City of Montgomery v. Mary Ann Patterson.

80 So. 3d 264, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 127, 2011 WL 1902217
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedMay 20, 2011
Docket2090960
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 So. 3d 264 (City of Montgomery v. Mary Ann Patterson.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Montgomery v. Mary Ann Patterson., 80 So. 3d 264, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 127, 2011 WL 1902217 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

PITTMAN, Judge.

The City of Montgomery (“the City”) appeals from a judgment, entered after an ore tenus proceeding, of the Montgomery Circuit Court entered in favor of the plaintiff, Mary Ann Patterson, in her civil action against the City in which she asserted a single negligence claim; the trial court ruled that the plaintiff should recover $35,500 from the City, a damages amount placing the City’s appeal within this court’s exclusive appellate jurisdiction under Ala. Code 1975, § 12-3-10. We reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for the entry of a judgment dismissing the plaintiffs action.

The plaintiff sued the City in November 2008, alleging in her complaint that she had been injured while attending a football game in November 2006 that had been played at a football stadium operated by the City, Cramton Bowl; the complaint further alleged that, while the plaintiff was standing in a concession-stand line at that facility on the date in question, an overhead window covering collapsed, striking her head. The plaintiff also averred in her complaint that her injuries were the result of the City’s negligence and that she had filed a verified claim with the City in February 2007 for compensation therefor.1 The City filed a motion to dismiss alleging that the plaintiffs complaint failed to state a claim, relying upon statutes limiting liability of owners of premises used for sporting or recreational purposes (see Ala.Code 1975, §§ 35-15-22 and 35-15-23); however, that motion was denied. The City then answered the complaint, asserting those statutes as affirmative defenses. The City thereafter moved for a summary judgment, again relying upon the recreational-use statutes; that motion was also denied.

The trial court then held an ore tenus proceeding on the merits of the plaintiffs claim. After the plaintiff had testified and her counsel had rested, the City, citing Ala.Code 1975, § 11-47-190, as well as the recreational-use statutes, orally sought a “directed verdict” (actually, orally requested the entry of a judgment on partial findings; see Rule 52(c), Ala. R. Civ. P., and Ragsdale v. Ragsdale, 991 So.2d 770, 772 & n. 1 (Ala.Civ.App.2008)) in its favor, asserting that the plaintiff had failed to show that any agent, officer, or employee in the line and scope of work for the City had acted in a negligent manner. The trial court denied the City’s request, and the City then presented its case. At the close of the trial, the City again raised the statutes it had cited in its request for a “directed verdict” as a basis for a judgment in its favor. The trial court thereafter rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, awarding her $35,500 in damages.

Because the application of Ala.Code 1975, § 11-47-190, is placed squarely in [266]*266issue by the parties, we quote from its pertinent portions at length:

“No city or town shall be liable for damages for injury done to or wrong suffered by any person or corporation, unless such injury or wrong was done or suffered through the neglect, carelessness, or unskillfulness of some agent, officer, or employee of the municipality engaged in work therefor and while acting in the line of his or her duty, or unless the said injury or wrong was done or suffered through the neglect or carelessness or failure to remedy some defect in the streets, alleys, public ways, or buildings after the same had been called to the attention of the council or other governing body or after the same had existed for such an unreasonable length of time as to raise a presumption of knowledge of such defect on the part of the council or other governing body....”

Speaking eight years after the incorporation of the predecessor of § 11-47-190 into the 1907 Alabama Code, Justice Thomas C. McClellan summarized the effect of the statute:

“By Code 1907, § 1273 [now codified at Ala.Code 1975, § 11-47-190], the liability of municipalities for damages for injuries done or suffered is limited to two distinct classes of negligent misconduct or omission, viz.: (a) Where the wrong done or suffered was the proximate result of culpable act or omission of some agent, officer, or employee engaged, within the line of his duty, in the municipality’s service; (b) where the wrong done or suffered was the proximate result of culpable municipal omission ‘to remedy some defect in the streets, alleys, public ways, or buildings, after the same (i.e., defect as defined) has been called to the attention of the council, or after the same (i.e., defect as defined) had existed for such unreasonable length of time as to raise a presumption of knowledge of such defect on the part of the council.’ ... In the first class (a) are wrongs or injuries resulting from negligence of agents, etc., of the municipality, consistent with the doctrine of [respondeat] superior; and in the second class (b) are wrong[s] or injuries for which the municipalities are only liable for culpable neglect to remedy a condition negligently created or made or allowed to exist by a person or corporation not related in service to the municipality — a stranger to the municipal service or function.”

City of Birmingham v. Carle, 191 Ala. 539, 541-42, 68 So. 22, 23 (1915); accord Ellison v. Town of Brookside, 481 So.2d 890, 891-92 (Ala.1985).

In attacking the correctness of the trial court’s judgment, the City asserts that liability could not properly attach under the first of the two statutory classes of liability because, the City says, the plaintiff failed to present evidence demonstrating that an agent, officer, or employee of the City, through negligence, carelessness, or unskillfulness, caused her injury so as to warrant application of the doctrine of re-spondeat superior. The City further asserts that liability could not properly attach under the second of the two statutory classes of liability because, the City says, the plaintiff failed to present evidence demonstrating that the City’s governing body had actual or constructive notice of the existence of a defective condition at Cramton Bowl. In response, the plaintiff contends that she adduced substantial evidence of the “negligence of [municipal] employees arising within the line and scope of their employment” (ie., conduct falling within the first statutory class of municipal liability); she then posits that because, in her view, the City or its em[267]*267ployees “affirmatively created the dangerous condition” so as to obviate the need for notice, the plaintiff was not required to demonstrate that the City had actual or constructive knowledge of a defect under the second prong. In other words, we do not perceive the plaintiff to contend that the City is liable under the second prong because of a failure to remedy a dangerous condition after having notice thereof; rather, we view the plaintiff as contending solely that the City is liable under principles of respondeat superior under the first prong.2

“The four well-known elements necessary for recovery in any negligence action are: (1) existence of a duty on the part of the defendant; (2) a breach of that duty; (3) existence of a causal relationship between the defendant’s conduct and the plaintiffs injury; and (4) a resulting injury to the plaintiff.” Chatman v. City of Prichard, 431 So.2d 532, 533 (Ala.1983). Because the plaintiff in this case sought to affix liability upon the City for the alleged conduct of one or more of the City’s alleged agents or employees,3

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Bluebook (online)
80 So. 3d 264, 2011 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 127, 2011 WL 1902217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-montgomery-v-mary-ann-patterson-alacivapp-2011.