Jenkins v. Jordan Valley Water Conservancy District ( 2012 )


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  •                           IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    ‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐
    Alan Jenkins, Ash Jenkins, and Patricia      )                  OPINION
    Jenkins,                                     )
    )            Case No. 20100400‐CA
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,            )
    )                   FILED
    v.                                           )               (January 6, 2012)
    )
    Jordan Valley Water Conservancy              )                
    2012 UT App 1
    District,                                    )
    )
    Defendant and Appellee.               )
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    Third District, Salt Lake Department, 070908316
    The Honorable Judith S. Atherton
    Attorneys:      Carl E. Kingston, Salt Lake City, for Appellants
    David C. Richards and Sarah E. Spencer, Salt Lake City, for Appellee
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    Before Judges McHugh, Voros, and Orme.
    McHUGH, Presiding Judge:
    ¶1      Alan, Ash, and Patricia Jenkins (the Jenkinses) appeal from the trial court’s order
    granting summary judgment in favor of Jordan Valley Water Conservancy District (the
    District) on the Jenkinses’ claim for damages to their home and property after a water
    line owned and operated by the District broke and flooded the Jenkinses’ home on two
    separate occasions. The trial court concluded that the Jenkinses’ claims were barred by
    the public duty doctrine. We conclude that the trial court was incorrect and reverse on
    this issue. In addition, we reject the District’s alternative grounds for summary
    judgment. Although the District’s actions fall within the scope of the statutory
    immunity afforded governmental entities, the current definition of “governmental
    function” results in a complete abrogation of the Jenkinses’ preexisting remedy and
    violates the Utah Constitution’s open courts clause. Therefore, we remand to the trial
    court for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     Alan Jenkins is the owner of a home located in South Salt Lake, Utah (the Home).
    During the relevant time period, Alan’s son and daughter‐in‐law, Ash and Patricia
    Jenkins, and Ash’s and Patricia’s three children lived with Alan in the Home. The
    District is a political subdivision of the State of Utah. It treats and delivers water to
    other local districts, cities, residents, and businesses located within the geographic
    boundaries of the District. To accomplish these purposes, the District owns and
    operates approximately 275 miles of water transmission and distribution pipelines,
    including a section that is buried along the south side of 3300 South Street between 200
    and 500 East (the Water Line Section). The Water Line Section runs parallel to the
    Jenkinses’ Home, which abuts 3300 South.
    ¶3      In December 2002, after considering numerous factors, including the history of
    prior breaks, the Engineering Department Manager and Distribution & Transmission
    Technical Advisor (collectively, the Engineers) identified the Water Line Section as
    needing to be replaced. Most of the pipe comprising the water line is cast iron pipe that
    was installed in the 1950s and 1960s; the Water Line Section was installed in 1957.
    These older pipes have a useful life expectancy of forty to seventy years depending
    upon various factors, including the depth of the pipe and soil conditions.
    Consequently, many sections of the water line were coming to the end of their useful
    life, and a significant number of sections had been identified for replacement (the
    Identified Pipe).
    ¶4      According to the District, it is financially impossible to replace all of the
    Identified Pipe in a single year. Therefore, the District has adopted procedures to
    prioritize the replacement of Identified Pipe according to various factors affecting need,
    cost, and convenience, and to recommend which Identified Pipe should be replaced in
    any given year (the Recommended Pipe). Based on the application of those factors, the
    20100400‐CA                                 2
    Engineers determined that the replacement of the Water Line Section should be
    deferred because it was not economically justified at that time. In their 2003‐2004
    annual budget proposal to the District’s Board of Trustees (the Board), the Engineers
    presented their recommendation of which Identified Pipe should be replaced that year,
    the reasons for that recommendation, and a request for the necessary funds to replace
    the Recommended Pipe. The Engineers acknowledge that their decision was influenced
    by the Board’s expectation that they not exceed the prior year’s capital improvement
    budget by more than a certain percentage. Although they identified the Water Line
    Section as needing to be replaced in 2002, the Engineers did not recommend it for
    replacement until 2006. The Board allocated the necessary funds for replacement of the
    Water Line Section in the District’s 2006‐2007 fiscal year budget.
    ¶5     On November 19, 2005, after it had been listed as Identified Pipe but before the
    Engineers had designated it as a Recommended Pipe, the Water Line Section ruptured,
    resulting in the flooding of the Jenkinses’ property and the Home (the 2005 Breach).
    The Jenkinses contend that the 2005 Breach caused “structural damage to the [Home]
    and realty and destroy[ed] personal property belonging to [them].” Subsequently, the
    Board accepted the Engineers’ recommendation that the Water Line Section be replaced
    and allocated the necessary funds to do so. In October 2006, the District began
    replacing the six‐inch cast iron pipe in the Water Line Section with six‐inch PVC pipe.
    The replacement was timed to coincide with a South Salt Lake City construction project
    involving the sidewalk, curb, and gutter located above the Water Line Section. On
    October 2, 2006, while the District was laying the new PVC pipe alongside the cast iron
    pipe, the Water Line Section broke at a different point in the same general location as
    the 2005 Breach, again flooding the Home and causing additional damage (the 2006
    Breach).1 The Water Line Section had broken at least nine times in the nine years
    preceding the Breaches, and seven of those breaches had occurred during the five years
    immediately preceding the 2005 Breach.
    ¶6     Although the District provided some financial assistance to the Jenkinses after
    the 2005 Breach, the Jenkinses claim that it did not compensate them fully for their
    damages then and that the District has refused to pay any amounts in connection with
    the 2006 Breach. Consequently, on November 1, 2006, the Jenkinses served a notice of
    1
    The 2005 Breach and the 2006 Breach are collectively referred to as “the
    Breaches.”
    20100400‐CA                                3
    claim indicating their intent to sue the District. When the District failed to respond, the
    Jenkinses filed a complaint, seeking damages for property damage, emotional distress,
    and lost wages. The District answered the complaint, raising both the public duty
    doctrine and governmental immunity as defenses. Thereafter, the District filed a
    motion and memorandum for summary judgment asserting (1) that the Jenkinses’
    claims were barred by the public duty doctrine; (2) that even if not barred by that
    doctrine, the Jenkinses could not prevail because they had failed to designate an expert;
    (3) that even if the Jenkinses could establish liability without an expert, the District was
    immune from suit; and (4) that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over some of the
    Jenkinses’ claims because they were not identified in the notice of claim. After full
    briefing and hearing, the district court granted summary judgment on the basis that the
    claims against the District were barred by the public duty doctrine. Because the district
    court found this doctrine determinative, it did not consider the other grounds for
    summary judgment advanced by the District. This appeal followed.
    ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶7      The Jenkinses appeal the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor
    of the District. “We review summary judgments for correctness, giving no deference to
    the trial court’s decision (even on questions that would be denominated as ‘mixed’
    [questions of law and fact] if they arose on appeal after trial).” Bahr v. Imus, 
    2011 UT 19
    ,
    ¶ 16, 
    250 P.3d 56
    .
    ANALYSIS
    ¶8      We begin our analysis with the examination of the District’s challenge to the
    sufficiency of the notice of claim because we generally consider issues affecting subject
    matter jurisdiction first. See Kilpatrick v. Bullough Abatement, Inc., 
    2008 UT 82
    , ¶ 9, 
    199 P.3d 957
     (“The first issue is whether we have jurisdiction . . . .”); Hicks v. UBS Fin. Servs.,
    Inc., 
    2010 UT App 26
    , ¶ 12, 
    226 P.3d 762
     (“[B]efore reaching the substantive issue . . . we
    must first determine whether we have jurisdiction to hear this appeal.”), cert. granted,
    
