Robinson v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority

676 A.2d 471, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 89, 1996 WL 288465
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1996
Docket94-CV-1474
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 676 A.2d 471 (Robinson v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, 676 A.2d 471, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 89, 1996 WL 288465 (D.C. 1996).

Opinions

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

This appeal is from the grant of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict in a suit by plaintiff-appellant against appellee Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) alleging negligence by a WMATA Metrorail station manager in failing to intervene while witnessing a criminal assault on plaintiff Rebecca Robinson by a third person. The jury found negligence and awarded Ms. Robinson and her husband damages. The trial judge set aside the verdict on WMATA’s post-trial motion for judgment, concluding that while the jury reasonably could have found the station manager negligent in failing to summon the WMATA transit police or other law enforcement officers, there was no evidence that the police could have arrived within the at most two-minute time frame of the assault and prevented Ms. Robinson’s injuries;1 and that no other duty was imposed by the WMATA regulations. Similarly, the judge ruled that the jury had “only unguided speculation as a basis for concluding ... that the station manager could have safely interrupted the robbery on his own” by physical or verbal intervention. The judge therefore concluded that appellants had failed as a matter of law to prove proximate causation.

On appeal, appellants effectively concede that a call to the police could not have yielded a response in time to prevent or reduce Ms. Robinson’s injuries. They argue, instead, that the station manager had discretion under WMATA’s rules and standard procedures to take other measures such as commanding the assailant to stop or simply approaching the area of the assault in uniform (making “his uniformed presence ... known,” in appellants’ characterization). And they argue that the jury had sufficient facts on which to find that intervention of this sort would have cut short the assault and prevented Ms. Robinson’s injuries.

We hold, with the trial judge, that the only duty owed by the station manager to Ms. [473]*473Robinson was to notify immediately the transit police or similar officers, not to intervene physically or by words in the assault, and that as a matter of law the breach of that duty did not proximately cause Ms. Robinson’s injuries. We therefore sustain the grant of judgment for WMATA without considering the alternative ground relied on by the judge.

I.

The relevant facts are not disputed. WMATA concedes (as it did below) that the jury reasonably could have found that Ms. Robinson was assaulted for a period of up to two minutes in a Metrorail station; and that all or part of her struggle with the assailant as he sought to steal her purse and threw her to the ground was seen or at least heard by station manager Barlow (Ms. Robinson claimed she screamed throughout the struggle). The jury further could have found that Barlow did not summon the transit police or other authorities, or leave his kiosk during the assault. He was 62 years old at the time; according to both his and Ms. Robinson’s testimony, the assailant appeared to be in his 20’s. Barlow was trained in passenger safety but not law enforcement, negotiating with criminals or weapons use. He did not carry a weapon as part of his uniform as station manager.

Alan Brown, Assistant Superintendent of WMATA’s Office of Rail Transportation, was responsible for training and supervision of Metrorail employees. He testified about the written Metrorail rules and standard operating procedures applicable to criminal acts of third persons. As Brown pointed out at trial, these rules prohibit “physical intervention” by a station manager to stop criminal behavior. And while they do not explicitly bar verbal intervention (“sounding some type of alarm or warning or making [the manager’s] presence known” to the criminal), this action would be an improper response, he testified, because it could cause panic in the station and other unwanted consequences. Under WMATA’s rules and procedures, according to Brown, the proper response by a station manager witnessing a crime in progress is to notify the transit police or other authorities immediately.

II.

WMATA’s liability in tort for the acts of its agents is restricted to conduct that implements or carries out those “quasi-legislative policy decisions which are discretionary in nature” and for which WMATA is cloaked in immunity. WMATA v. O’Neill, 633 A.2d 834, 841 (D.C.1993) (quoting McKethean v. WMATA 588 A.2d 708, 714 (D.C.1991)). The parties agree that here, as in O’Neill, the scope of WMATA’s duty to a passenger2 is defined by its written directives to its employees — “rules which define the appropriate standard of care in this situation.” Id. at 838. In the present context of an assault upon a passenger by a third person, these rules mark the extent of WMATA’s “duty to protect its passengers from foreseeable harm arising from criminal conduct of others.” Id. at 840.

WMATA’s written rules and standard procedures in question are contained in two documents, both introduced in evidence. Appellants argue that, Brown’s testimony notwithstanding, the jury could reasonably interpret these rules and procedures as imposing on the station manager a duty to act more directly upon observing an assault than just by summoning the police, and that Barlow’s failure to confront the assailant in any way was negligence that the jury reasonably could have found prolonged the assault and caused Ms. Robinson injury.

The principal document is WMATA’s DEPARTMENT of Rail SeRvices OPERATIONS Manual (SOP). Under the heading “Passenger Safety,” it sets forth the responsibilities of station managers, general and specific. Among the general duties are frequent inspection of the station for unsafe conditions, warning passengers of unsafe conditions and practices, reporting dangerous conditions to the communications center, and the like. [474]*474SOP 1-4 through 1-11. The Manual states detañed procedures to be followed in two instances, the first when the station manager witnesses or learns of “accidents or incidents' involving electrical shock or potentially hazardous conditions,” the second “[u]pon witnessing or being informed of criminal acts” at the station. In the latter case (SOP 3-7), the station manager “shall” (as pertinent here):

A. Notify TP AS [the transit police] immediately;
if: * # *
D. Notify the Passenger Operations Supervisor via emergency call number “0” to report the incident and request ambulance service if necessary;
* * * * * *
F. Avoid physical intervention of persons involved in criminal activities.

(Emphasis added). The station manager’s duty to report crime in progress is reinforced by WMATA’s MetRORAil Safety Rules and PROCEDURES Handbook, applicable to all employees, which states:

Rule 1.27 Employees shall immediately notify their supervisor, Transit Police, OCC [Office of Central Communications], or other appropriate persons when they are aware of unauthorized persons on WMATA property;
Rule 1.28 Employees shall inform OCC or the Transit Police, whichever is quicker, when observing passengers committing disorderly, unsafe, or criminal acts.

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Robinson v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority
676 A.2d 471 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
676 A.2d 471, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 89, 1996 WL 288465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-washington-metropolitan-area-transit-authority-dc-1996.