Gregg Mehlberger v. Johnson County, Iowa
This text of Gregg Mehlberger v. Johnson County, Iowa (Gregg Mehlberger v. Johnson County, Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 14-0927 Filed March 11, 2015
GREGG MEHLBERGER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
JOHNSON COUNTY, IOWA, Defendant-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Stephen B. Jackson
Jr., Judge.
Plaintiff appeals dismissal of his claim on grounds municipal defendant
possessed statutory immunity from such claim. AFFIRMED.
Pete Leehey and Anthony J. Olson of Pete Leehey Law Firm, P.C., Cedar
Rapids, for appellant.
Sasha L. Monthei of Sheldrup Blades Schrock Smith P.C., Cedar Rapids,
for appellee.
Considered by Mullins, P.J., and Bower and McDonald, JJ. 2
MCDONALD, J.
Gregg Mehlberger filed suit against Johnson County arising out of a
motorcycle accident allegedly caused by the county’s negligence. Following a
bench trial, the district court concluded the county was immune from liability
based on the theory of the case and evidence presented at trial. Mehlberger
timely filed this appeal. Our standard of review is for correction of errors at law.
See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. We will not set aside a bench trial decision unless it
was induced by an error at law. See Evans v. Benson, 731 N.W.2d 395, 397
(Iowa 2007).
I.
The following facts are supported by substantial evidence. During the
week preceding June 19, 2010, a Johnson County maintenance crew replaced a
culvert under a section of Sugar Bottom Road. During construction, the county
placed “road closed” barricades near the culvert and “road closed” signs at other
points along the roadway prior to entry into the construction zone. By June 18,
the maintenance crew had replaced the culvert and restored the affected
roadway by laying a recycled asphalt surface as the compacted aggregate base
support structure of the road. The county planned to place a final seal on the
roadway at a later date when it was doing similar work on other roadways.
Although the final seal had not been applied, the Johnson County Secondary
Road Department determined the road was sufficiently sealed and compacted to
be safe. The county removed the road closed barricades and road closed signs 3
and reopened Sugar Bottom Road to traffic. No different signage was placed,
erected, or installed near the completed construction upon the road reopening.
On June 19, Plaintiff Gregg Mehlberger and a group of friends were
motorcycling in Johnson County. As Mehlberger approached the curve in Sugar
Bottom Road near the completed construction, he lost control of his bike on loose
gravel. The loose gravel caused Mehlberger’s motorcycle to slide out from
underneath him and caused Mehlberger to slide on the road into the ditch head
first. Mehlberger was taken by ambulance to the emergency room, where
doctors cleaned out dirt and rocks embedded in his arm. It is not disputed that
the quality of the road surface changed near the construction area.
Mehlberger filed this suit against the county. In his third amended petition,
Mehlberger alleged the county was negligent in the following particulars: (a)
creating a dangerous condition by not completing the road work promptly; (b)
failing to warn of the incomplete road work and presence of gravel/mud; and (c)
removing the barriers closing the portion of Sugar Bottom Road before the
roadwork was completed. The county filed two motions for summary judgment,
asserting various statutory immunities. The district court denied both motions for
summary judgment. The matter was tried to the court in March 2014. Based on
the theory of the case and evidence presented at trial, the district court found and
concluded the county was immune from liability pursuant to Iowa Code section
668.10 (2009). 4
II.
As a general rule, a municipality possesses statutory immunity for any
cause of action arising out of the municipality’s failure “to place, erect, or install a
stop sign, traffic control device, or other regulatory sign.” Iowa Code
§ 668.10(1)(a). The statutory immunity extends to Johnson County. See Iowa
Code § 670.12(2) (defining a “municipality” as including a “county”). “However,
once a regulatory device has been placed, created, or installed, the . . .
municipality may be assigned a percentage of fault for its failure to maintain the
device.” Id.
Mehlberger frames the question on appeal as one of statutory
construction. He contends the county does not have statutory immunity here
because the county’s decision to remove the road closed barricades and road
closed signs after completing construction is a “failure to maintain” within the
meaning of section 668.10. In support of his argument, Mehlberger notes a
common definition of “maintain” is “to continue; carry on; to preserve or keep in a
given existing condition.” The American Heritage Dictionary 757 (2d. ed. 1982).
We conclude Mehlberger has not correctly framed the issue on appeal.
At trial, the evidence showed the county placed road closed barricades on
the roadway during construction. The evidence also showed the county placed
road closed signs at other points along the roadway during construction. When
the county completed the culvert replacement and restoration of the roadway, the
county removed the road closed barricades and the road closed signs.
Mehlberger’s expert testified that he did not “have a problem with [the county] 5
reopening the road.” He did not testify that the county should have “maintained”
the road closed barricades or road closed signs upon reopening Sugar Bottom
Road. Indeed, it would not make any sense to “maintain” road closed barricades
and signs when the roadway was no longer closed. Instead, Mehlberger’s expert
testified that, upon opening the road, the county should have placed or installed
different signage to warn motorists of the change in the surface conditions in the
road. The district court seized upon this distinction, concluding “by Mehlberger’s
own expert’s testimony, this is not a case concerning maintenance of road signs
but, rather, a question of failure to place, erect, or install a warning sign. No
evidence demonstrated that the ‘road closed’ signs should have remained
posted.” The district court concluded the case, as actually tried to the court, fell
squarely within the statutory immunity provision of section 668.10(1).
We agree with the district court’s findings and conclusions based on the
case as it was actually tried to the district court. Mehlberger’s claim is not that
the road closed barricades and signs should have been “maintained” after the
road was open. His real claim, as evidenced at trial, is that new and different
signs should have been placed to warn motorists of the danger presented by the
new road surface when the road was reopened. The claim actually presented
clearly arises out of the municipality’s failure “to place, erect, or install” signage
and is barred by Iowa Code section 668.10(1)(a). See Saunders v. Dallas Cnty.,
420 N.W.2d 468, 472 (Iowa 1988) (“No matter how the challenged county activity
is defined or labeled, it comes down to a choice of whether or where to place
signs.
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