    238 P.3d 443
     (Utah 2010) (No. 20100186). We conclude that subject matter jurisdiction
    exists with respect to the Jenkinses’ claims, but we remand to the trial court for the
    resolution of factual issues determinative of the damages available to the Jenkinses. We
    20100400‐CA                                    4
    then proceed to the issue of whether the Jenkinses’ negligence claim is barred by the
    public duty doctrine. See generally Rollins v. Petersen, 
    813 P.2d 1156
    , 1162 n.3 (Utah 1991)
    (noting that the public duty doctrine should be considered before questions of
    immunity). We conclude that it is not and reverse the trial court’s summary judgment
    in favor of the District on that theory.
    ¶9      We next address the alternative grounds raised by the District in support of
    summary judgment in its favor. Because “judicial restraint requires that courts avoid
    reaching constitutional questions in advance of the necessity of deciding them,” State v.
    Thurman, 
    846 P.2d 1256
    , 1262 (Utah 1993) (internal quotation marks omitted), we defer
    the open courts challenge advanced by the Jenkinses until after the consideration of all
    other issues. See Clegg v. Wasatch Cnty., 
    2010 UT 5
    , ¶¶ 26‐27, 
    227 P.3d 1243
     (declining to
    reach an open courts clause question when a factual issue remained with respect to the
    application of immunity because “to do so would be to impermissibly render an
    advisory opinion”). Thus, we begin our analysis of the District’s alternative grounds by
    considering whether summary judgment is appropriate because the Jenkinses failed to
    designate an expert. Under the unique facts present here, we hold that expert testimony
    is not required. We then proceed to the issue of whether, even if the District negligently
    caused damage to the Jenkinses, it is immune from liability under the Governmental
    Immunity Act of Utah (the GIAU). See Utah Code Ann. §§ 63G‐7‐101 to ‐904 (2011).
    Ultimately, we conclude that the District’s decision of when to replace the Water Line
    Section was a discretionary function for which the District is immune as a matter of law.
    ¶10 Having thus eliminated all other bases for resolving the issues before us, we
    proceed to the Jenkinses’ argument that even if the District would be immune,
    summary judgment is not appropriate because the GIAU as applied to their claims
    violates the open courts clause of the Utah Constitution. See Utah Const. art. I, § 11; see
    also Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 9, 
    980 P.2d 1171
     (following “the principle that a case
    should be decided on non‐constitutional grounds if possible and that constitutional
    issues should be addressed only when necessary”). We first determine that legislative
    amendments to the state’s governmental immunity laws resulted in the complete
    abrogation of the Jenkinses’ preexisting remedy without providing them a reasonable
    alternative. We next focus on the social or economic evils identified by the Utah
    Legislature as the motivation for the amendments, deferring to that body’s judgment
    that these concerns are legitimate and require a remedy. Upon the identification of the
    evils to be addressed, we proceed to the consideration of whether the selected remedy is
    20100400‐CA                                  5
    reasonable and rational, including the review of whether the remedy is narrowly
    tailored. Although we are convinced that the means selected by the legislature are
    rationally designed to address the economic and social evils it has identified, we
    conclude that the complete abrogation of the Jenkinses’ claims is not narrowly tailored.
    Based on controlling precedent from the Utah Supreme Court, we hold that the open
    courts clause of the Utah Constitution prevents the District from taking advantage of
    the immunity afforded by the GIAU with respect to the Jenkinses’ claims. Therefore,
    we reverse the decision of the trial court and remand for further proceedings consistent
    with this decision.
    I. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    ¶11 We first consider the District’s challenge to our subject matter jurisdiction over
    the Jenkinses’ second and third causes of action on the ground that they were not
    included in the notice of claim as required by the GIAU. See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐
    401(3)(a) (2011) (requiring that any person with a claim against a governmental entity
    “file a written notice of claim with the entity before maintaining an action”);2 Greene v.
    Utah Transit Auth., 
    2001 UT 109
    , ¶ 16, 
    37 P.3d 1156
     (“Compliance with the Immunity Act
    is necessary to confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a trial court to hear claims against
    governmental entities.”).3 Whether this court has subject matter jurisdiction is a
    question of law that we review under the correction of error standard, affording no
    deference to the trial court’s legal conclusion. See Xiao Yang Li v. University of Utah, 2006
    2
    Since the Jenkinses filed their notice of claim on November 1, 2006, section 63G‐
    7‐401 has been amended several times. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 63
    ‐30d‐401(3)(a) (2004); 
    id.
    § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a) (2008); id. § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a) (2011). Because those amendments did
    not affect the provisions regarding the content of the notice of claim, we refer to the
    current version of the statute. Compare id. § 63‐30d‐401(3)(a) (2004), with id. § 63G‐7‐
    401(3)(a) (2011).
    3
    The parties agree that the District is a governmental entity. See id. § 63G‐7‐102(3)
    (2011) (“‘Governmental entity’ means the state and its political subdivisions as both are
    defined in this section.”); id. § 63G‐7‐102(7) (“‘Political subdivision’ means any county,
    city, town, school district, community development and renewal agency, special
    improvement or taxing district, local district, special service district, an entity created by
    an interlocal agreement . . . , or other governmental subdivision or public corporation.”).
    20100400‐CA 
    6 UT 57
    , ¶ 7, 
    144 P.3d 1142
    . The interpretation of the GIAU is also a question of law that
    we review under the nondeferential standard of correctness. See General Constr. & Dev.,
    Inc. v. Peterson Plumbing Supply, 
    2011 UT 1
    , ¶ 5, 
    248 P.3d 972
    .
    ¶12 The GIAU mandates that before a party may commence an action against a
    governmental entity in the district court the party must file a written notice of claim that
    includes, to the extent relevant here, “(i) a brief statement of the facts; (ii) the nature of
    the claim asserted; [and] (iii) the damages incurred by the claimant so far as they are
    known.” See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a). “The purpose of the notice of claim
    requirement is to provide the governmental entity an opportunity to correct the
    condition that caused the injury, evaluate the claim, and perhaps settle the matter
    without the expense of litigation.” Mecham v. Frazier, 
    2008 UT 60
    , ¶ 17, 
    193 P.3d 630
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, the issue presented by the District is whether
    the Jenkinses’ notice meets the requirements of section 63G‐7‐401.
    ¶13    The Jenkinses’ notice of claim states, in relevant part,
    On or about November 19, 2005, and again on or about
    October 2, 2006, the water line running along 3300 South
    Street broke, flooding the Jenkin[se]s’ [H]ome, causing
    extensive damage to the foundation and walls of the
    [H]ome, damaging or destroying the personal property of
    the occupants and creating an environment where mold is
    now present throughout the basement of the [H]ome.
    . . . [T]he damage . . . to the foundation of the house has
    created an unsafe condition and . . . to remedy the condition,
    the foundation may have to be replaced. The cost of
    repairing or replacing the foundation is not yet known, but
    . . . [t]he rough estimate is in the neighborhood of $50,000.
    Mr. Jenkins has received an estimate to clean up the mold
    from Watertite Solutions, in the amount of $28,716.60. The
    damage to the personal property damaged or destroyed is
    approximately $15,000.00.
    20100400‐CA                                   7
    When the Jenkinses received no response to their notice, they filed their complaint,
    seeking compensation for the damage to the Home and their personal property. In
    addition, they sought lost wages and damages for the “extreme emotional anguish and
    suffering” all of the Jenkinses have endured as a result of the living conditions created
    by the flooding, including persistent mold, a damaged and now‐porous foundation, an
    inoperable water heater, and an inoperable heating and air conditioning system.
    According to the District, the notice of claim did not fairly apprise the District of the
    additional claims for lost wages and emotional distress.
    ¶14 Although the GIAU has been interpreted to require strict compliance, the court
    will not impose obligations that are not included in the statute. See Peeples v. State, 
    2004 UT App 328
    , ¶ 9, 
    100 P.3d 254
     (“Strict compliance [with section 63G‐7‐401] is not . . . a
    one‐way street, and a claimant is not required to do more than the [GIAU] clearly
    requires.”). Further, the statute does not mandate that the notice of claim “meet the
    standards required to state a claim for relief,” as in a complaint filed to initiate a civil
    action. See Houghton v. Department of Health, 
    2005 UT 63
    , ¶ 21, 
    125 P.3d 860
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). “Rather, a plaintiff need only include enough specificity in
    the notice to inform as to the nature of the claim so that the defendant can appraise its
    potential liability.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted); see also id. ¶ 22 (holding that
    the draft complaint requesting “attorney[] fees as may be provided by law,” attached to
    the notice of claim fairly apprised the governmental entity that the plaintiffs would seek
    attorney fees later requested under a particular statute (internal quotation marks
    omitted)); Mecham, 
    2008 UT 60
    , ¶ 19 (holding that a notice of claim against a
    governmental employee need not use words such as “malice” or “fraud,” so long as the
    notice alerts the governmental entity of an intent to sue due to the employee’s
    fraudulent or malicious conduct).
    ¶15 In interpreting the plain language of the GIAU, this court has concluded that the
    requirement that the plaintiff provide a “brief statement of the facts” unambiguously
    “does not require specifics.” See Peeples, 
    2004 UT App 328
    , ¶ 8; see also Utah Code Ann.
    § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a)(i). Here, the Jenkinses’ statement “contains multiple facts, including
    the date of [their] injury, its alleged cause, details of the alleged . . . defect, and that the
    injury occurred at [the Home].” See Peeples, 
    2004 UT App 328
    , ¶ 10. Although it does
    not include any facts concerning the impact of the flooding on the emotional well being
    or earning capacity of the Jenkinses, the notice adequately “constitutes a brief recitation
    of those facts most relevant to the [incident].” See Xiao Yang Li, 
    2006 UT 57
    , ¶ 10.
    20100400‐CA                                    8
    ¶16 The statute also requires the claimant to set forth “the nature of the claim.” See
    Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a)(ii) (2011). “There is no ambiguity in the nature of
    claim requirement: ‘There must be enough specificity in the notice to inform as to the
    nature of the claim so that the defendant can appraise its potential liability.’” Heideman
    v. Washington City, 
    2007 UT App 11
    , ¶ 14, 
    155 P.3d 900
     (quoting Yearsley v. Jensen, 
    798 P.2d 1127
    , 1129 (Utah 1990)). While the notice of claim filed by the Jenkinses alerts the
    District to its potential liability for the substantial damages to the Jenkinses’ Home and
    property, it does not specifically notify the District that they also hope to recover for
    emotional distress and lost wages. The District asserts that this renders the notice of
    claim invalid with respect to those claims.
    ¶17 In Yearsley v. Jensen, 
    798 P.2d 1127
     (Utah 1990), the Utah Supreme Court
    interpreted the “nature of the claim” requirement. See id. at 1129. There, the plaintiff
    filed a notice of claim seeking “$100,000 for physical and emotional distress” suffered
    when police officers “physically beat the claimant in the course of the arrest of a third
    party.” Id. at 1128. When the plaintiff sued for malicious prosecution, the defendants
    argued that the notice of claim had not adequately alerted them to that cause of action.
    See id. The Utah Supreme Court agreed, concluding that the claim for malicious
    prosecution “var[ied] so profoundly” from the plaintiff’s notice of claim that it would
    do violence to the immunity act to permit the plaintiff to go forward with that claim in
    the litigation. See id. at 1129; see also Heideman, 
    2007 UT App 11
    , ¶ 14 (holding that the
    court was judicially barred from considering plaintiff’s claim for intentional interference
    with economic relations where the notice of claim sought damages for breach of
    contract, civil rights violations, and other unrelated causes of action). The District
    contends here that, as in Yearsley, the Jenkinses’ claims for lost wages and emotional
    distress vary profoundly from the nature of the claim described in their notice of claim.
    See Yearsley, 798 P.2d at 1129.
    ¶18 However, the Jenkinses have not asserted any new causes of action; instead, they
    seek categories of damages not previously identified.4 In Behrens v. Raleigh Hills Hospital
    Inc., 
    675 P.2d 1179
     (Utah 1983), the Utah Supreme Court considered that distinction
    4
    Although the Jenkinses’ complaint asserts the claims for lost wages and
    emotional distress as separate causes of action, they incorporate by reference the
    allegations concerning the District’s failure to replace the Water Line Section from the
    first cause of action as the basis of liability for those additional damages.
    20100400‐CA                                  9
    determinative. See id. at 1182. There, the defendant argued that the plaintiff could not
    recover punitive damages because they had not been identified in the notice of claim.
    Id. The supreme court disagreed, explaining that “an amendment to include [punitive]
    damages does not import into a case a new and different cause of action.” See id.
    Similarly, the Jenkinses’ request to be compensated for lost wages and emotional
    distress caused by the flooding does not import a new cause of action into the case.
    And despite the absence of a claim for those damages, the notice of claim is detailed
    enough to provide the District an opportunity to “correct the condition that caused the
    injury, evaluate the claim, and perhaps settle the matter without the expense of
    litigation.” Mecham v. Frazier, 
    2008 UT 60
    , ¶ 17, 
    193 P.3d 630
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    ¶19 The District’s argument seems more accurately characterized as a challenge to
    the Jenkinses’ compliance with the requirement that the notice of claim include a
    description of “the damages incurred by the claimant so far as they are known.” See
    Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a)(iii). Our supreme court reviewed the scope of that
    requirement in Xiao Yang Li v. University of Utah, 
    2006 UT 57
    , 
    144 P.3d 1142
    , where it
    considered whether a complaint filed by the heirs of persons killed in a traffic accident
    should have been dismissed. See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 2‐5. The heirs filed a notice of claim describing
    the accident and indicating that the nature of the claim was negligence, negligent
    supervision, and vicarious liability. See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 10‐11. Although the notice stated only
    that seven of the plaintiffs were dead and that the others were receiving medical
    treatment, the supreme court concluded that it “went beyond the minimal requirements
    of the [GIAU] by at least indicating that the damages would be those incurred as a
    result of the injuries and deaths caused by the accident.” See id. ¶ 12. The supreme
    court further explained that the GIAU “does not call for an all‐inclusive summary of the
    damages or for speculation.” See id.
    ¶20 Here, the Jenkinses put the District on notice of their intent to sue for the
    damages incurred as a result of the Breaches. They went beyond the minimal
    requirements of the GIAU by quantifying many of those damages. While they did not
    provide an all‐inclusive summary of damages, that omission does not necessarily
    render their notice of claim inadequate. The GIAU requires that the notice of claim
    include a description of the damages incurred “so far as they are known.” See Utah
    Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐401(3)(a)(iii). The Jenkinses filed their notice of claim one month
    after the 2006 Breach of the Water Line Section and included significant detail in
    quantifying the damages then known. While the notice of claim does not include lost
    20100400‐CA                                10
    wages and emotional distress damages, it was written before the Jenkinses were forced
    to live in the damaged Home for years pending resolution of this dispute. Indeed, the
    complaint alleges that the emotional distress is continuing: “The[] conditions [to the
    Home caused by the flooding] continue to cause extreme mental anguish and suffering
    to the [Jenkinses], to their damage in an amount to be proved at trial.”
    ¶21 The extent to which the damages for the emotional impact of the flooding arose
    after the Jenkinses filed their notice of claim is not apparent from the record. Likewise,
    the claim for lost wages does not provide any information about when “Ash Jenkins
    and [Patricia] Jenkins were required to take time off from their usual vocations.” As a
    result, we are unable to determine whether the Jenkinses met their obligation to provide
    a “listing of only known damages.” See Xiao Yang Li, 
    2006 UT 57
    , ¶ 12. If the damages
    were known to the Jenkinses but not reported in the notice of intent, recovery of them is
    barred; to the extent that the Jenkinses were not aware of these damages at the time
    they filed the notice of claim, recovery is not barred. Further proceedings in the trial
    court are necessary to resolve this factual issue.
    ¶22 In any event, this court has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims and
    damages that were described in the notice of claim. Therefore, we now proceed to the
    review of the substantive issues raised by this appeal, beginning with the basis for the
    trial court’s decision.
    II. The Public Duty Doctrine
    ¶23 The Jenkinses contend that the trial court erred in concluding that the public
    duty doctrine bars their claim that the District was negligent in failing to replace the
    Water Line Section prior to the Breaches.5 The trial court determined that under the
    public duty doctrine, the District owed them no duty to prevent the Breaches. Whether
    a duty exists is a question of law that we review for correctness. See Slisze v. Stanley‐
    Bostitch, 
    1999 UT 20
    , ¶ 9, 
    979 P.2d 317
    ; Tuttle v. Olds, 
    2007 UT App 10
    , ¶¶ 20‐24, 
    155 P.3d 5
    The Jenkinses clarified at oral argument that they do not assert any negligence in
    connection with the repair of the 2005 Breach or the replacement of the Water Line
    Section in 2006. Instead, they claim that the District negligently failed to replace the cast
    iron pipe comprising the Water Line Section before the Breaches, thereby causing
    extensive damage to the Jenkinses.
    20100400‐CA                                  11
    893 (McHugh, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (reviewing the trial court’s
    reliance on the public duty doctrine to grant summary judgment as a question of law).
    A.     The Relationship Between the Public Duty Doctrine and Negligence
    ¶24 The Jenkinses’ claim is based on a theory of negligence. To prove a claim of
    negligence, the Jenkinses must establish four elements: “(1) that the defendant owed
    the plaintiff a duty, (2) that the defendant breached that duty, (3) that the breach of the
    duty was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and (4) that the plaintiff in fact
    suffered injuries or damages.” Webb v. University of Utah, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 9, 
    125 P.3d 906
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The failure to prove any one of these elements is
    fatal to the plaintiff’s case. See Dikeou v. Osborn, 
    881 P.2d 943
    , 946 (Utah Ct. App. 1994).
    The issue before us is whether the trial court correctly concluded that the District owed
    no duty to the Jenkinses, thereby defeating their claim for negligence as a matter of law.
    ¶25 “‘“[D]uty” is a question of whether the defendant is under any obligation for the
    benefit of the particular plaintiff; and in negligence cases, the duty is always the
    same—to conform to the legal standard of reasonable conduct in light of the apparent
    risk.’” Downing v. Hyland Pharmacy, 
    2008 UT 65
    , ¶ 11, 
    194 P.3d 944
     (quoting W. Page
    Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 53 (5th ed., Lawyer’s Ed. 1984)).
    Typically, the court determines whether a duty exists based upon “the sum total of
    those considerations of policy which lead the law to say that the particular plaintiff is
    entitled to protection.” See DeBry v. Valley Mortg. Co., 
    835 P.2d 1000
    , 1003‐04 (Utah Ct.
    App. 1992); accord Webb, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 9. The public duty doctrine supplants this
    analysis by predetermining that policy considerations weigh against imposing a duty
    on the governmental entity to protect any particular plaintiff. It is
    a common law rule[ that] provides that a governmental
    entity and its employees owe no duty of care to individual
    members of the general public to provide governmental
    services and this rule of nonliability is grounded in the
    principle that the duty of a governmental entity to preserve
    the well‐being of the community is owed to the public at
    large, rather than to specific members of the community.
    57 Am. Jur. 2d Municipal, County, School, and State Tort Liability § 88 (2001). Thus,
    20100400‐CA                                  12
    “[f]or a governmental agency and its agents to be liable for
    negligently caused injury suffered by a member of the
    public, the plaintiff must show a breach of a duty owed him
    as an individual, not merely the breach of an obligation
    owed to the general public at large by the governmental
    official.”
    Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 11, 
    980 P.2d 1171
     (quoting Ferree v. State, 
    784 P.2d 149
    , 151
    (Utah 1989)).
    B.     The Distinction Between the Public Duty Doctrine and Governmental Immunity
    ¶26 In contrast to the public duty doctrine, governmental immunity provides that a
    governmental entity need not pay any damages, despite the fact that it was negligent.
    Thus, immunity is analytically distinct from the public duty doctrine. Nevertheless, the
    simultaneous operation of the two legal theories has caused considerable confusion.6
    See Webb, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 7 (“The central challenge confronting us in this case is to make
    sense of the scene where common law negligence and governmental immunity law
    have collided.”). Because governmental immunity “is an affirmative defense and
    conceptually arises subsequent to the question of whether there is tort liability in the
    first instance,” see Ferree, 784 P.2d at 153, the “proper mode of analysis is to first
    consider whether there is a legal theory upon which suit can be brought . . . before
    6
    Due to the confusion caused by this overlap, some states have abolished the
    common law public duty doctrine. See, e.g., Natrona Cnty. v. Blake, 
    2003 WY 170
    , ¶ 15, 
    81 P.3d 948
    , 956 (Wyo. 2003) (collecting cases abolishing the public duty doctrine); 1 Dan B.
    Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 271 (2001) (noting the rejection of the doctrine in some states);
    18 McQuillin Municipal Corporations § 53.04.25 (3d. ed. 2003) (collecting cases). Indeed,
    Chief Justice Durham has acknowledged that the interplay between governmental
    immunity and public duty in Utah creates “confusion in the law and inequitable
    results.” See Rollins v. Petersen, 
    813 P.2d 1156
    , 1166 (Utah 1991) (Durham, J., concurring
    and dissenting). However, our supreme court has declined to eliminate the common
    law doctrine in response to the legislature’s adoption of statutory governmental
    immunity. See 
    id.
     at 1162 n.3 (majority opinion) (“[T]he legislature’s abrogation of
    absolute sovereign immunity does not lead to the conclusion that the public duty
    doctrine has also been abrogated.”).
    20100400‐CA                                  13
    considering the separate and independent questions of whether the [entity] is immune.”
    Rollins v. Petersen, 
    813 P.2d 1156
    , 1168 n.3 (Utah 1991); see also Ledfords v. Emery Cnty.
    Sch. Dist., 
    849 P.2d 1162
    , 1163‐64 (Utah 1993) (noting that analytical clarity is served by
    addressing traditional tort questions before issues of immunity). We follow that mode
    of analysis now by first reviewing whether, under the public duty doctrine, the District
    owed no duty of care to the Jenkinses individually.
    C.     The Public Duty Doctrine in Utah
    ¶27 The Utah Supreme Court first relied on the public duty doctrine in Obray v.
    Malmberg, 
    26 Utah 2d 17
    , 
    484 P.2d 160
     (1971), where it cited cases from other
    jurisdictions to support its conclusion that the “failure by a public sheriff to investigate
    a crime . . . [is] not pursuable by an individual since the public official’s duty is to the
    public.”7 See id. at 1162. Since then, the public duty doctrine has been applied in Utah
    to eliminate a duty to any individual member of the public for the negligent
    performance of a governmental regulatory or enforcement activity. See, e.g., Madsen v.
    Borthick, 
    850 P.2d 442
    , 446‐47 (Utah 1993) (holding that the Utah Department of Finance
    had no duty to plaintiffs in the regulation of a financial institution); C.T. v. Martinez, 
    845 P.2d 246
    , 247 (Utah 1992) (holding that the Utah Department of Social Services had no
    duty to plaintiffs in licensing a day care facility); Ferree, 784 P.2d at 152 (holding that the
    Utah State Department of Corrections did not owe a duty to plaintiff in granting a
    prisoner a two‐day release). Indeed, the application of the doctrine to these “[v]arious
    kinds of regulatory and police activities” is a classic form of the public duty doctrine.
    See DeBry, 889 P.2d at 440 n.12; see also 57 Am. Jur. 2d Municipal, County, School, and State
    Tort Liability § 102 (2001) (“[A] governmental entity cannot be held liable in negligence
    for failure to carry out its statutory duties.”); 1 Dan B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 271
    (2001) (“The traditional examples of the public duty rule are all cases of non‐
    performance of a statutory duty, not cases of affirmative conduct.”). In addition, Utah’s
    public duty doctrine provides protection to governmental entities engaged in activities
    that benefit the public at large, whether or not considered regulatory or enforcement
    7
    The doctrine was first recognized in the United States in South v. Maryland, 
    59 U.S. 396
     (1855). There, the Supreme Court held that a sheriff’s common law duty to
    enforce the law did not create a duty to the plaintiff that was then breached when the
    sheriff failed to intervene after the plaintiff was kidnapped and held for ransom. See 
    id.
    at 402‐03.
    20100400‐CA                                   14
    activities. See, e.g., Cannon v. University of Utah, 
    866 P.2d 586
    , 589 n.6 (Utah Ct. App.
    1993) (holding that the police officers posted by the university at a crosswalk in which
    the plaintiffs were hit on their way to a university‐sponsored basketball game owed “a
    general duty . . . to the public at large, not to any distinct group”).
    D.     Application of the Public Duty Doctrine to These Facts
    ¶28 The Jenkinses argue that the public duty doctrine does not apply to the District’s
    actions here because the sale of water is a proprietary, rather than a governmental,
    function. See 57 Am. Jur. 2d Municipal, County, School, and State Tort Liability § 102 (“The
    public duty rule applies to uniquely government functions.”).8 However, in Utah, the
    public duty doctrine is applied more broadly and arguably includes proprietary
    functions of governmental entities. See, e.g., Webb, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 28 (holding that the
    university had no duty to a student injured on an icy sidewalk during a required,
    school‐related field trip); Rollins, 813 P.2d at 1161‐62 (holding that the state‐run mental
    hospital had no duty to a victim injured by an escapee). Thus, whether the allegedly
    negligent activity is proprietary or governmental is not determinative of whether the
    doctrine is implicated.
    ¶29 Instead, the Utah Supreme Court has focused its analysis on the relationship
    between the plaintiff and the public entity. In Webb v. University of Utah, 
    2005 UT 80
    ,
    
