Mercer v. North Central Serv. , 308 Neb. 224 ( 2021 )


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    03/26/2021 08:09 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    308 Nebraska Reports
    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
    Cite as 
    308 Neb. 224
    Mark Mercer, individually, et al., appellees, and
    Columbia National Insurance Company, a Nebraska
    corporation, and Farmers Mutual Insurance Company
    of Nebraska, a Nebraska mutual insurance company,
    intervenors-appellees, v. North Central Service, Inc.,
    a Minnesota corporation, et al., appellees, and
    Metropolitan Utilities District, a political
    subdivision, appellant.
    M’s, Inc., a Nebraska corporation, doing business
    as M’s Pub, appellee, and United Fire & Casualty
    Company, as subrogee for M’s, Inc., a Nebraska
    corporation, intervenor-appellee, v.
    Metropolitan Utilities District,
    a political subdivision,
    appellant.
    Columbia National Insurance Company, as subrogee
    for Old Omaha Association, appellee, v.
    Metropolitan Utilities District, a
    political subdivision, appellant.
    Nouvelle Eve, Inc., a Nebraska corporation, and
    Susanne Keuck, an individual, appellees, and
    Truck Insurance Exchange, as subrogee for
    Nouvelle Eve, Inc., a Nebraska corporation,
    intervenor-appellee, v. Metropolitan
    Utilities District, a political
    subdivision, appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed January 22, 2021.   Nos. S-20-193, S-20-196, S-20-198, S-20-205.
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    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
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    1. Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act: Appeal and Error. Whether
    a plaintiff’s negligence claims are precluded by an exception to the
    Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act is a question of law for which
    an appellate court has a duty to reach its conclusions independent of the
    conclusions reached by the district court.
    2. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court reviews
    the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the
    record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing
    all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.
    3. Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act. The purpose of the discretion-
    ary function exception to the Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act is
    to prevent judicial second-guessing of legislative and administrative
    decisions grounded in social, economic, and political policy through the
    medium of an action in tort.
    4. ____. The discretionary function exception to the Political Subdivisions
    Tort Claims Act extends only to basic policy decisions made in gov-
    ernmental activity, and not to ministerial activities implementing such
    policy decisions. The exception does not extend to the exercise of dis-
    cretionary acts at an operational level. Examples of discretionary func-
    tions include the initiation of programs and activities, establishment of
    plans and schedules, and judgmental decisions within a broad regulatory
    framework lacking specific standards.
    5. ____. A court engages in a two-step analysis to determine whether
    the discretionary function exception to the Political Subdivisions Tort
    Claims Act applies. First, the court must consider whether the action is
    a matter of choice for the acting employee. If the court concludes that
    the challenged conduct involves an element of judgment, it must then
    determine whether that judgment is of the kind that the discretionary
    function exception was designed to shield.
    6. Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act: Governmental Subdivisions:
    Notice: Negligence. When (1) a governmental entity has actual or con-
    structive notice of a dangerous condition or hazard caused by or under
    the control of the governmental entity and (2) the dangerous condition
    or hazard is not readily apparent to persons who are likely to be injured
    by the dangerous condition or hazard, the governmental entity has a
    nondiscretionary duty to warn of the danger or take other protective
    measures that may prevent injury as the result of the dangerous condi-
    tion or hazard. In such a situation, a governmental entity’s failure to
    warn or take other protective measures is not a planning-level decision
    involving a social, economic, or political policy judgment and, there-
    fore, does not come within the discretionary function exception of the
    Political Subdivisions Tort Claims Act.
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    308 Nebraska Reports
    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
    Cite as 
    308 Neb. 224
    Appeal from the District Court for Douglas County: Timothy
    P. Burns, Judge. Affirmed.
    Michael F. Coyle, Robert W. Futhey, and Daniel J. Gutman,
    of Fraser Stryker, P.C., L.L.O., and Mark A. Mendenhall, of
    Metropolitan Utilities District, for appellant.
    Anne Marie O’Brien and Michael L. Storey, of Lamson,
    Dugan & Murray, L.L.P., for appellees Mark Mercer et al.
