OP ALA, Justice.
The question presented for our review is whether the time intervals prescribed in the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act [Act],
51 O.S. 1981 §§ 151 et seq., for bringing an action against a public trust or a municipal corporation that was acting in its proprietary capacity when the harm occurred violate the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the Due Process Clause in the U.S. and in the Oklahoma Constitution and whether these time intervals constitute special legislation that offends Art. 5 § 59, Okl.Const. We answer in the negative.
The plaintiff-appellant, Blanche Black [Black], alleged that on December 11, 1981 she slipped and fell at the Tulsa Intema-
tional Airport [Airport] in front of the ticket counter operated by Trans World Airlines, Inc. and that on December 27, 1981 she gave written notice to the Airport Director of her injury from that fall.
Black commenced the present action on December 9, 1983. Two of the defendants, City of Tulsa [City] and Tulsa Airports Improvement Trust [Trust], separately demurred to her petition. They alleged that Black had failed to bring the action within the time limit prescribed in the Act, 51 O.S. 1981 § 156(C),
and thus her claim against them was barred. After Black elected to stand on her petition, the district court rendered judgment for the City and the Trust.
Black asserts error in this judgment. She contends that the § 156(C) time period then in force was tainted with an infirmity because the statute of which it formed a part [1] violated Oklahoma’s constitutional prohibition against special legislation, Art. 5, § 59, Okl.Const.,
by including within its purview municipalities and public trusts when acting in a proprietary capacity and by excluding from its ambit unincorporated cities, townships or private-sector entities that perform the same function; [2] offended the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution (a) by providing a shorter time period for the commencement of a tort action against a public tortfeasor than that which was then applicable to private tort-feasors and (b) by impermissibly extending the statute’s provisions to public tort-feasors sued for an act or omission which occurred when the public entity was acting in the exercise of a proprietary function and [3] contravened the established notions of due process — state
and federal — by providing for an “intolerably short” limitation period for claims against public tortfeasors.
We recognize at the outset that there is a strong presumption which favors the constitutionality of legislative acts. The reviewing court will uphold the statute unless it is clearly, palpably and plainly inconsistent with our fundamental law.
Challenged statutes that differentiate in the treatment given to one group as compared with that accorded to another are commonly tested for constitutional validity by ascertaining whether [1] there has been a denial of equal protection in the federal-law sense, [2] there was a taking of property without due process of law within the meaning of both the state and the federal fundamental law and [3] the enactment is tainted by an impermissible special legislation in the state-law sense.
In
Reirdon v. Wilburton Board of
Education,
we upheld the constitutionality of the Act’s
notice
requirement. Classifications created by that provision were there the subject of an equal-protection
challenge.
We acknowledged in
Reirdon
that § 156 resulted in the establishment of
two different classes
of actionable tort claims — those against public entities and those against private actors. Applying to the statute the rational-basis test,
we declared that the dichotomous division of tort-feasors into private and public categories rests on a legitimate state interest and does not offend constitutional restrictions on the legislative use of classification criteria. We now reiterate our commitment to the teaching of
Reirdon.
Due process is typically invoked to assure that individual and property rights are not taken by governmental authority without notice and opportunity for hearing.
In the context of a statutory time bar, a
reasonable
interval of time does not offend the concept of due process.
A time limit for the commencement of an action will stand invalidated
only
if it denies the plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to initiate an action or if it unconstitutional
ly infringes on a person’s protected interests.
Section 156 allowed a plaintiff up to 13 months to file a petition following the occurrence of an injury.
Because this statutory limit does not appear unreasonable in length, we must decline Black’s invitation to declare it infirm as impermissibly abbreviated.
In an attack based on Oklahoma’s prohibition against the enactment of special legislation, the general gauge for measuring a statute’s constitutionality is the reasonableness of the classification and the uniformity of its operation.
The law need not be universal in its application and operate upon all persons in a like manner in order to be general under Art. 5, § 59, Okl.Const.
A classification is not infirm if the special class has some reasonable distinction from other subjects of a like general character, which distinction bears some reasonable relation to the legitimate objectives and purposes of the legislation.
There are real and vital distinctions that provide a rational basis for recognizing municipal tortfeasors as a special class.
By their very nature municipal corporations need not be placed in the same category as private corporations or natural persons. They are created for the benefit of the community as a whole, not for the financial gain of the individual citizens. No profit from their proprietary or corporate operations may find its way into the private pockets of the individual citizens, but all of its revenue is captured for the benefit of the public treasury. A legal controversy between an individual and a private corporation affects only the litigants but a controversy between an individual or private corporation and a municipality affects all taxpayers within the corporate limits of the municipality.
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OP ALA, Justice.
The question presented for our review is whether the time intervals prescribed in the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act [Act],
51 O.S. 1981 §§ 151 et seq., for bringing an action against a public trust or a municipal corporation that was acting in its proprietary capacity when the harm occurred violate the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution and the Due Process Clause in the U.S. and in the Oklahoma Constitution and whether these time intervals constitute special legislation that offends Art. 5 § 59, Okl.Const. We answer in the negative.
The plaintiff-appellant, Blanche Black [Black], alleged that on December 11, 1981 she slipped and fell at the Tulsa Intema-
tional Airport [Airport] in front of the ticket counter operated by Trans World Airlines, Inc. and that on December 27, 1981 she gave written notice to the Airport Director of her injury from that fall.