    125 P.3d 906
    , the supreme court explained that “an omission or failure to act can
    generally give rise to liability only in the presence of some external circumstance—a
    special relationship.” Id. ¶ 10. Typically, these relationships arise “‘when one assumes
    responsibility for another’s safety or deprives another of his or her normal
    opportunities for self‐protection.’” Id. (quoting Beach v. University of Utah, 
    726 P.2d 413
    ,
    415 (Utah 1986)). While the supreme court acknowledged that “as a matter of public
    8
    The District correctly notes that the Jenkinses did not argue to the trial court that
    the public duty doctrine, as opposed to governmental immunity, is limited to
    governmental functions. However, the Jenkinses did argue that the public duty
    doctrine is not applicable here, citing Utah decisions where liability has been imposed.
    Because the applicability of the public duty doctrine turns on the relationship between
    the public actor and the plaintiff, rather than on whether the activity is governmental or
    proprietary, we conclude that the Jenkinses’ challenge to the district court’s application
    of the public duty doctrine was adequately preserved.
    20100400‐CA                                  15
    policy, we do not expose governmental actors to tort liability for all mishaps that may
    befall the public,” it held that the governmental actor will be liable when its negligence
    causes injury “to persons who stand so far apart from the general public that we can
    describe them as having a special relationship to the governmental actor.” Id. ¶ 11. In
    Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , 
    980 P.2d 1171
    , the supreme court provided a nonexclusive list
    of the circumstances under which this type of special duty can arise: (1) where there is
    a “statute intended to protect a specific class of person of which the plaintiff is a
    member from a particular type of harm”; (2) “when a government agent undertakes
    specific action to protect a person or property”; (3) where “government actions . . .
    reasonably induce detrimental reliance by a member of the public”; and (4) “under
    certain circumstances, when the agency has actual custody of the plaintiff or of a third
    person who causes harm to the plaintiff.” See id. ¶ 13; accord Webb, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 25;
    Gabriel v. Salt Lake City Corp., 
    2001 UT App 27
    , ¶ 17, 
    34 P.3d 234
    . The District contends
    that the Jenkinses do not fall within any of these categories and therefore, it owed them
    no duty to operate its water distribution pipeline nonnegligently. We are not
    persuaded.
    ¶30 First, the public duty doctrine in Utah has not been traditionally applied to
    protect a governmental entity from negligent maintenance of its own equipment when
    undertaken to protect an identifiable group of persons, rather than the public at large.
    In Nixon v. Salt Lake City Corp., 
    898 P.2d 265
     (Utah 1995), the plaintiff, who worked for a
    janitorial service hired by the city to clean the Salt Lake City Airport, was injured while
    using a battery‐powered floor scrubber owned and maintained by the city. See id. at
    267. The plaintiff presented evidence that the city had negligently maintained the
    equipment. See id. In response, the city argued that it was immune from suit under the
    governmental immunity act for any portion of its liability arising out of a negligent
    inspection of the equipment. See id. at 270. The Nixon court concluded that “as a matter
    of law, the acts complained of are acts of maintenance,” for which the city owed a duty
    to foreseeable plaintiffs under traditional tort principles. See id. In doing so, it relied on
    jurisprudence developed under the public duty doctrine. See id. at 271. The court
    indicated that the public duty doctrine barred recovery where an inspection was
    undertaken “to determine [whether] a particular building or piece of equipment was
    unsafe for the public as a whole,” see id., but not where the inspection was undertaken
    “‘to protect a particular individual or class of individuals,’” see id. at 271 (quoting 57A
    Am. Jur. 2d Negligence § 376 (1989)). Because the city’s inspection and maintenance of
    its floor scrubber was undertaken to protect persons like the plaintiff who might use the
    20100400‐CA                                  16
    equipment, the court concluded that it did not fall within the public duty doctrine or, by
    extension, the governmental immunity statute. See id.
    ¶31 This court reached a similar conclusion in Ilott v. University of Utah, 
    2000 UT App 286
    , 
    12 P.3d 1011
    , again relying on the public duty doctrine to define the limits of
    governmental immunity for inspections. See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 12‐15. There, the plaintiff, who was
    attending a University of Utah football game, was injured when a plank on the
    bleachers broke. See id. ¶ 2. In holding that neither the public duty doctrine nor
    governmental immunity prevented the plaintiff from recovering, the court concluded
    that the University was engaged in maintaining its own property and that the plaintiff
    was “a member of a specific group (business invitees paying to attend a football
    game).” See id. ¶ 15.
    ¶32 In this case, we hold that the Jenkinses had a special relationship to the District
    and, accordingly, that the District owed them a duty of care. Unlike the public at large,
    the Jenkinses owned property next to the Water Line Section that the District had
    identified for replacement due, in part, to prior breaches. Where the District’s own
    criteria had identified the Water Line Section for replacement, the District “assume[d]
    responsibility” for its replacement and, by extension, the “safety” of individuals like the
    Jenkinses who lived in the path of any water that might escape from future breaches.
    See Beach, 726 P.2d at 415 (noting that a special relationship arises “when one assumes
    responsibility for another’s safety or deprives another of his or her normal
    opportunities for self‐protection”). In addition, after the Jenkinses were flooded in 2005
    and had received some compensation from the District, they certainly stood “so far
    apart from the general public that we can describe them as having a special relationship
    to the governmental actor.” See Webb, 
    2005 UT 80
    , ¶ 11. Furthermore, the Jenkinses
    could not protect themselves. Thus, the District had a duty to the Jenkinses not to
    negligently delay the replacement of the Water Line Section. Consequently, we hold
    that the trial court erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of the District on
    the ground that the public duty doctrine absolved it of any duty to the Jenkinses to
    maintain the Water Line Section.9
    9
    In reaching this conclusion, we do not express any opinion about whether the
    District has a special relationship with other persons who own property adjacent to
    segments of the water line that have not previously breached or been identified for
    replacement.
    20100400‐CA                                 17
    ¶33 Nevertheless, the District contends that summary judgment in its favor can be
    affirmed on several alternative grounds, including that the Jenkinses failed to designate
    an expert and that the decision of when and whether to replace the Water Line Section
    was a discretionary function for which the District is immune under the GIAU. We
    now consider whether there are alternative grounds apparent from the record under
    which the trial court’s summary judgment ruling can be affirmed. See Bailey v. Bayles,
    
    2002 UT 58
    , ¶ 13, 
    52 P.3d 1158
     (holding that an appellate court may affirm the decision
    of the trial court on any ground apparent from the record). To affirm the summary
    judgment ruling on an alternative legal theory, the necessary facts supporting that
    theory must be undisputed. See Richardson v. Hart, 
    2009 UT App 387
    , ¶ 14, 
    223 P.3d 484
    .
    III. Failure to Designate an Expert
    ¶34 There is no dispute that the Jenkinses did not designate an expert witness to
    testify as to the standard of care or whether the District breached that standard by
    continuing to use the Water Line Section after it was identified for replacement.10
    According to the District, the lack of expert testimony on these points defeats the
    Jenkinses’ negligence claim because “issues of fact which are outside the knowledge
    and experience of lay persons must be established by expert testimony.” Hoopiiaina v.
    Intermountain Health Care, 
    740 P.2d 270
    , 271 (Utah Ct. App. 1987) (citing Kim v. Anderson,
    
    610 P.2d 1270
    , 1271 (Utah 1980)).
    ¶35 The District relies on District of Columbia v. Arnold & Porter, 
    756 A.2d 427
     (D.C.
    2000), for the proposition that “the operation and maintenance of a municipal water
    main system and the handling of leaks in that system are not subjects within the
    common knowledge of jurors.” 
    Id.
     at 433‐34. There, the plaintiffs owned businesses
    that suffered damage when the District of Columbia (D.C.) did not immediately
    investigate reports of a leak in its municipal water system and then delayed turning off
    the water in the area for approximately nine hours. See 
    id.
     at 429‐32. After a bench trial
    on the plaintiffs’s negligence claims, the trial court found for the plaintiffs and D.C.
    appealed. See 
    id. at 429
    . Although the District of Columbia Court of Appeals remanded
    on other issues, it rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that while the “general subject of
    municipal water standards may be beyond the ken of the average layperson,” the issues
    of the particular case were a matter of “common sense.” See 
    id. at 432
    . The appellate
    10
    The parties have not raised any issues with respect to causation.
    20100400‐CA                                   18
    court first held that the operation and maintenance of the system, as well as the
    handling of leaks, were not subjects within the common knowledge of lay jurors, and
    then further explained that,
    given our repeated articulation of the need to show a
    national standard of care if the subject in question . . . is so
    distinctly related to some science, profession or occupation
    as to be beyond the ken of the average layperson, we are not
    persuaded . . . that the factual and legal context of [D.C.’s]
    actions, in conjunction with common sense make clear that
    no expert was required to tell the average layperson what
    [D.C.] should have done.
    
    Id.
     at 433‐34 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶36   Based on this authority, the District asserts that
    [t]he specialized knowledge regarding cast iron pipelines,
    including their expected and reasonably anticipated
    lifetimes, the nature of breaks to such pipelines, the effect of
    various kinds of soil conditions, the proper means of repair,
    the proper interpretation of a history of breaks to a
    particular pipeline, the identification and prioritization of
    [Identified Pipe], and the available and proper maintenance
    measures, including replacement of water lines, are all
    matters beyond the scope of a typical layperson’s
    knowledge.
    Thus, it asks us to affirm the summary judgment ruling in its favor due to the Jenkinses’
    failure to designate an expert on these issues.
    ¶37 However, unlike the plaintiffs in Arnold & Porter, who claimed that D.C. acted
    negligently in the manner in which it handled reports of a leak in its system, see 
    id.
     at
    429‐32, the Jenkinses do not claim that the District negligently investigated whether the
    Water Line Section needed to be replaced or that it negligently repaired the breaks in
    the Water Line Section. Rather, the Jenkinses contend that after making the
    determination that the Water Line Section needed to be replaced, the District
    20100400‐CA                                  19
    negligently waited over three years before actually replacing it, during which time the
    section twice ruptured and flooded their property. Specifically, the Jenkinses claim that
    when the District’s own procedures established that the
    [Water Line Section] had failed so many times, in such a
    short distance, over such a short period of time, and that the
    District had determined three years before the Jenkin[se]s’
    [H]ome was flooded that the [Water Line Section] needed to
    be replaced, its failure to act constituted negligence. This is
    particularly true in [this] case, where the District not only
    failed to act before the first flood, but failed to act until the
    Jenkin[se]s’ [H]ome had been flooded a second time, almost
    one year later.
    Where the issue is narrowly focused on the decision to delay three years before
    replacing the Water Line Section, we agree with the Jenkinses that the facts and results
    of the District’s actions and inactions are not beyond the scope of laypersons’
    knowledge and ability to analyze and determine whether the District was negligent in
    this case. See, e.g., Bowman v. Kalm, 
    2008 UT 9
    , ¶ 13, 
    179 P.3d 754
     (holding that no expert
    was required to explain the “causal connection between a decedent made clumsy due to
    a doctor’s negligence, and the decedent’s death due to a dresser being pulled down on
    top of her”). But see Spafford v. Granite Credit Union, 
    2011 UT App 401
    , ¶¶ 26‐32
    (requiring expert testimony to establish breach of duty and causation where the plaintiff
    tripped and fell on a curb that was alleged to be “unusually tall, ‘tapered aggressively,’
    and . . . ‘in a state of disrepair’”). In response, the District contends that it was
    financially unable to replace all of the cast iron sections of the water line in a single year
    and was, therefore, required to defer replacement of the Water Line Section. We are
    similarly unconvinced that expert testimony is needed on that point.
    ¶38 In reaching this conclusion, we find this court’s decision in Schreiter v. Wasatch
    Manor, Inc., 
    871 P.2d 570
     (Utah Ct. App. 1994), instructive. There, a resident of a high‐
    rise apartment building, who had sustained personal injuries during a fire, brought a
    negligence action against the owner of the building based on its failure to install a fire
    sprinkler system. See 
    id. at 572
    . The trial court granted summary judgment against the
    resident on two alternative grounds: (1) that the plaintiff failed to show the cost of or
    the defendant’s ability to pay for a fire sprinkler system; and (2) that the plaintiff had
    not designated an expert witness. See 
    id.
     On appeal, this court reversed. See 
    id.
    20100400‐CA                                  20
    ¶39 First, we held that expert testimony was not required to establish the standard of
    care or that it was breached. See 
    id. at 573, 575
    . While the Schreiter court acknowledged
    that the cost of installing the fire sprinkler system might have some relevance, it held
    that “a jury could reasonably find that the approximate cost of such a system would not
    preclude its installation by a reasonable person under the circumstances.” 
    Id. at 574
    .
    Likewise, although the cost of replacing sections of the water line may have some
    relevance to the question of whether the District’s delay in replacing the Water Line
    Section was negligent, that question “is simply not a situation where the issues or facts
    appear to be so complex or technical that they would otherwise elude the mental
    processes of the average citizen.” See 
    id. at 575
    .
    ¶40 Next, the Schreiter court determined that the defendant’s subjective ability to pay
    for such a system was irrelevant to the objective standard of care to be used in
    determining whether the defendant had breached its duty to the resident, stating,
    [The defendant’s] own actual or subjective ability to pay has
    no bearing at all on whether it breached its duty to [the
    plaintiff]. Were we to accept [the defendant’s] requirement,
    aside from the practical problem of requiring a plaintiff to
    prove a particular defendant’s financial position and
    capacity to pay, we would be imposing one standard of care
    on wealthy defendants and a lower standard on poor
    defendants; a higher standard on efficient and well‐managed
    entities and a lower standard on inefficient, poorly managed
    entities.
    
