Barneck v. Utah Department of Transportation ( 2015 )


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  •              This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter.
    
    2015 UT 50
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    ———————
    MICHAEL BARNECK, LINDA BARNECK, individually and as heirs of
    JUSTINE BARNECK, deceased, and HEIDI PAULSON,
    Appellants,
    v.
    UTAH DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, and the STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee.
    ———————
    No. 20130429
    Filed June 12, 2015
    ———————
    Eighth District, Duchesne
    The Honorable George M. Harmond
    No. 120800019
    ———————
    Attorneys:
    David M. Bennion, Scott S. Bell, Alan S. Mouritsen,
    Salt Lake City, for appellants
    Sean D. Reyes, Att‘y Gen., Peggy Stone, Reed Stringham, Ass‘t
    Att‘y Gen., Salt Lake City, for appellee
    ———————
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE authored the opinion of the Court, in
    which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE DURHAM, JUSTICE PARRISH,
    and JUDGE TOOMEY joined.
    JUSTICE NEHRING did not participate herein due to his retirement;
    COURT OF APPEALS JUDGE KATE A. TOOMEY sat.
    JUSTICE HIMONAS became a member of the Court on February 13,
    2015, after oral argument in this matter, and accordingly did not
    participate.
    ———————
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1 During a brief but significant rainstorm, a culvert under
    SR-35 in Duchesne County became obstructed, causing some fif-
    teen feet of water to back up on the north side of the road. After
    Utah Department of Transportation workers removed debris from
    the road and tried unsuccessfully to unclog the culvert, they left
    the scene. The standing water sat next to the road for several
    hours and eventually caused it to collapse, leaving a gaping hole
    in the middle of the road. Later that night, plaintiffs‘ vehicles ca-
    reened into this chasm. Plaintiffs subsequently filed this suit
    against UDOT for negligence and wrongful death. These claims
    were dismissed on summary judgment in the district court, on the
    basis of the determination that UDOT was entitled to immunity
    under the Governmental Immunity Act.
    ¶2 In reviewing this decision, we are asked to interpret and
    apply competing provisions of the Governmental Immunity Act—
    provisions that waive immunity for ―any injury caused by . . . a
    defective, unsafe, or dangerous condition of any highway [or] . . .
    culvert,‖ UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(3)(a)(i), while also providing an
    exception to such waiver where ―the injury arises out of, in connec-
    tion with, or results from . . . the management of flood waters‖ or
    the ―repair, or operation of [a] flood or storm system[],‖ 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(p), (q). We reverse and remand. In so doing, we interpret
    the statutory references to ―dangerous condition‖ of a ―culvert,‖
    the ―management of flood waters,‖ and the ―operation of a flood
    or storm system.‖ We also clarify the relationship between the
    statutory waivers of immunity and exceptions therefrom, in a
    manner repudiating the but-for standard of causation articulated
    in some of our prior cases and adopting instead a standard of
    proximate causation.
    I
    ¶3 On a July afternoon in 2011, over an inch of rain fell over
    the course of about an hour in the area near mile marker 461 on
    1 The briefs identify this area a bit differently. They refer to it as
    ―near mile marker 46.5.‖ We are unsure of what to make of that
    formulation, as we suppose that a ―mile marker‖ is in fact a mile
    marker and not a half-mile marker, and see no indication in the rec-
    ord or elsewhere that UDOT uses half-mile markers. But we note
    2
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                           Opinion of the Court
    SR-35 in Duchesne County.2 Such rain would usually collect in
    and run down a natural gully and through a culvert passing un-
    der SR-35. For reasons yet unknown, however, the culvert on this
    particular day had become obstructed. And the water quickly
    backed up, pooling at a depth of around fifteen feet. The water—
    and debris it carried—then ran across the surface of SR-35. In re-
    sponse to this and other occurrences at different locations along
    SR-35, UDOT dispatched a team of workers to clear the debris.
    ¶4 Upon arriving on the scene, UDOT workers cleared the de-
    bris on the road. They also attempted to clear the obstruction in
    the culvert using a backhoe. UDOT‘s attempts to unblock the cul-
    vert were ultimately unsuccessful, and the workers left for the day
    at about 4:00 p.m. The decision to leave was based on the deter-
    mination that there was no change in driving conditions and noth-
    ing obstructing the roadway for motorists. A short time later, a
    single UDOT worker returned to inspect the site one last time. He
    saw some water flowing on the south side of SR-35. But he could
    not see if the water was flowing from the culvert or if it was leach-
    ing through the embankment under the road. The worker then left
    for the day.
    ¶5 The pooled water sat for several hours and apparently re-
    sulted in ―hydraulic piping‖—a phenomenon in which water
    seeps through and displaces the road base. This process of hy-
    draulic piping continued through the afternoon and night, and
    this discrepancy anyway. We do so in case there literally is a ―mile
    marker 46.5‖ on SR-35. Cf. J.K. ROWLING, HARRY POTTER AND THE
    SORCERER‘S STONE 89–90 (1998) (noting Uncle Vernon and Aunt
    Petunia‘s disbelief in the notion of a Platform 9 ¾ at King‘s Cross
    Station); John Ingold, Colorado Hopes a Mile 419.99 Sign on Interstate
    70       Thwarts      Stoners, DENVER        POST      (Jan.       10,
    2014), http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_24889289/colorado
    -hopes-mile-419-99-sign-interstate-70 (noting the replacement of
    mile marker 420 on I-70 with marker 419.99; noting that the num-
    ber 420 is ―[i]n sports terms,‖ the ―‗Roll Tide‘ of weed,‖ and ex-
    plaining that marker 420 repeatedly had been stolen by ―marijua-
    na enthusiasts‖) (Only in Colorado. Or so we assume.).
    2 The facts set forth here are largely undisputed, but presented
    in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party given that this
    case comes before us on an appeal from summary judgment.
    3
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    eventually the road collapsed. The result was a chasm in SR-35
    that was twenty feet deep and thirty feet across. There were no
    signs to alert oncoming traffic.
    ¶6 Plaintiff Heidi Paulson was traveling eastbound on SR-35
    later that night when suddenly, and without warning, her car
    slammed into the east wall of the chasm, falling nose-first to the
    bottom. Paulson was severely injured. Only a short time later,
    plaintiff Michael Barneck and his fifteen-year-old daughter Justine
    were traveling westbound when they violently crashed into the
    chasm, killing Justine and injuring Michael.
