Estate of Buckner v. City of Lansing
Estate of Buckner v. City of Lansing
Opinion of the Court
On order of the Court, leave to appeal having been granted and the briefs and oral argument of the parties having been considered by the Court, we reverse in part the March 15, 2007 judgment of the Court of Appeals. MCR 7.302(G)(1). Under the doctrine of governmental immunity, MCL 691.1401 et seq., governmental agencies are entitled to immunity “for all tort liability whenever they are engaged in the exercise or discharge of a
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I would affirm the rulings of the trial court and the Court of Appeals that denied summary disposition for defendant city of Lansing. I also concur with part III(C) of Justice Weaver’s dissenting statement.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
imposes liability on a government agency having jurisdiction over a highway for failure “to keep a highway under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel . . . .” Thus, liability not only extends to highways in a state of disrepair, but to those in a condition not reasonably safe and fit for travel.[3]
The city of Lansing in this case plowed snow over a city sidewalk, impeding foot travel on it. Hence, a question of fact exists whether the city failed to keep the sidewalk in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel. Therefore, I concur with part III(C) of Justice Weaver’s dissenting statement.
Nawrocki v Macomb Co Rd Comm, 463 Mich 143 (2000).
MCL 691.1402(1).
3 Nawrocki, 463 Mich at 192 (Kelly, J. dissenting).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I dissent from the order reversing the Court of Appeals judgment affirming the trial court’s denial of summary disposition for the defendant, the city of Lansing. Because both lower courts properly concluded that a question of fact exists regarding whether the city created an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice, the plaintiffs should be permitted to present that question of fact to a jury.
The majority of four (Chief Justice Taylor and Justices Corrigan, Young, and Markman) has now decided that, despite the statutory mandate requiring governmental entities to maintain highways (including sidewalks) in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel, the city’s creation of an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice “does not constitute a ‘defect’ in the sidewalk” and therefore, the plaintiffs have failed to establish that the city violated its duty to maintain the sidewalk in reasonable repair. However, while the majority does not view an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice to be a “structural defect,” the statutory duty to maintain a highway “in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel” is not limited to a duty to repair “structural defects.” Because both the statute and prior cases interpreting the duty to repair a highway indicate that an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice is a “defect” that a governmental entity has an obligation to address given its duty to maintain the sidewalk in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel, and because a question of fact exists regarding whether the city created an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the circuit court’s denial of the city’s motion for summary disposition.
Further, the majority of four’s completely incorrect extension of Nawrocki v Macomb Co Rd Comm
I. FACTS
On January 29, 2005, at approximately 6:45 p.m., Chantell Buckner (then age seven), Lanecia Wright (then age 14), and LaQuata Wright (then age 13) were walking from their home on Saginaw Street to a nearby McDonald’s Restaurant located at the north corner of Saginaw and Larch streets.
The city of Lansing’s public service department had a policy of not clearing the north sidewalk along Saginaw Street to discourage pedestrians from walking on the north sidewalk.
When the north sidewalk of Saginaw Street became impassable because of the snow and ice piled onto it, the girls decided to walk in the roadway along the north curb of Saginaw Street. As the girls walked alongside the curb, a car headed east toward the girls struck Chantell Buckner and LaQuata Wright. Both girls suffered massive injuries, and Chantell died as a result of her injuries.
After the accident, it became evident that the city’s decision not to clear the sidewalk likely stemmed from the fact that the sidewalk itself, irrespective of snow and ice, was defective in that it had never been completed after a construction project in 1998. When the city constructed Prudden Street in 1998, it damaged the existing sidewalk along
The plaintiffs’ original complaint against the city alleged failure to maintain, clear, shovel, or remove the unnatural accumulation of snow and ice from the north sidewalk. Essentially, the plaintiffs alleged that the city was hable under the highway exception to governmental immunity for injuries that resulted because of the city’s failure to clear the unnatural accumulation of snow and ice from the north sidewalk of Saginaw Street.
The city subsequently brought a motion for summary disposition asserting that under the law of natural accumulations, an actual defect in the sidewalk surface must exist.