    Id. at 574
    . The same considerations are appropriate here. The fact that a defendant
    operates a large quantity of negligently maintained or obsolete equipment should not
    affect the standard of care required to fulfill the defendant’s duty to foreseeable
    plaintiffs. Indeed, we have discovered nothing in our jurisprudence that would support
    a sliding scale of care, which benefits a defendant who operates so much outdated
    equipment that replacing it all at once is not feasible, while imposing a greater standard
    of care on the defendant who employs newer and better maintained equipment. Nor
    can we imagine a public policy reason for doing so. Consequently, we hold that no
    expert testimony was required to address whether the District had sufficient financial
    20100400‐CA                                21
    resources to replace the Water Line Section sooner because such an opinion is irrelevant
    to the standard of care owed to the Jenkinses and whether that standard was breached.
    ¶41 In sum, we decline the District’s invitation to affirm the trial court’s summary
    judgment in its favor on the alternative ground that the Jenkinses failed to designate an
    expert witness. The issue of whether three years was a reasonable time to delay
    replacing the Water Line Section after the Engineers designated it as Identified Pipe is
    not beyond the knowledge and analytical ability of the average juror.
    IV. Governmental Immunity
    ¶42 Next, the District argues that summary judgment is appropriate, irrespective of
    whether the public duty doctrine applies or whether the Jenkinses were required to
    designate an expert, because the decision about when to replace the Water Line Section
    was a discretionary function for which the District is immune from suit under the
    GIAU. See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐301(5)(a) (2011) (providing an exception to the
    waiver of governmental immunity for injuries arising out of “the exercise or
    performance, or the failure to exercise or perform, a discretionary function, whether or
    not the discretion is abused”). While “a party’s entitlement to discretionary function
    immunity is a question of law,” it is dependent upon the particular facts and
    circumstances of the challenged act or failure to act by the public entity. See Laney v.
    Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 16, 
    57 P.3d 1007
     (plurality opinion).
    A.     The Development of Governmental Immunity in Utah
    ¶43 At common law, a governmental entity was not immune from liability for its
    negligence in the provision of water. In Egelhoff v. Ogden City, 
    71 Utah 511
    , 
    267 P. 1011
    (1928), the Utah Supreme Court affirmed the denial of the city’s motion for a directed
    verdict on the plaintiff’s claim that the city negligently maintained its water lines, which
    resulted in leaks that caused damage to the plaintiffs’ property. See 
    id.
     at 1012‐17. The
    supreme court explained that
    where the water system of a municipal corporation is conducted by
    the municipality in part for profit, even if principally used for
    public purposes, the municipality acts in its corporate or
    private capacity and is liable for damages caused by its negligent
    construction or management, to its employee or the public
    20100400‐CA                                  22
    generally, to the same extent as a private individual or
    corporation would be under the circumstances. But, there is
    a distinction between furnishing water to individuals for
    compensation and furnishing it for fire purposes. The former is
    the exercise of a private, the latter a governmental, function;
    and there is no liability if the negligent act was done in the
    extinguishment of fire, or in connection with flushing
    hydrants solely to better fire protection, or the like.
    Id. at 1012 (emphases added);11 see also 18A McQuillin Municipal Corporations § 53.103‐
    105 (3d ed. 2002) (noting that although a governmental entity is not liable for
    negligently supplying water for public purposes such as protecting “against fire,
    flushing sewers, and other uses pertaining to the public health and safety,” it is liable
    for ordinary negligence arising out of its activity of supplying water for a fee). Thus,
    the Egelhoff court distinguished between activities engaged in for public purposes and
    those undertaken for profit, concluding that only the former were entitled to immunity.
    See Egelhoff, 
    267 P. at
    1012‐13.
    ¶44 For a period of time after Egelhoff, the Utah Supreme Court continued to
    distinguish between governmental and proprietary activities in determining whether a
    governmental entity could be held liable for negligence related to the provision of
    water. See, e.g., Nestman v. South Davis City Water Improvement Dist., 
    16 Utah 2d 198
    , 
    398 P.2d 203
    , 205 (1965) (concluding that a water improvement district was not entitled to
    sovereign immunity for damages caused by the breach of its reservoir, because
    “operating a water system and supplying water for fees . . . is a proprietary function,
    and the city is liable for damage or injury caused by its negligence in connection
    therewith”); Gordon v. Provo City, 
    15 Utah 2d 287
    , 
    391 P.2d 430
     (1964) (affirming a jury
    verdict for a plaintiff injured by a loose water meter lid because the city “operated the
    water system as a commercial venture in a proprietary capacity and thus [was]
    responsible for any negligence in operating or maintaining it”). Thus, under Utah’s
    11
    In Brown v. Salt Lake City, 
    33 Utah 222
    , 
    93 P. 570
     (1908), abrogated on other grounds
    by Kessler v. Mortenson, 
    2000 UT 95
    , ¶¶ 13‐14, 
    16 P.3d 1225
    , the Utah Supreme Court
    similarly concluded that the maintenance of a conduit that was part of a waterworks
    system that the city was not required to furnish to its inhabitants was not “owned,
    maintained, nor operated in a governmental capacity.” See id. at 574.
    20100400‐CA                                  23
    common law, a governmental actor was liable for negligence only with respect to its
    proprietary activities. See also Standiford v. Salt Lake City, 
    605 P.2d 1230
    , 1233 (Utah 1980)
    (collecting early Utah decisions using the distinction between governmental and
    proprietary functions to determine whether the governmental actor could be held liable
    in tort); DeBry v. Noble, 
    889 P.2d 428
    , 440 (Utah 1995) (discussing the development of
    governmental immunity in Utah).
    ¶45 In 1965, the Utah Legislature adopted the Utah Governmental Immunity Act (the
    UGIA), which codified the instances in which the traditional immunity of governmental
    entities is waived. See DeBry, 889 P.2d at 432. The UGIA provided immunity for
    governmental entities engaged in governmental functions unless expressly waived. See
    id. Although “the term ‘governmental function’ was the operative phrase establishing
    the scope of governmental immunity,” the 1965 version of the UGIA did not define that
    term. See id. Thus, to determine whether a governmental entity was engaged in a
    governmental function for purposes of the UGIA, the courts borrowed the distinction
    between proprietary and governmental functions that had originated under the
    common law. See Greenhalgh v. Payson City, 
    530 P.2d 799
    , 801 (Utah 1975) (holding that
    the UGIA did not displace the common law distinction between proprietary and
    governmental functions), superseded by statute as stated in Standiford, 605 P.2d at 1238.
    ¶46 In 1980, the Utah Supreme Court refined the methodology for determining the
    scope of governmental immunity by considering whether “the activity under
    consideration is of such a unique nature that it can only be performed by a
    governmental agency or that it is essential to the core of governmental activity.” See
    Standiford, 605 P.2d at 1236‐37. During this period, the operation of a municipal water
    system was considered a proprietary function, falling outside the protection of the
    UGIA. See Bennett v. Bow Valley Dev. Corp., 
    797 P.2d 419
    , 422 (Utah 1990).12 Shortly
    thereafter, the legislature amended the UGIA to include a statutory definition of
    governmental function, thereby superceding the Standiford decision. See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 63
    ‐30‐2(4) (Supp. 1987). The 1987 amendment significantly expanded the
    definition of governmental function by including all governmental acts irrespective of
    whether they were “essential,” “core,” or “unique to government.” See 
    id.
     § 63‐30‐
    12
    Although Bennett v. Bow Valley Development Corp., 
    797 P.2d 419
     (Utah 1990), was
    decided after the 1987 amendments to the UGIA, it arose prior to those amendments
    and was decided based on the pre‐1987 precedent. See id. at 421.
    20100400‐CA                                  24
    2(4)(a). Subsequent amendments and the reenactment of the UGIA as the GIAU have
    reiterated the legislature’s all‐inclusive definition of a governmental function for
    purposes of governmental immunity. See id. § 63G‐7‐102(4) (2011). With this historical
    framework in mind, we proceed to our analysis of whether the district is immune from
    suit.
    B.     The Little Test
    ¶47 To determine if a governmental entity or its employees are entitled to statutory
    immunity, the courts undertake a three‐part analysis. See Ledfors v. Emery Cnty. Sch.
    Dist., 
    849 P.2d 1162
    , 1164 (Utah 1993); Clegg v. Wasatch Cnty., 
    2010 UT 5
    , ¶ 11, 
    227 P.3d 1243
    . First, we must determine whether the “activity . . . performed by [the entity is] a
    governmental function and therefore immunized from suit by the general grant of
    immunity contained in [section 63G‐7‐201 of the GIAU].” Clegg, 
    2010 UT 5
    , ¶ 11; see also
    Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐201. Next, if the activity is a governmental function, we must
    determine whether “some other section of the [GIAU] has waived that blanket
    immunity.” Ledfors, 849 P.2d at 1164. Finally, “if the blanket immunity has been
    waived,” we then must determine whether the GIAU contains “an exception to that
    waiver which results in a retention of immunity against the particular claim asserted in
    this case.” Id.
    ¶48 Under the GIAU’s initial grant of immunity, governmental entities and their
    employees “are immune from suit for any injury that results from the exercise of a
    governmental function.” See Utah Code Ann. § 63G‐7‐201. The legislature has defined
    “[g]overnmental function” to mean “each activity, undertaking, or operation of a
    governmental entity,” including those “performed by a department, agency, employee,
    agent, or officer of a governmental entity,” and also “includes a governmental entity’s
    failure to act.” Id. § 63G‐7‐102(4)(a)‐(c). The parties here do not dispute that the District
    is a governmental entity or that the maintenance of the water line is a governmental
    function under the broad definition contained in the GIAU. For purposes of its
    summary judgment argument, the District also concedes that immunity would be
    waived under one of two waiver provisions of the GIAU. See id. § 63G‐7‐301(3)(a)(i)
    (providing that immunity is waived for any injury caused by “a defective, unsafe, or
    dangerous condition of any highway, road, street, alley, crosswalk, sidewalk, culvert,
    tunnel, bridge, viaduct, or other structure located on them”); id. § 63G‐7‐301(a)(ii)
    (providing that immunity is waived for injury caused by “any defective or dangerous
    condition of a . . . public improvement”). The point of contention between the parties is
    20100400‐CA                                  25
    the District’s assertion that its conduct falls “under the [GIAU’s] discretionary function
    and latent defective condition exceptions to the GIAU’s waiver of immunity.”
    ¶49 The GIAU provides that immunity is not waived, and instead retained, despite
    any waiver provision in the statute, “if the injury arises out of, in connection with, or
    results from . . . the exercise or performance, or the failure to exercise or perform, a
    discretionary function, whether or not the discretion is abused.” Id. § 63G‐7‐301(5)(a).
    “Discretionary function immunity is a distinct and limited form of immunity that
    should be applied only when a plaintiff is challenging a governmental decision that
    involves a basic policy‐making function.” Sandberg v. Lehman, Jensen & Donahue, LC,
    
    2003 UT App 272
    , ¶ 10, 
    76 P.3d 699
     (internal quotation marks omitted). “[D]iscretionary
    function immunity is intended to shield [only] those governmental acts and decisions
    impacting on large numbers of people in a myriad of unforeseeable ways from
    individual and class legal actions, the continual threat of which would make public
    administration all but impossible.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted); see also
    Hansen v. Salt Lake Cnty., 
    794 P.2d 838
    , 846 (Utah 1990). However, because “[n]early all
    acts performed by government employees involve some amount of discretion,” Nelson,
    919 P.2d at 575, courts “read the discretionary function exception to the immunity
    waiver narrowly,” Johnson v. Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶¶ 19, 21, 
    133 P.3d 402
    .
    Furthermore, “[i]mmunity is an affirmative defense which the defendant bears the
    burden of proving.” Trujillo v. Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    1999 UT App 227
    , ¶ 27, 
    986 P.2d 752
    .
    ¶50 The Utah Supreme Court has identified a four‐part test (the Little test or the Little
    factors) to decide whether the discretionary function exception to the immunity waiver
    applies:
    (1) Does the challenged act, omission, or decision necessarily
    involve a basic governmental policy program or objective?
    (2) Is the questioned act, omission, or decision essential to
    the realization or accomplishment of that policy, program, or
    objective as opposed to one which would not change the
    course or direction of the policy, program, or objective?
    20100400‐CA                                 26
    (3) Does the act, omission, or decision require the exercise of
    basic policy evaluation, judgment, and expertise on the part
    of the governmental agency involved?
    (4) Does the governmental agency involved possess the
    requisite constitutional, statutory, or lawful authority and
    duty to do or make the challenged act, omission, or decision?
    Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 22 (quoting Little v. Utah State Div. of Family Servs., 
    667 P.2d 49
    , 51
    (Utah 1983)). The determination of whether an action of a governmental entity involves
    a discretionary function is a factually intensive inquiry and typically is not amenable to
    resolution by summary judgment. See Trujillo, 
    1999 UT App 227
    , ¶ 28 (citing Hansen,
    794 P.2d at 846); see also Laney v. Fairfield City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 16, 
    57 P.3d 1007
     (“Although
    a party’s entitlement to discretionary function immunity is a question of law, a court
    must have sufficient facts before it to determine whether the challenged act, omission,
    or decision satisfies the four‐part Little test.”).
    C.     There Are No Disputed Questions of Fact Regarding Whether the District’s
    Decision About When to Replace the Water Line Section Was a Discretionary
    Function
    ¶51 Nevertheless, the District contends that summary judgment is appropriate here
    because the undisputed facts demonstrate that the decision of when to replace the
    Water Line Section was a discretionary function as a matter of law. Because the District
    bears the burden of proof at trial on the issue of immunity, see Trujillo, 
    1999 UT App 227
    , ¶ 27, it had the initial burden “to provide the court with facts that demonstrate
    both that [it] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law and that there are no material
    issues of fact that would require resolution at trial,” see Orvis v. Johnson, 
    2008 UT 2
    , ¶ 19,
    
