LORETTA A. PICO, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT, v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT, AND COUNTY OF PASSAIC AND ERIC A. WALLER, DEFENDANTS, AND TOWNSHIP OF WAYNE, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued April 24, 1989—Decided July 25, 1989.
116 N.J. 55
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed, and the matter is remanded to the Chancery Division for the entry of a judgment consistent with this oрinion.
For affirmance and remandment—Chief Justice WILENTZ, and Justices CLIFFORD, HANDLER, POLLOCK, O‘HERN, GARIBALDI and STEIN—7.
Opposed—None.
Glenn R. Jones, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for appellant (Peter N. Perretti, Jr., Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney; Benjamin Clarke, Deputy Attorney General, of counsel).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
POLLOCK, J.
The narrow issue on this appeal is whether defendant State of New Jersey (the State) is immune from liability to plaintiff, Loretta A. Pico (Pico or plaintiff), under the weather-immunity section of the New Jersey Tort Claims Act,
-I-
Because this matter arises on the State‘s motion for summary judgment, we accept as true plaintiff‘s version of the facts as gleaned from the pleadings, affidavits, and depositions, giving her the benefit of all inferences favorable to her claim.
On January 24, 1984, an ice storm hit northern New Jersey around 3:00 a.m. At approximately 5:00 a.m., a Wayne Township policeman callеd the emergency number of the Department of Transportation (DOT) in Newark to report generally icy conditions along Route 23 in Wayne. DOT relayed this message to Patrick Avino, the foreman of the DOT maintenance yard in Totowa, which is approximately three miles from
Between 7:30 and 7:50 a.m., Pico was driving northbound to work on Route 23 when she noticed that cars had pulled to the side of the highway and that people were waving their hands, apparently to warn approaching traffic. Her car skidded on a pаtch of ice, but she regained control and parked her car on the roadside. As she was walking to call her employer, she was injured when she was struck by a car driven by Eric Waller. According to Waller, the road was in good condition, and the accident happened when his car skidded sidеways solely because of the icy conditions.
Plaintiff sued Waller, Wayne Township, Passaic County, and the State. She settled her claim against Waller, and has not petitioned this Court for review of the grant of summary judgment in favor of the township and the county, neither of which had jurisdiction over Route 23, a state highway.
In its motion for summary judgment, the State claimed that the suit was barred because of the weather immunity provided by
The Law Division granted the State‘s motion because of the weather immunity under
-II-
We begin by affirming the now-familiar principle that the public policy of this State is that public entities shall be liable for their negligence only as set forth in the Tort Claims Act.
a. Except as otherwise provided by this act, a public entity is not liable for an injury, whether such injury arises out of an act or оmission of the public entity or a public employee or any other person.
b. Any liability of a public entity established by this act is subject to any immunity of the public entity and is subject to any defenses that would be available to the public entity if it were a private person.
[Footnote omitted.]
As the Comment to that section states, courts should employ an analysis that first asks “whether an immunity applies and if not, should liability attach.”
Following that admonition, our initial inquiry is whether any immunity applies. In this regard, the State points to
Similarly, in the month following that decision, another part of the Appellate Division ruled that plaintiff‘s claim should survive the State‘s motion for summary judgment because the plaintiff had presented evidence that her injuries were not caused solely by the weather. Meta v. Township of Cherry Hill, 152 N.J.Super. 228, certif. denied, 75 N.J. 587 (1977). In Meta, a ditch on the side of the roadwаy was filled with silt and vegetation with the result that water spilled onto the paved portion of the highway, where it froze and created a slippery condition. Id. at 231. Plaintiff established that the township and county had actual knowledge of the condition on the day of her accident and prior knowlеdge of other accidents at the same location. Id. at 231, 233-34. From this, the Appellate Division concluded that her injuries were not caused solely by the weather, but by the failure of the township and county to act reasonably to alleviate or to warn of the dangerous condition. Id. at 234.
More recently, in Horan v. State, 212 N.J.Super. 132 (1986), the Appellate Division held that the State and municipality could not be held liable for their failure to warn the traveling public that a bridge froze before adjacent roadways. The reason is that the condition, dangerous as it was, occurred only
We reject plaintiff‘s argument that the State should be deprived of the immunity because of the foreman‘s statement that “he would handle” the icy conditions. Although the parties disagree on the adequacy of the State‘s response, they are in accord that the State did nothing to increase the danger of the ice in its natural condition. Indeed, plaintiff vigorously asserts that the State did no salting or sanding at the sitе of the accident. We are left with the inescapable fact that the sole cause of the accident was the icy condition in its natural state. Imposition of liability in this context would undermine the policy judgment made by the Legislature that a public entity should be immune for an injury caused solely by the effect on the use of a highway of weather conditions.
The imposition of liability on the State for the failure of one of its employees to respond to a telephone call would provide the wrong incentive for the allocation of State resources. With its limited resources, the State, like other public entities, cannot be everywhere at once in a snow or ice storm. A governmental entity should respond to those conditions as it perceives them, and not merely in the order in which it receives complaints. Nor should the fear of potential liability determine the treat-
The Legislature has determined that as betweеn the public entity and the injured pedestrian or motorist, the entity is not to bear the cost of those risks. Implicit in that determination is the value judgment that the cost of the risk is to be borne directly or indirectly by the injured party, not by taxpayers. If the public entity should aggravate the risk or fail to give an adequаte warning of a palpably dangerous condition that it has created, then it may be liable. A governmental entity enjoys common-law immunity for routine, anticipated dangerous conditions that result from snow removal. That immunity, however, may be lost for the “palpably unreasonable failure to warn of a dangerous condition * * *.” Rochinsky, supra, 110 N.J. at 415 n. 7. In the present case, we need not consider the application of common-law immunity because the statutory weather immunity provided by
Although a public entity is generally liable for the ordinary negligence of its employees in performance of ministerial duties,
The Appellate Division also erred in holding that the State might be vicariously liable under a standard of ordinary negligence for Avino‘s failure to treat the icy condition. In finding that holding to be erroneous, we recognize that
The liability of the employee,
CLIFFORD, J., concurring.
The Society for the Preservation of Linguistic Hygiene should comе to the rescue of the so-called “weather immunity” statute. In enacting
Although I join entirely in the opinion of the Court, I think we would do wеll to take a stand against verbal pollution, particularly by avoiding the label of “weather immunity.” The statute does not confer immunity, for there is no liability to immunize against if a claimant‘s injuries find their cause solely in the weather conditions. I suppose what is meant is that there is no duty to clean up thosе conditions of streets and highways that are produced by storms and the like, and I suppose too that the Court is correct in reading some sense into the statute. And I suppose, finally, that this little legislative lapse is not worth losing much sleep over. But I do wish someone would clean up the act.
For reversal and remandment—Justices HANDLER, POLLOCK, O‘HERN, GARIBALDI and STEIN—5.
Concurring in result—Justice CLIFFORD—1.