The circuit court denied both of the city’s motions for summary disposition, stating with respect to the first complaint:
*1249 Plaintiffs contention is that there was an unnatural accumulation that occurred and the unnatural accumulation doctrine is still good law and distinguishes itself from the MacLachlan[8] case and the Court concurs. I was affirmed, so that I know the case. I know it well. I do believe that doctrine is still good law. The unnatural accumulation was not argued in front of the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court, which clearly makes the facts in the Court’s opinion distinguishable. Therefore, based on the oral argument and the Plaintiffs response, Defendant’s Motion is denied.
The city appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court’s denial of the city’s motion for summary disposition with respect to the plaintiffs’ first complaint on the basis that the “City could be found liable for creating an unnatural accumulation of snow that caused the accident, notwithstanding the provisions of the governmental tort liability act (GTLA), MCL 691.1401 et seq.”
The city again appealed, and the plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal. This Court granted leave and requested that the parties consider
(1) whether the children’s decision to risk walking in the street prevents the plaintiffs from establishing proximate causation; (2) whether the city of Lansing is entitled to governmental immunity because the injuries did not occur on the sidewalk that the city allegedly failed to maintain, i.e., the injuries were not the direct result of the allegedly unmaintained condition; and (3) whether the statutory duty to “maintain the highway in reasonable repair,” MCL 691.1402(1), imposes obligations relating only to structural-type defects, or whether it includes a duty not to place temporary obstacles on a highway that render it impassable. [Buckner Estate v City of Lansing, 480 Mich 895 (2007).]
II. STANDARD OP REVIEW
This Court reviews the applicability of the governmental immunity statute, a question of law, de novo.
III. ANALYSIS
The governmental tort liability act (GTLA)
(1) Except as otherwise provided in section 2a, each governmental agency having jurisdiction over a highway shall maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel. A person who sustains bodily injury or damage to his or her property by reason of failure of a governmental agency to keep a highway under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel may recover the damages suffered by him or her from the governmental agency.... The duty of the state and the county road commissions to repair and maintain highways, and the liability for that duty, extends only to the improved portion of the highway designed for vehicular travel and does not include sidewalks, trailways, crosswalks, or any other installation outside of the improved portion of the highway designed for vehicular travel.
MCL 691.1401 defines “governmental agency” and “highway” as:
(d) “Governmental agency” means the state or a political subdivision.
(e) “Highway” means a public highway, road, or street that is open for public travel and includes bridges, sidewalks, trailways,*1251 crosswalks, and culverts on the highway. The term highway does not include alleys, trees, and utility poles.
Inserting the definitions into § 1402, the highway exception to governmental immunity provides: “Each governmental agency [which includes cities] having jurisdiction over a highway [which includes sidewalks] shall maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel. A person who sustains bodily injury ... by reason of failure of a governmental agency to keep a highway ... in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel may recover ... damages.” Pared down even further for purposes of this case, the plaintiffs’ position is that pursuant to MCL 691.1402, the city, having jurisdiction over the sidewalk in question, has a duty to “maintain the [sidewalk] in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel.” Further, the personal injuries sustained by the girls in this case occurred “by reason of failure of [the city]” “to keep [the sidewalk] in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for public travel.”
A. Nawrocki Only Concerns Defects in “the improved portion of the highway designed for vehicular travel.”
In Nawrocki, this Court was only concerned with an injury that occurred on an improved portion of the highway. This Court did not address a city’s duty to maintain sidewalks “in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel.”
[T]he location of an alleged dangerous or defective condition, as narrowly defined in the fourth sentence of the statutory clause, is the critical factor in determining whether a plaintiff is successful in pleading in avoidance of governmental immunity under the highway exception.
While it is true that the second sentence of MCL 691.1402(1)-, MSA 3.996(102) (1) generally allows “any person” to recover damages from a governmental agency with highway jurisdiction, the fourth sentence of the statutory clause specifically limits the state and county road commissions’ duty, and resultant liability for breach of this duty, “only to the improved portion of the highway designed for vehicular travel. ” The plain language of this sentence, though limiting the duty and resultant liability, does not expressly exclude any particular class of injured traveler from recovering damages under the highway exception. Thus, we believe that pedestrians who sue the state or a county road commission are not automatically and entirely excluded, as a class, from the protections of the statutory clause.[16]
The italicized language above establishes that this Court viewed the limited duty for the “improved portion of the highway” as applicable only to the state and to counties. Accordingly, the broader duty applicable to governmental agencies in general, as set forth in the first sentence of MCL 691.1402(1), is still intact. In other words, even after Nawrocki, cities still have a “duty to maintain the highway [including sidewalks] in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel.”