    ¶7 Plaintiffs sued UDOT on the basis of its alleged negligent
    maintenance of the road and the clogged culvert. After discovery,
    UDOT moved for summary judgment. UDOT claimed that it was
    immune under the Governmental Immunity Act because the
    plaintiffs‘ injuries arose out of the ―management of flood waters‖
    and the ―operation‖ of a ―flood or storm system.‖ The district
    court granted summary judgment in favor of UDOT on both theo-
    ries. Plaintiffs now appeal.
    ¶8 We review the district court‘s decision granting summary
    judgment de novo, affording it no deference. Torian v. Craig, 
    2012 UT 63
    , ¶ 13, 
    289 P.3d 479
    . In so doing, we determine whether
    UDOT has established that there are no genuine issues of material
    fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. UTAH R.
    CIV. P. 56(c).
    II
    ¶9 Utah‘s Governmental Immunity Act, UTAH CODE §§ 63G-7-
    101 to -904, at once waives sovereign immunity and carves out
    express exceptions to those waivers. The waiver of relevance to
    this case is in the provision waiving immunity for ―any injury
    caused by . . . a defective, unsafe, or dangerous condition of any
    highway [or] . . . culvert.‖ 
    Id. § 63G-7-301(3)(a)(i).
    And the rele-
    vant exception, in turn, is in the provision retaining immunity
    where ―the injury arises out of, in connection with, or results from
    . . . the management of flood waters‖ or the ―repair, or operation
    of [a] flood or storm system[].‖ 
    Id. § 63G-7-301(5)(p),
    (q).
    ¶10 In advancing its motion for summary judgment, UDOT re-
    lies on the above-cited exception provision. It claims that the neg-
    ligence alleged by the plaintiffs concerned UDOT‘s ―management
    of flood waters‖ or its ―repair[] or operation of [a] flood or storm
    4
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                            Opinion of the Court
    system[].‖ Plaintiffs see the case differently. They claim that their
    injuries were caused by ―a defective, unsafe, or dangerous condi-
    tion of [a] highway [or] . . . culvert,‖ and that the question of
    UDOT‘s immunity is thus controlled by the above-cited waiver
    provision. And in any event, to the extent there are disagreements
    about the cause of plaintiffs‘ injuries, plaintiffs point to those dis-
    agreements as an alternative ground (of genuine issues of material
    fact) for denying UDOT‘s motion for summary judgment.
    ¶11 To resolve this dispute, we must first interpret the terms of
    the operative waiver and exception provisions of the Governmen-
    tal Immunity Act. We must also clarify the relationship between
    these provisions by articulating the governing standard of causa-
    tion in a case (like this one) in which the plaintiffs‘ injuries might
    fairly be described as arising both out of conduct that is covered by
    a waiver provision (defective or dangerous culvert) and out of
    conduct that is described in an exception provision (management
    of flood waters or operation of a storm system).
    ¶12 We proceed in that manner in the paragraphs that follow.
    We (A) interpret the terms of the waiver of immunity for injuries
    caused by ―a defective, unsafe, or dangerous condition of any
    highway [or] . . . culvert‖; (B) set forth our understanding of the
    exception for the ―management of flood waters‖; (C) construe the
    exception for the ―operation of a flood or storm system‖; and (D)
    establish the causation standard that applies in a case in which an
    injury can be understood to arise both out of conduct that is de-
    scribed in a waiver provision and in an exception.
    A. Dangerous Condition of a Culvert
    ¶13 By statute, governmental immunity is waived for ―any in-
    jury caused by . . . a defective, unsafe, or dangerous condition of
    any highway [or] . . . culvert.‖ UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(3)(a)(i).
    The threshold question presented concerns the meaning of the
    statutory reference to a ―defective, unsafe, or dangerous condi-
    tion.‖
    ¶14 The operative terms of this waiver provision are imported
    from tort law. Specifically, the reference to ―defective, unsafe, or
    dangerous condition[s]‖ is an unmistakable transplant from the
    5
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    law of premises liability.3 In that field, this court has long held
    that landowners are liable in tort for defective or dangerous con-
    ditions on their land causing injuries to invitees.4 Similar stand-
    ards are embedded in settled tort law in other jurisdictions.5
    ¶15 These principles of premises liability have also long formed
    the basis of an exception to the common law doctrine of sovereign
    3 See Glaittli v. State, 
    2014 UT 30
    , ¶¶ 26–27, 
    332 P.3d 953
    (Lee, J.,
    concurring in the judgment) (noting that the Governmental Im-
    munity Act‘s waiver provisions incorporate ―classic terms of art
    from premises liability in the law of tort‖ such as ―dangerous
    condition‖ and ―latent condition‖ and ―natural condition‖ (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted)).
    4  See, e.g., Burt v. Utah Light & Power Co., 
    72 P. 497
    , 497–98 (Utah
    1903) (affirming jury verdict in a case in which the defendant
    maintained a ―tunnel conduit, 6 feet in diameter‖ near a county
    highway, ―a break or rift in the conduit permitted about one-
    fourth of the water flowing . . . to escape and flow to the county
    road‖ below, causing the death of plaintiff‘s fifteen-year-old-son;
    noting that ―the road in question was in the same dangerous con-
    dition for several days,‖ and affirming the admissibility of evi-
    dence offered to show the ―time and opportunity to the defendant
    to discover and remedy the dangerous condition‖); Scoville v. Salt
    Lake City, 
    39 P. 481
    , 482 (Utah Terr. 1895) (holding that even if ice
    that had accumulated on a sidewalk was not from a ―natural
    cause‖ but an ―artificial cause,‖ it still constituted a ―dangerous
    condition‖ and a ―defect‖ in the sidewalk, resulting in the munic-
    ipality‘s liability).
    5   See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 343 (1965) (setting forth
    the terms of the law under which ―[a] possessor of land is subject
    to liability for physical harm caused to his invitees by a condition
    on the land‖); 2 DAN B. DOBBS ET AL., THE LAW OF TORTS § 276, at
    84 (2d ed. 2011) (―The landowner owes to the invitee a nondele-
    gable duty of care to make conditions on the land reasonably safe
    . . . .‖); W. PAGE KEETON ET AL., PROSSER AND KEATON ON TORTS §
    61, at 419–32 (5th ed. 1984) (discussing the premises liability no-
    tion of a dangerous condition as applied to injuries to invitees).