    177 P.3d 600
    . In support of its motion for summary judgment, the District provided a
    detailed affidavit from Alan Packard, the District’s Assistant General Manager and
    Chief Engineer,13 setting forth the analysis employed by the Engineers to identify
    13
    Packard was previously employed as the Engineering Department Manager for
    the District. It was in his capacity as Engineering Department Manager that he
    evaluated the Water Line Section.
    20100400‐CA                                   27
    pipeline sections in need of replacement. Packard also outlined the factors the Board
    weighed to determine the order in which the various Identified Pipes were actually
    replaced, including the Board’s allocation of a finite pool of annual resources for that
    purpose and its attempts to coordinate with municipal road projects so as to minimize
    the cost and inconvenience of replacement. Packard further described the way in which
    these procedures affected both the date when the Water Line Section was first
    recommended for replacement and the date it was actually replaced.
    ¶52 Once the District set forth the facts supporting its discretionary function defense,
    the Jenkinses were required to “set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine
    issue for trial.” See id. ¶ 18 (internal quotation marks omitted). Notwithstanding that
    obligation, the Jenkinses have made no attempt to offer any evidence that calls into
    dispute the affidavit testimony provided by the District concerning the methodology
    employed to prioritize the replacement of the Water Line Section.14 Instead, the
    Jenkinses challenged two of the facts set forth by the District in its motion for summary
    judgment on the grounds that they were “speculative, without foundation and not
    relevant.”15
    ¶53 First, the Jenkinses objected to the District’s statement in its motion for summary
    judgment that “[b]ecause it is financially impossible for [the District] to replace all of its
    pipelines in its water system that are experiencing breaks or approaching their useful
    lifetime, the determination of which aging pipeline within its water system will be
    replaced is the subject of intensive annual scrutiny by [the District].” With respect to
    this fact, the Jenkinses argued that
    14
    Consequently, the Jenkinses also failed to comply with rule 7(c)(3)(B) of the
    Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, which requires that for each fact the nonmoving party
    claims is disputed, that party “shall provide an explanation of the grounds for any
    dispute, supported by citation to the relevant materials, such as affidavits or discovery
    materials.” See id.
    15
    None of these objections is well taken. Packard adequately describes his
    personal involvement in the budget process, his familiarity with the volume of cast iron
    pipe in the water line, and the factors considered in determining the order in which
    sections of the pipeline are replaced.
    20100400‐CA                                   28
    [f]rom the remaining [f]acts listed by [the District], it is
    obvious that the focus of the meetings held to discuss which
    pipelines to replace, is on the financial aspects of the job, not
    the safety or the reliability of the system. The “scrutiny”
    described in . . . Packard’s [a]ffidavit does not appear to be
    “intense” at all, but just a review of the proposed budget and
    “when can the repairs be done the most cheaply.”
    Rather than disputing the fact that the District engaged in the analysis described by
    Packard, the Jenkinses argue that the District’s analysis was inadequate. This argument
    does not create a dispute as to the facts asserted in the affidavit. See Chapman v. Primary
    Children’s Hosp., 
    784 P.2d 1181
    , 1186 (Utah 1989) (“[M]ere conclusory allegations in a
    pleading, unsupported by a recitation of relevant surrounding facts, are insufficient to
    preclude dismissal or summary judgment.”). Rather, it may have some relevance to the
    legal questions raised by this dispute, including whether the District was engaged in a
    discretionary function for purposes of the GIAU.
    ¶54 Second, the Jenkinses challenged the District’s statement that “it is financially
    impossible for [the District] to replace every pipeline in its water system that has
    experienced a break or is approaching its useful lifetime.” As support, the Jenkinses
    assert that the “[D]istrict is in the business of providing a service to both wholesale and
    retail customers and presumably has the ability to charge its customers enough for
    those services to meet its reasonable and necessary expenditures.” However, the
    Jenkinses again fail to provide contrary evidence to dispute the affidavit testimony.
    Instead, they speculate that the Board could have raised water fees to a level that would
    have allowed the District to replace all of the cast iron pipe in the water line
    immediately. Such unsupported opinion is not sufficient to create an issue of fact. See
    Treloggan v. Treloggan, 
    699 P.2d 747
    , 748 (Utah 1985) (per curiam) (rejecting an affidavit
    in opposition to a motion for summary judgment because it “reveal[ed] no evidentiary
    facts, but merely reflect[ed] the affiant’s unsubstantiated opinions and conclusions”).
    ¶55 In both of its challenges to the District’s statement of facts, the Jenkinses simply
    attack the wisdom of the Board’s budgetary decisions. See generally Utah Code Ann.
    § 63G‐7‐301(5)(a) (2011) (providing an exemption to the waiver of immunity for
    discretionary functions “whether or not the discretion is abused”). Thus, they have not
    met their burden of coming forward with nonspeculative facts to challenge the District’s
    evidence. “Where the movant supports a motion for summary judgment with affidavits
    20100400‐CA                                  29
    or other sworn evidence, the nonmoving party may not rely on bare allegations from
    the pleadings to raise a dispute of fact.” Poteet v. White, 
    2006 UT 63
    , ¶ 7, 
    147 P.3d 439
    .
    Because the Jenkinses failed to provide any evidence contrary to Packard’s affidavit, we
    conclude that there are no material issues of fact in dispute. We, therefore, now
    consider whether the District has met its burden of showing that it is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law given these undisputed facts. See Orvis, 
    2008 UT 2
    , ¶ 19.
    To do so, we examine each of the four Little factors to determine whether the decision of
    when to replace the Water Line Section involved a discretionary function. See Johnson v.
    Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 22, 
    133 P.3d 402
    ; Little v. Utah State Div. of Family
    Servs., 
    667 P.2d 49
    , 51 (Utah 1983).
    D.     Application of the Little Test
    ¶56 Under the first part of the Little test, we must determine if “the challenged action,
    omission, or decision necessarily involve[s] a basic governmental policy, program, or
    objective.” See Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 22. The District is a water conservancy district
    formed pursuant to the Water Conservancy District Act. See Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2a‐
    1001 to ‐1009 (2009 & Supp. 2011).16 Water conservancy districts are created, among
    other reasons, to conserve and develop water in the state; to provide for its beneficial
    use; to control and make use of it for domestic, manufacturing, irrigation, and power; to
    promote the prosperity and general welfare of the people of the state; and to “construct,
    finance, operate, and maintain works in the state.” See id. § 17B‐2a‐1002(1)(a)‐(f) (2009).
    The Water Conservancy District Act grants water districts significant authority,
    including the power to “acquire or construct works, facilities, or improvements.” Id.
    § 17B‐2a‐1004(1)(c) (Supp. 2011); see also id. § 17B‐1‐102(35) (defining “works” as “a
    dam, reservoir, well, canal, conduit, pipeline, drain, tunnel, power plant, and any facility,
    16
    The Water Conservancy District Act, was rearranged and reenacted in 2007. See
    Special & Local Districts Amendments, ch. 329, §§ 359‐66, 
    2007 Utah Laws 1723
    , 1894‐
    1900. However, because the material provisions relevant to this case are substantially
    the same, we cite to the current version for the convenience of the reader. Compare Utah
    Code Ann. § 17B‐2a‐1002(1) (2009) (current statute describing the purpose of water
    conservancy districts), and id. § 17B‐2a‐1004(1)(c) (Supp. 2011) (current statute
    describing the powers of water conservancy districts), with id. § 17A‐2‐1401 (2004) (prior
    statute listing the benefits and policies of water conservancy districts), and id. § 17A‐2‐
    1413 (2004) (prior statute defining the powers of water conservancy districts).
    20100400‐CA                                  30
    improvement, or property necessary or convenient for supplying or treating water for
    any beneficial use, and for otherwise accomplishing the purpose of the local district”
    (emphasis added)). Thus, the District’s decisions concerning the maintenance of the
    Water Line Section involve a basic governmental policy, program, and objective under
    the GIAU. Cf. Rocky Mountain Thrift Stores, Inc. v. Salt Lake City Corp., 
    784 P.2d 459
    , 463
    (Utah 1989) (concluding that decisions regarding “the design, capacity, and
    construction” of a flood control system involved a basic governmental objective of
    “flood control to protect life and property”).
    ¶57 Second, we consider whether the decision to delay replacement of the pipe for
    three years after the Water Line Section had been recommended for replacement is
    “essential to the realization or accomplishment of that policy, program, or objective as
    opposed to one which would not change the course or direction of the policy, program,
    or objective.” See Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 22. Here, the policy, program, or objective is
    the provision of water for beneficial use through 275 miles of pipe comprising the water
    line. The District contends that the decisions concerning when to replace the numerous
    sections of Identified Pipe are essential to the accomplishment of its objectives. The
    Jenkinses disagree, asserting that “[t]he timing of the replacement is not essential to the
    objective of providing water to [the District’s] customers.” While the District contends
    that it must prioritize because it cannot replace all segments of its water line that are
    approaching the end of their useful life at once, the Jenkinses assert that the District
    could simply charge high enough fees to replace all of the aging pipe.17 However,
    decisions concerning what amount of an entity’s resources should be allocated to
    repairs or improvements involve a classic exercise of discretion. See 
    id.
     ¶ 26 n.10
    (acknowledging that a governmental entity “may qualify for the discretionary function
    exception by demonstrating that a particular allocation of funds was based on an
    analytical project prioritization”).
    ¶58 In Duncan v. Union Pacific Railroad, 
    842 P.2d 832
     (Utah 1992), the supreme court
    held that the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) was immune from a
    17
    Although the parties engage on the issue of whether the District could replace
    all of the sections of the 275‐mile water line that are comprised of cast iron pipe, the
    Water Line Section had actually been identified for replacement. Thus, the issue is
    whether the District could have replaced all of the Identified Pipe, not whether it could
    have replaced all of the cast iron pipe in the system.
    20100400‐CA                                  31
    wrongful death suit brought by the heirs of persons killed in an automobile‐train
    collision at a rural railroad crossing. See 
    id.
     at 835‐36. The plaintiffs claimed that UDOT
    was negligent in deferring the installation of automatic warning lights, signs, and gates
    at the crossing, and that the decision to do so was an operational, rather than a
    discretionary, decision. See 
    id.
     at 833‐34. In rejecting that argument, the Utah Supreme
    Court described UDOT’s process of installing upgrades. See id. at 834. UDOT first
    assigned priority according to the hazardousness of the particular crossing. See id. It
    then installed the upgrades in that order until its federal funding was exhausted, which
    generally covered “only . . . eight to ten projects in Utah each year.” See id. Applying
    the Little test, the Duncan court concluded that “the evaluation of crossings and the
    assigning of priorities for upgrading the adequacy of warning devices . . . [was]
    essential to the improvement of public safety.”18 Id. at 835.
    ¶59 This court reached a similar conclusion in Smith v. Weber County School District,
    
    877 P.2d 1276
     (Utah Ct. App. 1994), where we determined that a school district was
    entitled to discretionary function immunity for its decision to locate a school bus stop
    on a particular side of a busy road. See 
    id.
     at 1281‐82. In conducting the Little test, the
    Smith court emphasized that “the bus stop and route in question were part of a vast
    system serving an entire school district” and that the design of the system involved
    competing concerns such as “safety, feasibility, and cost effectiveness.” See 
    id. at 1281
    .
    Consequently, the court concluded that the system itself was essential to accomplishing
    the goals of transporting children to school and educating them. See 
    id.
     at 1281‐82.
    ¶60 Viewing the Water Line Section as part of the District’s entire water distribution
    system, see 
    id. at 1281
    , we conclude that the assignment of priorities for replacement of
    Identified Pipe is essential to the District’s objectives. See Duncan, 842 P.2d at 835. The
    Jenkinses’ argument that the District could raise its fees and replace all of the pipe
    immediately ignores the other factors the District weighs in deciding when a particular
    section of Identified Pipe will be replaced. Cf. Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶¶ 10,
    18, 67, 
    57 P.3d 1007
     (plurality opinion) (noting that a municipal power system had the
    18
    The supreme court also concluded that UDOT’s activities met the other Little
    test factors, concluding that UDOT had exercised “basic policy evaluation, judgment
    and expertise,” and that it had the authority “to determine which crossings [were] most
    hazardous and most deserving of the limited funds available for active warning
    devices.” See Duncan v. Union Pac. R.R., 
    842 P.2d 832
    , 835 (Utah 1992).
    20100400‐CA                                 32
    ability to raise fees, but not considering that fact in determining that its decisions about
    the features of power lines, including the minimum height of high voltage power lines,
    were essential to the governmental objective of promoting public safety). For example,
    the District’s Assistant General Manager/Chief Engineer explained in his affidavit that
    the District may be unable to obtain the necessary permits from the relevant
    municipality if there has already been recent construction in the area. He further stated
    that the District seeks to avoid “unnecessary demolishment of recent improvements to
    property, roads, sidewalks, and landscaping,” and the disturbance to the public caused
    by “ongoing and repeated construction in the same area.” Indeed, when the Water Line
    Section was replaced, it was done in conjunction with a road project scheduled for the
    same section of 3300 South. “‘The decision of how and when to replace a major element
    of a substantial public facility is . . . at bottom a question of how best to allocate
    resources.’” Keegan v. State, 
    896 P.2d 618
    , 625 (Utah 1995) (quoting Baum v. United
    States, 
    986 F.2d 716
    , 724 (4th Cir. 1993)). Thus, we conclude that the second part of the
    Little test is met because the prioritization of replacement projects was essential to the
    operation of the water system.
    ¶61 Under the third prong of the Little test, the District must show that decisions
    concerning when to replace the Water Line Section “require[ed] the exercise of basic
    policy evaluation, judgment, and expertise on the part of the governmental agency
    involved.” Little v. Utah State Div. of Family Servs., 
    667 P.2d 49
    , 51 (Utah 1983) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). The parties point us to two decisions from our supreme
    court that they contend are controlling on the issue, Keegan v. State, 
    896 P.2d 618
     (Utah
    1995), and Johnson v. Utah Department of Transportation, 
    2006 UT 15
    , 
    133 P.2d 402
    . We
    conclude that under either of these opinions, the District’s decision regarding the
    priority of replacing the Identified Pipe is a discretionary function.
    ¶62 In Keegan, the plaintiff brought a wrongful death action, claiming that UDOT was
    negligent in not raising the concrete barrier separating the eastbound and westbound
    lanes of Interstate Highway 80. See Keegan, 896 P.2d at 619. Although the barrier met
    national safety standards when first constructed, subsequent projects had added road
    surface material, reducing the distance between the top of the barrier and the road. See
    id. At the time of the accident, in which plaintiff’s husband was killed, the barrier did
    not meet national safety standards. See id. As a result, the plaintiff claimed that UDOT
    negligently failed to raise the height of the barrier during the overlay projects. See id.
    The trial court denied UDOT’s claim that its decision was a discretionary function, and
    20100400‐CA                                  33
    the jury entered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. See id. UDOT appealed, claiming,
    among other issues, that it was entitled to discretionary function immunity. See id.
    ¶63 Applying the Little factors, the Utah Supreme Court first concluded that UDOT’s
    decision involved the basic governmental objective of public safety on the roads. See id.
    at 624. It then determined that the decision was essential to that policy because “it
    involved a determination of not only the degree of safety that would be provided by
    various options considered, but also what degree of safety would be an appropriate
    goal given the time and cost constraints.” Id. Where the project design engineer had
    prepared a cost‐benefits report based on an extensive safety study examining cost, other
    scheduled projects, and inconvenience, and where the timing and plans for the project
    were debated by senior engineers, the supreme court concluded that the decision
    involved UDOT’s basic policy judgment and expertise. See id. Thus, the Keegan court
    held that the decision not to raise the barrier was a discretionary function for which
    UDOT was immune. See id. at 624‐25. The supreme court explained that “‘[e]very
    highway could probably be made safer by further expenditures, but we will not hold
    UDOT (and implicitly, the legislature) negligent for having to strike a difficult balance
    between the need for greater safety and the burden of funding improvements.’” See id.
    at 624 (quoting Duncan v. Union Pac. R.R., 
    790 P.2d 595
    , 601 (Utah Ct. App. 1990), aff’d,
    