The majority’s order improperly extends the limited holding in Nawrocki to this case, in which a defect in the improved portion of the highway is not even at issue. Nawrocki does not stand for the proposition that in order for a plaintiff to properly allege a claim of negligence against a city for failure to maintain a sidewalk in reasonable repair, the plaintiff must first show there was a defect in the sidewalk itself. There is simply no language in the statute, or in Nawrocki, supporting that conclusion. In fact, a footnote in that case exposes the error in the majority’s strained interpretation of the holding in Nawrocki:
We acknowledge that repairing and maintaining the improved portion of the highway in a condition reasonably safe and convenient for public travel represents a higher duty of care on the part of government than repairing and maintaining it for vehicular travel.[19]
The reference to “public travel” is a reference to travel on surfaces other than roadways designed for “vehicular travel,” that is, sidewalks, bridges, trailways, crosswalks, and culverts. Because this Court did not extend its holding to require that a plaintiff alleging a city’s failure to maintain a sidewalk in reasonable repair must show an actual defect in “bridges, sidewalks, trailways, crosswalks, and culverts on the highway,”
Moreover, the majority of four’s completely incorrect extension of Nawrocki in a one-page order, as opposed to a full opinion, appears to be an attempt by the majority to conceal another example of judicial activism by unrestrained statutory interpretation.
B. Haliw Only Addresses the Natural Accumulation of Snow and Ice; MacLachlan Does Not Address the Unnatural Accumulation of Snow and Ice
Unlike Nawrocki, Haliw did concern the accumulation of snow and ice, but the question was whether a natural accumulation of snow and ice alone rose to the level of creating a defect upon which liability could rest. The plaintiff slipped on a patch of ice created by a depression in a city sidewalk. Water had pooled in the depression and subsequently hardened into ice. There were no other rough edges or defects in the depression and the ice that formed was level with the sidewalk. It was on the basis of these precise facts that this Court concluded that the “accumulation” of ice was “natural” and that because the hole, by itself, did not contribute to the plaintiffs injury, the city was not hable.
[W]e reject the proposition that the presence of ice alone, which naturally accumulates and which is the sole proximate cause of a slip and fall, satisfies the remaining elements of the negligence analysis employed in actions against governmental agencies. In the absence of a persistent defect in the highway (i.e., a sidewalk), rendering it unsafe for public travel at all times, and which combines with the natural accumulation of ice or snow to proximately cause injury, a plaintiff cannot prevail against an otherwise immune municipality.[22]
Importantly, in MacLachlan, this Court was faced with a case where there was a question of fact concerning whether the snow and ice on a roadway were the result of a natural or unnatural accumulation. The plaintiff was getting off a bus when he came face-to-face with a “wall of snow and ice” created when the city of Lansing plowed the street and had not yet cleared the snow and ice pushed to the side of the road. As the plaintiff walked alongside the wall in an attempt to find an opening so that he could get to the sidewalk, he was hit by a car. The circuit court granted summary disposition to the city, but the Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court’s order, concluding that there was a question of fact regarding whether the snow pushed off to the side was the result of a natural or unnatural accumulation of snow and ice. In particular, the Court discussed the distinction between natural versus unnatural accumulations of snow and ice:
Under the long-recognized “natural accumulation” doctrine, “ ‘a governmental agency’s failure to remove the natural accumulations of ice and snow on a public highway does not signal negligence of that public authority’ ” When, however, the accumulation of ice and snow is the result of unnatural causes, the municipality may be liable.
If there is any question regarding whether the condition was natural or unnatural, determination of this question of fact is within the province of a jury. Here, however, there is no dispute that the wall of ice and snow was created by the plowing efforts of the City of Lansing. Thus, reasonable minds could not differ on the fact that the snow wall was an unnatural accumulation.