    Matthew B. Reilly and Thomas J. Culhane, of Erickson &
    Sederstrom, P.C., L.L.O., for intervenors-appellees Columbia
    National Insurance Company and Farmers Mutual Insurance
    Company.
    Thomas M. White and Amy S. Jorgensen, of White &
    Jorgensen, and Richard A. DeWitt and Robert M. Gonderinger,
    of Coker, Huck, Kasher, DeWitt, Anderson & Gonderinger,
    L.L.C., for appellee M’s, Inc.
    Brian T. Bailey, of Nielsen, Zehe & Antas, P.C., for appellee
    United Fire & Casualty Company.
    Edward F. Pohren and Jerry M. Slusky, of Smith, Slusky,
    Pohren & Rogers, L.L.P., for appellees Nouvelle Eve, Inc., and
    Susanne Keuck.
    Heavican, C.J., Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke,
    Papik, and Freudenberg, JJ.
    Heavican, C.J.
    INTRODUCTION
    An explosion and fire destroyed part of the Old Market area
    in Omaha, Nebraska. Various affected landowners and their
    insurers brought suit against a fiber optic contractor, a wire-
    less company, and the Metropolitan Utilities District (MUD).
    The plaintiffs settled with all defendants except MUD. MUD
    sought summary judgment, arguing that it was immune from
    suit. The district court found that MUD was not immune
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    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
    Cite as 
    308 Neb. 224
    from suit and denied MUD’s motion for summary judgment.
    MUD appeals. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Gas Explosion and Fire.
    On January 9, 2016, at 2:50 p.m., an explosion and fire
    occurred in the Old Market area of Omaha. The natural gas
    explosion occurred in the basement of the Mercer Building,
    located at the corner of 11th and Howard Streets and owned
    by plaintiffs, Mark Mercer and Vera Mercer, who also resided
    in the building. The building’s ground floor housed two busi-
    nesses, Nouvelle Eve, Inc., a clothing boutique, and M’s Pub,
    a restaurant.
    MUD was, at all relevant times, a member of a statewide
    one-call notification center (Nebraska One-Call), also known
    as Nebraska811. 1 MUD contributed to the costs of Nebraska
    One-Call and provided MUD facility location information
    when requested. In addition to definitions and requirements
    as set out in statute, the Nebraska One-Call board of directors
    maintains an excavator manual, which is distributed to exca-
    vators intending to excavate in Nebraska. That manual was
    entered into evidence. Also offered into evidence was MUD’s
    locating manual.
    On December 10, 2015, according to evidence offered at
    the summary judgment hearing, Chris Sacco, an MUD loca-
    tor, responded to a locate request “refresh” ticket made under
    Nebraska One-Call by North Central Service, Inc. (NCS), for
    the area in front of the Mercer Building. NCS planned to use
    horizontal directional drilling (HDD) to bore an underground
    path for fiber optic cable. HDD is often referred to as “blind
    drilling.” It creates a risk of striking an object below the sur-
    face of the ground that is not seen by the drill operator. There
    is evidence in the record that natural gas pipe strikes as a result
    of HDD are common.
    1
    See 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 76-2301
     et seq. (Reissue 2009 & Cum. Supp. 2016).
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    Sacco spoke with NCS’ foreman and walked the bore path
    with him. After walking the path, Sacco used MUD resources
    to ascertain where the shutoff valve for the relevant gas line
    was located. According to Sacco’s deposition, once he had
    determined the coordinates of the gas line in question and
    measured out those coordinates, he placed a dot of yellow paint
    on the curb in front of M’s Pub marking where the gas line
    entered the building.
    Sacco testified that he then crossed 11th Street and found
    the gas service valve cover, but it was located under a parked
    car. Because he could not open the cover, Sacco could not elec-
    tronically locate the distribution line. Instead, Sacco visually
    lined a traffic cone with the dot he had made in front of M’s
    Pub, and he then placed a second dot on the sidewalk in front
    of M’s Pub to mark where the gas line was in the bore path.