    6
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                           Opinion of the Court
    immunity.6 It is accordingly unsurprising to see such principles
    incorporated in the statute that displaced the common law in this
    field—the Governmental Immunity Act. At various points in that
    Act, the legislature speaks the language of premises liability in
    codifying waivers of the government‘s immunity and exceptions
    thereto. UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(3)(a)(i) (waiving immunity for
    injuries caused by ―a defective, unsafe, or dangerous condition‖ of
    various public properties); 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(3)(b)(i) (retaining im-
    munity for ―latent dangerous or latent defective condition[s]‖ of
    those same public properties); 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(1)(c) (retaining im-
    munity for injuries caused by the Division of Water Resources‘
    failure to deliver water when it is due to a ―natural condition‖); 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(k) (retaining immunity for injuries caused by ―any
    natural condition on publicly owned or controlled lands‖).7
    ¶16 We accordingly construe the language of the statutory
    waiver of immunity for a ―defective, unsafe, or dangerous condi-
    tion of any highway [or] . . . culvert‖ to incorporate the term-of-art
    sense of these terms from premises liability in tort.8 ―It can be no
    accident that the relevant, operative terms of the Governmental
    Immunity Act—those addressed to the government‘s immunity as
    6  See BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY 335 (9th ed. 2009) (noting that the
    existence of a dangerous condition may ―result[] in [a] waiver of
    sovereign immunity‖); see also Davis v. Provo City Corp., 
    265 P.2d 415
    , 419 (Utah 1953) (Crockett, J., concurring) (―Respected authori-
    ties have recognized that where a static condition of extreme dan-
    ger is knowingly permitted to persist, that the city may be held
    liable [even if the city is engaged in a governmental function].‖).
    7 See also Glaittli, 
    2014 UT 30
    , ¶¶ 26–27 (Lee, J., concurring in the
    judgment) (citing these and other provisions).
    8  See Maxfield v. Herbert, 
    2012 UT 44
    , ¶ 31, 
    284 P.3d 647
    (―[W]hen
    a word or phrase is ‗transplanted from another legal source,
    whether the common law or other legislation, it brings the old soil
    with it.‘‖ (quoting Felix Frankfurter, Some Reflections on the Reading
    of Statutes, 47 COLUM. L. REV. 527, 537 (1947)); Hansen v. Hansen,
    
    2012 UT 9
    , ¶ 19, 
    270 P.3d 531
    (―Because the Utah support statute
    adopts a legal term of art . . . with a settled meaning in the law, we
    interpret the statute to embrace the meaning of the term as it is
    understood in that context.‖).
    7
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    regards its role as possessor of land or other property—coincide
    with the key terms that have long been used to define the scope of
    premises liability in tort.‖ Glaittli v. State, 
    2014 UT 30
    , ¶ 30, 
    332 P.3d 953
    (Lee, J., concurring in the judgment). Thus, we read the
    statute‘s waiver of immunity for ―defective, unsafe, or dangerous
    condition[s]‖ of highways and culverts ―as a transplant from
    premises liability in tort law.‖ 
    Id. ¶ 31.
    And we therefore ―inter-
    pret that term in a manner incorporating the ‗old soil‘ that it has
    long carried at common law.‖ 
    Id. ¶17 Under
    this term-of-art understanding, a dangerous condi-
    tion is ―[a] property defect creating a substantial risk of injury
    when the property is used in a reasonably foreseeable manner.‖
    BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY 335 (9th ed. 2009). In other words, the
    statutory waiver for ―defective, unsafe, or dangerous condi-
    tion[s]‖ applies to injuries caused by a ―defect[] or dangerous
    condition[] which [the government defendant] created, or of
    which [it] was aware, and which [it] should reasonably foresee
    would expose others to an unreasonable risk of harm.‖ Stephenson
    v. Warner, 
    581 P.2d 567
    , 568 (Utah 1978).9
    B. Management of Flood Waters
    ¶18 The statutory waiver of immunity for defective or danger-
    ous conditions of highways and culverts is subject to exceptions.
    One exception relevant here is as to injuries resulting from the
    ―management of flood waters.‖ UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(5)(p).
    UDOT seeks refuge in this provision. It advocates a broad under-
    9  Accord Akins v. Cnty. of Sonoma, 
    430 P.2d 57
    , 63 (Cal. 1967) (not-
    ing statutory definition of ―dangerous condition‖ as ―a condition
    of property that creates a substantial . . . risk of injury when such
    property . . . is used with due care in a manner in which it is rea-
    sonably foreseeable that it will be used.‖ (internal quotation
    marks omitted)); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 343 (―A pos-
    sessor of land is subject to liability for physical harm caused to his
    invitees by a condition on the land if, but only if, he (a) knows or
    by the exercise of reasonable care would discover the condition,
    and should realize that it involves an unreasonable risk of harm to
    such invitees, and (b) should expect that they will not discover or
    realize the danger, or will fail to protect themselves against it, and
    (c) fails to exercise reasonable care to protect them against the
    danger.‖).
    8
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                           Opinion of the Court
    standing of ―management of flood waters‖ that would encompass
    the broad range of conduct by UDOT that forms the basis of plain-
    tiffs‘ allegations of negligence.
    ¶19 Plaintiffs offer a more limited view of this provision. They
    would have us limit the concept of ―flood waters‖ to ―major
    events that rarely occur‖—a standard that in their view was not
    satisfied here because the rain storm in question was not so rare.
    Alternatively, plaintiffs insist that in any event UDOT did not en-
    gage in any effective ―management‖ given that its efforts were
    minimal and unsuccessful.
    ¶20 We adopt a middle position. We read the statutory refer-
    ence to ―flood waters‖ to embrace a term-of-art understanding
    from tort law—an understanding that forecloses plaintiffs‘ princi-
    ple limiting this provision to ―major‖ or ―rare‖ events. And we
    interpret ―management‖ in a manner that is inconsistent with
    plaintiffs‘ theory requiring successful management.
    1. Flood waters
    ¶21 ―Flood waters‖ is not a statutorily defined term. As with
    the phrase ―dangerous condition,‖ however, the term ―flood wa-
    ters‖ is a legal term of art incorporated from tort law and other
    fields.
    ¶22 In trespass liability in tort, ―flood waters‖ is an established
    term of art. It is best understood in relation to other, related
    terms—―watercourse‖ and ―standing water.‖ As the Restatement
    (Second) of Torts commentary indicates:
    [I]n times of flood a stream may be swollen far be-
    yond its normal size. The additional volume of wa-
    ter is called flood water. As long as this flood water
    remains a part of the stream and continues to flow
    with it either in the main channel or in a separate
    flood channel . . . , it is part of the watercourse. But
    when flood water departs from the flowing stream
    and ceases to flow as part of the stream or becomes
    stagnant, it is no longer part of the watercourse.
