that the 1967 widening of M Street made the bus stop a safety hazard, and that appellees’ alleged negligence was their failure to remedy the hazard. Appellants first contend that WMATA, as a common carrier, owes a duty of reasonable care to prospective passengers of its transit system. WMATA breached this duty, they say, by ignoring its own safety standards and allowing the continued existence of a dangerous bus stop. According to appellants, immunity should not attach to these breaches as a matter of public policy. More specifically, appellants maintain that WMATA is statutorily liable because the relocation and maintenance of its stops are proprietary activities. Thus, they argue, the trial court erred in ruling that WMATA was immune from suit.
WMATA responds that, under District of Columbia law, it owes no duty of care to prospective passengers on its transit system. Further, even if it did owe such a duty and breached it, the trial court correctly ruled that it was immune from suit because its alleged acts of negligence were governmental, not proprietary. We agree with both of WMATA's arguments.
*712 A. Duty of Care
We reject appellants’ contention that WMATA owed a special duty of care to the victims of the accident, who were prospective passengers on its transit system. WMATA, like any common carrier, owes a duty of reasonable care to its passengers.
D.C. Transit System, Inc. v. Carney,
[Ujntil a person has placed himself in some substantial sense in the custody or under the control of the carrier, he is not a passenger and no special duty of care is owed him. An intent to become a passenger is not enough to confer that status or to charge the carrier with the duty to exercise that degree of care owed by a carrier in the transportation of a passenger.
Baker v. D.C. Transit System, Inc.,
In the instant case, none of the victims of the accident was boarding or leaving a WMATA bus. Rather, they were all waiting on the sidewalk, which was owned not by WMATA but by the District of Columbia. Thus WMATA owed no duty to the victims other than a general duty to exercise ordinary care in the operation of its buses so as to avoid injuring the citizenry. 18 E. MoQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 53.108 (3d ed.1984); see Standardized Civil Jury Instructions, supra, No. 8.10 (common carrier has no responsibility to maintain or repair public space at a bus stop). Since no WMATA vehicle or property was involved in this case, we conclude that Baker v. D. C. Transit is controlling on the issue of WMATA’s duty. We hold accordingly that WMATA owed the victims no duty of care because they were not its passengers at the time they were injured.
B. Immunity
The trial court ruled that WMA-TA was immune from suit under section 80 of the WMATA Compact, D.C.Code § 1-2431(80) (1987). 3 We agree. Even assuming that WMATA owed a duty of care which it breached, the court was correct in holding WMATA immune from suit for its alleged acts of negligence.
Section 80 establishes a governmental-proprietary test for deciding which of WMATA’s activities may subject it to tort liability.
Hall v. WMATA,
Appellants argue that this “common good” test is overly broad and would render section 80 superfluous, since all of WMATA’s activities are essentially oriented to serving the public. Appellants are certainly correct that, in many instances, the “common good” test is of little help, for proprietary activities may benefit the public as well as the agency performing them.
See Johnson v. Detroit Metropolitan Airport,
In the instant case, then, the issue of WMATA’s immunity comes down to a question of whether its alleged acts of negligence are characterized as discretionary decisions or ministerial execution of those decisions. 4 Appellants assert, of course, that WMATA’s acts ánd omissions fall in the latter category. They cite WMATA’s policy of ensuring passenger safety, set forth in its System Safety Program Plan (SSPP) and related documents, as proof that WMATA’s discretion is limited by established standards. They also claim that WMATA failed to follow its own standards by maintaining a hazardous bus stop and failed to train its staff properly in implementing these safety standards. But the gist of appellants’ complaint is really that WMATA was negligent in not relocating the bus stop to a safer place after 1967. Assuming that relocation was even the responsibility of WMATA, 5 appellants’ claims relate more to design, a discretionary function, than to implementation.
While the provision of mass transportation by WMATA is itself a proprietary activity,
Qasim v. WMATA,
A decision to relocate or not to relocate the bus stop after 1967 would involve safety planning, not implementation or operation of a safety plan.
