Myoung Ma v. State

45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 180, 1993 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Claims of Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 1993
DocketNo. 87-CC-4140
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 180 (Myoung Ma v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Claims of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myoung Ma v. State, 45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 180, 1993 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 150 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER

JANN, J.

The Claimants filed their complaint in the Court of Claims on June 17, 1987. Claimants allege that the State was negligent in constructing and maintaining a pipe system on the campus of Western Illinois University so close to a children s play area that it became a dangerous condition. Claimants further allege the State failed to warn residents of the danger. Claimant, Ji Wong Ma, fell off the pipe while playing on the pipe and suffered a skull fracture. The Claimants seek damages of $100,000 per Claimant.

A hearing was held before the commissioner on October 8 and 9,1991. Both parties filed briefs.

THE FACTS

Claimants, Myoung Ma and Bok Soon Ma, are the parents of Claimant, Ji Wong Ma, who was bom on June 8, 1983. Ji Wong Ma was injured on January 14, 1987, when he fell from a pipe on the campus of Western Illinois University. At the time of the accident, Ji Wong Ma was three years and seven months old. Myoung Ma was a student at Western Illinois University and Bok Soon Ma was a homemaker. At the time of the trial, Ji Wong Ma was eight years old and he was attending school in the third grade. The Mas lived in an apartment in East Village which is an apartment complex on the Western Illinois University campus. Outside the apartment is a childrens play area. Down the hill from the play area is a grassy, woody area with heating pipes above the ground.

On January 14, 1987, Ji Ma and his brother, Il Ma, and three other Korean children were playing on the playground near the residence of their parents. At the time of the accident, Il Ma was five years old. Il Ma testified he does not clearly remember the accident. Of the five children playing, Il Ma was the oldest. Initially, the boys’ mother, Bok Soon Ma, was with the children on the playground sitting at a picnic table with two friends. When Myoung Ma came home for lunch, Bok Soon Ma went inside her apartment at East Village.

After Bok Soon went inside, the children headed down the hill for the pipes at the bottom of the hill. Two adults remained sitting at a picnic table at the time of the accident. These adults could not see the pipes from the table where they were sitting. All of the children had been playing on the pipes before the Claimant fell from a pipe.

Ji Wong Ma was the first child to climb out on the pipe. Il Ma testified he thought it was dangerous. He was scared of the pipe and had told his brother to stay on the lower parts. Ji Wong Ma crawled out on the pipe and fell off upside down. Ji Wong Ma fell from the second bend in the pipe. The pipes come out of the side of the hill on the ground and are held above the ground by a suspension system.

II Ma did not see his brother fall. The other childrens yelling caused him to turn and he saw his brother was already on the ground. After Ji Wong Ma fell, the other children started running towards their home at East Village. II Ma said a black man carried Ji Wong Ma to the Ravine Room between Washington and Lincoln dormitories. The other children led the man to the apartment of Myoung and Bok Soon Ma.

Ji Wong Ma fell from a steam pipe at a height of about seven feet and hit his head on a solid object, which was likely a part of the structure itself, causing an open depressed slmll fracture. The structure was constructed by Respondent approximately 21 years before the date of the fall, and remained substantially the same from the time of construction until the date of the accident. East Village was in existence prior to the construction of the pipe structure and has been used for married student housing since it was built. From the time that the pipe structure was constructed until 1971, there was a creek running under the pipe structure.

The Claimants had moved into East Village approximately six months prior to the date of the accident. Myoung Ma had been in the United States less than four years, while Bok Soon Ma and Ji Wong Ma had been in the United States approximately six months. On the date of the accident, Bok Soon Ma and Ji Wong Ma spoke practically no English, while Myoung Mas English was not fluent.

Claimants, Myoung Ma and Bok Soon Ma, both testified that they knew of the pipes. The children had played outside daily for five to six months on an average of one to two hours. Bok Soon Ma had observed the pipes prior to the accident. Bok Soon Ma knew that her children had played on the pipes once while they were walking. Claimants, Bok Soon Ma and Myoung Ma, the parents, were in their apartment at East Village at the time of the fall. They had been inside for 20 minutes before the man came to the door to inform them of the accident.

In addition to the children being unsupervised by Claimants, Bok Soon Ma and Myoung Ma, on the date of the accident, Officer Gene Clark of the university police testified that he had observed Ji Wong Ma playing unsupervised in Sherman Hall in December of 1986. At that time, there were three to five children who were also unsupervised. Sherman Hall is three blocks from East Village where Claimants resided.

Officer Clark, who had worked at the university for 13V2 years, was the public safety officer who responded to a radio call of an injured child in the Ravine Room between the Lincoln and Washington dormitories on the date in question. When he arrived, Ji Wong Ma was walking around. He was agitated and would not let the officer get close to him until his father arrived. Officer Clark offered to take the whole family to the hospital. They declined. The Mas took Ji Wong Ma to the Macomb Hospital. After some initial treatment, Ji Wong Ma was taken to the Peoria Hospital. He was in the hospital for seven to eight days. The medical bills which arose out of that treatment exceed $8,100. Ji Wong Ma suffered a depressed skull fracture when he fell. He had one focal seizure after the fall.

As a result of the accident, Ji Wong Ma has a scar on the right side of his head near the back which is in a comma shape. This scar is not visible. Both medical doctors testified there was no permanent injury to Ji Wong Ma in their respective depositions.

Ji Wong Ma was eight years old and in the third grade at the time of the trial. He makes good grades and participates in numerous physical activities that boys his age would normally participate in.

There was no evidence presented that Respondent had knowledge that young children habitually frequented the vicinity around the pipes. Additionally, the testimony from numerous witnesses was that there had been no previous accidents on the pipes.

Officer Clark had worked at Western Illinois University as a public safety officer for 13% years. He had also been an emergency medical aid technician since 1982. Officer Clark testified he knew of no other accidents on the pipes during his 13% years on the force. Likewise, George Goehner who worked for the university for 23 years in a number of positions with the housing and physical plant departments also testified he had no official or personal knowledge of children being injured while playing in the vicinity of the pipes.

Respondents witnesses, E. F. Raymond and Carol Homell, searched the safety and police reports. They did not find any reports of children playing on the pipes or injuries arising therefrom. E. F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Ill. Ct. Cl. 180, 1993 Ill. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myoung-ma-v-state-ilclaimsct-1993.