    9
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶23 RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 841 cmt.k (1965).10 Thus,
    ―flood water‖ is water that flows beyond a regular watercourse.
    And a ―watercourse,‖ in turn, is ―a stream of water . . . flowing
    constantly or recurrently on the surface of the earth in a reasona-
    bly definite natural channel.‖ 
    Id. § 841(1);
    see also BLACK‘S LAW
    DICTIONARY, supra at 1729 (defining ―watercourse‖ as ―[a] body of
    water, usu. of natural origin, flowing in a reasonably definite
    channel with bed and banks‖).
    ¶24 A ―watercourse‖ includes the channel or bed itself and
    does not require that the bed carry running water year-round. So
    a watercourse may be dry ―in time[s] of drought‖ and running
    with water at other times of the year. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
    TORTS § 841 cmts. a, c. ―Surface water‖ on the other hand, is ―wa-
    ter from rain, melting snow, springs or seepage, or detached from
    subsiding floods, that lies or flows on the surface of the earth but
    does not form a part of a watercourse . . . . ‖ 
    Id. § 846.
      ¶25 In accordance with these principles, rain water falling and
    accumulating outside of a ―watercourse‖—even in significant
    quantities—is not ―flood water‖ but ―surface water.‖ See, e.g., S.
    Pac. Co. v. Proebstel, 
    150 P.2d 81
    , 83 (Ariz. 1944); Horton v. Goode-
    nough, 
    194 P. 34
    , 37 (Cal. 1920). Thus, it is only after that water
    joins a watercourse (whether the watercourse is natural or artifi-
    cial) and then spills out over its banks (whether the cause is natu-
    10 This is not to say that all abnormal volumes of water within a
    watercourse are ―flood water.‖ The Restatement goes on to note
    that ―[s]ome streams have overflow or flood channels that carry
    the excess water of the stream during high water or flood peri-
    ods.‖ RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 841 cmt.f. So long as the-
    se channels are ―reasonably defined,‖ ―they are part of the water-
    course.‖ 
    Id. And additional
    volumes of water in those channels
    are not ―flood waters.‖ Id.; see also Fitzpatrick v. Okanogan Cnty.,
    
    238 P.3d 1129
    , 1134 (Wash. 2010) (en banc) (noting that water
    within the ―flood channel‖ of a stream is still a part of ―[a] natural
    watercourse,‖ and is not ―flood water‖ or ―surface water‖ for
    purposes of the common enemy doctrine (internal quotation
    marks omitted)); Mogle v. Moore, 
    104 P.2d 785
    , 789 (Cal. 1940)
    (―The term ‗flood waters‘ is used to indicate waters which escape
    from a water course . . . and flow over adjoining lands in no regular
    channel . . . .‖ (emphasis added)).
    10
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                            Opinion of the Court
    ral or artificial) that it becomes ―flood water.‖ See, e.g., Maricopa
    Cnty. Mun. Water Conservation Dist. No. 1 v. Warford, 
    206 P.2d 1168
    ,
    1175 (Ariz. 1949); Williams v. Carbon Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    780 P.2d 816
    , 818 (Utah 1989) (rejecting a school district‘s claim of immuni-
    ty—where water collected on a parking lot the district had resur-
    faced damaged neighboring lands—on the ground that the dam-
    ages resulted ―from the runoff surface waters‖ and not the ―man-
    agement of flood waters‖ (emphasis added) (internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    ¶26 Accordingly, the status of water as ―flood water‖ does not
    depend, as plaintiffs suggest, on the rarity of the rainstorm that
    produced it. We don‘t doubt, as plaintiffs note, that the highly
    unusual flooding that occurred in downtown Salt Lake City in
    1983 animated the legislature‘s attention to this matter. But, as we
    have stated before, it is ―an erroneous premise‖ to assume that
    ―statutory provisions are addressed only to the specific problems
    giving rise to their adoption.‖ Graves v. Ne. Servs., Inc., 
    2015 UT 28
    ,
    ¶68, 
    345 P.3d 619
    ; see also Hooban v. Unicity Int’l, Inc., 
    2012 UT 40
    ,
    ¶ 17, 
    285 P.3d 766
    (―[W]e cannot presume that the legislature
    meant only to deal with [one] particular problem, as legislative
    bodies often start with one problem in mind but then reach more
    broadly in their ultimate enactment.‖). Thus, the fact that unusual
    rainfall animated the passage of the flood waters provision does
    not limit the scope of the ―flood waters‖ provision to such events.
    The status of water as ―flood water‖ depends on its connection
    and location relative to a watercourse, not the water‘s unusual-
    ness. ―Flood waters‖ are those that have joined a watercourse and
    spilled over its banks. Extending these principles to the Govern-
    mental Immunity Act, UDOT retains immunity for injuries caused
    by its management of flood waters—of waters that have escaped a
    watercourse, by exceeding its bounds and flowing out over adja-
    cent property. To the extent UDOT‘s activities are directed at a
    defective culvert as the source of the flood waters, on the other
    hand, the statute‘s immunity does not attach. See UTAH CODE
    § 63G-7-301(3)(a)(i).
    2. Management
    ¶27 As with ―flood waters,‖ the term ―management‖ is not de-
    fined in the Governmental Immunity Act. And the parties again
    offer competing definitions of the term. UDOT advances a broad
    definition—encompassing any management-level decision, in-
    11
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    cluding a decision to leave flood water as is (i.e., omissions).
    Plaintiffs, on the other hand, contend for a narrower construction.
    They insist that management encompasses only active—and suc-
    cessful—attempts to direct flood water. We reject plaintiff‘s argu-
    ment as untenable and adopt UDOT‘s position in part.
    ¶28 The term management ―is not expressly defined in the Act,
    and does not appear to be a technical term of art.‖ Hi-Country
    Prop. Rights Grp. v. Emmer, 
    2013 UT 33
    , ¶ 18, 
    304 P.3d 851
    . We ac-
    cordingly ―construe it to partake of the ordinary meaning the
    word would have to a reasonable person familiar with the usage
    and context of the language in question.‖ 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). A starting point for assessing ordinary meaning
    is the dictionary. We start there because the dictionary attests to a
    range of senses that a given term has been given over time. See 
    id. ¶ 19.