See
18 E. McQuil-lin,
supra,
§ 53.41 (failure to reconstruct or upgrade is planning, a governmental function). Indeed, the allegedly hazardous condition of the stop itself arose from a traffic control plan, the District’s decision to widen M Street. Appellants do not allege that WMATA, in implementing its safety policy, engaged in any negligent acts which created the dangerous condition, nor do they claim that WMATA allowed the bus stop to deteriorate. Despite the existence of a general safety policy and the broad statements in the SSPP, the record contains no specific safety guidelines which would implement the policy and limit WMATA’s discretion in choosing to relocate a bus stop.
Compare Berkovitz, supra,
In trying to bring their claims under the proprietary or ministerial umbrella, appellants are really seeking to establish as affirmative negligence what is essentially passive conduct: WMATA's failure to take or enforce safety precautions. Without more specific evidence in the record of either safety requirements or an actual omission of an identifiable duty, we see no basis for finding WMATA liable. Were we to hold otherwise, a jury would be forced to speculate on whether adoption of precautionary measures by WMATA might have prevented the accident. The impossibility of such speculation is one of the main reasons why policy decisions receive immunity in the first place.
We therefore hold that, even if WMATA owed a duty to the persons waiting at the bus stop who were injured as a result of Mr. Williams’ conduct, it cannot be held liable for their injuries because the design and placement of the bus stop are governmental functions immune from tort liability under section 80 of the WMATA Compact.
III. The DistriCt of Columbia
A. Immunity
Appellants argue that the District was jointly negligent with WMATA in cre *715 ating the hazardous bus stop after the 1967 widening of M Street since the District makes the final decision in locating bus stops. Appellants contend that such a decision is ministerial, not discretionary, so that the trial court erred in ruling that the District was immune from suit. The District responds that its decision was discretionary, and hence that the court properly upheld its claim of immunity. The District is right.
To determine whether the District has waived its sovereign immunity so as to make it liable in tort in a given situation, this court applies the discretionary-ministerial test. “Under this standard the District is immune from suit only if the act complained of was committed in the exercise of a discretionary function; if committed in the exercise of a ministerial function, the District must respond.”
Wade v. District of Columbia, supra
note 4,
Discretionary acts include administrative decisions “establishing plans, specifications, or schedules of operations.”
Dalehite v. United States, supra,
The District is immune in this case for essentially the same reason that WMATA is immune: the decision to relocate a bus stop following street improvement is part of overall traffic and safety design, a discretionary policy decision.
See, e.g., District of Columbia v. Pace, supra
(guardrail and exit ramp design);
District of Columbia v. North Washington Neighbors, Inc.,
Repeating an argument they made with respect to their claim against WMATA, appellants characterize the District’s alleged
*716
negligent acts as mere implementation of policy,
i.e.,
negligent maintenance of the original bus stop. But the District committed no affirmative act of negligence, such as allowing the bus stop to deteriorate, which might give rise to liability.
See, e.g., Wagshal v. District of Columbia,
B. Negligence
Appellants also claim that, apart from its alleged negligence in maintaining a hazardous bus stop, the District is liable for the accident because it negligently failed to maintain the crumbling median separating the eastbound and westbound lanes of M Street. According to appellants, the defective median proximately caused the accident by launching the speeding car into the bus stop. The trial court correctly recognized that the District could be liable for improper maintenance of the median, but nevertheless granted summary judgment for the District on the ground that Williams’ criminal conduct was an unforeseeable intervening cause which severed the chain of causation between the defective median and the accident. Appellants now argue that the issue of causation should have been decided by the jury, not the court, because they presented evidence that Williams’ conduct was reasonably foreseeable. The District responds that, under District of Columbia law, criminal acts must be specifically foreseeable and that appellants’ evidence was insufficient to satisfy this heightened standard. We agree that Williams’ criminal conduct was an unforeseeable intervening cause, relieving the District of any liability it might otherwise have had for negligent maintenance of the median.