*1255 We recognize that a city should not he punished merely for removing snow from the roadway. However, a municipality can be held liable if in clearing ice and snow it “introduced a new element of danger not previously present, or created an obstacle to travel, such as a snow bank, that exceeds the inconvenience posed by a natural accumulation.” Here it is alleged that a wall of snow and ice, three-to-four-feet high and created by the defendant city, caused an unusual obstacle that increased the hazard to decedent. A jury may conclude that the city’s act of piling ice and snow so high that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to traverse, introduced a new element of danger that exceeded the inconvenience posed by a natural accumulation. Plaintiff through his expert presented evidence that the city had adequate time to remove the snow wall from the bus stop and that it would not have been an unreasonable burden in light of the potential risk for the city to leave or create an opening in the piled snow to allow access to the sidewalk in an area designated as a bus stop. We accordingly conclude that plaintiff has created a justiciable question of fact relative to the alleged unnatural accumulation of ice and snow in the form of a snow wall and in avoidance of governmental immunity.[23]
In so holding, the Court of Appeals acknowledged that a city could be “held liable if, in clearing ice and snow, it ‘introduced a new element of danger not previously present, or created an obstacle to travel, such as a snow bank, that exceeds the inconvenience posed by a natural accumulation.’ ”
This Court reversed the judgment of the Court of Appeals. However, the Court’s order did not address the issue of natural versus unnatural accumulation of snow and ice; instead it merely stated that “[tjhere was no defect in the roadway rendering it unsafe for public travel at all times.”
C. Cities Have a Duty to Maintain Sidewalks in Reasonable Repair
In Jones v Enertel, Inc,
MCL 691.1402(1), part of the governmental tort liability act (GTLA), imposes a general duty on municipalities to keep “a highway,” including a sidewalk on the highway, under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair:
“Except as otherwise provided in section 2a[2] each governmental agency having jurisdiction over a highway shall maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel. A person who sustains bodily injury or damage to his or her property by reason of failure of a governmental agency to keep a highway under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel may recover the damages suffered by him or her from the governmental agency. [Emphasis added.]”
The emphasized language places a duty on municipalities to maintain their sidewalks on public highways in reasonable repair. This means that municipalities have an obligation, if necessary, to actively perform repair work to keep such sidewalks in reasonable repair. This is a greater duty than the duty a premises possessor owes to invitees under common-law premises liability principles. The basic duty owed to an invitee by a premises possessor is “to exercise reasonable care to protect the invitee from an unreasonable risk of harm caused by a dangerous condition on the land.” Lugo v Ameritech Corp, 464 Mich 512, 516; 629 NW2d 384 (2001). Accordingly, as we discussed in Lugo, this duty does not generally require a premises possessor to remove open and obvious conditions because, absent special aspects, such conditions are not*1257 unreasonably dangerous precisely because they are open and obvious. However, such reasoning cannot be applied to the statutory duty of a municipality to maintain sidewalks on public highways because the statute requires the sidewalks to be kept in “reasonable repair.” The statutory language does not allow a municipality to forego such repairs because the defective condition of a sidewalk is open and obvious. Accordingly, we conclude that the open and obvious doctrine of common-law premises liability cannot bar a claim against a municipality under MCL 691.1402(1).[27]
The question in this case is whether the statutory duty to “maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel” includes a duty not to place temporary obstacles on a highway that render it impassable. The plain language of the statute requires a city to “maintain the highway [including sidewalks] in reasonable repair.” The statute further provides that if an individual is injured “by reason of failure of a governmental agency to keep a highway [including sidewalks] under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel,” the injured party can recover damages from the governmental agency.
Moreover, Michigan courts have previously held that a city can be held hable if, in the process of clearing snow and ice, the city “introduced a new element of danger not previously present, or created an obstacle to travel, such as a snow bank, that exceeds the inconvenience posed by a natural accumulation.”
This unnatural accumulation created an obstruction on the sidewalk which should have been removed so that the village could fulfill its duty of keeping the highways “reasonably safe and convenient for public travel.” MCL 691.1402; MSA 3.996(102). The village was liable for injuries caused by its negligent failure to remove the obstruction after it had notice thereof. Kowalczyk v Bailey, 379 Mich 568; 153 NW2d 660 (1967).
