Vittoria v. Provo City

2024 UT App 99, 554 P.3d 1133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 18, 2024
Docket20220659-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 UT App 99 (Vittoria v. Provo City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vittoria v. Provo City, 2024 UT App 99, 554 P.3d 1133 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 99

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DAWN VITTORIA, Appellant, v. PROVO CITY, Appellee.

Opinion No. 20220659-CA Filed July 18, 2024

Fourth District Court, Spanish Fork Department The Honorable Jared Eldridge No. 220300023

T.C. Taylor and Peter Lattin, Attorneys for Appellant J. Brian Jones and Gary D. Millward, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1 Dawn Vittoria slipped and fell on a sidewalk owned by Provo City (the City). She subsequently made a claim against the City and later filed suit in district court. The City moved to dismiss. The district court concluded that Vittoria’s complaint was untimely under the Governmental Immunity Act of Utah (the GIAU) and dismissed Vittoria’s complaint with prejudice. Vittoria appeals, and we affirm. Vittoria v. Provo City

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 On July 11, 2019, while walking along a sidewalk owned by the City, Vittoria tripped and suffered an injury. The fall occurred when Vittoria caught her foot on a “height differential of several inches between two” slabs of concrete. This defect had existed for at least a year prior to the incident, which led Vittoria to assert that the City “knew or should have known” about its presence.

¶3 In March 2020, Vittoria filed a notice of claim. The City did not process the claim until after receiving a calculation of the damages sought, which Vittoria submitted in December 2020. In February 2021, in a letter to Vittoria, the City denied liability but made a settlement offer of $13,800 “as a courtesy to a Provo citizen without any admission of fault.” The assistant city attorney signed the letter. Vittoria did not accept the offer.

¶4 A year later, in February 2022, Vittoria filed suit in district court. The City responded by filing a motion to dismiss the case, see generally Utah R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), as untimely under the requirements of the GIAU. Following additional briefing and oral argument, the district court granted the City’s motion and dismissed the case with prejudice as time-barred.

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶5 Vittoria argues on appeal that the district court erred when it dismissed her claim as untimely under the GIAU. “Because a

1. “On appeal from a motion to dismiss, we review the facts only as they are alleged in the complaint. We accept the factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences from those facts in a light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Haynes v. Department of Public Safety, 2020 UT App 19, n.2, 460 P.3d 565 (cleaned up).

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trial court’s grant or denial of a motion to dismiss is a question of law, the standard of review is correctness,” with no deference to the court’s decision. Moulding Invs., LLC v. Box Elder County, 2024 UT App 23, ¶ 21, 545 P.3d 781 (cleaned up).

ANALYSIS

¶6 Under the GIAU, an individual with a claim against a governmental entity must file a notice of claim “within one year after the claim arises.” Utah Code § 63G-7-402. Sixty days after a notice of claim is filed, an individual is free to “pursue an action in the district court against the governmental entity.” Id. § 63G-7- 403(2)(a). However, that action must be “commence[d] . . . within two years after the claim arises.” Id. § 63G-7-403(2)(b). 2

¶7 Though Vittoria filed a timely notice of claim with the City, she did not file an action in the district court until February 2022, over two and a half years after her claim arose in July 2019. Because Vittoria’s claim was over six months past the GIAU deadline when she filed it, her claim is untimely, and the district court appropriately dismissed her claim under rule 12(b)(6) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.

¶8 Vittoria, however, argues that the GIAU conflicts with Utah Code section 78B-2-303, which states, “Actions on claims against a county, city, or incorporated town, which have been rejected by the county executive, city commissioners, city council, or board of trustees shall be brought within one year after the first

2. The GIAU includes a savings provision that is inapplicable here. See Utah Code § 63G-7-403(3)(b) (allowing a claimant to commence an action after the time limit if (1) the action was originally commenced on time, (2) the action failed or was dismissed for reasons other than the merits, and (3) the new action is commenced within one year of the previous action’s failure or dismissal).

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rejection.” Vittoria contends that the two statutes “conflict any time a city denies a claim one year after the incident giving rise to a lawsuit”—which is, as she argues, what happened here. Vittoria argues that in granting the City’s motion to dismiss, the district court failed to “harmonize” the GIAU and section 78B-2-303. Vittoria views this issue as a matter of first impression, but it is not.

¶9 The legislature expressly stated that the GIAU is a “comprehensive chapter” applying to “all functions of government” and governing “all claims against governmental entities.” Id. § 63G-7-101(2). Our supreme court has “consistently required strict compliance with the requirements of the [GIAU].” Rushton v. Salt Lake County, 1999 UT 36, ¶ 19, 977 P.2d 1201. In Craig v. Provo City, 2016 UT 40, 389 P.3d 423, like here, a tort suit under the GIAU was brought against the City. Id. ¶ 1. When initially filed, the suit was timely but was dismissed because the “plaintiffs failed to submit an ‘undertaking’ or bond as required by statute.” Id. When the plaintiffs refiled, they had surpassed the one-year filing deadline required by the GIAU. Id. (citing Utah Code § 63G-7-402). The plaintiffs argued that their claim was in fact timely by invoking Utah Code section 78B-2-111, known as the Savings Statute. Id. Our supreme court considered whether the time-bar provision of the GIAU, the same one at issue here, foreclosed the Savings Statute. Id. ¶ 2. The court determined that the GIAU did in fact foreclose the Savings Statute because the GIAU “speaks comprehensively on the procedure and requisite timing of a claim filed against the government.” Id. ¶ 18 (emphasis added). The court explained that the GIAU is “all-encompassing on the matters that it regulates in comprehensive detail,” which includes “actions for which the government has waived its immunity” and the “manner and means by which a plaintiff may pierce through such immunity.” Id. ¶ 22. On those matters, the court construed the GIAU “as speaking comprehensively in the sense of foreclosing the application of other laws regulating claims against non-governmental parties.” Id. The court reasoned

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that, among other things, the GIAU “speaks in careful detail . . . on the timing requirements” of both filing a notice of claim with a governmental entity and initiating an action in court after such claim is denied. Id. ¶ 23. The court concluded that the GIAU’s “filing and timing standards are presented in such detail that [it] view[s] them as occupying the field.” Id. ¶ 26.

¶10 While Vittoria is correct in her assertion that Craig did not address the exact section of the Utah Code at issue here, the parallels to her case are undeniable, and Craig compels our affirmance here.

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2024 UT App 99, 554 P.3d 1133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vittoria-v-provo-city-utahctapp-2024.