    842 P.2d 832
     (Utah 1992)). Indeed, the court cited favorably to federal authority on this
    point, stating,
    “The decision of how and when to replace a major element of a
    substantial public facility is, like the decisions involving design
    and construction, at bottom a question of how best to allocate
    resources. Such a decision is inherently bound up in
    considerations of economic and political policy, and
    accordingly is precisely the type of governmental decision
    that Congress intended to insulate from judicial second
    guessing through tort actions for damages.”
    Id. at 625 (emphasis added) (quoting Baum, 986 F.2d at 724); see also Baum, 986 F.2d at
    723 (holding that a decision not to replace a guardrail on a National Service Parkway
    was a discretionary function).
    ¶64 The Jenkinses claim that Keegan can be distinguished because the decision to wait
    three years before replacing the Water Line Section did not involve the same type of
    20100400‐CA                                    34
    careful analysis. Instead, they point to the supreme court’s decision in Johnson as
    authority for the proposition that the District’s decision was merely operational. See
    Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶¶ 35‐37. There, the plaintiff was injured when he drove into
    cutouts running parallel to his lane of travel on Interstate Highway 15 (I‐15) that were
    marked only by orange barrels. See id. ¶ 4. UDOT’s Regional Director decided to use
    the plastic barrels without requesting any safety analysis and without discussing it with
    his supervisor. See id. ¶ 5. Furthermore, he did so despite the contractor’s request to
    erect concrete barriers instead, and the concern of UDOT’s Project Engineer that the
    plastic barrels were not adequate for safety purposes. See id. ¶¶ 6‐7. Indeed, the
    contractor had requested additional funds to cover the cost of switching to concrete
    barriers, but no agreement on price was ever reached.19 See id. ¶¶ 7‐8. When the
    plaintiff sued for the substantial injuries he suffered when his car fell into the cutout,
    the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of UDOT on the basis of the
    discretionary function exception to the waiver of governmental immunity. See id. ¶ 12.
    ¶65 On appeal, the supreme court reversed, explaining that a governmental entity
    cannot escape liability by merely asserting that some minimal level of discretion was
    used in making a decision. See id. ¶ 21. Rather, “[t]he key . . . is that the government
    actually exercises a level of discretion in a manner that implicates policy‐making and
    thrusts the decision into the political process.” Id. (citing Keegan, 896 P.2d at 623‐24); see
    also Little, 667 P.2d at 51 (“If the State posits immunity on . . . an exercise of discretion, it
    must make a showing that a conscious balancing of risks and advantages took place.”).
    The court explained that “[a] real and substantial consideration of the relevant concerns,
    such as the benefits to public welfare and safety weighed against increases in spending
    taxpayers’ money, is necessary to prove that the government engaged in policy‐level
    considerations.” Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 36. To illustrate the application of that test, the
    Johnson court distinguished between the initial decision to undertake the construction
    project and the later decision to use plastic barrels to mark hazards during that project.
    19
    During the project, another car drove into the cutouts and knocked over a
    number of orange barrels. See Johnson v. Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 10, 
    133 P.2d 402
    . But for the fact that the contractor’s employees had temporarily left the site, they
    likely would have been struck by the automobile. See 
    id.
     After that event, the
    contractor again questioned the adequacy of the existing safety measures. See 
    id.
    However, the Regional Director made no changes prior to the plaintiff’s accident. See
    
    id.
     ¶¶ 10‐11.
    20100400‐CA                                    35
    See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 34‐35. With respect to the decision “whether or not to perform the
    construction on I‐15,” the supreme court concluded that “the decision to spend nearly
    five million dollars on the construction project . . . combined with the adverse effects on
    public convenience, placed that decision squarely in the public policy arena.” Id. ¶ 34.
    In contrast, the placement of orange barrels “was . . . so inconsequential in the overall
    construction project” that UDOT supervisors were not even consulted before the barrels
    were used. See id. The supreme court noted “[t]he manner in which the construction
    occurred . . . is where the line is drawn between operational and policy decisions.” Id.
    ¶ 35; see also Trujillo v. Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    1999 UT App 227
    , ¶¶ 23‐27, 30‐34, 
    986 P.2d 752
     (collecting cases holding that because UDOT had not established that its decisions
    regarding a construction project were made at the policy level, it was not entitled to rely
    on the discretionary function exception to the waiver of immunity under the UGIA).
    Because the decision to use the plastic barrels was an operational decision, the supreme
    court held that UDOT could not rely on the discretionary function exception to the
    waiver of immunity. See Johnson, 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶¶ 37, 39 (concluding that the
    “unsubstantiated decision” of the regional director “not to spend money [was] not the
    same as a thorough and deliberate cost‐benefit analysis”). Like UDOT in Johnson, the
    District’s decision “to spend nearly [$180,000] on the construction project, . . . combined
    with the adverse effects on public convenience, placed that decision squarely in the
    public policy arena.” See id. ¶ 34.
    ¶66 The District has provided the only evidence of the criteria used and the process
    followed to determine the order in which the sections of Identified Pipe are replaced.
    After gathering data on the pipelines in the District’s system, the Engineers meet and
    determine which sections need to be replaced, which sections they will recommend to
    the Board for immediate replacement, and which sections they will recommend to be
    deferred for replacement at a later date. In doing so, they consider cost, budgetary
    considerations, permitting issues, soil conditions likely to cause greater degradation of
    the pipe, the history of breaks, and the possibility of coordinating with other
    construction projects so as to conserve resources and minimize disruption. The
    Engineering Department Manager then presents these recommendations to the Board,
    including the supporting rationale. The Board decides which replacement projects it
    will fund.
    ¶67 Based on this evidence, the District has established that the replacement of
    Identified Pipe “was based on an analytical project prioritization.” Johnson v. Utah Dep’t
    of Transp., 
    2006 UT 15
    , ¶ 26 n.10, 
    133 P.2d 402
    . The Jenkinses identify no contrary
    20100400‐CA                                 36
    evidence; instead they assert that the failure to consider the risks to third parties
    precludes a conclusion that the District exercised discretion at a policy‐making level.
    However, the allocation of limited resources among capital improvement projects “‘is
    precisely the type of governmental decision that [the legislature] intended to insulate
    from judicial second guessing through tort actions for damages.’” See Keegan v. State,
    
    896 P.2d 618
    , 625 (Utah 1995) (quoting Baum v. United States, 
    986 F.2d 716
    , 724 (4th Cir.
    1993)). Consequently, we conclude that the decision of when to replace the various
    sections of Identified Pipe, including the Water Line Section, involved the basic policy
    judgment and expertise of the District.
    ¶68 Under the fourth Little factor, we ask, “Does the governmental agency involved
    possess the requisite constitutional, statutory, or lawful authority and duty to do or
    make the challenged act, omission, or decision?” See Little v. Utah Div. of Family Servs.,
    
    667 P.2d 49
    , 51 (Utah 1983). Utah Code section 17B‐1‐103(2)(d) provides that a local
    water district “may acquire or construct works, facilities, and improvements necessary
    or convenient to the full exercise of the district’s powers, and operate, control, maintain,
    and use those works, facilities, and improvements.” Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐1‐103(2)(d)
    (Supp. 2011). Therefore, the District has the express authority to replace sections of the
    water line.
    ¶69 The undisputed facts indicate that the District’s decisions concerning the order in
    which Identified Pipe is replaced meets all four of the Little factors. Therefore, we hold
    that the District is immune from liability to the Jenkinses under the GIAU.20
    V. Open Courts
    20
    The District also asserts that it has retained immunity under the GIAU because
    the condition of the water line was a latent defect. A latent defect is “a defect which
    reasonably careful inspection will not reveal.” Pigs Gun Club, Inc. v. Sanpete Cnty., 
    2002 UT 17
    , ¶ 26, 
    42 P.3d 379
     (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the Jenkinses’ claim
    is not that the District failed to identify the Water Line Section as needing to be
    replaced. According to the Jenkinses, the District correctly identified the pipe as
    defective, but then negligently waited three years before replacing it. Thus, the latent
    defect exception from the waiver of immunity is not implicated and we do not address
    it further.
    20100400‐CA                                  37
    ¶70 The Jenkinses contend that if the District is immune from liability under the
    discretionary function exception of the GIAU, the statute violates article 1, section 11 of
    the Utah Constitution (the open courts clause), which states,
    All courts shall be open, and every person, for an injury
    done to him in his person, property or reputation, shall have
    remedy by due course of law, which shall be administered
    without denial or unnecessary delay; and no person shall be
    barred from prosecuting or defending before any tribunal in
    this State, by himself or counsel, any civil cause to which he
    is a party.
    Utah Const. art. 1, § 11. Under the open courts clause, the “citizens of Utah have a right
    to a remedy for an injury,” Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 10, 
    103 P.3d 135
    , and “the
    legislature [is] not . . . free to arbitrarily eliminate common law rights without
    establishing significant social and policy need or providing reasonable alternatives for
    the protection and vindication of those rights,” Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 48,
    