In this case, the testimony revealed that the drift had been present two days and that the city had plowed the streets. The jury could reasonably have inferred that the defendant Village of Yale had caused the drift to be placed across the sidewalk through the use of its snowplows. A jury could deem the agents of Yale responsible for producing the drift where it was as high as it was.[36]
We do not think it open to serious question that there was evidence in this case that at this crossing there was an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice, occasioned by shoveling from the railroad track, so as to produce a hump on either side of the track of several inches in depth; thus increasing the height of the bank on either side. We think it was at least a question for the jury as to whether this left the highway in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel. It is true that the natural accumulations of snow and ice and the natural results of traveling on the same do not of themselves make a case of faulty highway which justifies a jury in finding a municipality in fault. But that is not this case, as the evidence was ample to show that snow was thrown and piled on this highway in such a manner as to make an unnatural hump or ridge on either side of the track.[38]
Of note in Johnson is the fact that the decedent’s cause of death was not due to the fact that the sleigh in which she was riding came into contact with the unnatural accumulation of snow and ice. Instead, the decedent was trampled to death after the driver of another horse-drawn sleigh lost control of the team when he came upon the unnatural “hump” of snow and ice in the roadway. Again, this Court held that it was proper for the jury to consider whether the decedent’s death was proximately caused by the city’s negligence:
The question of whether there is sufficient causal connection between the defective highway and the injuries to the plaintiffs intestate to justify the court in submitting this case to the jury has been sufficiently discussed in dealing with the question of proximate cause. If it is open to the jury to find that the driver would not have lost the control of the team but for the defect in the highway, then the connection between the wrong and the injury is sufficient to justify a recovery.[39]
Applying the law to the facts in this case, neither the Court of Appeals nor the circuit court erred in denying the city’s motion for summary disposition. Here, the city was aware that the sidewalk in question was defective and admitted to intentionally piling up plowed snow and ice onto the defective north sidewalk to encourage pedestrians to use the south sidewalk. Consequently, there is a question of fact regarding whether the accumulation of snow and ice was natural or unnatural. The city was aware of the risk that pedestrians (including children) would walk on the road because of unplowed sidewalks. In fact, the city had both an ordinance and a recently adopted city resolution calling for all citizens to clear the sidewalks in front of their property in order to make the sidewalks passable and to prevent pedestrians from walking on the street. Given the city’s duty to maintain the sidewalk in reasonable repair “and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel,” a jury should have been allowed to consider whether the city was negligent in failing to remove the snow and ice from the sidewalk.
IV CONCLUSION
In this tragic case, the majority of four has summarily dispensed with the plaintiffs’ claim against the city on the basis that the accumulation of snow and ice was not a “defect.” In addition, the majority of four’s incorrect extension of Nawrocki in a one-page order, instead of in a full opinion, appears to be an attempt by the majority to conceal its latest example of judicial activism by unrestrained statutory interpretation. I would find that both lower courts properly concluded that a question of fact exists regarding whether the city created an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice. Accordingly, the plaintiffs should be permitted to bring that question of fact before a jury.
The statutory duty to maintain the highway “in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel” is not limited to a duty to repair “structural defects.” Because both the statute and prior cases interpreting the highway-repair duty can be interpreted so as to find that an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice is a “defect” that a governmental entity has an obligation to address given its duty to maintain the sidewalk in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel, and because a question of fact exists with regard to whether the city created an unnatural accumulation of snow and ice, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals affirming the circuit court’s denial of the city’s motion for summary disposition.
Nawrocki v Macomb Co Rd Comm, 463 Mich 143 (2000).
By January 29, 2005, the city had received approximately 26.5 inches of snow since January 1, 2005. The average temperature for the two weeks before January 29 was below freezing. The largest snowfall occurred one week before the accident at issue here when, on January 22, the city received 12.6 inches of snow in one day.
During a February 3, 2005, Lansing City Council meeting, a city employee of the public service department stated that the “sidewalk gets plowed occasionally but there is discretion given to the employee, but the general practice during heavy snow fall is to only plow the South side of that particular road.” See also Sidewalk Near Site of Fatality to Close, Lansing State Journal, Feb. 1, 2005, at 1A and City Considers Extending Sidewalk Near Hit-and-Run, Lansing State Journal, Feb. 11,2005, at 1A.
The car’s driver was defendant Luther Wampler (now deceased), who was allegedly intoxicated at the time his car collided with the girls. He was subsequently charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated, MCL 257.625, and failing to stop at the scene of an accident, MCL 257.618.
A city employee admitted that it had been an unwritten policy of the city not to plow the north sidewalk for over 20 years. Thus, apparently even before the Prudden Street installation, the city had not plowed the area in question.
MCL 691.1402(1) provides in pertinent part:
Except as otherwise provided in section 2a, each governmental agency having jurisdiction over a highway shall maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel. A person who sustains bodily injury or damage to his or her property by reason of failure of a governmental agency to keep a highway under its jurisdiction in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel may recover the damages suffered by him or her from the governmental agency.