    There is also evidence supporting a finding that Sacco made a
    third mark in the street.
    In addition to allegedly marking the line with dots, Sacco
    found the “stop box” for the gas line into the Mercer Building
    that had been abandoned in 2009. The stop box was next to the
    yellow dot that Sacco said he placed by the curb in front of M’s
    Pub. Based on the research he had just done to find the coordi-
    nates of the gas line, Sacco knew that this box was abandoned.
    Sacco testified that although he had a responsibility to tell his
    supervisor that the box had not been properly abandoned, he
    did not do so.
    Sacco testified that he used dots and not lines because he
    did not want paint to drift onto M’s Pub customers who were
    seated outside. Other evidence suggested that at this time of
    year, the outdoor seating area was not open, and that thus, in
    the words of an owner of M’s Pub, there was “[n]ot a chance”
    diners were seated outside.
    A report completed by the State Fire Marshal following an
    investigation into the fire opined that the dots found on the
    sidewalk in front of M’s Pub had not been recently marked
    when contrasted with brighter yellow markings across the
    street. Evidence about the relative brightness of the blue
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    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
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    paint marking the water lines that were laid by a different
    locator working with Sacco on December 10, 2015, was also
    offered to shed doubt on Sacco’s assertion that he located and
    marked the relevant gas lines on December 10.
    On January 4, 2016, Ron Jankowski, a second MUD locator,
    was assigned another “refresh” ticket for the sidewalk in front
    of the Mercer Building. Jankowski spoke to the NCS foreman,
    who informed him that he was fine with the markings in the
    Old Market area and that MUD did not need to re-mark the
    area. Jankowski completed the remainder of the refresh tickets
    and then decided to drive through the Old Market to satisfy
    himself that marks for water and gas were painted in front of
    the building. Jankowski testified that he drove south down 11th
    Street, at between 10 and 15 miles per hour, and saw marks for
    water and gas painted in front of M’s Pub, though he did not
    see the yellow-marked gas valve cover.
    On January 9, 2016, NCS began working just outside the
    Mercer Building. According to the record, NCS employees
    were aware of a gas line on the east side of 11th Street because
    it was marked with long yellow lines. According to the tes-
    timony of those involved, the area was searched for yellow
    markings, which were seen in the alley and on the east side of
    the street. According to deposition testimony, no yellow mark-
    ings were found on the west side of 11th Street where the HDD
    was to be done in front of the Mercer Building.
    While performing HDD, NCS struck the gas line in front of
    the Mercer Building. Gas escaped from the ruptured line and
    migrated to the basement of the building, where it encountered
    an ignition source and exploded. Notification of the fire was
    received by the 911 emergency dispatch service at 2:51 p.m.
    The Omaha Fire Department (OFD) and MUD were, in turn,
    notified. Upon arriving at the fire, an OFD representative
    determined that the fire was gas fed and that MUD was needed
    to turn off the gas.
    Upon receiving notification of the fire, an MUD dis-
    patcher radioed Al Kurz, an MUD field services technician,
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    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
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    308 Neb. 224
    at 2:53 p.m. Kurz was in the midst of a job and indicated
    that he would go to the fire when he was finished. The dis-
    patcher took a second call from 911 at 2:55 p.m., when
    OFD concluded that gas was involved. The dispatcher updated
    Kurz at 2:56 p.m., then notified a senior MUD technician,
    Steve Osmera, who indicated he would report to the scene.
    Osmera then accessed the location of the gas line into the
    Mercer Building.
    Having accessed the location and written down the coordi-
    nates, Osmera headed to the Old Market. But when he arrived
    there at 3:16 p.m., he was immediately summoned to speak
    to the OFD chief and left the paper with the coordinates in
    his vehicle. Osmera surveyed the scene and determined that
    a “grade one leak” had occurred, which is the most serious
    type of gas leak. He called dispatch at 3:17 p.m. so that other
    MUD personnel could be dispatched. At that time, Osmera was
    informed that an MUD foreman with authorization to turn off
    gas transmission main lines was on his way.
