Beard v. Viene

1992 OK 28, 826 P.2d 990, 63 O.B.A.J. 605, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 31, 1992 WL 32836
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 25, 1992
Docket77023
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1992 OK 28 (Beard v. Viene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Viene, 1992 OK 28, 826 P.2d 990, 63 O.B.A.J. 605, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 31, 1992 WL 32836 (Okla. 1992).

Opinion

OP ALA, Chief Justice.

The United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma certified for this court’s answer the following question posed pursuant to the Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, 20 O.S.1981 §§ 1601 et seq.: Whether, as a matter of interstate comity, the State of Oklahoma will recognize and enforce a limitation on the tort liability of a municipality of a sister state pursuant to the law of that sister state, when the limitation on tort liability to be recognized and enforced is identical in amount to the limitation of tort liability for Oklahoma municipalities imposed under Oklahoma law?

As qualified by our analysis below, we answer in the affirmative and hold that, under the principle of comity, Oklahoma will recognize a limitation on the municipal tort liability of a sister state.

ANATOMY OF FEDERAL LITIGATION

The plaintiffs, Jo Anne Beard and Bradley C. Brockman [Beard and Brockman], are citizens and residents of the State of Illinois. The defendant, the City of Kansas City, Missouri [Kansas City], is a municipal corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the State of Missouri. And the defendant, Donna Marie Viene [Viene], was an employee of Kansas City through its Parks and Recreation Department. While in a vehicle owned by Beard and operated by Brockman on March 5, 1989, Beard and Brockman were injured in an automobile collision with Viene who, in the course of her employment, was driving a vehicle owned by Kansas City. The collision occurred on the Will Rogers Turnpike in Ottawa County, Oklahoma, near mile marker 328.4, approximately 15.4 miles east of the City of Miami, Oklahoma. Beard and Brockman commenced separate actions in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, which were later transferred to the Northern District of Oklahoma and consolidated. Kansas City sought a “partial summary judgment” asserting that (1) as shown by Mo.Rev.Stat. *992 § 537.600, 1 the State of Missouri adheres to the doctrine of governmental tort immunity; (2) by the terms of Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.-600(1), the immunity of the political subdivisions of the State of Missouri is waived, except to the extent provided for in Mo. Rev.Stat. § 537.610, 2 which limits recovery for tort liability arising out of a single transaction involving the negligent operation of a motor vehicle by an employee in the course of their employment, to the statutory maximum of $100,000.00 per person; (3) Oklahoma’s Governmental Tort Claims Act 3 contains a similar limitation on the *993 tort liability of its political subdivisions; and (4) because the State of Oklahoma recognizes a limitation on municipal tort liability and inasmuch as Kansas City is a defendant in an adjudicative proceeding in the State of Oklahoma, the principle of comity dictates that Oklahoma recognize the limitation on the municipal tort liability of Kansas City by precluding recovery in excess of Missouri’s statutory maximum.

ANALYSIS, DISCUSSION AND ANSWER

At the outset, we encounter certain se-mantical difficulties in the language of the certified question. 4 First, the statutory limitations on municipal tort liability in Oklahoma and Missouri are not identical. Title 51 O.S.Supp.1988 § 154(A)(1) establishes a $25,000.00 cap on the recoverability by any one person for property damage arising out of a single transaction. 5 In addition, 51 O.S.Supp.1988 § 154(A)(2) establishes a $100,000.00 cap on the recovera-bility by any one person for bodily injuries arising out of a single transaction. 6 These two provisions operate to provide a maximum recoverable tort liability of $125,-000.00 by any one person. This is in contradistinction to the maximum recoverable tort liability (for property and bodily damage) of $100,000.00 under the applicable Missouri statutes. 7

Second, in the context in which they are used, the terms “recognize” and “enforce” appear ambiguous. At one level of discourse, the term “recognize” assumes the existence of a dispositive rule of law that is both valid and applicable. At the other level, the term “recognize” denotes not merely an assumption that there exists a dispositive rule of law, but an inquiry into whether a normative rule of law in fact exists and is applicable to a particular dispute, which in this instance would necessitate a substantial examination into the content of Missouri law, needlessly embroiling this court in the merits of the parties’ action. 8 Against this latter interpretation, we narrowly construe the term “recognize” to assume, without deciding, the dispositive character of the limitation on the municipal tort liability of Kansas City in the State of Missouri. 9

As a juristic concept, enforcement is an exercise of power concomitant with sovereignty. But the term “enforce” also implies that a foreign rule of law is capable of being enforced in the courts of a second, distinct sovereign power. While this statement merely recognizes the well-settled rule that the courts of a sovereign state may enforce the laws of another sovereign *994 state, 10 such a rule is inapplicable as an analytical foundation for an answer to the posited question. Rather, the conceptual predicate is one of respecting the “limitations on ... [Missouri’s] statutory waiver of its immunity from suit.” 11 In the courts of Oklahoma, this respect is afforded and applied solely, if at all, as a matter of comity. The characterization of applying a limitation on the municipal tort liability of a sister state under principles of comity as “enforcement” is simply inapposite.

The question certified for our answer presents a matter of relatively recent development in American jurisprudence. 12 Where nearly every state has to some extent waived the traditional doctrine of sovereign immunity in its own courts to permit recovery for governmental torts, the “privilege of immunity” afforded in the courts of sister states has been brought to forefront, 13 implicating in the process the very fundaments of “Our Federalism.” Ultimately, the resolution of this question reposes in the interstices of the common-law principle of comity, contemporary approaches to conflict-of-laws analysis, and the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution. 14

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Bluebook (online)
1992 OK 28, 826 P.2d 990, 63 O.B.A.J. 605, 1992 Okla. LEXIS 31, 1992 WL 32836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-viene-okla-1992.