Proximate cause has been defined as “that cause which, in natural and continual sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would not have occurred.”
S.S. Kresge Co. v. Kenney,
When an intervening act is criminal, this court demands a more heightened showing
*717
of foreseeability than if it were merely negligent. Because of “the extraordinary nature of criminal conduct, the law requires that the foreseeability of the risk be more precisely shown.”
Lacy v. District of Columbia, supra,
Appellants argue that this heightened standard does not apply in this case because Williams’ crimes — manslaughter, manslaughter while armed, and driving while intoxicated — are all crimes of general intent. They contend that the special standard of
Lacy
and
Cook
is applicable only to specific intent crimes. This argument is utterly without legal support. In discussing intervening criminal conduct, this court has not differentiated between specific and general criminal intent.
See, e.g., District of Columbia v. Doe, supra,
Appellants argue nevertheless that it is reasonably foreseeable that impaired or negligent drivers may leave the road and crash into bus stops. They presented evidence below that approximately fifty WMATA bus stops and ten bus shelters a year were struck by cars between 1977 and 1982, 10 and they note the high frequency of traffic accidents involving alcohol and drug abuse. We hold that this is not enough to make the District liable.
While it is unfortunately true that drug abuse and drunk driving are major problems, in the District of Columbia as elsewhere,
see Rong Yao Zhou v. Jennifer Mall Restaurant, Inc.,
Thus the trial court did not err in holding that there were no facts or circumstances from which a jury could find proximate cause, and that appellants’ evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to send the issue of foreseeability to the jury.
See Graham v. M & J Corp.,
IV. Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress
Finally, we turn to the claim of John McKethean for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
We held this case in abeyance pending the decision of the en banc court in
Williams v. Baker,
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment for both WMATA and the District of Columbia. That judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
.
See, e.g., Cohen v. Owens & Co.,
. The Williamses did not seek summary judgment on the claims of the other plaintiffs.
. D.C.Code § 1-2431(80) states in relevant part:
The Authority [WMATA] shall be liable for its contracts and for its torts and those of its Directors, officers, employees and agent[s] committed in the conduct of any proprietary function, in accordance with the law of the applicable signatory ... but shall not be liable for any torts occurring in the performance of a governmental function.
. We recognize, as does the District of Columbia Circuit, that the governmental-proprietary test as set out in section 80 of the WMATA Compact is not necessarily congruent with the discretionary-ministerial test which we apply to tort claims against the District.
See Wade v. District of Columbia,
. Whether WMATA, the District, or both had legal responsibility for a decision to relocate the bus stop is uncertain. In their respective pleadings each attempted to place the responsibility on the other, but the trial court found the record too inadequate to determine the issue. After ruling that they were both immune from suit, the court dismissed their cross-claims as moot, and neither has appealed. Thus the issue of responsibility is not before us and need not be decided.
. In Dant the plaintiff alleged that the fare collection system on WMATA’s subways was "negligently designed, operated and maintained.” The court held:
Design is distinct from operation and maintenance. As we interpret the claim, “operation and maintenance" involve ministerial rather than discretionary responsibilities.... Accordingly, Dant may properly pursue his claim under count three, but only insofar as he can establish that the injury alleged is directly attributable to negligent maintenance and operation, and not to negligent or faulty design.
Dant v. District of Columbia, supra,
. The trial court was well aware of the difference between immune policy judgments and actionable negligent implementation of such policy judgments. While it ruled that the District could not be sued for a decision not to relocate the bus stop, it did note that the District could be liable for failing to repair a deteriorating median strip.
. Appellants also challenge the trial court's ruling that under
Goggins v. Hoddes,
.When we speak of an "intervening" act which breaks the chain of causation, we refer to what the Restatement calls a “superseding cause.” See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 440 (1965).
. This evidence was in the deposition testimony of a "bus operations analyst" employed by WMATA.