      ¶29 The attested senses of ―management‖ and of its root verb
    ―manage‖ leave room for elements of the meanings advanced by
    both parties. As UDOT indicates, sometimes ―management‖ is
    simply ―the act or art of managing,‖ as in ―the conducting or su-
    pervising of something,‖ especially ―the executive function of
    planning, organizing, coordinating, directing, controlling, and su-
    pervising.‖ WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY
    1372 (2002).11 Yet the plaintiffs‘ notion of ―management‖ also finds
    tenable support in the dictionary. An alternative notion of ―man-
    age‖ is ―to control and direct.‖ 
    Id. And sometimes
    ―manage‖ even
    conveys success—as in the notion of ―manage‖ as ―[t]o succeed in
    accomplishing, achieving, or producing.‖ AMERICAN HERITAGE
    11  See also AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
    LANGUAGE 1064–65 (5th ed. 2011) (―management‖: ―[t]he act,
    manner, or practice of managing; handling, supervision, or con-
    trol‖; ―manage‖: ―[t]o have charge of; direct or administer‖);
    RANDOM HOUSE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1166 (2d
    ed. 1987) (―management‖: ―the act or manner of managing; han-
    dling, direction, or control‖; ―manage‖: ―to take charge or care
    of‖); AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
    792 (2d ed. 1981) (―management‖: ―[t]he act, manner, or practice
    of managing, handling, or controlling something‖; ―manage‖: ―to
    direct or administer‖).
    12
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                          Opinion of the Court
    DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1065 (5th ed. 2011).12 But
    see WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1372 (defin-
    ing ―manage‖ as to ―handle either well or ill‖).
    ¶30 Thus, the dictionary itself cannot resolve the contest of
    meanings of management put forward by the parties. But the struc-
    ture and context of the Governmental Immunity Act serve to do
    so. In context, it makes no sense to read ―manage‖ to be limited to
    the notion of successfully accomplishing or achieving something. A
    provision preserving the government‘s immunity from liability for
    injuries caused by the ―management‖ of ―flood waters‖ necessari-
    ly presumes that such management may not be successful. Oth-
    erwise there would be no need for immunity from suit. For that
    reason we cannot agree with plaintiffs that ―making a futile effort
    that is doomed to failure . . . does not qualify as management.‖
    ¶31 We likewise conclude that ―management‖ cannot be lim-
    ited to the physical function of actively ―control[ling] and di-
    rect[ing]‖ the flood waters themselves. WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW
    INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1372. That notion of management
    makes no sense in the context of a provision preserving immunity
    for injuries arising out of ―the management of flood waters, earth-
    quakes, or natural disasters.‖ UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(5)(p) (empha-
    sis added). One cannot control or direct an earthquake or a torna-
    do. The only way that government can manage those phenomena is
    in the broad sense advanced by UDOT—by ―conducting or su-
    pervising‖ the government‘s efforts to deal with them, by ―plan-
    ning, organizing, coordinating, and supervising.‖ WEBSTER‘S
    THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1372. So that sense of
    management must suffice to trigger the flood waters immunity,
    since under the canon of consistent usage13 ―management‖ cannot
    12 See also AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
    LANGUAGE 1065 (5th ed.) (providing one definition of ―manage-
    ment‖ as ―[s]kill in managing; executive ability‖); RANDOM HOUSE
    DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1166 (same).
    13  ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE
    INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS 173 (2012) (describing this canon
    and explaining that ―the more connection [one use of a word in a
    statute] has with the [use of the word] under consideration, the
    13
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    properly mean one thing as applied to two of the objects in a se-
    ries (earthquakes and natural disasters) but something else as ap-
    plied to the other object in the same series (flood waters).14
    ¶32 Thus, we interpret the statute‘s immunity for injuries aris-
    ing out of the ―management‖ of flood waters to refer to executive
    efforts at planning, organizing, coordinating, or supervising the
    government‘s response to such waters. Such efforts could certain-
    ly encompass a studied decision to do nothing. On that basis we
    reject the plaintiffs‘ assertion that ―omissions‖ could not count as
    ―management.‖
    ¶33 Yet we also stop short of a whole-hearted endorsement of
    UDOT‘s (and the district court‘s) position—that any and all ―inac-
    tion‖ counts as ―management.‖ Certainly there are some decisions
    not to act (like a decision to allocate flood mitigation resources to
    one affected area and not another) that easily qualify as managerial
    omissions. But if government literally does nothing—making no
    studied assessment of flood waters and rendering no decision as
    to how to deal with the problem—then there would appear to be
    no management at all, and thus no sense in which an injury could
    arise out of such management.15
    C. Operation of a Flood or Storm System
    ¶34 A second basis for immunity under the Act is for injuries
    arising out of ―the construction, repair, or operation of flood or
    storm systems.‖ UTAH CODe § 63G-7-301(5)(q). UDOT contends
    that the culvert in question is a ―storm system.‖ Its principal ar-
    more plausible the argument becomes‖ that they share the same
    meaning).
    14 This is not to say that active efforts at directing or controlling
    flood waters would not qualify as ―management.‖ Such efforts
    would undoubtedly count as one of the more common ways for
    the government to deal with flood waters, and would thus qualify
    for immunity. But the statute renders plaintiffs‘ limited view of
    ―management‖ untenable. That term cannot be limited to active
    attempts to direct or control for reasons noted above.
    15  See, e.g., AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
    LANGUAGE 1064–65 (5th ed.) (―management‖: ―[t]he act, manner, or
    practice of managing; handling, supervision, or control‖ (emphasis
    added)).
    14
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                           Opinion of the Court
    gument for that conclusion is the notion that it groups the culvert
    in question together with other culverts in the same general area
    for certain reporting purposes. The district court agreed. It con-
    cluded that the culvert in question was part of a ―storm system‖
    in the sense of ―an organized or established procedure or method
    or the set of materials or appliances used to carry it out.‖
    WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 2322; see also 
    id. (―an aggregation
    . . . of objects joined in regular interaction or in-
    terdependence‖).
    ¶35 We disagree. UDOT has not asserted that the culvert is a
    storm system; at most it has suggested that it is part of one. That
    cannot be enough to sustain the applicability of the statutory ex-
    ception. If that were sufficient, the ―storm system[]‖ exception
    would swallow the ―culvert‖ rule. In a statute that waives im-
    munity for injuries caused by a defective ―culvert‖ but reinstates
    immunity for injuries arising out of the operation of ―storm sys-
    tems,‖ a culvert cannot logically be equated with a storm system.