    While walking the scene, Osmera saw a yellow-painted
    “stop box” in the sidewalk outside of M’s Pub. A stop box, or
    curb box, is an outside shutoff for a service used on a side-
    walk. Osmera, believing that this was the valve to shut off gas
    service into the Mercer Building, moved to open the box and
    turn off the gas. As he sought out tools to do so, he encoun-
    tered Kurz.
    Kurz had arrived at the scene at 3:21 p.m. His assistant
    remained in their vehicle to look up the coordinates of the gas
    distribution valve into the Mercer Building. When Osmera saw
    Kurz arrive, he asked Kurz to help him turn off the valve he
    had located on the sidewalk. Kurz’ assistant followed Osmera
    to help. The three eventually got the valve into the off position,
    but the flames did not abate. At 3:31 p.m. Osmera notified
    dispatch that the valve was turned off but it did not “kill the
    flames.” Osmera then began looking on a computer for other
    valves for gas lines in the alley, but apparently, he did not look
    for other valves on 11th Street.
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    MERCER v. NORTH CENTRAL SERV.
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    308 Neb. 224
    About 1 hour later, MUD employees were walking around
    the area and noticed two “CC box[es]” in the street. A CC
    box is similar to a stop box or curb box, except it is made of
    heavier material for placement in the street. One CC box was
    marked “GAS.” The employees got the attention of Kurz and
    an OFD firefighter. Not waiting for MUD tools, the firefighter
    used a pick to open the CC box. Kurz was then able to turn
    off the gas at 4:26 p.m., about 11⁄2 hours after MUD was first
    notified of the fire. At that point, the fire in the stairwell at M’s
    Pub was extinguished.
    Evidence showed that due to the danger in a fire fed by gas,
    OFD was not able to take an offensive position in fighting the
    fire until the gas had been turned off. So as MUD sought out
    the correct valve, OFD continued in a defensive position with
    respect to the fire, attempting to keep it from moving to sur-
    rounding buildings.
    Procedural History.
    Multiple lawsuits were initiated in Douglas County as a
    result of the damage caused by this fire. Plaintiffs in those
    cases filed suit, and numerous insurance companies intervened,
    alleging negligence as to multiple defendants. Due to various
    settlements, MUD is the only remaining defendant involved in
    these appeals. The plaintiffs’ allegations generally center on
    three failures by MUD: (1) failing to properly mark the gas
    line, (2) failing to timely shut off the gas at the scene of the
    fire, and (3) failing to properly abandon the old gas line outside
    the Mercer Building.
    MUD filed a motion to dismiss in each case on the ground
    that it was immune from suit on the basis of the discretionary
    function exception to the Political Subdivisions Tort Claims
    Act (PSTCA). 2 That motion was denied by the district court,
    which concluded that it was “unable to determine, from
    the face of the challenged complaints, whether the alleged
    2
    
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 13-910
    (2) (Reissue 2012).
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    negligence involved discretionary policy-level decision-making
    or operational-level conduct.” Thereafter, MUD filed several
    motions for summary judgment. As relevant to these appeals,
    the parties offered evidence with respect to MUD’s claim
    of immunity.
    Following a hearing, the district court denied MUD’s
    motions for summary judgment. As is relevant on appeal, the
    district court reasoned that
    both the statute and MUD’s own policies provide detailed
    instructions for employees on how facilities are to be
    located, marked, and documented, thereby eliminating
    any discretion.
    . . . To the extent MUD argues that the locators exer-
    cised their judgment in how and where to mark the gas
    line at issue, the Court finds this was a “discretionary
    act at an operational level, where there is no room for
    policy judgment” to which the discretionary exception
    does not apply.
    The court continued that “[e]ven if the Court determined that
    MUD did have an element of judgment in how its employees
    located, marked, [and] documented its facilities, as well as how
    it handled abandoned gas lines, the Court finds these actions
    are not the kind that the discretionary function was designed
    to shield . . . .”
