Condemarin v. University Hospital

775 P.2d 348, 107 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1989 Utah LEXIS 37, 1989 WL 46294
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1989
Docket20602
StatusPublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 775 P.2d 348 (Condemarin v. University Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Condemarin v. University Hospital, 775 P.2d 348, 107 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1989 Utah LEXIS 37, 1989 WL 46294 (Utah 1989).

Opinions

DURHAM, Justice:

This case raises important questions of first impression regarding the Utah Governmental Immunity Act. Utah Code Ann. §§ 63-30-1 to -38 (1986 & Supp.1988). It comes to us on an interlocutory appeal from the denial of plaintiffs’ motion for a summary judgment striking certain provisions of the Act as unconstitutional.1

The following facts were undisputed in the trial court. Plaintiff Crelia Condema-rin, who was pregnant with her second child, went to Cottonwood Hospital in the early morning of May 19, 1982, after several hours of labor and a suspected premature rupture of membranes. Because her treating physician anticipated a high risk delivery, she was transferred on his orders to the University Hospital in Salt Lake City. Plaintiff Leonel Condemarin was born at the University Hospital that same day after an emergency caesarean section. Attending physicians concluded that he suffered fetal distress and was “severely asphyxiated” at birth, which resulted in “severe neurologic damage,” including impairments of hearing, sight, and ability to be fed, as well as a seizure disorder and spas-ticity.

[349]*349The minor plaintiff’s treating physician believes that the child will have a normal life span as a severely retarded and handicapped person. He believes there is little doubt that plaintiffs physical and mental defects are related to the asphyxia at the time of his birth. It is likely that the cost of medical and custodial care related to the severe neurologic disorder of Leonel Condemarin in its various aspects will greatly exceed the sum of $100,000.

Each of the individual defendants in this action and each person who provided care to plaintiffs at the University Hospital during the labor and delivery was an employee of the University Hospital or the University of Utah and was acting as such at the time in question.

I. Governmental Immunity and Hospitals

It is appropriate at this time in the evolution of the doctrine of governmental immunity to remind ourselves of its origins. In the 1961 case of Muskopf v. Coming Hospital District, 55 Cal.2d 211, 359 P.2d 457, 11 Cal.Rptr. 89 (1961), Justice Traynor detailed the history of the rule:

The shifting fortune of the rule of governmental immunity as applied to hospitals is illustrative of the history of the rule itself. From the beginning there has been misstatement, confusion, and retraction. At the earliest common law the doctrine of “sovereign immunity” did not produce the harsh results it does today. It was a rule that allowed substantial relief. It began as the personal prerogative of the king, gained impetus from sixteenth century metaphysical concepts, may have been based on the misreading of an ancient maxim, and only rarely had the effect of completely denying compensation. How it became in the United States the basis for a rule that the federal and state governments did not have to answer for their torts has been called “one of the mysteries of legal evolution.” Borchard, Governmental Responsibility in Tort, 34 Yale L.J., 1, 4.
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None of the reasons for its continuance can withstand analysis. No one defends total governmental immunity. In fact, it does not exist. It has become riddled with exceptions, both legislative ... and judicial ..., and the exceptions operate so illogically as to cause serious inequality. Some who are injured by governmental agencies can recover, others cannot: one injured while attending a community theater in a public park may recover {Rhodes v. City of Palo Alto, 100 Cal.App.2d 336, 341-342, 223 P.2d 639), but one injured in a children’s playground may not {Farrell v. City of Long Beach, 132 Cal.App.2d 818, 819-920, 283 P.2d 296); for torts committed in the course of a “governmental function” there is no liability, unless the tort be classified as a nuisance {Phillips v. City of Pasadena, 27 Cal.2d 104, 106, 162 P.2d 625). The illogical and inequitable extreme is reached in this case: we are asked to affirm a rule that denies recovery to one injured in a county or hospital district hospital, although recovery may be had by one injured in a city and county hospital. Beard v. City and County of San Francisco, 79 Cal.App.2d 753, 755-768, 180 P.2d 744.

Id. at 214-215, 216, 359 P.2d at 458-59, 460, 11 Cal.Rptr. at 90-91, 92 (citations omitted).

Immunity from liability existed as a matter of common law in Utah for government entities engaging in governmental, as opposed to proprietary, activities. See Ramirez v. Ogden City, 3 Utah 2d 102, 104, 279 P.2d 463, 464 (1955), and cases cited therein. Section 63-30-3 of the Utah Governmental Immunity Act, effective July 1, 1966, provides for governmental immunity, unless waived, for “all governmental entities ... for any injury which results from the exercise of a governmental function, governmentally-owned hospital ... and from an approved ... professional health care clinical training program conducted in either public or private facilities.”

After the passage of the Act, this Court applied the traditional “governmental/proprietary” test until Standiford v. Salt Lake City Corp., 605 P.2d 1230 (Utah [350]*3501980). In that case, this Court rejected the test:

Originally, the proprietary-governmental distinction was created as a device to limit the harsh results produced by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. The doctrine operated on the basis that a public entity should be liable for the torts it committed in the exercise of a proprietary function but not for those committed in the exercise of a governmental function. See Gillmor v. Salt Lake City, 32 Utah 180, 89 P. 714 (1907); Sehy v. Salt Lake City, 41 Utah 535, 126 P. 691 (1912); Alder v. Salt Lake City, 64 Utah 568, 231 P. 1102 (1924); Rollow v. Ogden City, 66 Utah 475, 243 P. 791 (1926); Niblock v. Salt Lake City, 100 Utah 573, 111 P.2d 800 (1941). The distinction is, however, “one of the most unsatisfactory known to the law,” Davis, Administrative Law, Ch. 9, “Tort Liability of Governments and of Officers,” at 179.
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Clearly, factors which may lead to such contrary and unpredictable results do not provide an adequate test upon which governmental agencies can rely in planning their budgets and providing for their tort liability, whether by way of insurance coverage or otherwise.

Id. at 1233, 1235 (citation omitted). Stan-diford set forth a new standard for determining governmental immunity under section 63-30-3: “whether the activity under consideration is of such a unique nature that it can only be performed by a governmental agency or ... it is essential to the core of governmental activity.” Id. at 1236-37.

Under the Utah Governmental Immunity Act, immunity is specifically waived for all government entities (1) as to contractual obligations, (2) as to actions involving real and personal property, (3) for negligent operation of nonemergency motor vehicles, (4) for defective highways, bridges, and other structures, and (5) for nonlatent defective conditions in public buildings and structures. Utah Code Ann.

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Bluebook (online)
775 P.2d 348, 107 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1989 Utah LEXIS 37, 1989 WL 46294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condemarin-v-university-hospital-utah-1989.