    D. Proximate Cause
    ¶36 The Immunity Act‘s waivers extend to injuries ―proximate-
    ly caused‖ by a governmental entity‘s negligence, UTAH CODE
    § 63G-7-301(4), or ―caused by‖ a ―defective, unsafe, or dangerous
    condition‖ of a ―culvert,‖ 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(3)(a)(i). In the exception
    provisions, however, immunity is reinstated for injuries that
    ―arise[] out of, in connection with, or result[] from‖ a latent defec-
    tive condition of a culvert, 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(b)(i); from the ―man-
    agement of flood waters,‖ 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(p); or from the ―con-
    struction, repair, or operation of flood or storm systems,‖ 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(q).
    ¶37 The parties offer competing constructions of these causa-
    tion standards. In UDOT‘s view, immunity attaches if there is any
    causal connection between the management of flood waters or the
    operation of a storm system and the plaintiffs‘ injuries. The plain-
    tiffs disagree. They insist that ―UDOT should not be immune from
    any damages . . . for time immemorial,‖ and that there must be
    some ―sufficient causal nexus‖—based on the ―actions taken,‖ the
    time between the government action and the injury, and ―the de-
    gree of risk at issue.‖
    ¶38 We concede that UDOT‘s approach finds support in our
    precedents. But we reject it on the ground that it yields an expan-
    15
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    sive notion of the Immunity Act‘s exceptions that effectively swal-
    lows the antecedent waivers. With that in mind, and in an attempt
    to reconcile the results of our prior decisions (if not the analysis of
    our prior opinions) with the operative terms of the statute, we re-
    pudiate the language of some of our prior opinions and adopt a
    new standard. Under the new standard (explained further below),
    we hold that an immunity-invoking condition (such as the man-
    agement of flood waters or operation of a storm system) must be a
    proximate cause of the plaintiff‘s injuries in order to sustain the re-
    instatement of immunity.
    ¶39 In a number of prior opinions, we have concluded that a
    but-for causal connection is sufficient to trigger a statutory rein-
    statement of immunity under an exception provision of the Act.
    See Hoyer v. State, 
    2009 UT 38
    , ¶ 32, 
    212 P.3d 547
    ; Blackner v. Dep’t
    of Transp., 
    2002 UT 44
    , ¶15, 
    48 P.3d 949
    ; Taylor ex rel. Taylor v. Og-
    den City Sch. Dist., 
    927 P.2d 159
    , 163 (Utah 1996). This test has
    some arguable basis in the statutory text. The exception provi-
    sions do not speak explicitly in terms of proximate cause. They
    reinstate immunity for an injury that ―arises out of, in connection
    with, or results from‖ one of the exceptions. UTAH CODE § 63G-7-
    301(5). And the ―results from‖ formulation may properly be un-
    derstood as the invocation of a but-for test, see Burrage v. United
    States, 
    134 S. Ct. 881
    , 887–89 (2014) (collecting cases holding that
    similar phrases indicate but-for causation), particularly if read in
    contrast to the express proximate cause standard in the waiver of
    immunity for negligence, see UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(4).
    ¶40 In the abstract, the Immunity Act‘s different causation for-
    mulations—of ―proximate[] cause[]‖ in the negligence waiver but
    ―results from‖ in connection with the statutory exceptions—might
    imply two different standards of causation. This could arguably
    follow from the premise that where a statute ―has used one term
    in one place, and a materially different term in another, the pre-
    sumption is that the different term denotes a different idea.‖
    SCALIA & GARNER, supra note 13, at 170. But this presumption is a
    rather weak one. 
    Id. at 171
    (referring to the canon as ―often disre-
    garded‖ and ―particularly defeasible by context‖). It can easily be
    rebutted by context. And in any event it begs the question—of
    whether the second term is ultimately a ―materially different‖ one
    (or instead merely a synonym). In this instance we deem the ref-
    16
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                            Opinion of the Court
    erence to ―arises out of‖ as synonymous with ―proximately
    caused,‖ for reasons set forth below.
    ¶41 First, the ―results from‖ formulation in the exception provi-
    sions is not obviously ―materially different‖ from the proximate
    cause standard in the waiver provision. Sometimes ―results from‖
    is understood to convey the principle of proximate cause. For
    years this court and others interpreted the Federal Employers‘ Li-
    ability Act—which recognizes a tort cause of action for federal
    railroad employees for ―injury or death resulting‖ from a rail-
    road‘s negligence—to require proof of proximate cause. Raab v.
    Utah Ry. Co., 
    2009 UT 61
    , ¶¶ 12, 41–42, 
    221 P.3d 219
    .16 And alt-
    hough the U.S. Supreme Court reached a different conclusion in
    CSX Transp., Inc. v. McBride, 
    131 S. Ct. 2630
    (2011), that court can
    hardly be understood to have ruled that this terminology always
    conveys a but-for standard of causation. Instead it has recognized
    that courts ―read phrases like ‗results from‘ to require but-for cau-
    sality‖ only ―[w]here there is no textual or contextual indication to
    the contrary.‖ 
    Burrage, 134 S. Ct. at 888
    (interpreting the phrase
    ―results from‖ in the federal Controlled Substances Act to require
    but-for causation, rather than a ―substantial‖ factor causation
    standard, before imposing mandatory 20-year sentencing en-
    hancement, without reaching question of whether it also requires
    a showing of proximate causation).
    ¶42 Second, in this instance there are strong ―textual‖ and
    ―contextual‖ indications that the ―results from‖ terminology of
    the exception provisions is in line with the ―proximately caused‖
    standard in the waiver provision. Most important is the fact that a
    ―but-for‖ reading of ―arises out of‖ would allow the statutory ex-
    ceptions to nullify the immunity waivers in a number of common
    circumstances. It is easy to imagine circumstances in which the
    16  See CSX Transp., Inc. v. McBride, 
    131 S. Ct. 2630
    , 2644–45 (2011)
    (Roberts, J., dissenting) (noting that the Supreme Court‘s ―own
    cases, for 50 years after the passage of FELA, repeatedly recog-
    nized that proximate cause was required for recovery under that
    statute‖); see also 
    id. at 2646
    (noting that the Court has ―applied the
    standard requirement of proximate cause to actions under federal
    statutes where the text did not expressly provide for it‖ in every-
    thing from securities fraud, to RICO, to Antitrust, to environmen-
    tal cases under NEPA).
    17
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    government‘s waiver of immunity for negligence would be com-
    pletely erased by a but-for connection to wide-ranging activity
    covered by an exception—like the performance of a ―discretionary
    function,‖ UTAH CODE § 63G-7-301(5)(a), ―the collection of and as-
    sessment of taxes‖, 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(h), or the ―issuance, denial,
    suspension, or revocation of, or by the failure or refusal to issue,
    deny, suspend, or revoke, any permit, license, certificate, approv-
    al, order, or similar authorization,‖ 
    id. § 63G-
    7-301(5)(c).