MCL 691.1401 defines “governmental agency” and “highway” as:
(d) “Governmental agency” means the state or a political subdivision. [A city is a political subdivision.]
(e) “Highway” means a public highway, road, or street that is open for public travel and includes bridges, sidewalks, trailways, crosswalks, and culverts on the highway. The term highway does not include alleys, trees, and utility poles.
Haliw v Sterling Hts, 464 Mich 297 (2001).
8 MacLachlan v Capital Area Transportation Auth, 474 Mich 1059 (2006).
Buckner v City of Lansing, 274 Mich App 672, 673 (2007). The Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court’s denial of the city’s motion for summary disposition with regard to the second complaint on the basis that “plaintiffs came forward with insufficient evidence to establish a genuine issue of fact regarding whether the alleged defect in the city’s sidewalk proximately caused the accident at issue.” Id.
Ostroth v Warren Regency GP, LLC, 474 Mich 36, 40(2006).
Cowles v Bank West, 476 Mich 1,13 (2006).
MCL 691.1401 et seq.
Ross v Consumers Power Co (On Rehearing), 420 Mich 567, 595 (1984).
The five statutory exceptions axe: (1) the highway exception, MCL 691.1402; (2) the motor-vehicle exception, MCL 691.1405; (3) the public-building exception, MCL 691.1406; (4) the proprietary-function exception, MCL 691.1413; and (5) the governmental-hospital exception, MCL 691.1407(4).
MCL 691.1402(1). Justice Makkman insists, ante at 1244, that our decision in Nawrocki limited the duty to keep a highway “in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel” only to keep a highway that is designed for vehicular travel “in reasonable repair.” That statement is correct, and I joined the majority’s decision in that respect. However, the discussion of duty in Nawrocki was limited to the facts presented in that case, which specifically concerned an injury sustained as a result of a county’s failure to maintain a highway designed for vehicular travel.
The present case is distinguishable not only because it concerned a city’s failure to maintain a sidewalk, but also because it concerned a city’s duty with respect to the creation of an unnatural accumulation of snow on a city sidewalk. As we noted in Nawrocki, supra at 176, the duty of the state and county road commissions to keep a highway “in reasonable repair” “is significantly limited, extending ‘only to the improved portion of the highway designed for vehicular travel.’ ” (Emphasis in original.) The reason this duty is limited in such fashion is that the state and county governmental agencies do not have as broad a duty as other governmental agencies (that broader duty extending not just to highways designed for vehicular travel, but also to bridges, sidewalks, trailways, crosswalks, and culverts, MCL 691.1401[e]) because the fourth sentence of MCL 690.1402(1) limits the state and the counties to a duty to repair
16 Nawrocki, supra at 168-170 (emphasis added).
MCL 691.1402(1).
19 Nawrocki, supra at 172 n 28 (emphasis added).
MCL 691.1401(e).
Haliw, supra at 309 n 9.
22 Id. at 312 (emphasis added).
23 MacLachlan v Capital Area Trans Auth, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, decided January 20, 2005 (Docket No. 252221), pp 5-6 (emphasis added; citations omitted).
Id., citing Skogman v Chippewa Co Rd Comm, 221 Mich App 351, 354 (1997).
MacLachlan, 474 Mich at 1059.
Jones v Enertel, Inc, 467 Mich 266 (2002).
27 Jones, supra at 268-269 (emphasis added).
MCL 691.1402(1)
Skogman, supra at 354 (emphasis added).
Kowalczyk v Bailey, 379 Mich 568, 572 (1967).
Hampton v Master Products, Inc, 84 Mich App 767 (1978). Justice Markman, ante at 1245, questions my reliance on cases that preceded the enactment of the GTLA; however, the fact that there are pre-GTLA cases establishing a duty by cities to maintain sidewalks in a condition that is safe for public travel and that a post-GTLA case cites pre-GTLA cases provides even stronger evidence that the enactment of the GTLA in no way abrogated the existing duty of a city to maintain a sidewalk in a condition that is safe for public travel. Had such duty been abrogated, the Hampton Court would not have cited a pre-GTLA case that made reference to the continued existence of such a duty.
36 Id. at 772-773.
Johnson v City of Marquette, 154 Mich 50 (1908).
