Mustain v. Grand River Dam Authority

2003 OK 43, 68 P.3d 991, 2003 WL 1908220
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 7, 2003
Docket96,056
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 2003 OK 43 (Mustain v. Grand River Dam Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mustain v. Grand River Dam Authority, 2003 OK 43, 68 P.3d 991, 2003 WL 1908220 (Okla. 2003).

Opinion

OPALA, V.C.J.

T1 The certiorari quest presses for our decision two questions: (1) Does the Grand River Dam Authority's collection of commercial-and private-dock permit fees and miscellaneous rents constitute "commercial activity" which would except it from the immunity otherwise extended by the Recreational Land Use Act? (2) Does the Governmental Tort Claims Act's protection extend to the Grand River Dam Authority? We answer the first question in the negative and the second in the affirmative.

I.

ANATOMY OF THE LITIGATION

T2 Robin Mustain (plaintiff/appellant) sustained severe bodily injuries when the personal water craft (water eraft 2 ) on which she was a passenger struck a support structure of an abandoned railroad bridge situated in the main channel of Grand Lake. The accident occurred at approximately 8:45 p.m. on July 12, 1998. Mustain was one of three individuals aboard the craft operated by David Grandin. According to witnesses, Grandin was piloting the water craft, weaving it back and forth between the support columns of an abandoned railroad bridge at dusk, when he struck a concrete cross-bar which spanned the distance between two vertical support structures. The cross-bar stood approximately three-and-a-half feet above the water. As a result of the accident the other passenger was killed. Mustain and Grandin sustained serious injuries.

13 The bridge at issue in today's controversy is over ninety-five years old. It was left uncompleted when a dam was built to impound the waters of the Grand River to create a source for producing hydroelectric power. The bridge and portions of the support structure (including the cross bar which was struck) were visible above the water line. The structure bore no markings or warnings. Mustain produced an affidavit from a maritime safety expert which states the bridge structure constitutes a navigational hazard and should have been marked and lighted in accordance with federal regulations. She also relied on evidentiary material to show that the Authority generated miscellaneous rent income attributable to its operation of the lake and permit fees for commercial and private docks on the lake. Mustain does not claim nor did she produce probative material to show that she or Grandin were charged a fee for using the lake or that the Authority *993 charges user fees. The Authority contends it is prohibited from charging such fees. 3

{4 Mustain seeks recovery from Grandin, 4 operator of the water craft, and from the Grand River Dam Authority (Authority), who owns and operates the lake. She bases her first theory of recovery on what we will refer to as the "commercial-activity exception" to the immunity otherwise afforded the Authority by the Recreational Land Use Act (RLUA). 5 Her petition alleges the Authority, despite having actual knowledge of the dangers posed by the bridge and notice of defects associated with the structure, consciously chose to disregard these dangers and refused to take steps to rectify the alleged dangerous condition or provide warnings of the danger. These actions, she asserts, constitute "deliberate, willful or malicious" conduct as this phrase is used in § 18301-315(E) 6 and operate to strip the Authority of the protection otherwise afforded by the RLUA.

T5 The Authority moved to dismiss the action claiming (1) the suit is time-barred by the statute of repose, 7 (2) the Authority's collection of commercial- and private-dock permit fees and miscellaneous rents does not constitute "commercial activity" within the meaning of the RLUA and hence it is not stripped of its immunity shield, and (8) the Authority's conduct does not rise to the level of deliberate, willful, or malicious and hence its actions do not deprive it of the RLUA's protection; 8 but even if they did, the provisions of the Governmental Tort Claims Act (GTCA) 9 apply here to exempt it from civil liability.

*994 T6 The trial court sustained the Authority's motion to dismiss. 10 It ruled (1) the statute of repose operates to bar Mustain's claim, and (2) the Authority's profit-related activities are unrelated to the bridge and hence not the type of commercial endeavor that deprives the Authority of the RLUA-conferred immunity. Mustain appealed.

T7 Treating the nisi prius order as summary adjudication, the Court of Civil Appeals (COCA) affirmed the trial court's disposition. 11 COCA agreed with the trial court's ruling that the Authority's profit-related activities, demonstrated by the evidentiary materials, do not operate to bring the Authority within the statute's commercial-activity exception. With regard to Mustain's other theory of liability-that the Authority's actions amounted to deliberate, willful or malicious conduct and hence lie outside the protections afforded by the RLUA-COCA noted the legislature had declared the Authority to function as a state agency and held that it falls under the protection of the GTCA. Any liability the Authority may bear under the other theory is barred by the GTCA.

IL

STANDARD OF REVIEW FOR SUMMARY PROCESS

18 We agree with COCA that the trial court's disposition stood effected by summary process. Summary process is a procedural pretrial device for the prompt and efficient disposition of an action sans forensic combat. 12 It is available where the moving party shows there is no substantial controversy over applicable facts that are material to its defense and any inference which may be reasonably drawn from undisputed facts tendered must be construed in the moving party's favor. 13 Once the moving party has made the required showing, the adverse party must then assume the burden of demonstrating the existence of a material fact that would justify a trial. 14 Summary relief issues stand before us for de novo review. 15

HL

A.

THE RULE IN HUGHEY-THAT COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY UNRELATED TO LAND/WATER USE BY INVITED GUESTS IS NOT A BAR TO § 1301-315 IMMUNITY-APPLIES TO TODAY'S CONTROVERSY.

T9 Mustain's certiorari challenges COCA's holding that the Authority's commercial activities here in question are not of the type that bring it within the RLUA's commercial-activity exception and stand outside the immunity protection otherwise afforded by that Act. She contends that its activities-the col *995 lection of dock-permit fees and miscellaneous rents-are to be likened to those present in Boyd v. U.S. ex rel. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 16

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 OK 43, 68 P.3d 991, 2003 WL 1908220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mustain-v-grand-river-dam-authority-okla-2003.