    ¶43 If a but-for connection to these activities were enough to
    override the government‘s waiver of immunity for negligence, the
    statutory waiver would be overridden in a wide range of cases.17
    That makes little sense in the context of a statute aimed at waiving
    governmental immunity for negligence and other governmental
    activity specified in the waiver provisions. The problem with the
    but-for standard is evident in the context of this case. Any case of
    a defective culvert would also (quite inevitably) encompass a but-
    for connection to discretionary functions, to taxes, and to permits
    or licenses. Yet if such a but-for connection were sufficient to rein-
    state immunity, the waiver for defective culverts would be nulli-
    fied. We reject the but-for standard on that basis.
    ¶44 If we are to give effect to both sets of provisions (as we
    must), we cannot properly reinstate immunity on a mere showing
    of ―some causal relationship,‖ e.g., 
    Taylor, 927 P.2d at 163
    , between
    the excepted immune act and the plaintiff‘s injury. Our analysis
    must vindicate—and mediate—both sets of provisions (waivers
    17 See Kerr v. City of Salt Lake, 
    2013 UT 75
    , ¶¶ 16, 21–23, 
    322 P.3d 669
    (rejecting a city‘s reliance on the ―discretionary function‖ ex-
    ception in a case of injury caused by the defective condition of a
    sidewalk; explaining that ―[b]ecause all cities must decide how to
    allocate scarce public funds to maintain sidewalks, Salt Lake
    City‘s interpretation of the discretionary function exception
    would completely negate the explicit waiver of governmental
    immunity for defective or dangerous sidewalks‖); Thayer v. Wash.
    Cnty. Sch. Dist., 
    2012 UT 31
    , ¶ 57, 
    285 P.3d 1142
    (Lee, J., dissent-
    ing) (rejecting a but-for causation standard in the context of the
    licensing exception; noting that nearly all negligent driving deci-
    sions by government employees could be shielded by ―plausibly
    trac[ing] the injury back to the issuance of the employee‘s driver‘s
    license‖).
    18
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                           Opinion of the Court
    and exceptions). We therefore hold that the exception provisions
    (reinstating immunity) are properly invoked only where a plain-
    tiff‘s injury is proximately caused by immune conduct.
    ¶45 In so holding, we need not and do not overrule the results
    of our prior decisions, as most of them can be recast in terms con-
    sistent with the standard we adopt today. As noted above, three
    of our prior cases adopt the but-for standard—Taylor, Blackner,
    and Hoyer. All three cases arguably would have come out the
    same way under the proximate cause standard.
    ¶46 Taylor arose out of a fight between students in a middle
    school restroom. 
    Id. One of
    the students pushed the plaintiff,
    whose hand then went through a glass window. 
    Id. The student,
    through his parents, sued the school district, claiming negligence
    in not having installed safety-glass in the bathroom. 
    Id. And the
    district then invoked immunity under an exception for injuries
    arising ―out of assault.‖ 
    Id. at 160.
    Adopting and applying a but-
    for test, we held that ―the nerve and tendon damage to [the plain-
    tiff‘s] hand was the result of [the plaintiff‘s] being shoved into the
    window by a fellow student.‖ 
    Id. at 163.
    In Taylor, however, it was
    beyond question that the student pushing the plaintiff into the
    window was also a proximate cause of the injury. So the invocation
    of the but-for test was immaterial. The case would have come out
    the same way under the standard we adopt today.
    ¶47 In Blackner the plaintiff was stopped on a canyon road wait-
    ing for a UDOT front-end loader to clear snow from an avalanche
    that had occurred earlier that morning. 
    2002 UT 44
    , ¶ 4. A UDOT
    employee was inspecting avalanche-prone areas nearby and no-
    ticed that many cars, including the plaintiff‘s, were parked direct-
    ly beneath a known avalanche zone. 
    Id. ¶ 5.
    The employee cau-
    tioned others about the problem, but a determination was made
    that the loader could continue clearing the road. 
    Id. Only mo-
    ments after removing the last bit of snow, a second avalanche hit,
    injuring the plaintiff. 
    Id. ¶¶ 6–7.
    UDOT invoked the ―natural con-
    dition‖ exception under the Act, and we affirmed on the ground
    that the avalanches were natural conditions and both but-for
    causes of the plaintiff‘s injuries. 
    Id. ¶¶ 15–16.
    Again, however, the
    avalanches were also quite apparently the proximate cause of the
    plaintiff‘s injuries—the impact on the plaintiff was direct and
    19
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    quite foreseeable.18 So the Blackner result would be correct under
    our new standard despite the fact that UDOT‘s alleged negligence
    was likely also a proximate cause.19
    ¶48 The Hoyer case is more difficult to reconcile with our new
    standard, but even that case may arguably have come out the
    same way. In Hoyer the plaintiff sued the Department of Wildlife
    Resources for negligently failing to care for snakes it had seized
    from the plaintiff during the execution of a search warrant. 
    2009 UT 38
    , ¶¶ 2–3. The plaintiff offered to have an expert come in and
    care for the snakes while DWR held them, but DWR refused. 
    Id. ¶ 3.
    All but eight of the snakes died as a result. 
    Id. DWR claimed
    immunity under the ―judicial or administrative proceeding‖ ex-
    ception under the Act. 
    Id. ¶ 24.
    We held that DWR was immune
    because ―the snakes would not have died‖ ―[b]ut for these judicial
    proceedings.‖ 
    Id. ¶ 32.
    Yet again this same result arguably could
    still have obtained under a proximate cause inquiry—if, for ex-
    ample, it could be shown that the seizure of a fickle breed of boa
    constrictors to instigate a criminal proceeding heightened the
    scope of the risk of the snakes dying, making such a result fore-
    seeable under the circumstances.20
    18 See Fluehr v. City of Cape May, 
    732 A.2d 1035
    , 1041 (N.J. 1991)
    (holding in statutory tort sovereign immunity case that ―the natu-
    ral conditions of the ocean,‖ rather than lifeguards‘ negligence,
    ―were the legal cause‖ of a surfer‘s broken neck (emphasis added)).
    19  That is the net effect of a determination that a particular injury
    is a proximate result of both an act for which the government has
    waived immunity (such as negligence) and an act for which the
    statute reinstates it (such as a natural condition): To give effect to
    both the waiver and the exception, immunity is first waived and
    then reinstated.