    MUD appeals.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    MUD assigns, in all four appeals, that the district court
    erred in denying its motion for summary judgment on the basis
    of immunity under the discretionary function exception to
    the PSTCA 3.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] Whether a plaintiff’s negligence claims are precluded
    by an exception to the PSTCA is a question of law for which
    3
    See 
    id.
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    an appellate court has a duty to reach its conclusions inde­
    pendent of the conclusions reached by the district court. 4
    [2] An appellate court reviews the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment de novo, viewing the record in the light
    most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all reason-
    able inferences in that party’s favor. 5
    ANALYSIS
    Jurisdictional Note.
    As an initial note, we have jurisdiction over this appeal
    under 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902
    (1)(d) (Supp. 2019). That
    section includes, in the definition of a final order from which
    an appeal may be taken, “[a]n order denying a motion for
    summary judgment when such motion is based on the asser-
    tion of sovereign immunity or the immunity of a govern-
    ment official.” 6
    Immunity.
    The primary issues presented by this appeal are whether
    MUD is immune from suit as to its prefire actions in locat-
    ing the relevant gas lines and in failing to abandon a gas line
    that previously serviced the Mercer Building, and also as to
    its postfire actions related to turning off the gas line servicing
    the Mercer Building. The district court denied MUD’s motion
    for summary judgment, in which MUD had argued that it was
    immune from suit under the discretionary function exception
    to the PSTCA.
    For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the decision of
    the district court. In so affirming, we note that the sole issue
    presented to this court on appeal is whether MUD was entitled
    to immunity from suit, and accordingly, this court consid-
    ers the facts only to the extent it is necessary to determine
    4
    See Amend v. Nebraska Pub. Serv. Comm., 
    298 Neb. 617
    , 
    905 N.W.2d 551
    (2018).
    5
    Kaiser v. Allstate Indemnity Co., 
    307 Neb. 562
    , 
    949 N.W.2d 787
     (2020).
    6
    § 25-1902(1)(d).
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    whether the allegations against MUD were protected by the
    discretionary function exception to the PSTCA. We are not
    presented with, nor do we opine upon, the merits of the under-
    lying litigation.
    The PSTCA operates to waive the immunity of politi-
    cal subdivisions, but is subject to exceptions as set forth in
    § 13-910. Section 13-910(2) provides that the PSTCA does
    not apply to “[a]ny claim based upon the exercise or perform­
    ance of or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary
    function or duty on the part of the political subdivision or an
    employee of the political subdivision, whether or not the dis-
    cretion is abused.”
    [3,4] The purpose of the discretionary function exception is
    to prevent judicial “second-guessing” of legislative and admin-
    istrative decisions grounded in social, economic, and political
    policy through the medium of an action in tort. 7 The discretion-
    ary function exception extends only to basic policy decisions
    made in governmental activity, and not to ministerial activities
    implementing such policy decisions. The exception does not
    extend to the exercise of discretionary acts at an operational
    level. 8 Examples of discretionary functions include the ini-
    tiation of programs and activities, establishment of plans and
    schedules, and judgmental decisions within a broad regulatory
    framework lacking specific standards. 9
    [5] A court engages in a two-step analysis to determine
    whether the discretionary function exception to the PSTCA
    applies. 10 First, the court must consider whether the action
    is a matter of choice for the acting employee. 11 If the court
    concludes that the challenged conduct involves an element
    of judgment, it must then determine whether that judgment
    7
    Kimminau v. City of Hastings, 
    291 Neb. 133
    , 
    864 N.W.2d 399
     (2015).
    8
    
    Id.
    9
    
    Id.
    10
    
    Id.
    11
    
    Id.
