Truitt v. Diggs

1980 OK 57, 611 P.2d 633, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 8, 1980
Docket50042
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1980 OK 57 (Truitt v. Diggs) 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
Truitt v. Diggs, 1980 OK 57, 611 P.2d 633, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 257 (Okla. 1980).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

The sole question before us is whether a petition filed in a wrongful death action stated a cause of action. The action was brought by the Administrator of the Estate of Randall Truitt, a student at U.S. Grant High School in Oklahoma City, who was shot and killed by a fellow student, James Briggs. The unfortunate incident took place on the school grounds during regular school hours as the alleged result of growing tension between a group of black students and a group of white students. The Administrator of the deceased student’s estate brought this action in the District Court of Oklahoma County, naming the following as defendants:

1. The School Principal, J. H. Diggs;
2. The School Vice President, Harold D. Merideth;
3. The Members of the Oklahoma City Board of Education, Paul English, Pat Potts, C. B. McCray, Armand Start, Freddye Williams, Floyd Don-werth, and Dene Brown;
4. The Chief of Security of the Oklahoma City Public School System, Doc F. Wadley;
5. Three Security Guards, Robert Buff, Harry Thomas, and Ron Gamble;
6. A limited partnership, which conducted a management study and made recommendations as to the necessity and adequacy of existing and future security systems within the Oklahoma City School System, Arthur Young and Company.

All defendants filed demurrers to the petition, and their demurrers were, despite several amendments by the plaintiff, sustained, and the case was ultimately dismissed by the Trial Judge, due to plaintiff’s failure to state a cause of action against any of the defendants.

Plaintiff has appealed from the dismissal of the case, arguing that he has in fact stated a cause of action against each of the defendants. The demurrers filed below were based upon two theories, failure to plead causation between any alleged negligence and the wrongful death, and failure to plead facts sufficient to demonstrate that the protection offered by the doctrine of sovereign immunity was waived or forfeited.

I.

Appellant agrees that the School District enjoys governmental immunity from prosecution in the suit, but argues that the individual members of the School Board, and the other employees and agents of the School Board involved, are individually liable and not protected from suit under the facts set forth in the petition, for the facts alleged show that employees and officers of the School Board were guilty of willful and wanton negligence. In making this argument, Appellant relies upon Hazlett v. Board of County Commissioners of Muskogee County, 168 Okl. 290, 32 P.2d 940 (1934).

In Haziett, in considering the sufficiency of the petition filed against the Board of County Commissioners, we held that the facts alleged were sufficient to state a cause of action against the Commissioners individually, as the facts alleged were sufficient to charge want of good faith on the part of the defendant. The allegations in that case were that the defendant had knowingly employed a reckless driver and required him to drive a school bus which was known to be defective.

In the case before us, the plaintiff alleges that the various members of the School Board, the Principal, Vice Principal, Head of Security, and the Security officers failed to provide proper security and crowd control at U.S. Grant High School, and their failure to provide adequate security measures brought about the untimely death of young Randall Truitt. In specific terms the *635 plaintiff alleges that the defendants failed to request additional assistance from the Oklahoma City Police Department, and that the Public School System failed to warn the students and their parents of the impending danger, took inadequate steps to control disturbances at the school, failed to properly instruct their employees, and failed to supervise them.

Additionally, in an amendment to his first amended petition, the plaintiff sought to mirror the pleadings in the Hazlett case cited above. He did so by alleging as follows:

“That the security measures were wholly inadequate, outdated and insufficient; and that the defendants, the individual members of the Board of Education, knew of the careless and reckless manner in which such security measures were being administered and knowing of the reckless manner in which the security of said school was being administered by defendants’ security personnel referred to above, said members of said board continued said employees in their employ and permitted them to continue the use of such defective security measures knowing that all students’ lives were being placed in danger by such actions.
“That said defendants, the individual members of the Board of Education, are personally liable for the injuries caused plaintiff by reason of the fact that they willfully, carelessly and negligently neglected the duties of their office in that knowing of the defective security measures being used by said security personnel, they continued such inadequate security measures in force and effect and continued to permit such reckless security personnel to administer such security programs.”

The gravamen of plaintiff’s allegation is that the Oklahoma City School Board, its agents and employees, provided inadequate security. The characterizing of this failure as reckless and wanton does not make it so, for such are conclusions and not facts. Although the allegations in the petition give rise to a cause of action in negligence, the negligence alleged is not sufficient to deprive the School Board Members and the Board’s agents and employees of the limited protection from suit afforded them. In so holding, we note that the failures alleged in the case before us are vastly different from the failures alleged in the Hazlett case. In Hazlett, the facts alleged were that the School Board and its members knew that the school bus was defective and needed repair, and also knew of the reckless driving history of the driver, yet continued to employ the driver and required him to drive the bus which was in grave need of repair.

Clearly, any reasonable person knowing of the reckless driving history and the condition of the bus would not have allowed the practices alleged in Hazlett to continue. However, in the case before us, the decisions which the School Board and its agents and employees were called upon to make were not so clear-cut. A great deal of discretion is involved in determining what security measures are needed. Is the School Board to be held as acting in bad faith and therefore liable because it thought three guards would be sufficient, if a jury finds that four were needed and not three, or are Board Members to be held individually liable if they determine that twenty hours of instruction is sufficient, when the jury believes that twenty-four is? We think not. The decisions required to be made by the School Board and its employees and agents called for legitimate judgment calls. The facts plead, as opposed to conclusions, do not indicate that the Board or its agents or employees were acting in bad faith, or acted in a willful and wanton way. Accordingly, we hold that the facts

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1980 OK 57, 611 P.2d 633, 1980 Okla. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truitt-v-diggs-okla-1980.