38 Id. at 53.
39 Id. at 57.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring).
I concur with the order. I write separately only to respond to several arguments in Justice Weaver’s dissent, which have the potential to mislead future litigants and which seek to replace the policy determinations of the Legislature, as explained in Nawrocki v Macomb Co Rd Comm, 463 Mich 143 (2000), with those of Justice Weaver.
The central proposition of Justice Weaver’s dissent is that, under MCL 691.1402(1), municipalities have a “statutory duty to maintain [a] highway ‘in reasonable repair and in a condition reasonably safe and fit for travel.’ ” Post at 1246. However, Nawrocki (a decision in which Justice Weaver joined) quite clearly explains that the duty established under the first sentence of MCL 691.1402(1) is limited to keeping the highway “in reasonable repair”:
The first sentence of the statutory clause, crucial in determining the scope of the highway exception, describes the basic duly imposed on all governmental agencies, including the state, having jurisdiction over any highway: “[to] maintain the highway in reasonable repair so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel.” This sentence establishes the duty to keep the highway in reasonable repair. The phrase “so that it is reasonably safe and convenient for public travel” refers to the duty to maintain and repair. The plain language of this phrase thus states the desired outcome of reasonably repairing and maintaining the highway; it does not establish a second duty to keep the highway “reasonably safe.” [Nawrocki, supra at 160.]
Justice Weaver’s dissent then goes to extraordinary lengths to distinguish Haliw v Sterling Hts, 464 Mich 297 (2001), noting that Haliw involved a natural accumulation of snow, unlike the instant case.
After distinguishing Haliw on the facts, Justice Weaver’s dissent then relies on several cases to support its contention that a plaintiff may recover for an injury that arises from an unnatural accumulation of ice and snow. What Justice Weaver’s dissent fails to acknowledge is that two of these cases — Kowalczyk v Bailey, 379 Mich 568 (1967), and Johnson v City of Marquette, 154 Mich 50 (1908) — did not involve the application of the governmental tort liability act (GTLA), MCL 691.1401 et seq., which was enacted in 1964. Although the third case cited by the dissent, Hampton v Master Products, Inc, 84 Mich App 767 (1978), did refer to the GTLA, Hampton relied on Kowalczyk, a pre-GTLA case, to conclude that an unnatural accumulation could permit recovery. Accordingly, Justice Weaver’s reliance on these cases is misplaced because all of them have been superseded with the 1964 enactment of the GTLA, which was the subject of thorough interpretation in Nawrocki.
Justice Weaver’s dissent rightly notes that the facts of this case are extremely tragic. However, the question before this Court is not how to ensure that plaintiffs obtain a recovery; rather, we must determine whether, under the laws of our state, a recovery has been authorized against a municipality under the present circumstances. For under our laws, “[i]t is well settled” that a municipality is generally “immune from tort liability while engaging in a governmental function unless an
To reach its result, Justice Weaver’s dissent transforms Nawrocki, irrelevantly distinguishes Haliw, and relies upon opinions long since superseded by new statutes. Most significantly, it accords unnatural meanings to the words of the law. Although I too have harbored concerns about the impact of our state’s governmental immunity law, see, e.g., Reid v Detroit, 474 Mich 1116 (2006); Ewing v Detroit, 468 Mich 886 (2003), any solution must lie in legislative amendment, not in the revision of statutory law by this Court.
Nawrocki further clarified a municipality’s duty: “ ‘The duty to repair would generally limit the government’s liability to cases in which there are defects.’ ” Nawrocki, supra at 177 n 32 (citation omitted). This Court has repeatedly equated the duty to “repair” with a duty to fix “defects.” Nawrocki, supra at 158; Haliw v Sterling Hts, 464 Mich 297, 309 n 9 (2001); see also Teufel v Watkins, 267 Mich App 425, 429 n 1 (2005) (“The plain meaning of ‘reasonable repair’ as used in MCL 554.139(1)(b) requires repair of a defect in the premises. Accumulation of snow and ice is not a defect in the premises.”).
Justice Weaver’s dissent also expends a great deal of effort distinguishing MacLachlan v Capital Area Transp Auth, 474 Mich 1059 (2006). Given that the majority’s order never cites MacLachlan, I am unsure why Justice WEAVER believes it necessary to do so. The order is a simple and straightforward application of Nawrocki.
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