    20 See, e.g., B.R. ex rel. Jeffs v. West, 
    2012 UT 11
    , ¶ 28, 
    275 P.3d 228
    (explaining that ―proximate cause‖ requires an inquiry into
    ―whether the precise causal mechanism of a plaintiff‘s injuries
    was a foreseeable result of‖ the defendant‘s allegedly tortious ac-
    tions); Chylinski v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    150 F.3d 214
    , 217 (2d Cir.
    1998) (―In order to determine whether a defendant's conduct is the
    proximate cause of an injury, it is . . . necessary to determine
    20
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                           Opinion of the Court
    ¶49 The point is not to say that all of our prior cases are con-
    sistent with the new standard we adopt today. We adopt this
    standard because we deem it required by the structure and text of
    the Immunity Act. And we repudiate our prior decisions to the
    extent they are irreconcilable with our new standard.
    III
    ¶50 The above legal background sets the stage for our analysis
    of the motion for summary judgment before us on appeal. In as-
    sessing UDOT‘s motion, we consider whether UDOT has estab-
    lished that ―there is no genuine issue as to any material fact‖ and
    that it is ―entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.‖ UTAH R. CIV.
    P. 56(c). We conclude that UDOT has failed to carry that burden
    under the legal standards set forth above, and accordingly re-
    verse.
    ¶51 As an initial matter, it seems apparent that plaintiffs have
    properly invoked the waiver of immunity for injuries caused by a
    defective culvert. The culvert contained a ―defect‖ (the blockage)
    that created a ―substantial risk of injury‖ (hydraulic piping and
    the eventual chasm). And the plaintiffs‘ injuries are (at least argu-
    ably) proximately connected to the defect in the culvert—in that
    the blockage heightened the scope of the risk in a manner leading
    to injuries that were easily foreseeable.
    ¶52 It seems equally as clear that at least some of the water in-
    volved in this incident was ―flood water.‖ During the downpour,
    water began running in a watercourse—the gully and culvert. As
    a result of a defect in the culvert, the water backed up on the north
    side of SR-35, swelling beyond its bounds and flowing out ―in no
    regular channel‖ over the surface of SR-35. Whether the water that
    remained pooled on the north side of the road was ―flood water‖
    remains to be seen, as neither of the parties presented any evi-
    dence on whether that water had gone beyond the bounds of the
    gully other than having spilled over the road at some point before
    receding. Ultimately, however, at least some of the water involved
    in this incident—the amount that went over the road—was ―flood
    water‖ within the meaning of the Act.
    whether the harm caused is within the foreseeable scope of the
    risk created by the defendant's conduct.‖).
    21
    BARNECK v. UDOT
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶53 That said, UDOT has not established that the government
    activity forming the basis of the plaintiffs‘ claims amounted to
    ―management‖ of any such flood waters. The claim on review on
    summary judgment is rooted in the allegation that the ―legal and
    proximate cause‖ of plaintiffs‘ injuries was UDOT‘s negligence in
    its ―fail[ure] to eliminate the blockage‖ in the culvert, its failure to
    ―disburse the water‖ that had collected in the gully, and its failure
    ―to warn of or protect travelers from the dangerous conditions on
    SR-35.‖ Those allegations are focused on UDOT‘s actions in deal-
    ing with the culvert and with the water pooled next to the em-
    bankment (water that has not been shown to be ―flood water‖).
    ¶54 Plaintiffs‘ evidence on summary judgment was along the
    same lines. In the briefing on summary judgment in the district
    court, plaintiffs presented evidence focused on UDOT‘s alleged
    negligence in its attempts to unclog the culvert. In their statement
    of undisputed facts (which were eventually agreed to by UDOT
    for purposes of summary judgment), plaintiffs pointed to UDOT‘s
    knowledge of the dangers of pooled water next to an embank-
    ment, its failure to inspect the south side of the gully to see if the
    water was leaching through the embankment or flowing from the
    culvert, its failure to leave warning signs, and its minimal efforts
    in trying to unblock the culvert. And although plaintiffs refer-
    enced the water that spilled over SR-35, at no time did they allege
    or was any evidence put forward to show that their injuries were
    causally related to UDOT‘s management of that water. The only
    water UDOT was alleged to have managed in a manner causing
    injuries to plaintiffs was water that apparently was still inside a
    watercourse (the water pooled on the north side of the road in the
    gully).21
    ¶55 UDOT‘s argument on appeal accepts this premise, at least
    in part. In its briefing to this court, UDOT asserts that ―the culvert
    became blocked; the water in the adjacent wash escaped from the
    21 The parties did not develop a factual record as to the character
    of the pooled water or the natural bounds of the gully on the
    north side of the road. We assume at this point that it was simply
    water still inside the watercourse (the gully). We do not foreclose
    the possibility that this water was ―flood water,‖ though we do
    not endorse that view either. We reserve the matter for further in-
    quiry on remand.
    22
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                           Opinion of the Court
    wash and flowed over normally dry round; and UDOT made an
    effort to eliminate the blockage.‖ ―Those facts,‖ UDOT concludes,
    ―establish that UDOT managed the flood water.‖ (Emphasis add-
    ed). But that argument only serves to emphasize the nature of the
    plaintiffs‘ claims as set forth above. UDOT‘s ―effort to eliminate
    the blockage‖ was an attempt to remedy a defect in a culvert, not
    to manage flood waters. See supra ¶ 25. UDOT has accordingly
    failed to establish that there are no genuine issues of fact and that
    it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    ¶56 UDOT also failed to establish a right to judgment as a mat-
    ter of law under the ―storm system‖ exception. This argument
    fails as a matter of law. For reasons noted above, a single culvert
    might qualify as a component part of a ―storm system,‖ but it is
    not a storm system in itself. So the plaintiffs‘ injuries cannot be
    shown to be proximately connected to the operation of such a sys-
    tem, as the only allegation here is in connection with UDOT‘s ef-
    forts in connection with this culvert.
    IV
    ¶57 For the above reasons we hold that UDOT failed to carry its
    burden of establishing that there is no genuine issue of material
    fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In re-
    versing the entry of summary judgment, however, we do not
    deem UDOT categorically ineligible for immunity. We simply
    hold that it has failed to carry its burden on the record before us.
    ¶58 In remanding, we leave open the possibility that UDOT
    may yet advance evidence that plaintiffs‘ injuries were proximately
    caused by its ―management‖ of ―flood waters‖ as those terms are
    defined above. To the extent it can do so, moreover, we note that
    it may ultimately qualify for immunity to the extent the plaintiffs‘
    injuries are proximately connected to that activity.
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