This is an action by Dominick Martini, a minor, and his parents for damages for personal injuries and the expenses incident to the treatment thereof, incurred by minor plaintiff while engaged as a player on the Olyphant High School football team in an' interscholastic game between the Olyphant High School football team and the Blakely High School football team on November 11, 1950. Both schools are public high schools, in the Pennsylvania public school system. The game was played as a public exhibition in the Blakely stadium, which was viewed by some 2,500 spectators, admission fees were charged, concessions for the sale of popcorn and candy were in operation, and the details of the game reported by radio broadcasting from a Carbondale radio station.
The complaint avers that personal notice of the claim was given by plaintiff to defendant school district immediately following the injury sustained by minor plaintiff, and that thereafter plaintiffs presented their claim in person before the Board of School Directors of the Olyphant School District at a meeting of the board within a period of two months following the injuries ; that the school board entered into negotiations with plaintiffs looking to a settlement, but that the board now refuses to make any payment or offer settlement adequate to the damages sustained.
Defendant enters preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, which may be grouped under three heads:
1. Plaintiffs failed to file formal written notice with the school district of the claim within six months of the date of the injury, nor have they entered this action by leave of court on excuse shown why such notice should not have been filed within the prescribed time, all as required by the Act of July 1, 1937, P. L. 2547, 53 PS §2774.
3. That minor plaintiff voluntarily participated in the game and as a contestant accepted the risks of injury incident thereto.
We are of the opinion that the complete purpose of the Act of 1937, supra, requiring notice to school districts of the presentation of a claim based upon the negligence of an employe, was served by the formal presentation of the claim to the board in session. The averment in the complaint that the board entered upon negotiations with plaintiffs, looking toward a settlement of the claim, is sufficient excuse to warrant the court in permitting a claim to be filed after the six-month period. The courts have been reasonably liberal in interpreting the notice provisions of the statute, so long as the municipality had in fact received adequate notice on which to base an investigation and discover the facts pertinent to the alleged negligence. If there is any question about the matter, we hereby grant leave nunc pro tunc to plaintiffs to file the complaint herein.
Most of the objections to the liability of the school district for negligence of its officers or employes, occurring while in the conduct of their educational activities, have been considered in the case of Hoffman v. Scranton School District, 67 D. & C. 301. There we held that a school district, while obviously an agent of the State for the conduct of educational services which it is required or permitted to provide under the
Here, however, we have an entirely different situation. Plaintiffs argue that the theory of the Hoffman case ought to he extended to the player participant in such a game, as well as to the spectator who pays his admission to the publicly presented spectacle. No case directly comparable seems to have been presented to our appellate courts, but we did acknowledge in the Hoffman ease that there is opinion to the effect that the conduct of intramural and interscholastic games is certainly within the legitimate scope of school district educational activities and so essentially a governmental function. The question is directly presented
It is a matter of public knowledge that a good many undesirable features seem to have attached to the conduct of interscholastic, as well as intercollegiate athletic contests. Nevertheless, such contests in themselves we think are clearly within the field of legitimate educational activities; they offer a controlled outlet to the unbounded energy and activity of youth as developed and encouraged in a program of physical education. They are desirable from the standpoint of encouraging within student bodies a widespread interest in such education and serve as proper tests of accomplishment in a particular educational field. So far as the players themselves are concerned, their coaches, managers, attendants and those engaged in providing the necessary facilities for the playing of the game, the field of educational and therefore governmental activity is broad enough to include them within its boundaries. We, therefore, distinguish the contest itself as an educational activity from the presentation of it to spectators on a commercial basis as a proprietary activity. On this theory there can be no liability on the school district for the negligent failure of the district employes to provide to the player the adequate and customary equipment which a player ought to have to protect himself against foreseeable injury.
On the pleadings, we are unwilling to state that this particular player voluntarily assumed the risk of the game and so became subject to the usual rule that one who assumes a risk must bear the consequences. It is
Our decision that there is no liability here is based solely on the ground that the conduct of the game itself, so far as the players and those responsible for the control of the players therein are concerned, was strictly a governmental activity and the school district has no liability for the torts of its agents engaged in such an activity.
We point out that plaintiffs here are not without remedy, since the Public School Code of March 10, 1949, P. L. 30, sec. 511 (/), as amended, authorized appropriation of money by the school district for the payment of medical or hospital expenses incurred as the result of participation in athletic events or games, practice or preparation therefor, and for the purchase of accident insurance in connection with such partic
Now, December 1, 1952, preliminary objections nos. 4 and 5 filed by defendant are sustained. The other preliminary objections are dismissed. Plaintiffs are granted permission to amend the complaint so as to plead a cause of action for medical and hospital expenses incurred as a result of the injury to minor plaintiff, incurred in the game of November 11, 1950, if they so desire, within 20 days from the date hereof; otherwise the complaint to be dismissed and judgment entered for defendant.