    57 P.3d 1007
     (plurality opinion).
    A.     Abrogation of a Remedy
    ¶71 In Berry v. Beech Aircraft Corp., 
    717 P.2d 670
     (Utah 1985), the supreme court
    outlined a test to determine whether a particular piece of legislation violates the open
    courts provision. See 
    id.
     at 674‐81. Before implementing the Berry test, however, we
    generally “first determine whether a cause of action has been abrogated by the
    legislative enactment.” Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 49. “If no remedy was eliminated, there is
    no need to proceed with the test set forth in Berry.” 
    Id.
     In making this threshold
    determination, we look “to the general law of rights and remedies at the time that the
    [l]egislature [purportedly] abrogate[d] a remedy.” Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 38, 
    980 P.2d 1171
    .
    ¶72 The Jenkinses contend that by defining essentially all activities of a governmental
    entity as governmental functions, the Utah Legislature abrogated their right to sue the
    District for negligence. According to the Jenkinses, operating a water system would not
    have been a governmental function prior to the adoption of that definition and
    therefore, they would have been able to recover their damages. Indeed, until the 1987
    amendments, the operation of a municipal water system was not entitled to immunity
    20100400‐CA                                 38
    under the UGIA. See Bennett v. Bow Valley Dev. Corp., 
    797 P.2d 419
    , 422 (Utah 1990). For
    purposes of summary judgment, the District does not challenge the Jenkinses’ assertion,
    stating that “[e]ven assuming that [the Jenkinses enjoyed a common law right to sue],
    . . . the 2004 GIA[U] . . . comports with the open courts clause.”21 Therefore, we do not
    further consider the issue of whether a cause of action was abrogated.
    B.     Reasonable Alternative Remedy
    ¶73 Because the District does not dispute that the Jenkinses had a right to sue that is
    no longer available due to the all‐inclusive definition of governmental function, we now
    proceed with the Berry test. When a remedy has been abrogated, we must first
    determine “whether the legislature has provided a ‘reasonable alternative remedy by
    due course of law for vindication of [a plaintiff’s] constitutional interests.’” Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 54 (additional internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Berry, 717 P.2d at
    680). In order to suffice, the substitute benefit “must be substantially equal in value or
    other benefit to the remedy abrogated in providing essentially comparable substantive
    protection to one’s person, property, or reputation, although the form of the substitute
    remedy may be different.” Berry, 717 P.2d at 680. Here, the Jenkinses have no
    alternative remedy if the District is immune.
    ¶74 Nevertheless, the District argues that because the adoption of the UGIA in 1965
    broadened governmental liability in some instances (allowing the state, counties, and
    school districts to be sued) in comparison to the common law, see DeBry v. Noble, 
    889 P.2d 428
    , 432 (Utah 1995), we should interpret the 2004 GIAU as providing “the general
    public collectively with reasonable alternative remedies for any remedies the 2004
    [GIAU] may have abrogated.” In addition, during the debates related to the repeal of
    21
    Thus, we do not undertake the analysis of whether the GIAU abrogated a
    remedy the Jenkinses would have previously enjoyed. Consequently, we need not
    consider whether the District’s status as a water district might have created a factual
    question of whether it was of such a unique character that its activities would have been
    considered governmental prior to the 1987 amendments to the GIAU. Cf. Parks v. Utah
    Transit Auth., 
    2002 UT 55
    , ¶ 14, 
    53 P.3d 473
     (holding that the Utah Transit Authority, as
    a public transit district, is of such a unique character, with such expansive and diverse
    operations, that it would have been a governmental function at common law and
    therefore, the GIAU did not abrogate plaintiffs’ remedy).
    20100400‐CA                                 39
    the UGIA and the enactment of the GIAU in 2004, members of the legislature opined
    that although the GIAU eliminated remedies for some tort victims, it was a reasonable
    trade‐off because the bill also “eliminate[d] the procedur[al] traps for the unwary.” See
    Recording of Utah Senate Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Feb. 24, 2004).
    Specifically, these legislators noted that the GIAU included more clear and concise
    notice of claim provisions, codified a statute of limitations discovery rule, and included
    a safe harbor provision for notices of claims. See 
    id.
     Accordingly, they concluded that
    while the bill would leave some tort victims without a remedy, it also “makes it much
    more likely that numerous claimants who previously lost their claims due to technical
    failures to meet notice requirements will be able to pursue their claims.” See Recording
    of House Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Mar. 3, 2004).22 The District claims that
    this trade‐off is justified by language in Masich v. United States Smelting, Refining &
    Mining Co., 
    113 Utah 101
    , 
    191 P.2d 612
     (1948), indicating that under the open courts
    clause “certain individual rights and remedies can be made to yield to the public good.”
    See id. at 624.
    ¶75 However, this part of the Berry test has not been interpreted so broadly by our
    supreme court. Instead, under the first part of the Berry test, the legislature “must . . .
    provide a quid pro quo in the form of . . . a substitute remedy for the individual,” and if
    this is not provided, the legislature must meet the second part of the Berry test. See Sun
    Valley Water Beds of Utah, Inc. v. Herm Hughes & Son, Inc., 
    782 P.2d 188
    , 192 (Utah 1989)
    (emphasis added). Where “the [l]egislature has provided non‐common law alternative
    remedies in lieu of common law remedies that it abrogated, such as in the No‐Fault
    Insurance Act, the Worker’s Compensation Act, or the Occupation Disease Act,” the
    supreme court has upheld the statute without proceeding to the next step of the Berry
    test. Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 44, 
    980 P.2d 1171
    ; see also Masich, 191 P.2d at 624‐25
    (upholding the Occupation Disease Act). But it has consistently held that there is not an
    adequate alternative remedy where “all actions of the type asserted” by a plaintiff are
    22
    An attorney statement submitted to the Senate committee states,
    While some tort victims may lose a claim under this bill, the
    trade off is reasonable because even more victims will be
    able to pursue claims under the revamped Notice of Claim
    provisions and other provisions of [the GIAU]. The entire
    group of tort victims is, therefore, better off, which serves
    the greater good.
    20100400‐CA                                    40
    barred, see Day, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 43, where plaintiffs are limited to alternative claims
    against different defendants, see Sun Valley Water Beds, 782 P.2d at 192, or where
    plaintiffs’ proven claims are subject to damages caps, see Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    ,
    ¶ 12, 
    103 P.3d 135
    .
    ¶76 Despite that authority, the District contends that because, by the adoption of the
    UGIA in 1965, the legislature “simultaneously expanded the immunity of cities and
    special districts, and restricted the immunity of the State of Utah and its
    instrumentalities, for the first time, allowing suit against the State,” it provided an
    adequate alternative remedy. (Emphasis omitted.) However, the Utah Supreme Court
    rejected a similar argument in Condemarin v. University Hospital, 
    775 P.2d 348
     (Utah
    1989). There, a plaintiff challenged the 1978 amendments to the UGIA under the open
    courts clause, because the amendments added government‐owned hospitals as a
    governmental entity covered by the UGIA, provided immunity for the hospitals’
    proprietary activities, and granted complete immunity to hospital employees. See id. at
    351. The University Hospital argued that the governmental immunity statute did not
    violate the open courts clause because its effect was to expand liability beyond that
    available at common law in some instances. See id. The Condemarin court disagreed,
    stating, “Although it is generally true that the [UGIA] expanded government liability,
    that is not the case with respect to proprietary or nongovernmental functions.” Id.
    Thus, the court concluded that the amendments had abrogated the plaintiff’s existing
    remedy without providing a reasonable alternative. See id. at 352. Consequently, we
    are not persuaded that the expansion of government liability resulting from the 1965
    adoption of the UGIA negates the fact that the Jenkinses’ remedy was abrogated by the
    adoption of an all‐inclusive definition of governmental function. Likewise, the fact that
    the legislature has made changes that may reduce the number of notices of claim
    deemed ineffective due to technical deficiencies does not change the impact of the
    amendments on the Jenkinses’ individual rights.
    ¶77 Under the GIAU, the Jenkinses are left entirely without a remedy the District
    concedes would have been available to them before the adoption of the 1987
    amendment to the UGIA defining “governmental function.”23 Further, the 2004
    23
    The 1987 amendments of the UGIA define “[g]overnmental function” as
    any act, failure to act, operation, function, or undertaking of
    (continued...)
    20100400‐CA                                    41
    enactment of the GIAU retained a similarly all‐inclusive definition24 and did nothing to
    provide a quid pro quo for persons situated like the Jenkinses. See Sun Valley Water
    Beds, 782 P.2d at 192. Thus, we conclude that the legislature has not provided the
    Jenkinses a reasonable alternative remedy.
    C.     The Laney and Judd Decisions
    ¶78    Pursuant to the Berry test,
    if there is no substitute or alternative remedy provided,
    abrogation of the remedy or cause of action may be justified
    only if there is a clear social or economic evil to be
    eliminated and the elimination of an existing legal remedy is
    not an arbitrary or unreasonable means for achieving the
    objective.
    Berry v. Beech Aircraft Corp., 
    717 P.2d 670
    , 680 (Utah 1985). To determine whether the
    elimination of the Jenkinses’ remedy meets this standard, we must examine the
    legislative history of the statute to ascertain the rationale for the subject legislation and
    then consider whether the means for eradicating the social or economic evils selected is
    23
    (...continued)
    a governmental entity whether or not the act, failure to act,
    operation, function, or undertaking is characterized as
    governmental, proprietary, a core governmental function,
    unique to government, undertaken in a dual capacity,
    essential to or not essential to a government or governmental
    function, or could be performed by private enterprise or
    private persons.
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 63
    ‐30‐2(4)(a) (1989).
    24
    The 2004 version of the GIAU defines “[g]overnmental function” as “each
    activity, undertaking, or operation of a governmental entity”; “each activity,
    undertaking, or operation performed by a department, agency, employee, agent, or
    officer of a governmental entity”; and “includes a governmental entity’s failure to act.”
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 63
    ‐30d‐102(4)(a)‐(c) (2004).
    20100400‐CA                                  42
    arbitrary or unreasonable. See Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶¶ 56‐58, 
    57 P.3d 1007
    (plurality opinion) (collecting Utah cases applying this standard). Before we begin that
    analysis, we pause to examine the appropriate level of deference to the Utah
    Legislature.
    ¶79 Of particular interest in undertaking this review is the Utah Supreme Court’s
    decision in Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , 
    57 P.3d 1007
     (plurality opinion). There, a
    majority of the court held that the 1987 definition of governmental function, see supra
    note 23, as applied to a municipal power system, violated the open courts clause of the
    Utah Constitution.25 See generally id. ¶¶ 1, 83. In reaching the conclusion that the statute
    was unconstitutional, the lead opinion in Laney cited favorably a two‐justice
    concurrence in Lee v. Gaufin, 
    867 P.2d 572
    , 590‐92 (Utah 1993) (Zimmerman, J., and Hall,
    C.J., concurring in the result),26 in which the concurring justices determined that a
    presumption of unconstitutionality attached to legislation challenged under the open
    courts clause. See Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 63; see also Lee, 867 P.2d at 591 (Zimmerman, J.,
    and Hall, C.J., concurring in the result) (“[W]hen we have found a statute to limit a right
    protected by the open courts [clause], we have, de facto, shifted from a presumption
    that the limiting statute is constitutional to a presumption that the statute is
    25
    This was a plurality opinion where Chief Justice Durham wrote the main
    opinion, joined by Justice Howe. Justice Russon concurred in the result, stating that
    although the main opinion seemed to accept that the legislature could change the
    definition of governmental function, governmental functions were inherently different
    than proprietary functions and the legislature could not similarly “declare automobiles
    to be sailboats or houses.” See Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 74, 
    57 P.3d 1007
    (Russon, J., concurring). However, Justice Russon did accept that the legislature could
    grant governmental immunity for a governmental entity engaged in a proprietary
    activity by meeting the Berry test. See id. ¶ 79.
    26
    Although the majority reached its conclusion that the statutes of limitations and
    repose in the Utah Health Care Malpractice Act were unconstitutional under the
    uniform operation of laws provision found in article I, section 24 of the Utah
    Constitution, Justices Zimmerman and Hall determined that the statute of repose’s
    effect on the claims of minors violated article I, section 11, the open courts clause. See
    Lee v. Gaufin, 
    867 P.2d 572
    , 590 (Utah 1993) (Zimmerman, J., and Hall, C.J., concurring in
    the result).
    20100400‐CA                                 43
    unconstitutional . . . .” (emphasis omitted)); Wood v. University of Utah Med. Ctr., 
    2002 UT 134
    , ¶¶ 46‐47, 
    67 P.3d 436
     (Durham, C.J., dissenting) (explaining that “[c]ontrary to
    the position taken by the lead opinion, this court has consistently rejected the
    presumption of constitutionality of statutes challenged under the [open courts clause]”
    in favor of heightened scrutiny). Thus, the Laney court began its analysis with a
    presumption that the all‐inclusive definition of “governmental function” ran afoul of
    the open courts clause, and then considered whether that presumption had been
    rebutted by the municipality. See Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 53.
    ¶80 In analyzing whether the UGIA violated the open courts clause, the Laney court
    first noted that the operation of a power system is a dangerous activity and involves
    “the highest degree of care” to prevent harm to others. See id. ¶ 64 (internal quotation
    marks omitted). With that backdrop in mind, the court questioned the stated legislative
    purpose of the amendment, which was “to make liability insurance more affordable for
    government entities by reducing liability risks.” See id. ¶ 66. The court emphasized that
    although this may be a worthy objective, no specifics were given about whether a
    municipal power system in Utah had ever sustained a large damage award or whether
    their operations had been affected by potential liability. See id. The lead opinion further
    emphasized that the power system was not subsidized by taxpayers and actually
    generated an annual profit, concluding that “[i]f the City cannot afford to purchase
    reasonable amounts of liability insurance to meet its high standard of care, rate
    increases may be justified and necessary.” See id. ¶ 67. Ultimately, a majority of the
    court determined that the legislation swept too broadly when it defined “all activities of
    municipalities as governmental action, regardless of their nature.”27 See id. ¶ 69. The
    court suggested that the legislature could “create very limited immunities to address
    27
    Two justices dissented from the open courts analysis in Laney, arguing that the
    provision should not be interpreted to impose “a strong substantive limitation on the
    legislature’s ability to limit or eliminate a cause of action for, or the remedies available
    for personal injury.” Id. ¶ 88 (Wilkins, J., and Durrant, J., dissenting) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Instead, the dissenting justices called for the abandonment of the test
    announced in Berry, due to its intrusion on the legislative function and violation of the
    separation of powers clause of the Utah Constitution. See id. ¶¶ 88‐106. Finally,
    because the 1987 amendments to the UGIA did not “unreasonably burden[] important
    constitutional rights,” the dissenting justices would have upheld it as constitutional. See
    id. ¶ 138.
    20100400‐CA                                  44
    specific problems, or to place ‘caps’ on the amount of damages,” as was upheld in
    McCorvey v. Utah Department of Transportation, 
    868 P.2d 41
     (Utah 1993). See Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 70; see also McCorvey, 868 P.2d at 47‐48 (holding that the damage cap on claims
    against governmental entities did not violate the open courts clause because in the
    absence of the UGIA, the state would have been completely immune).
    ¶81 Two years later, a majority of the supreme court retreated from the analytical
    framework applied by the Laney majority, instead adopting a more deferential
    approach. In Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    , 
    103 P.3d 135
    , the court examined a statutory
    damages cap on quality of life damages in medical malpractice actions adopted with the
    stated purpose of reducing health care costs. See id. ¶¶ 3, 6. The majority rejected
    Laney’s presumption of unconstitutionality and instead “recognize[d] an obligation of
    deference to legislative judgments in a Berry review, and [noted that] to the extent [it]
    differ[ed] from [the court’s] prior application of Berry, those prior applications [were]
    disavowed.” See id. ¶ 11. In addition, the Judd court departed from the Laney court’s
    reassessment of the legislators’ collective judgment that the legislation was necessary to
    address a legitimate public concern. See id. The higher level of deference afforded the
    legislature is apparent in the Judd majority’s refusal to second guess the empirical truth
    of the stated policy considerations by “undertak[ing] the same investigation as the
    legislature, [and] reviewing its data‐gathering methods and conclusions to determine
    whether the stated legislative findings are perfectly correct.” See id. ¶ 13. Instead, the
    Judd majority indicated that “[w]hen an issue is fairly debatable, we cannot say that the
    legislature overstepped its constitutional bounds when it determined that there was a
    crisis needing a remedy.” See id. ¶ 15.
    ¶82 Despite the Judd court’s greater deference to legislative judgments concerning the
    existence of a crisis needing to be addressed, the majority reaffirmed the part of the
    Berry test requiring the reviewing court to evaluate whether the means selected for
    abating that crisis are nonarbitrary and reasonable. See id. ¶ 16; see also Berry v. Beech
    Aircraft Corp., 
    717 P.2d 670
    , 680 (Utah 1985). To do so, the court focused on whether the
    legislation was “narrowly tailored” to respond to the stated social or economic evils to
    be abated. See Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17; Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 57 (quoting Hirpa v. IHC
    Hosps., Inc., 
    948 P.2d 785
    , 793‐94 (Utah 1997) (upholding the Good Samaritan Act and
    noting that “[t]he statute does not cut an unnecessarily wide swath through causes of
    action against medical providers”)). Because the damage cap at issue in Judd was
    narrowly tailored to apply only to quality of life damages, which are “less susceptible to
    quantification than purely economic damages,” and it could facilitate the “predict[ion]
    20100400‐CA                                45
    and control[ of] future costs [and thereby] result in lower insurance rates,” see Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17, the supreme court concluded that the damage cap did not violate the open
    courts clause.28 See 
    id.
     ¶¶ 39‐40.
    ¶83 Thus, while the supreme court’s decision in Judd disavows the Laney court’s
    reassessment of the social or economic evils identified by the legislature, see id. ¶ 15, it
    embraces the requirement that the legislative remedy adopted be narrowly tailored. See
    id. ¶ 17; see also Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶¶ 68‐69. Furthermore, Judd left intact the Laney
    court’s application of the Berry test to the all‐inclusive definition of “governmental
    function” adopted in the 1987 amendments to the UGIA, which the court determined
    “swept too broadly,” see Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 69, despite the fact that governmental
    entities are subject to liability in many instances only by the grace of the Utah
    Legislature. See generally Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶¶ 39‐40; see also Condemarin v. University
    Hosp., 
    775 P.2d 348
    , 351 (Utah 1989) (holding amendments to UGIA unconstitutional
    under the open courts clause despite expansion of government liability from common
    law).
    ¶84 With this precedent in mind, we turn now to the facts at issue here and continue
    our application of the Berry test. We begin with the identification of the social or
    economic evils to be eliminated, deferring to the legislature’s judgment and its
    conclusions concerning the existence of a crisis needing a remedy. See Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    ,
    ¶ 11. We then consider whether the means selected to address that crisis are a
    reasonable and nonarbitrary method of addressing the elimination of the evils
    identified. Although we conclude that the means selected are reasonably related to
    achieving an abatement of the social and economic evils identified by our legislature,
    we determine that those means, the complete elimination of any remedy, are not
    narrowly tailored. Therefore, we hold that the abrogation of the Jenkinses’ remedy
    against the District violates the provisions of the open courts clause of the Utah
    Constitution.
    28
    Two justices dissented in Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    , 
    103 P.3d 135
    . In particular,
    they disagreed with the majority’s “deference to legislative judgments in a Berry
    review” and its rejection of “heightened scrutiny in favor of a rational basis standard”
    of review. See id. ¶ 42 (Durham, C.J., and Nehring, J., dissenting) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    20100400‐CA                                 46
    D.     The Social and Economic Evils Identified by the Utah Legislature
    ¶85 In Laney, the supreme court identified the goals of the 1987 amendments to the
    UGIA as the dramatic increase in lawsuits naming governmental entities as defendants,
    large damage awards against governmental entities, and the increasing difficulty for
    governmental entities to obtain affordable liability insurance. See Laney v. Fairview City,
    