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    is of the kind that the discretionary function exception was
    designed to shield. 12
    [6] But when (1) a governmental entity has actual or con-
    structive notice of a dangerous condition or hazard caused by
    or under the control of the governmental entity and (2) the
    dangerous condition or hazard is not readily apparent to per-
    sons who are likely to be injured by the dangerous condition
    or hazard, the governmental entity has a nondiscretionary duty
    to warn of the danger or take other protective measures that
    may prevent injury as the result of the dangerous condition or
    hazard. 13 In such a situation, a governmental entity’s failure to
    warn or take other protective measures is not a planning-level
    decision involving a social, economic, or political policy judg-
    ment and, therefore, does not come within the discretionary
    function exception of the PSTCA. 14
    The One-Call Notification System Act is relevant to the
    nature of MUD’s assertion of immunity. The intent of the One-
    Call Notification System Act is
    to establish a means by which excavators may notify
    operators of underground facilities in an excavation
    area so that operators have the opportunity to iden-
    tify and locate the underground facilities prior to exca-
    vation and so that the excavators may then observe
    proper precautions to safeguard the underground facili-
    ties from damage. 15
    Moreover, “[i]t is the purpose of the One-Call Notification
    System Act to aid the public by preventing injury to persons
    and damage to property and the interruption of utility serv­
    ices resulting from accidents caused by damage to under-
    ground facilities.” 16
    12
    
    Id.
    13
    Lemke v. Metropolitan Utilities Dist., 
    243 Neb. 633
    , 
    502 N.W.2d 80
    (1993).
    14
    
    Id.
    15
    § 76-2302(1).
    16
    § 76-2302(2).
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    In order to accomplish this purpose, the participating utili-
    ties must comply with § 76-2323:
    (1) Upon receipt of the information contained in the
    notice pursuant to section 76-2321, an operator shall
    advise the excavator of the approximate location of under-
    ground facilities in the area of the proposed excavation by
    marking or identifying the location of the underground
    facilities with stakes, flags, paint, or any other clearly
    identifiable marking or reference point . . . .
    This court has previously discussed what qualifies as a
    discretionary function for purposes of that exception to the
    PSTCA. Recently, in Lambert v. Lincoln Public Schools, 17 we
    concluded that the decision to enforce an elementary school’s
    “no dogs” policy only during the schoolday was a discretion-
    ary function and that the school district was immune from
    suit under the PSTCA when it did not supervise a school
    playground after school hours. We reasoned that school admin-
    istrators were given broad discretion to place restrictions on
    the use of school buildings and grounds, and also in utilizing
    staff to supervise school grounds, because such decisions were
    grounded in social, economic, and political policy. 18
    Conversely, in Kimminau v. City of Hastings, 19 we held that
    the failure to remove corn mash from the side of the road was
    not protected from liability by virtue of the discretionary func-
    tion exception to the PSTCA. We noted that the maintenance
    of roads and highways was not a matter of choice, but was
    required under state law. We reasoned that specific actions to
    undertake a duty to maintain the roads were not policy deci-
    sions, but were ministerial acts at the operational level pur-
    suant to the statutory duty to maintain roads, and thus were
    not immune under the discretionary function exception to
    the PSTCA.
    17
    Lambert v. Lincoln Public Schools, 
    306 Neb. 192
    , 
    945 N.W.2d 84
     (2020).
    18
    
    Id.
    19
    Kimminau v. City of Hastings, supra note 7.
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    In Lemke v. Metropolitan Utilities Dist., 20 we found that the
    discretionary function exception was not applicable and that
    MUD had a nondiscretionary duty to warn its customers that
    a flexible natural gas connector linking their range to a gas
    line was defective, even if MUD did not provide the connec-
    tor. We observed that the failure to warn in the instance where
    the governmental entity had notice of a dangerous condition
    and the dangerous condition was not readily apparent was
    not a planning-level decision involving a social, economic, or
    political policy judgment falling within the discretionary func-
    tion exception.
    Marking of Gas Line.
    We turn first to whether the marking of the gas lines in
    question was a matter of choice for the MUD locators. We
    conclude that it was not. Section 76-2323 is clear that MUD
    and Nebraska One-Call’s other members have a duty to “advise
    the excavator of the approximate location of underground
    facilities in the area of the proposed excavation by marking
    or identifying the location of the underground facilities with
    stakes, flags, paint, or any other clearly identifiable marking or
    reference point.” MUD’s own locating manual also emphasizes
    this necessity.
