Fazzolari v. Portland School District No. 1J

734 P.2d 1326, 303 Or. 1
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1987
DocketTC A8212-07615; CA A34098; SC S32918
StatusPublished
Cited by409 cases

This text of 734 P.2d 1326 (Fazzolari v. Portland School District No. 1J) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fazzolari v. Portland School District No. 1J, 734 P.2d 1326, 303 Or. 1 (Or. 1987).

Opinion

*3 LINDE, J.

When plaintiff, then a 15-year-old high school student, was about to enter her school building a few minutes before 7:00 a.m. on May 21, 1982, an unknown assailant grabbed her from behind and dragged her to some nearby bushes, where he beat and raped her. In an action against the school district to recover damages for her injuries, plaintiff claimed that school administrators were negligent in failing to provide proper supervision of students on the school’s grounds during hours when the school was open to students, in failing to provide security personnel when district administrators knew of previous similar attacks and could have foreseen the danger of such attacks on students at plaintiffs school, in failing to warn students after similar attacks had been perpetrated in the area near the school and in failing to trim or remove bushes offering concealment to an assailant. The circuit court let the case go to trial but granted defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the end of plaintiffs evidence.

On plaintiffs appeal from the resulting judgment, the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case for a new trial. Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No. 1J, 78 Or App 608, 717 P2d 1210 (1986). The majority of the panel held that the trial court erred in ruling as a matter of law that a previous attack on a woman on the school grounds before school hours did not make the attack on plaintiff reasonably foreseeable. Presiding Judge Buttler dissented on grounds that the school district’s duty of due care to protect its students against foreseeable harm does not extend to times when a student is not engaged in recognized school activities. Fazzolari, supra, 78 Or App at 616, 618, 717 P2d 1210. We allowed the school district’s petition for review along with petitions in two other cases, also decided today, that involve similar issues. See Donaca v. Curry County, 303 Or 30, 734 P2d 1339 (1987), Kimbler v. Stillwell, 303 Or 23, 734 P2d 1344 (1987). In this case, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.

I. THE USES OF “DUTY”

The problem common to today’s cases is the relation of foreseeability and duty as elements of liability in negligence law. As Justice O’Connell observed in Stewart v. Jefferson Plywood Co., 255 Or 603, 607, 469 P2d 783 (1970), it is a *4 problem that has produced “a vast amount of legal literature” without leading to an agreed scholarly analysis. We review the evolution of this state’s approach to the problem in some detail before turning to the specifics of each case.

Foreseeability is a judgment about a course of events, a factual judgment that one often makes outside any legal context. It therefore ordinarily depends on the facts of a concrete situation and, if disputed, is decided as an issue of fact. “Duty” expresses the formal link between factual conduct and legal liability; its content must be located in the law, not in facts nor in morals, manners, or other values unless these are incorporated into law. When “duty” refers to legally obligatory conduct, it serves a person injured by noncompliance as a premise to claim a legal remedy; at other times the concept is invoked defensively to limit the reach of liability even though harm was caused by conduct falling short of a legal obligation. See e.g., Nylander v. State of Oregon, 292 Or 254, 257-58, 637 P2d 1286 (1981) (discussing “duty” as a legal premise to potential liability); cf. Thompson v. Weaver, 277 Or 299, 560 P2d 620 (1977)(discussing defensive use of “duty”). In either case, “duty” by definition appears as a legal issue and, if disputed, is decided by the court.

This neat division of issues is unproblematic when the substance and scope of a duty are found in legislation or in a particular common law source. But when the law (for instance negligence law) defines a duty by reference to the foreseeability of events, the questions who decides what, at which stage of litigation, and with what precedential effect become problematic, as today’s cases show. A rather extensive statement in this case seems preferable to fragmented conclusions in each of today’s opinions.

At the time the Oregon Territory adopted the “common law of England,” 1 the common law had no broad theory of liability for unintended harm resulting from a failure to take due care toward members of the public generally but only liability for harm resulting from negligent conduct in various callings and relationships. Men had particular duties but no general duty. See 3 Harper, James & Gray, The Law of Torts *5 107-114 (2d ed 1986)(citing other literature); Winfield, Duty in Tortious Negligence, 34 Colum L Rev 41 (1934). “Negligence,” “fault,” and “tort” also did not describe general theories of common-law liability in this country before the 1870s; the formula that liability followed generally from harm caused by breach of a duty of care gained currency only after 1880, stimulated in part by the theoretical writings of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. See White, Tort Law in America 12-19 (1980). 2 The first Oregon case reciting the formula was Kennedy v. Hawkins, 54 Or 164, 167, 102 P 733 (1909).

The elements of this formula met critical examination early in this century. Professor Francis H. Bohlen, who became the first reporter of the American Law Institute’s Restatement of Torts, offered this recapitulation of negligence law:

“* * * To constitute actionable negligence there must be: (1) A duty to the plaintiff to observe care. This depends upon the probability of injury if care be not taken. (2) A standard of care not observed (constituting the breach). This again depends upon the anticipation of probable danger. (3) Injury suffered in consequence. This, it is submitted, must be judged by the rules governing responsibility for the effect of a breach of any obligation imposed by law and not assumed voluntarily by the parties.” (Footnote omitted.)

Bohlen, The Probable or the Natural Consequence as the Test of Liability in Negligence (pt. 1), 40 Am L Register (n.s.) 79, 86 (1901), reprinted in Bohlen, Studies in the Law of Torts 9-10 (1926). In this summary statement, foreseeability of harm to another defined both duty and its breach, which seems redundant. 3 Professor Winfield, in the article already cited, ques *6 tioned whethér “duty” served any necessary or useful function in common-law negligence cases, noting that it had entered the formula through decisions denying recovery because suppliers of defective equipment had breached duties to someone other than plaintiff, a fateful non sequitur. 4

Nonetheless, the “duty” concept was retained in negligence law.

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Bluebook (online)
734 P.2d 1326, 303 Or. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fazzolari-v-portland-school-district-no-1j-or-1987.