City of Oklahoma City v. Moore

1971 OK 144, 491 P.2d 273
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 23, 1971
Docket43435
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1971 OK 144 (City of Oklahoma City v. Moore) 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
City of Oklahoma City v. Moore, 1971 OK 144, 491 P.2d 273 (Okla. 1971).

Opinion

HODGES, Justice.

Plaintiff recovered a judgment upon a jury verdict against the City of Oklahoma City for personal injuries received in a fall when the water meter lid she stepped on gave way causing her to fall into the water meter box. The defendant Oklahoma City appeals.

Plaintiff, a welfare department worker, was calling upon a client in Oklahoma City on Tuesday, August 23, 1966, at approximately 7:45 A.M. She parked her car in a parking lot across the street from where the client lived, crossed the street and started across the parking between the curb and the sidewalk when she stepped on a water meter lid and fell into the meter box causing her permanent personal injuries. Plaintiff filed suit against the City of Oklahoma City without first making a claim against the City through the City Council.

Defendant raises the following issues for reversal of the judgment of the trial court: The Governmental Tort Liability Act of 1965, 11 O.S.Supp., 1965, Section 1751 et seq. bars or limits the recovery of the plaintiff ; trial court refused to submit defendant’s theory of defense to jury in that property where accident occurred was private property and plaintiff failed to prove the element of hidden danger involved; plaintiff relied on a presumption which runs backward in time which is error; plaintiff bases an action in negligence on an infer *275 ence of negligence predicated on an inference which is error; and plaintiff failed to overcome the presumption that the city water meter reader properly performed his duty.

The evidence showed that the water meter was installed and maintained by the defendant. That on Monday, August 22, 1966, the day before the accident occurred an employee of the defendant read the water meter at approximately 9 A.M. To read the meter which is located beneath the ground in a box, it is necessary to remove the lid by a special key which unlocks and allows removal of the approximately 18 pound iron metal lid.

The testimony also revealed that city water meter readers are not the only persons who have access to the type of keys which unlock the lid. License Plumbers usually carry a key which will allow unlocking and lifting of the meter lids, and any individual may purchase one from a hardware store. It was shown that a common coat hanger may be used if bent properly to unlock and remove the water meter lids.

The evidence further showed that if the meter lid is properly secured it will not only sustain the weight of an adult but will also hold the weight of a car. The water meter in question is located between the curb and the sidewalk and is in close proximity to both.

In their first proposition City contends that plaintiff’s cause of action, if any, is governed by the Governmental Tort Liability Act of 1965, before its amendment in 1968. The Act provides for a limited tort liability of cities with a population in excess of two hundred thousand. They argue the Act bars or limits the recovery of the plaintiff in the following aspects: (1) the Act covers all tortious acts committed by municipalities or their employees regardless of whether the function is governmental or proprietary; (2) that plaintiff failed to give the City written notice of her claim within thirty days after being injured as required by the Act; (3) the Act changes and replaces the common law definition of “governmental function” in regard to water systems so that plaintiff’s cause of action, if any, arose out of a governmental function.

In a recent opinion in Oklahoma City v. Prieto, Okl., 482 P.2d 919 (1971), we held the Act is limited to tort liability caused by negligence “when engaged in a governmental function”, and that those portions of the Act purporting to extend it to municipal liability arising from proprietary functions are not within the title to the Act, and are unconstitutional and void. A later amendment to the Act in 11 O.S.Supp. 1968, 1753, while not controlling in the present case as plaintiff’s cause of action arose prior thereto, did follow the conclusion reached in the Prieto case and specifically limited the provisions of the Act to tort liability of municipalities arising out of a governmental function, with a further proviso that the intent of the Act was not to extend or restrict claims arising out of proprietary functions of municipalities. Even before the amendment, it clearly appears that the legislature intended to enlarge the area of tort liability rather than restrict it. The Act provides for suit against a municipality in the additional area of a governmental function, with certain exemptions and limits, which heretofore did not exist.

City also argues, alternatively, that if the Act is only applicable to “governmental functions” then the function the City was engaging in when plaintiff was injured was a governmental function under the provisions of the Act defining “governmental function”, 11 O.S.Supp. 1965, 1752. This section defined “governmental function” as:

“All functions of State Government and all functions of municipalities which are imposed by law, or tend to promote or serve the general health, safety and welfare of the public.”

and defined proprietary function as:

“All functions of municipalities that are not governmental functions.”

*276 There is no question that prior to the adoption of the Governmental Tort Liability Act that a claim arising out of a negligent act committed by a City in the operation of its waterworks, as in the present case, was considered a proprietary function and in the exercise of such function the City is governed largely by the same rules as are applicable to private corporations. Cox v. City of Cushing, Okl., 309 P.2d 1079 (1957); City of Oklahoma City v. Hoke, 75 Okl. 211, 182 P. 692 (1919) ; Town of Hallett v. Stephens, 125 Okl. 157, 256 P. 921 (1927).

City argues, however, that those cases predated the Act in question and are not in point since the legislature had not previously acted to define governmental and proprietary functions. They argue that now since the legislature has defined the terms that our court is governed by their definition, and that under the legislative definition the operation of a waterworks by a City is a governmental function on which plaintiff’s cause of action must be predicated.

We do not believe it was the intent of the legislature to change or replace the standards or tests heretofore made by case law and judicial decisions in determining the distinctions between governmental and proprietary functions. As mentioned before, the intent of the legislature in enacting the Tort Liability Act was to expand the responsibility of cities over 200,000 for tort liability in governmental functions. The purpose of the Act was not to limit or restrict tort liability of cities in proprietary functions. Under plaintiff’s theory almost all activities could be classed as governmental, which would be an important departure from our existing law. Assuming arguendo, the power of the legislature to change the standards or tests governing what is a governmental or proprietary function, we do not believe the legislature would enact such vital legislation without specifically expressing or declaring such an intent.

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Bluebook (online)
1971 OK 144, 491 P.2d 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-oklahoma-city-v-moore-okla-1971.