T.L.I. ex rel. Irick v. Board of County Commissioners

2016 OK CIV APP 12, 376 P.3d 930, 2015 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 117, 2015 WL 10458331
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 11, 2015
DocketNo. 113,687
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 OK CIV APP 12 (T.L.I. ex rel. Irick v. Board of County Commissioners) 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
T.L.I. ex rel. Irick v. Board of County Commissioners, 2016 OK CIV APP 12, 376 P.3d 930, 2015 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 117, 2015 WL 10458331 (Okla. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

KEITH RAPP, Presiding Judge.

[ 1 The plaintiff, T.L.I (T.L.I.) a minor, by and through his next friend Travis L. Irick (Plaintiff), appeals an Order denying his motion for new trial entered after the trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant, Board of County Cominissioners of the County of Pottawatomie (Board). This appeal proceeds under the provisions of Okla. Sup.Ct.R. 1.86, 12 0.8. Supp 2018, ch. 15, app. 1.

BACKGROUND

12 Plaintiffs lawsuit claimed injury in an automobile accident at night on December 27, 2010. T.L.I. was a passenger in an automobile driven by another teenager. He and the other passengers and driver were traveling from the Prague, Oklahoma, area to Shawnee, Oklahoma,

T3 After an apparently mistaken turn, rthe group ended up on a county road named Crosslin Road. The road is a dead end road.

§4 Board had erected a sign signifying that the road is a dead end road.. On the date of the accident, the sign was down. The driver continued on the dead end road and crashed into an embankment TL I. sus-tamed injury.

15 After Board denied Plaintiffs claim, he filed this action. In his amended petition, Plaintiff alleged that Board was negligent in maintaining the road and road signs. Board responded with several defenses, including immunity under provisions of the Governmental Tort Claims Act, specifically citing 51 0.8. Supp. 2018, §§ 155(5) and 155(15). Board then filed its motion for summary judgment.1

[932]*932T6 Board maintained, and the trial court agreed, that it did not have actual or constructive notice that the dead end sign was down. Board presented the deposition testimony of County Commissioner Guinn, whose district covered the location of the accident. Commissioner Guinn stated that he was not aware of the dead end sign being down.

T7 Commissioner Guinn stated that his telephone complaint logs did not show any complaint about the road or the sign, The summary judgment record contains the logs for the last half of the year 2010. These logs show a call on August 9, 2010, about litter; a call on August 18, 2010, about a need for right-of-way mowing; a call on December 3, 2010, about a drain (tinhorn); and 2 call on December 10, 2010, about holes on the dead end of Hickory Hollow of Crosslin Road. The logs have an "action taken"; column which is blank for all of the foregoing exeept the last which containg the entry "done." The Record does not indicate whether a response, if any, to the calls would have brought attention to the dead end sign.

T8 T.L.I did not have any personal 'Enowl-edge of the dead end sign's history prior to the accident. The car's driver testlfied that he did not see a dead end sign, but he also had no personal knowledge about the sign's history.

~T 9 Plaintiff's summary judgment response, as relates to this appeal, was that the County erected the dead end sign and did not maintain it, The dead end sign fell or was knocked down and thus failed to warn the driver of the car that he was -on a dead end road. Plaintiff's summary judgment response dld not present any evidentiary materials that would show a dispute regarding whether Board had actual knowledge of the condition of the dead end sign on the date of the accident. -

10 Plaintiff argued for application of constructive notice. Plaintiffs response characterized the testimony of Commissioner Guinn to be that the County had no policy requiring its employees to report downed or damaged signs2 He then maintained that Board's ignorance of the knocked down sign was negligent or willful and therefore Board had constructive notice of the condition of the dead end sign.

$11 The trial court ruled that Section 155(15) shielded Board from lability because there was no evidence showing a question of fact about whether Board had actual or constructive knowledge of the fact that the dead end sign was down. The trial court awarded summary judgment on the basis of this ruling and rejected the other grounds urged by Board. Board has not appealed.

[12 Plaintiff then filed a motion for new [933]*933trial.3 In this motion, Plaintiff conceded-that Board had no actual notice of the fact that the dead end sign was down.4 Therefore, the trial court's ruling regarding lack of actual notice to Board is affirmed.

[13 In the motion for new trial, Plaintiff argued that Board had constructive notice of the downed dead end sign,. He maintained that Board failed to have and implement any policy for its employees to report downed and damaged signs and that such policy would have provided the mechanism to notify Board of a downed or damaged sign.

T14 In addition to his basic argument, Plaintiff added the allegation that Board's employees worked on Crosslin Road at least fourteen times in the year preceding the wreck, with one of those instances occurring eight days prior to the wreck,. He attached Board road grader employees' work and time sheets to establish that presence. However, there is no indication where in the work and time sheets it appears that an employee was present on Crosslin Road and a downed dead end sign was noted.5

~T15 Part of Board's response to the motion for new trial was an objection to the added materials on the ground that the materials had not been made a part of the response to the motion for summary judgment:; Without contradiction, | Board represented that Plaintiff possessed the added materials when responding to the motion for summary judgment. Therefore, the added materials did not qualify as "new evidence" unavailable at the time of the summary judgment proceedings.

16 In its ruling denying the motion for new trial, the trial court agreed that the added materials did not qualify as new evidence.6 Nevertheless; the trial court further ruled that Plaintiff had not demonstrated a fact issue regarding constructive notice even considering the added materials.

T 17 Plaintiff appeals.7

STANDARD OF REVIEW

$18 As a general rule, "a motion for new trial is addressed to the trial court's sound discretion and, absent error as to a pure and unmixed question of law, or arbitrary and capricious action, every presumption should be indulged in favor of the trial court's rulmg on appeal." Bennett v. Hall, 1967 OK 122, ¶ 5, 431 P.2d 339, 340-41. The standard of review when a summary judgment is followed by a ruling on a motion for new trial is set out in Reeds v. Walker, 2006 OK 43, ¶ 9, 157 P.3d 100, 106-07.

Summary relief issues stand before us for .de movo review. All facts and inferences must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-movant. Appellate tribunals bear the same affirmative duty as is borne by mis? prius courts to test for legal sufficiency all evidentiary material received in summary process in support of the relief sought by the movant. Only if the court should conclude there is no material fact (or inference) in dispute and the law favors the movant's claim or liability-defeating defense is the moving party entitled to summary relief in its favor,.

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Bluebook (online)
2016 OK CIV APP 12, 376 P.3d 930, 2015 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 117, 2015 WL 10458331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tli-ex-rel-irick-v-board-of-county-commissioners-oklacivapp-2015.