Hansen v. City of Saint Paul

214 N.W.2d 346, 298 Minn. 205, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1463
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 18, 1974
Docket43671
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 214 N.W.2d 346 (Hansen v. City of Saint Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. City of Saint Paul, 214 N.W.2d 346, 298 Minn. 205, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1463 (Mich. 1974).

Opinion

0. Russell Olson, Justice. *

Plaintiffs appeal from an order for summary judgment 1 in favor of defendant city. The trial court concluded the city was immune from liability for the negligence alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint because of the discretionary function exception of Minn. St. 466.03, subd. 6. We reverse.

On a motion for summary judgment, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party — in this case, plaintiffs. Dempsey v. Jaroscak, 290 Minn. 405, 188 N. W. 2d 779 (1971); Sauter v. Sauter, 244 Minn. 482, 70 N. W. 2d 351 (1955).

Briefly, such view of the facts indicates the following: Two dogs attacked and bit plaintiff Ellen Hansen on a public sidewalk at 136 North Lexington Avenue in St. Paul on May 18,1971, at 12:45 p. m. The attack resulted in extensive injuries and 2 months’ hospitalization for Mrs. Hansen, a 59-year-old woman; seven reports of dog-biting, concerning the same dogs, had been *207 made to the city officials during the prior 13-month period; the city officials knew the two dogs were vicious and prone to make unprovoked attacks upon public sidewalk pedestrians; the appropriate city health officer had notified the owner of the dogs that the dogs qualified as vicious under the city ordinance and the city knew the owner of the dogs ignored its requests that the dogs should be controlled or destroyed, pursuant to city ordinance requirements; the most recent of the other attacks had occurred 2 hours earlier against another sidewalk pedestrian who was also severely bitten; she had immediately reported the attack to the appropriate city officials; in response to that report, two city officers made a field investigation in the forenoon and discovered that the dogs were still running at large. It was while the officials interrupted this field investigation for their lunch break that the dogs attacked the plaintiff.

The issues before the court are twofold: (1) Whether the municipality has committed a tort in permitting dogs known to be dangerous, vicious, and impoundable to prowl uncontrolled upon the public sidewalks in a residential area, and (2) if so, whether the city is immune from liability for such tort because of the discretionary-act exception embodied in Minn. St. 466.03, subd. 6.

I. Tort Mobility

On the first issue of whether the inaction by the city constitutes tortious conduct on its part under these circumstances, this state has no precedent in point.

Generally, Minnesota holds a municipality responsible for negligence in maintaining the safety of its street and sidewalk surfaces. While a municipality is not an insurer, it is obligated to discharge the duty to maintain safe streets and sidewalks, and it cannot delegate that duty to adjacent property owners. Loewe v. City of Le Sueur, 277 Minn. 94, 151 N. W. 2d 777 (1967). In some instances the adjacent property owner also may be liable for his contribution to the sidewalk condition. Loewe v. City of Le Sueur, swpra. The liability of the city is, however, limited to those cases where it has notice, actual or constructive, of the de *208 fective condition. Cleveland v. City of St. Paul, 18 Minn. 255 (279) (1872). See, also, Peterson, Governmental Responsibility for Torts in Minnesota, 26 Minn. L. Rev. 480.

Consistently, this court heretofore has limited municipal liability for unsafe streets and sidewalks to physical defects on the surface and obstructions on or above it; moving hazards have not been covered in the municipality’s obligation to maintain reasonably safe streets and sidewalks. In Luke v. City of Anoka, 277 Minn. 1, 151 N. W. 2d 429 (1967), this court recognized the validity of the well-established, safe-street (and safe-sidewalk) common-law rule and noted that the rule had evolved as an exception to the general doctrine of governmental immunity prevailing prior to the passage in 1963 of Minn. St. c. 466. We refused in Luke to extend the municipality’s liability for unsafe sidewalks and streets to include liability for failure to protect sidewalk and street pedestrians from a moving hazard — in that case, a runaway vehicle along a parade route. On the other hand, some New York cases allow recovery against a municipality under circumstances where the municipality has adequate notice of an inherently dangerous condition; when the duty is established and knowledge and foreseeability are shown of the inherently dangerous condition or situation, liability has been permitted. Smullen v. City of New York, 28 N. Y. 2d 66, 320 N. Y. S. 2d 19, 268 N. E. 2d 763 (1971). In Smullen, the court noted that municipal liability would not be found for failure to perform a general protective governmental function such as an inspector’s failure to ascertain a safety code violation. 2 However, in Smullen *209 the inspector negligently adjudged a trench to be safe and visually observed the decedent, knowing of and relying on the inspector’s approval, enter the trench; the trench was determined in the trial court to be an inherently dangerous condition.

Under the recited facts of the instant case, it is difficult reasonably to come to any other conclusion than that the two roaming dogs constituted a dangerous condition for public sidewalk pedestrians in the immediate area of 136 North Lexington Avenue. The city had notice and knowledge of that inherently dangerous condition. The failure of the city officials to respond in fact may be a reckless disregard of the safety of the public sidewalk pedestrians.

While the St. Paul city ordinances recited in the footnote herein 3 create a duty upon the city to apprehend dogs running *210 at large and also empowers the city to destroy vicious dogs, we turn rather to a limited extension of the municipality’s common-law duty to maintain streets and sidewalks as a basis for municipal liability for the moving hazard upon the public sidewalk created by prowling vicious dogs.

Under circumstances where (1) vicious dogs prowl the public sidewalks endangering the safety of pedestrians sufficiently to constitute an inherently dangerous condition, and (2) the appropriate and responsible municipal officials charged with dog im-poundment duties in the municipality (or, in the absence thereof, the duty of maintaining the safety of the public sidewalks and streets) clearly have knowledge of such described inherently dangerous condition, and (3) those officials have further knowledge that the dog’s owner or master fails in his duty to control or confine the vicious, dangerous dog, as the municipality by ordinance requires, and the dog’s master or owner consistently ignores directives from said officials to confine and control the dog, and (4) confinement and impoundment of the dog are reasonably capable of achievement, then the municipality is responsible in tort for permitting dogs known to be dangerous, vicious, and impoundable to prowl uncontrolled upon the public sidewalks. We so hold.

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Bluebook (online)
214 N.W.2d 346, 298 Minn. 205, 1974 Minn. LEXIS 1463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-city-of-saint-paul-minn-1974.