Maxwell v. Independent School District Number Thirty-Two of Okfuskee County

672 P.2d 1179
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 9, 1983
Docket58569
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 672 P.2d 1179 (Maxwell v. Independent School District Number Thirty-Two of Okfuskee County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maxwell v. Independent School District Number Thirty-Two of Okfuskee County, 672 P.2d 1179 (Okla. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

ROBINSON, Judge:

Appellants filed suit on October 15, 1981, against the Appellees, alleging that in early *1180 March, 1981, Appellant Kelly Joe Maxwell suffered injuries to both knees when Appel-lee David Bosler, a teacher at Graham School, negligently overturned a desk which struck the minor Appellant. Appellees filed a Motion for Summary Judgment alleging that Appellants had failed to comply with 51 O.S. 1981 § 156(B) 1 of the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act (Act), which requires written notice of any claim within 120 days after the loss. It is undisputed that the first written notice Appellees received was on September 15,1981, and that the date of the injuries was in early March, 1981. Appellants filed their response to Appellees’ Motion for Summary Judgment alleging substantial compliance with § 156(B). The trial court sustained Appel-lees’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the basis that Appellants failed either actually or substantially to give the required statutory notice of a claim. Appellants appeal that decision.

Appellants assert that the trial court erred in sustaining Appellees’ Motion for Summary Judgment since substantial questions of fact existed concerning whether Appellants had substantially complied with § 156(B).

Appellant Kelly Joe Maxwell testified that he told the school counselor and the superintendent about the desk incident and that he was “hurt”, on the same day such incident occurred. Appellant Gloretta Maxwell, Kelly Joe’s mother, testified that she told the school principal about the incident on March 23 or 24, 1981. She also testified that she told the vice president of the school board about the incident some time around Mother’s Day of 1981. Kelly Joe’s sister testified that she told the school district superintendent “that Kelly was in the hospital and that Mr. Bosler had dumped his desk over on Kelly’s knees and messed them up somehow.”

Appellants rely on the cases of Reirdon v. Wilburton Board of Education, 611 P.2d 239 (Okl.1980) and Duesterhaus v. City of Edmond, 634 P.2d 720 (Okl.1981) in support of their contention that they substantially complied with § 156(B). We find, however, that these two cases are distinguishable from the case presently before us. Both Reirdon and Duesterhaus stand for the proposition that strict compliance with the notice provisions of the Act is not required where the governing body has not been prejudiced. In Reirdon, the Court stated:

The object of the statute must be kept in mind, and it should not be given a construction which will defeat the ends of justice. Statutory notice is intended to give the defendant notice concerning the claim of injury at an early date to enable it an opportunity to prepare a defense.

In Duesterhaus, the Court stated:

Actual notice to a superintendent, foreman, or manager will excuse the failure to give timely formal notice where the employer has not been prejudiced... . The purposes of the notice provisions of the act are to further legitimate municipal interests by promoting prompt investigation; providing the opportunity to repair any dangerous condition and for speedy and amicable settlement of meritorious claims; and to prepare to meet possible fiscal liabilities.

In Reirdon, notice was approved on the basis that approximately thirty days after the injury, the injured child’s mother’s lawyer mailed a letter to the school teacher, claiming that he had negligently administered corporal punishment to her son and that she intended to file suit against him and the Wilburton School Board because of her son’s injuries. A copy of the letter was sent to the president of the Wilburton School Board and this letter was discussed in a board meeting.

Notice was approved in Duesterhaus on the basis that the municipal counselor had been notified of the loss and claim shortly after it occurred and had engaged in settle *1181 ment negotiations with the plaintiff. In the cause now before the Court, there was no actual notice of a claim for monetary redress as a result of the desk incident until written notice was received by Appellees on September 15, 1981, some five and one-half months after the incident. Making a written claim for relief to a school board by letter, as in Reirdon, and an oral claim for relief to a city’s municipal counselor, as in Duesterhaus, both shortly after a loss or injury occurs, is clearly distinguishable from oral statements by Appellants that a' particular incident occurred which “hurt” Appellant. We hold that in this case there has not been substantial compliance with the notice provision. Although school officials may have had actual knowledge of the injury, such knowledge was not notice of a claim for monetary relief as a result of the desk incident and thus denied the school district the opportunity to promptly investigate and quickly settle the claim, if meritorious.

Two recent decisions support our conclusion. Johns v. Wynnewood School Board of Education, 656 P.2d 248 (Okl.1982) involved a certified question from the United States District Court for'the Western District of Oklahoma. The certified question dealt with whether the time limitations of § 156 applied to a minor. In the discussion of the case, the Supreme Court noted that the federal trial court had ruled “that the fact the School Board was aware of the injury did not supplant the formal notice provisions of the Act inasmuch as actual knowledge of the injury inflicted was not notice in and of itself that the injured parties intended to seek monetary redress as a result of the incident.” While the Supreme Court did not uphold or comment upon the federal trial court’s ruling, we are persuaded by, and are in agreement with, its ruling. The Supreme Court in Graves v. Willard Rose, Independent District # 80 and State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 54 O.B.J. (Vol. 54—No. 19) 1278 further interpreted the notice provisions of the Act. In Graves, the Appellant claimed substantial compliance with the notice provision because an accident report was filed and the school was notified of a traffic collision. The Court distinguished notice of the accident from a claim for relief and affirmed the trial court’s sustention of a Motion for Summary Judgment. The Court said:

In this regard, notice of the claim for relief must be distinguished from the notice of a traffic collision (or other tort). There is no showing made of actual knowledge to a managerial party of the claim asserted here....

In the present case, notice of the desk incident and injury caused thereby can also be distinguished from notice of a claim for monetary compensation as a result of the incident.

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Bluebook (online)
672 P.2d 1179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-independent-school-district-number-thirty-two-of-okfuskee-county-oklacivapp-1983.