Barnecut v. Seattle School District No. 1

389 P.2d 904, 63 Wash. 2d 905, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 561
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1964
Docket36451
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 389 P.2d 904 (Barnecut v. Seattle School District No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnecut v. Seattle School District No. 1, 389 P.2d 904, 63 Wash. 2d 905, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 561 (Wash. 1964).

Opinion

*906 Finley, J.

This is an action for .damages for personal injuries. The claimant, Mr. Barnecut, was a spectator at a baseball game played on the Hiawatha playfield. It is significant that the Hiawatha playfield is a public playground owned by the City of Seattle. While he was sitting in the stand (near the third base area), Mr. Barnecut was struck on the left side of his face by a baseball thrown by a member of one of the high school teams. The individual who threw the ball was not participating in the game at the time, but was “warming up” near third base. Mr. Barne-cut’s upper full-plate denture was broken into three pieces; his mouth and face were cut through; and, subsequently, he allegedly suffered severe pain and swelling in his mouth, jaw and face. The lawsuit for the resultant injuries against the school district was based on the theory of negligence; namely, that the school district had not exercised proper care in supervising the activity or conduct of the students relative to the baseball game.

The trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground that the action was barred by the provisions of ROW 28.58-.030, which confer a special immunity from tort liability upon school districts as follows:

“No action shall be brought or maintained against any school district or its officers for any noncontractual acts or omission of such district, its agents, officers or employees, relating to any park, playground, or field house, athletic apparatus or appliance, or manual training equipment, whether situated in or about any schoolhouse or elsewhere, owned, operated or maintained by such school district.” (Italics ours.)

The sole question before the court in this appeal is whether the factual pattern respecting plaintiff’s claim for relief invokes the provisions of RCW 28.58.030, thereby conferring its statutory tort immunity upon the school district and barring plaintiff’s claim for damages. Stated another way, the question is whether Mr. Barnecut’s claim for his injuries is an action against the school district for a tort — that is, negligence “relating to any . . . athletic apparatus Or appliance . . . owned, operated or main *907 tained by such school district . . ,”; 1 or, perhaps more definitively, whether a baseball is an “athletic apparatus or appliance.”

In attempting to resolve this latter question it seems desirable to consider the above-quoted statute, RCW 28.58.030, in the light of two decisions of this court: Snowden v. Kittitas Cy. School Dist. No. 401 (1951), 38 Wn. (2d) 691, 231 P. (2d) 621; and Briscoe v. School Dist. No. 123, Grays Harbor Cy. (1949), 32 Wn. (2d) 353, 201 P. (2d) 697.

The appellant herein contends that the facts in Briscoe are sufficiently analogous to the instant case that Briscoe is controlling, and should have resulted in a denial of immunity for the School District in the instant case, and thus should have prevented the trial judge from dismissing the complaint with prejudice.

On the other hand, the respondent urges that Snowden broadly defines the words “athletic apparatus or appliance,” and indirectly or by inference overrules Briscoe and supports the result reached by the trial court in the instant case.

We can agree with respondent that some of the language used in Snowden does appear to define the word appliance and the word apparatus somewhat broadly. But, essentially, the definition was for the purpose of the decision therein, and the language involved related to the particular facts of the Snowden case. In Snowden a small child, while walking across the school playfield, was injured when a baseball backstop collapsed. “Every allegation of negligence and all the testimony in support of such allegations directly or indirectly pertained, or had reference, to the con *908 dition or use of the backstop.” (Snowden, supra, p. 698.) In determining whether the backstop was an athletic apparatus or appliance within the contemplation of the special immunity statute, the court, in Snowden, cited and even quoted Briscoe with approval. This reliance upon Briscoe, coupled with the factual distinctions between Snowden and Briscoe, clearly leads us to reject the respondent’s reasoning and the argument that Snowden, inferentially or sub silentio, overruled Briscoe.

Factually, in Briscoe a school child was injured during a school recess period while playing “keep-away” with a football supplied by the school. The question of whether a football was an “athletic apparatus or appliance” within the contemplation of the special immunity statute was resolved by the court as follows:

“In making a determination of this question, we note, first, that in a broad, general sense, a football might be considered to be an athletic apparatus or appliance. When, however, the relation of the words used, as to each other, and the text of the statute as a whole are carefully studied, we .think that the most reasonable interpretation of what the legislature intended by the words ‘athletic apparatus or appliance’ is that it had reference to some sort of more or less permanently located equipment, such as swings, slides, traveling rings, teeter boards, chinning bars, etc., and not something as highly mobile as a football. The words ‘situated,’ ‘operated,’ and ‘maintained,’ as they are used in the statute in reference to ‘athletic apparatus or appliance,’ lend credence to this interpretation, for it is certainly incorrect to refer to a football as being ‘situated in or about any schoolhouse or elsewhere, owned, operated or maintained by such school district.’ ”

The key significance of the above-quoted statement from Briscoe is that in defining the phrase, “athletic apparatus or appliance,” the court emphasized that those words connoted more or less permanently located equipment and not something as highly mobile as a football. Although a baseball differs somewhat from a football in terms of size and other physical attributes, it would seem incongruous to classify it differently in relation to the *909 special immunity statute. Consistent with the reasoning in Briscoe, a baseball certainly can be said to be highly mobile, as opposed to “some sort of more or less permanently located equipment, such as swings, slides, traveling rings, teeter boards,” etc. We are not persuaded that the decision has been overruled, directly or impliedly, or that it should be overruled explicitly. Briscoe

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 P.2d 904, 63 Wash. 2d 905, 1964 Wash. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnecut-v-seattle-school-district-no-1-wash-1964.