    Our decision in Lemke informs of this duty. There, we con-
    sidered whether MUD had a nondiscretionary duty to warn,
    considering first, whether it had actual or constructive notice
    of a dangerous condition or hazard caused by or under the
    control of the governmental entity, and second, whether the
    dangerous condition or hazard was readily apparent to per-
    sons who are likely to be injured by the dangerous condition
    or hazard. 21
    MUD argues that the HDD was the dangerous condition
    or hazard and that because it was being performed by NCS,
    it was not under MUD’s control. We disagree. While HDD is
    20
    Lemke v. Metropolitan Utilities Dist., 
    supra note 13
    .
    21
    
    Id.
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    undoubtedly a dangerous activity, any danger was a result of
    the potential for striking buried utility lines. Those lines are
    under MUD’s sole control. The record demonstrates that the
    buried gas lines servicing the Mercer Building were known
    to MUD and were under MUD’s control but, because of their
    buried nature, were not readily apparent to the excavators who
    eventually struck the lines.
    While we agree that some discretion is given to MUD in
    how these lines are marked, there is no discretion—as set forth
    by the applicable state statutes, the excavator manual, MUD’s
    own locating manual, and the test set forth in Lemke—with
    respect to the ultimate responsibility to mark the lines. As such,
    MUD’s marking of the lines was not a matter of choice for
    purposes of the discretionary function exception.
    To the extent that there was discretion given to MUD loca-
    tors as to the method of marking used by MUD, such discretion
    is not of the social, economic, or political policy that the dis-
    cretionary function exception was designed to protect. Rather,
    the method the MUD locator used to mark the gas lines in
    question is the type of operational discretion not protected by
    the discretionary function exception.
    Gas Shutoff.
    We conclude the same as to allegations that MUD failed
    to timely shut off the gas and to properly abandon the out-of-
    service gas line outside of the Mercer Building.
    MUD’s own gas emergency procedure requires MUD to
    respond to emergencies and, upon request, shut off the natu-
    ral gas; one MUD employee testified in a deposition that in
    responding to a gas fire, the number one priority is to shut off
    the gas “as quickly as possible.” The exercise of this action
    was not a matter of choice.
    We note MUD contends that while at the fire, its employ-
    ees were acting in emergency conditions and their actions
    should be reviewed in light of those conditions. MUD takes
    issue with the appellees’ listing of all of MUD’s perceived
    wrongs at the scene and suggests that those are the types of
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    discretionary acts made in an emergency that should not be
    second-guessed.
    But we read the appellees’ primary assertion to be that MUD
    had a duty to turn off the gas as soon as possible and that as
    a result of its various deficiencies at the scene, MUD failed to
    do so. Regardless of the emergency—indeed because of the
    emergency—for purposes of the discretionary function excep-
    tion, MUD had no choice as to whether it needed to turn off
    the gas in a timely manner. As such, the discretionary function
    exception is inapplicable.
    Abandonment of Old Gas Line.
    Finally, with respect to the improperly abandoned gas line,
    there was testimony that upon discovering this line, the loca-
    tor, Sacco, had a responsibility to tell a supervisor that the line
    had not been properly abandoned. MUD’s locating manual sets
    forth the procedure to be followed in this event. Where service
    records are in need of correction, the locating manual provides
    that a locator “shall” call it into dispatch or fill out forms
    reporting the error. In addition, MUD has a separate procedure
    manual for use in the event that it needed to abandon a gas
    line. This, also, was not a matter of choice, and the discretion-
    ary function exception does not provide immunity. There is no
    merit to MUD’s assignments of error.
    CONCLUSION
    We find no error in the district court’s denial of summary
    judgment in each case finding that MUD was not immune
    from suit. That the gas lines were to be clearly marked, the
    gas to be shut off by MUD in the event of a gas fire, and the
    gas lines to be properly abandoned were not matters of choice.
    Each was required, at a minimum, by our case law regarding
    dangerous conditions and by MUD’s own policies, and were
    not protected by the discretionary function exception to the
    PSTCA. As such, in each case, the decision of the district
    court is affirmed.
    Affirmed.