Black commenced the present action on December 9, 1983. Two of the defendants, City of Tulsa [City] and Tulsa Airports Improvement Trust [Trust], separately demurred to her petition. They alleged that Black had failed to bring the action within the time limit prescribed in the Act, 51 O.S. 1981 § 156(C),
and thus her claim against them was barred. After Black elected to stand on her petition, the district court rendered judgment for the City and the Trust.
Black asserts error in this judgment. She contends that the § 156(C) time period then in force was tainted with an infirmity because the statute of which it formed a part [1] violated Oklahoma’s constitutional prohibition against special legislation, Art. 5, § 59, Okl.Const.,
by including within its purview municipalities and public trusts when acting in a proprietary capacity and by excluding from its ambit unincorporated cities, townships or private-sector entities that perform the same function; [2] offended the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution (a) by providing a shorter time period for the commencement of a tort action against a public tortfeasor than that which was then applicable to private tort-feasors and (b) by impermissibly extending the statute’s provisions to public tort-feasors sued for an act or omission which occurred when the public entity was acting in the exercise of a proprietary function and [3] contravened the established notions of due process — state
and federal — by providing for an “intolerably short” limitation period for claims against public tortfeasors.
We recognize at the outset that there is a strong presumption which favors the constitutionality of legislative acts. The reviewing court will uphold the statute unless it is clearly, palpably and plainly inconsistent with our fundamental law.
Challenged statutes that differentiate in the treatment given to one group as compared with that accorded to another are commonly tested for constitutional validity by ascertaining whether [1] there has been a denial of equal protection in the federal-law sense, [2] there was a taking of property without due process of law within the meaning of both the state and the federal fundamental law and [3] the enactment is tainted by an impermissible special legislation in the state-law sense.
In
Reirdon v. Wilburton Board of
Education,
we upheld the constitutionality of the Act’s
notice
requirement. Classifications created by that provision were there the subject of an equal-protection
challenge.
We acknowledged in
Reirdon
that § 156 resulted in the establishment of
two different classes
of actionable tort claims — those against public entities and those against private actors. Applying to the statute the rational-basis test,
we declared that the dichotomous division of tort-feasors into private and public categories rests on a legitimate state interest and does not offend constitutional restrictions on the legislative use of classification criteria. We now reiterate our commitment to the teaching of
Reirdon.
Due process is typically invoked to assure that individual and property rights are not taken by governmental authority without notice and opportunity for hearing.
In the context of a statutory time bar, a
reasonable
interval of time does not offend the concept of due process.
A time limit for the commencement of an action will stand invalidated
only
if it denies the plaintiff a reasonable opportunity to initiate an action or if it unconstitutional
ly infringes on a person’s protected interests.
Section 156 allowed a plaintiff up to 13 months to file a petition following the occurrence of an injury.
Because this statutory limit does not appear unreasonable in length, we must decline Black’s invitation to declare it infirm as impermissibly abbreviated.
In an attack based on Oklahoma’s prohibition against the enactment of special legislation, the general gauge for measuring a statute’s constitutionality is the reasonableness of the classification and the uniformity of its operation.
The law need not be universal in its application and operate upon all persons in a like manner in order to be general under Art. 5, § 59, Okl.Const.
A classification is not infirm if the special class has some reasonable distinction from other subjects of a like general character, which distinction bears some reasonable relation to the legitimate objectives and purposes of the legislation.
There are real and vital distinctions that provide a rational basis for recognizing municipal tortfeasors as a special class.
By their very nature municipal corporations need not be placed in the same category as private corporations or natural persons. They are created for the benefit of the community as a whole, not for the financial gain of the individual citizens. No profit from their proprietary or corporate operations may find its way into the private pockets of the individual citizens, but all of its revenue is captured for the benefit of the public treasury. A legal controversy between an individual and a private corporation affects only the litigants but a controversy between an individual or private corporation and a municipality affects all taxpayers within the corporate limits of the municipality. Any judgment against a city is paid from its public treasury and, if the treasury is deficient, taxes must be levied to replenish it.
No
private party bears tort liability for injuries caused by defective or unsafe conditions of public highways or has exposure to liability for the injury-dealing conditions of public ways and public buildings.
The terms of 51 O.S. 1981 § 166 clearly provide that the Act governs
all torts
re
gardless of whether they occurred during the exercise of an affected entity’s governmental or proprietary function.
The intent of the legislature clearly was to eliminate pre-existing artificial barriers between two different municipal functions and to impose a
single
procedural regime with a
single
gauge of liability for
all
claims pressed against the government, no matter in what capacity the public agency may have acted at the time of the harmful event. To prescribe separate forms of court process and distinct measures of responsibility for different functions of the government would more likely perpetuate the confusion of yore than foster symmetry in the choice of constitutionally permissible criteria for legislative classification.
No offense was dealt the Equal Protection or the Due Process Clauses by requiring that suits against the government for tortious harm committed by its agents acting in either proprietary or governmental capacity stand subjected to the very same norms of liability. Moreover, in creating a separate class of public tortfeasors, the Act did not violate the state’s constitutional prohibition against special legislation because the classification used is reasonable for the attainment of a legitimate objective and operates uniformly upon all members of the class.
Judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
All the Justices concur.