Rhoads Et Ux. v. Lancaster Park. Auth.

520 A.2d 122, 103 Pa. Commw. 303, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1883
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 22, 1987
DocketAppeal, 32 T. D. 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 520 A.2d 122 (Rhoads Et Ux. v. Lancaster Park. Auth.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhoads Et Ux. v. Lancaster Park. Auth., 520 A.2d 122, 103 Pa. Commw. 303, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1883 (Pa. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion by Judge Doyle,

This is an appeal by Daniel Rhoads and Mary Rhoads from two orders of the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County granting summary judgment to Appellees, Lancaster Parking Authority and the City of Lancaster. We affirm.

In late 1966 and early 1967, the Lancaster Parking Authority (Authority) was organized pursuant to the Parking Authority Law. 1 The Authority owns the Prince Street Parking Garage in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, which it leases to the City of Lancaster (City) and in turn, staffs and operates the garage pursuant to a management contract with the City. It is alleged that on September 11, 1981 at around 2:30 in the afternoon, three shabbily dressed, intoxicated men walked up the driving ramp into the parking garage. They were no *305 ticed by James Bandy, one of the garage attendants. He yelled at them not to walk up the automobile ramp. The men responded with obscenities and continued on their way. Mr. Bandy informed James Painter, the garage manager, of the presence of the three men. Mr. Painter looked up the ramp for the men, saw nothing, and returned to the ticket booth at the garages exit.

Shortly, thereafter, between 2:40 p.m. and 2:42 p.m., Mr. Rhoads drove his vehicle into the parking garage, received his parking ticket and proceeded to the fifth level of the garage. At about this time, a patron of the garage reported to Mr. Bandy and Mr. Painter that three men were on the fifth level of the garage causing a disturbance. As Mr. Rhoads parked his car, he was accosted by the three men who forced Mr. Rhoads into the back seat of his vehicle. Two of the assailants held him down, while the third occupied the drivers seat. Meanwhile, Mr. Painter proceeded by elevator to the fifth level to investigate the disturbance. He found nothing because the assailants were driving the Rhoads’ car out of the garage.

While leaving the garage in Mr. Rhoads’ automobile, the assailants hit a concrete barrier. They handed Mr. Rhoads’ parking ticket to Mr. Bandy. At this time, Mr. Bandy noticed two people in the back of the Rhoads’ vehicle wrestling and “carrying on.” Mr. Rhoads’ vehicle left the garage at 2:46, four minutes after it had entered. At no time did Mr. Bandy hit the “panic button” located in his ticket booth to summon the police. Subsequently, Mr. Rhoads was blindfolded, bound, and then repeatedly beaten and stabbed by the three assailants. Mr. Rhoads was eventually thrown down a 50-foot embankment and left for dead. His vehicle was later found in the Richmond, Virginia area. In the three years prior to the Rhoads incident, there had been some petty vandalism and car burglaries in the garage but no assaults or any other violent crimes on the premises.

*306 Appellants filed their complaint on June 1, 1982, alleging that the City and the Authority jointly or severally owned, possessed, maintained or controlled the Prince Street Garage; that Mr. Rhoads was a business invitee of the Appellees; that Appellees had notice of criminal activity in the garage and this assault in particular; and that Appellees negligently failed to provide adequate security for its patrons on its premises.

After extensive discovery, the trial court granted summary judgment on September 13, 1984 in favor of the City, on the ground that it had governmental immunity, and could not be sued under the “real property” exception of Section 8542(b)(3) of the Judicial Code (Code) 2 because it had relinquished the care, custody and control of the garage to the Authority. On September 24, 1984, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the Authority on the grounds that it was a local agency and the criminal assault upon Daniel Rhoads by third parties on the Authority’s premises also did not fall within the “real property” exception to governmental immunity.

Appellants appealed both orders to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, which transferred the cases to this Court. Appellants present three issues for our consideration on appeal: (1) whether the Authority is a local agency under Section 8541 of the Code 3 and therefore entitled to immunity, (2) whether the proprietary function exception to common law governmental immunity survived the statutory enactment of governmental immunity; 4 and (3) whether Appellants’ action falls within the “real property” exception to governmental immunity

*307 The Authority as a Local Agency

Section 8541 of the Code provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this subchapter, no local agency shall be liable for any damages on account of any injury to a person or property caused by any act of the local agency or an employee thereof or of any other person.” “Local agency” is defined in Section 8501 of the Code 5 as “[a] government unit other than the Commonwealth government. This term includes an intermediate unit.” Since “government unit” is not defined in Chapter 85 6 (the chapter of the Code dealing with sovereign and governmental immunity), we turn to Section 102, the general definitional section of the Code, for guidance. 7 A “governmental unit” is defined there in relevant part as “[t]he General Assembly and its officers and agencies, [and] any government agency. . . .” Section 102 further defines “Government agency” as “[a]ny Commonwealth agency or any political subdivision or municipal or other local authority. . . * Reading these definitions in pari materia, it is clear that the Authority is a local authority under Section 102, and hence a “local agency” under Section 8541.

*308 This conclusion is in accord with E-Z Parks, Inc, v. Larson, 91 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 600, 498 A.2d 1364 (1985), aff'd per curiam, 509 Pa. 496, 503 A.2d 931 (1986), where the issue was the alleged tortious interference with a lease, and wherein we stated that parking authorities are local agencies for the purposes of Section 8541 of the Code. In E-Z Parks, we wrote that parking authorities, which are public bodies, corporate and politic that exercise public power as an agent of the Commonwealth, clearly meet the definition of a local agency in Section 8501. Id. at 609, 498 A.2d at 1369.

Appellants strongly urge that parking authorities do not come within the definition of “local agency” set forth in Section 8501 of the Code, that is, “[a] government unit other than the Commonwealth government,” and present two arguments in support of this contention. First, they argue that when the Code was enacted in 1980, which enactment included the definition of “local agency,” the legislature intended to exclude municipal authorities from the definition. Their argument is that the previous statutory governmental immunity law, viz,

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Bluebook (online)
520 A.2d 122, 103 Pa. Commw. 303, 1987 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 1883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhoads-et-ux-v-lancaster-park-auth-pacommwct-1987.