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 65, 
    57 P.3d 1007
    . After the Laney court held the 1987 amendments
    unconstitutional as applied to a municipal power company, the legislature repealed the
    UGIA and enacted the 2004 GIAU. This was done in direct response to the Laney
    decision. See Recording of Utah Senate Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Feb. 24,
    2004). In enacting the GIAU, the legislature pointed to several social and economic evils
    it wished to remedy.
    ¶86 First, the legislature indicated that the “court‐created distinction” between which
    governmental activities are constitutionally entitled to immunity is “unpredictable and
    often illogical.” See Recording of House Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Mar. 3,
    2004). An Assistant Attorney General, who testified before the Senate Government
    Operations and Political Subdivisions Committee, stated that tests to distinguish which
    governmental functions are entitled to immunity “can become traps for the unwary.
    Both citizens and government can find themselves guessing wrong as to how the courts
    will draw the line,” and that “[t]he confusion not only has damaged the citizens but it
    has also injured government.” See 
    id.
    ¶87 In particular, the legislature was convinced that the historical treatment of the
    provision of water as proprietary was outdated. During the 2004 debate, the bill’s
    Senate sponsor stated, “If you went back prior [to Laney] or probably asked any member
    on this floor, ‘Is a water system a proper role for local government?’—the answer would
    have been, ‘Well of course, what are you even asking?’” See Recording of Utah Senate
    Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Feb. 24, 2004).29 Another unidentified senator
    stated, “I think everyone agrees that nowadays water service, electricity, [and] a lot of
    utility services are things that government should provide.” 
    Id.
     And Senator Greg Bell
    stated, “every water system could be duplicated by a private group or at least a quasi‐
    29
    The senator was apparently under the impression that prior to Laney, water
    systems were considered a governmental function and that the decision in that case
    “threw that all open.”
    20100400‐CA                                 47
    private group . . . but we have left municipal government and assigned municipal
    government those responsibilities.” 
    Id.
     Furthermore, a document submitted to the
    Senate committee entitled “Comments on Utah Governmental Claims Act” argues that
    public utilities, and specifically municipally‐run power systems, have never been
    proprietary functions.30 It states that
    power generation, transmission, and distribution are not and
    never have been private functions. They are functions of
    cities and towns, and if cities and towns choose not to
    perform the functions, they may grant a franchise to a
    private entity to do so. The Constitution therefore
    contemplates and makes the provision of public utility
    service a function and a purpose of government.
    ¶88 Because the provision of domestic water, unlike water used for fire protection,
    was traditionally not considered a governmental function for which the entity was
    immune, we disagree that the Laney analysis created a novel category of liability. See
    generally Egelhoff v. Ogden City, 
    71 Utah 511
    , 
    267 P. 1011
    , 1012‐13 (Utah 1928) (holding
    that the provision of water is a proprietary function, subjecting the city to liability for
    negligence). However, we acknowledge that much has changed during the eighty‐three
    years since the Utah Supreme Court decided Egelhoff v. Ogden City, 
    71 Utah 511
    , 
    267 P. 1011
     (Utah 1928). While at one time it may have been unusual for a governmental
    entity to provide water to its inhabitants, by 1990, our supreme court recognized that
    “[c]ities can and do operate water systems on a commercial basis. In many areas of our
    state, residents maintain wells and provide their own water. Also, there are privately
    owned companies supplying water to residents.” Bennett v. Bow Valley Dev. Corp., 
    797 P.2d 419
    , 422 (Utah 1990) (citation omitted) (holding “that the maintenance of a water
    storage tank” was not a governmental function). Thus, we accept the legislature’s
    judgment that expectations concerning the provision of water may have changed.
    “[O]ne of the functions of the legislative power is to remedy defects in the common law
    as they develop, and to adapt to the change of time and circumstance.” Berry v. Beech
    Aircraft Corp., 
    717 P.2d 670
    , 678 (Utah 1985) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    30
    As previously discussed, our review convinces us that, like most other states,
    Utah has not historically considered the provision of water for purposes other than fire
    protection a governmental function. See supra ¶¶ 43‐46.
    20100400‐CA                                 48
    However, in summarizing Berry’s holding, the Utah Supreme Court explained that “the
    rights of individuals protected by the open courts provision must be balanced against
    the legislature’s need to enact laws to meet changing societal needs.” Day v. State, 
    1999 UT 46
    , ¶ 37, 
    980 P.2d 1171
    .
    ¶89 As a second justification for the 2004 GIAU, the legislature indicated its desire to
    “guard[] government’s ability to act for the public good without fear of unexpected and
    potentially crippling taxpayer burdens.” Recording of Utah House Floor Debates, 55th
    Leg., Gen. Sess. (Mar. 3, 2004). An Assistant Attorney General testified, “Government,
    when it is unsure of whether it has immunity[,] will all too often err on the side of not
    providing the services that its taxpayers want, but might create a liability that the
    government cannot afford.”
    ¶90 Third, the legislature pointed to data that liability insurance premiums have
    risen for governmental entities dramatically since both the September 11, 2001 attacks
    and the Utah Supreme Court’s decision in Laney, while the amount of coverage has
    decreased. See Recording of Utah House Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Mar. 3,
    2004) (stating that “since Laney v. Fairview City, the insurance market has responded to
    court‐injected uncertainty in the governmental immunity realm by increasing
    premiums 230% for 70% of the prior coverage”).
    ¶91 In considering the constitutionality of the GIAU as applied to the Jenkinses’
    claim, we depart from Laney’s focus on the correctness of the legislature’s identified
    social and economic evils, instead accepting the supreme court’s more recent
    recognition in Judd that “our power does not extend so far as to permit imposition of
    our views on such policy disputes.” See Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 14, 
    103 P.3d 135
    ;
    see also id. ¶ 15 (explaining that the courts’ task is not to determine whether the
    legislature “made wise policy”). Because the social and economic concerns identified
    by the legislature are “fairly debatable,” we conclude that it has not “overstepped its
    constitutional bounds” by identifying them as a basis for its abrogation of the Jenkinses’
    remedy. See id. ¶ 15. Thus, we accept these social and economic evils as the starting
    point for our assessment of whether the complete abrogation of the Jenkinses’ remedy is
    reasonably and rationally related to the elimination of these concerns. Nevertheless, the
    means adopted to address those identified evils must be narrowly tailored to comply
    with the open courts clause.
    20100400‐CA                                49
    E.     The Reasonableness and Rationality of the Means Selected
    ¶92 The means adopted by the Utah Legislature to address these identified evils was
    to designate all action and inaction of any governmental entity as a governmental
    function for immunity purposes. In doing so, the legislature made it “crystal clear[] that
    all functions are covered under this governmental immunity” and that the new
    definition “establishes the legislature’s intent to apply governmental immunity broadly
    and concisely to all government functions and especially to all discretionary budget
    decisions that effect the taxing policies and priorities of state and local government.”
    See Recording of Utah Senate Floor Debates, 55th Leg., Gen. Sess. (Feb. 24, 2004). To
    determine if the inclusion of all governmental activity within the scope of the GIAU is
    rationally and reasonably related to the identified concerns, Judd instructs that we must
    first consider whether “[t]he legislature’s determination that it needed to respond to the
    perceived . . . crisis was logically followed by action designed” to remedy that crisis. See
    Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 16. The remedy need not abate the identified evil entirely, but it
    must be logically designed to remedy the concern in some measurable amount. See 
    id.
    Furthermore, the means must be narrowly tailored. See id. ¶ 17 (upholding a cap on
    quality of life damages because “[r]ather than cap all damages, like the cap struck down
    in Condemarin v. University Hospital, 
    775 P.2d 348
     (Utah 1989), the limitation on
    recoverable damages in this case is narrowly tailored, by limiting quality of life
    damages alone”).
    ¶93 Thus, it is not our role to assess the wisdom of placing the full burden of the
    District’s decisions to delay the replacement of Identified Pipe on the unfortunate
    individuals living down‐gradient from the water line, rather than on all customers of
    the District equally. Cf. Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17 (“Despite this court’s concerns about the
    wisdom of depriving a few badly injured plaintiffs of full recovery, the cap is also
    constitutionally reasonable.”). Moreover, the all‐inclusive definition of governmental
    function “is not unconstitutionally arbitrary merely because it does so.” See id. ¶ 16.
    Instead, our review is limited to whether the definition of governmental function, as
    applied to the District’s activities here, is rationally related, nonarbitrary, and “narrowly
    tailored” to the stated social evils it was designed to remedy. See id. ¶¶ 16‐17. We
    explain our reasoning now as to each evil identified by the Utah Legislature.
    20100400‐CA                                  50
    1.     The Uncertainty About Which Activities Are Immune
    ¶94 The first concern identified by the legislature is the confusion caused by the
    unpredictable judicial decisions defining the limits of a governmental function.
    Although the inclusion of all governmental activity as falling within the GIAU
    effectively eliminates any confusion on that point, it does not eliminate other factual
    and legal issues affecting whether governmental activity is immune. As our discussion
    of discretionary function illustrates, there are other aspects of the GIAU where the law
    as applied to specific facts will determine whether a particular exception or exemption
    is triggered. See supra ¶¶ 50‐69. As a result, the all‐inclusive definition of governmental
    function will not completely prevent uncertainty about whether the entity can be held
    liable. By including all governmental activity, however, the legislature logically
    eliminated confusion about whether a particular activity is a governmental function.
    Therefore, the definition “controls [uncertainty] in one area where [uncertainty] might
    be controllable.” See id. ¶ 16. In addition, the broad definition includes the provision of
    water, a function the Utah Legislature mentioned in its debates as being an expected
    service of municipalities.
    ¶95 However, the remedy adopted by the legislature must also be narrowly tailored
    to comply with the open courts clause. See id. ¶ 17. The Utah courts have upheld
    legislation in the face of an open courts clause challenge when the legislation is carefully
    constructed so as to leave remedies intact for situations in which the tortfeasor is
    especially culpable or the plaintiff warrants extra protection. For example, in Craftsman
    Builder’s Supply, Inc. v. Butler Manufacturing Co., 
    1999 UT 18
    , 
    974 P.2d 1194
    , the court
    accepted the legislature’s stated purpose of reducing liability insurance and record
    storage costs in the construction industry in enacting a builder’s statute of repose,
    which “provide[d] that actions for injury to persons or property arising out of an
    improvement to real property must be brought within a certain number of years of the
    triggering event.” See id. ¶¶ 13, 20. The court then determined that the statute was
    reasonable and nonarbitrary because the “possibility of injury and damage” after the
    repose period was “highly remote and unexpected.” See id. ¶¶ 21‐22 (recognizing, with
    approval, that although data suggested injury was remote after six to ten years, the
    legislature chose a period of twelve years for the majority of claims). The supreme
    court further noted that the legislature carved out certain exceptions to the repose
    period, leaving remedies intact where the provider “fraudulently conceale[d] the act or
    omission giving rise to the cause of action,” where the “act or omission [was] willful or
    20100400‐CA                                 51
    intentional,” where the parties had an express warranty for a longer period of time, or
    where the plaintiff was a minor or was mentally incompetent. See id. ¶ 22.
    ¶96 In contrast, the definition of “governmental function” in the GIAU broadly
    abrogates a large class of previously‐existing actions. See id. ¶ 19 (recognizing that the
    prior version of the builder’s statute of repose was “‘too likely to cut off injuries that
    should be compensated’” (quoting Horton v. Goldminer’s Daughter, 
    785 P.2d 1087
    , 1095
    (Utah 1989)). The legislation at issue in Judd was held to be narrowly tailored because it
    applied a cap only to a certain type of damages. See Judd v. Drezga, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17,
    
    103 P.3d 135
    . By analogy, to achieve the same effect as the definition of governmental
    function at issue here, the legislation in Judd would have had to bar all damages of any
    nature and in any amount. It seems unlikely that the supreme court would have upheld
    the legislation challenged in Judd under those circumstances. See id. ¶ 17; see also
    Condemarin, 775 P.2d at 349‐52 (holding that the 1978 amendments to the UGIA that
    added government‐owned health care facilities to the list of governmental entities
    protected by the statute and made their employees completely immune were
    unconstitutional under the open courts clause). Thus, the adoption of the all‐inclusive
    definition of governmental function is not narrowly tailored to address the concern that
    the court created definition of a governmental function was difficult to predict.
    2.      The Ability of Governmental Entities to Act for the Public Good Without
    Incurring Crippling Liability
    ¶97 The next social evil identified by the Utah Legislature as a motivation for its
    adoption of the all‐inclusive definition is the chilling effect that the unexpected and
    potentially crippling liability on the taxpayers will have on a governmental entity’s
    willingness to act for the public good. Again, because the GIAU waives immunity
    under other circumstances, the all‐inclusive definition of governmental function is not
    completely effective in eliminating the fear that actions undertaken for the public good
    might result in significant liability. Nevertheless, the application of that definition in
    the context of a water conservancy district does involve the protection of an entity
    acting for the public good. As previously noted, water conservancy districts are
    charged with conserving and using water for the benefit of the State. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 17B‐2a‐1002 (2009). Acknowledging the need for the conservation and beneficial
    use of this limited resource, the Utah Legislature has adopted a “statutory framework
    [that] evinces a state policy of displacing competition with regulation in the area of
    municipal control over water and water rights.” See Salt Lake City Corp. v. Big Ditch
    20100400‐CA                                 52
    Irrigation Co., 
    2011 UT 33
    , ¶ 64, 
    258 P.3d 539
     (holding that the trial court properly
    applied the municipal status defense to dismiss antitrust claims against Salt Lake City).
    Under these circumstances, the inclusion of the District’s activities within the statutory
    framework of the GIAU rationally promotes the allocation of the State’s water resources
    for the common good.31
    ¶98 Notwithstanding that rational connection, the all‐inclusive definition of
    governmental function is not narrowly tailored to address the specific evil. While the
    legislature identified the risk of “crippling liability” as the concern to be addressed, the
    amendment results in the abrogation of even modest damage claims against the
    District. For example, the District’s annual operating budget for 2006‐2007 was almost
    $79,000,000, while the Jenkinses’ claim is approximately $116,000. Rather than limiting
    the amount of recoverable damages, or the categories of damages that can be recovered,
    31
    Indeed, the supreme court has indicated a willingness to expand the Standiford
    v. Salt Lake City, 
    605 P.2d 1230
     (Utah 1980), definition of governmental function in the
    regulation context to account for the qualitative differences between operations for
    private gain and those undertaken for the public good. See id. at 1233; Madsen v.
    Borthick, 
    658 P.2d 627
    , 630‐31 (Utah 1983) (addressing banking regulation and holding
    that Standiford “does not preclude governmental immunity for supervisory functions in
    some respects similar to those that could be performed by a private association
    authorized by agreement, such as self regulation by an industry”); see also Moss v. Pete
    Suazo Utah Athletic Comm’n, 
    2007 UT 99
    , ¶¶ 23, 26, 
    175 P.3d 1042
     (concluding that
    governmental regulation of professional boxing “is qualitatively different from the type
    of regulation that could be provided by a private organization” and that “[o]nly the
    government can regulate the sport for the common good, rather than for the benefit of a
    select, financially interested sector of the boxing community”); DeBry v. Noble, 
    889 P.2d 428
    , 441 (Utah 1995) (rejecting an argument that private entities could perform building
    inspections and stating that the argument “ignores the qualitative differences between
    public and private regulation of building construction”); Gillman v. Department of Fin.
    Inst., 
    782 P.2d 506
    , 512‐13 (Utah 1989) (holding that banking regulation is a uniquely
    governmental activity and concluding that “governmental entities should not be
    dissuaded from engaging in [activities undertaken to ensure public health and safety]
    by the fear that liability may be imposed if an employee performs his duties
    inadequately” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    20100400‐CA                                  53
    see Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17, the legislative means adopted eliminates all recovery for any
    damage caused by the District’s negligent delay in replacing Identified Pipe.
    3.     The Increasing Number of Lawsuits and Judgments Against
    Governmental Entities and the Corresponding Increase in Insurance Costs
    ¶99 The last evil identified as warranting the inclusion of all governmental activities
    under the umbrella of the GIAU is the increase in lawsuits and judgments against
    governmental entities and the increases in insurance rates caused by this increase. We
    are unable to assess the extent to which the increase in lawsuits is due to claims arising
    out of activities previously not considered a governmental function, as opposed to
    claims for which immunity has been waived. Irrespective of the prevalence of claims
    previously not covered in that increase, the elimination of such claims will remedy the
    identified concern to some measure by reducing the total number of lawsuits against
    governmental entities. By extension, that reduction is likely to lower the amount of
    paid claims and lead to more favorable insurance rates. See id. ¶ 16 (noting that
    insurance rates “are undoubtedly subject to some measure of fluctuation based on paid
    claims”). Thus, the means selected is reasonably related to the identified evil.
    ¶100 As with the other social and economic evils identified, however, the elimination
    of all claims that would have been previously allowed as a proprietary function is not
    narrowly tailored. See id. ¶ 17. The amount of paid claims could also be reduced by
    more narrow measures, including damage caps or the elimination of some, but not all,
    categories of damages. See id.; see also Craftsman Builder’s Supply, Inc. v. Butler Mfg. Co.,
    
    1999 UT 18
    , ¶ 21, 
    974 P.2d 1194
    .32
    32
    Further, in Laney, the court considered the power company’s ability to increase
    rates to purchase reasonable amounts of insurance in connection with its open courts
    clause analysis. See Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 67, 
    57 P.3d 1007
     (plurality
    opinion). The District is a “quasi‐municipal” corporation, see Patterick v. Carbon Water
    Conservancy Dist., 
    106 Utah 55
    , 
    145 P.2d 503
    , 511 (1944), overruled on other grounds by
    Timpanogos Planning & Water Mgmt. Agency v. Central Utah Water Conservancy Dist., 
    690 P.2d 562
    , 572 (Utah 1984), and while it does not operate at a profit, it receives a
    substantial portion of its annual budget from the collection of fees.
    20100400‐CA                                   54
    ¶101 In sum, the means adopted by the legislature to address the identified social and
    economic evils are rationally related to those concerns but are not narrowly tailored.
    Instead of paring back the remedies available to the Jenkinses, the legislature chose to
    eliminate them entirely. Prior to the adoption of an all‐inclusive definition of
    governmental function, the District concedes that the Jenkinses could have sued the
    District for negligence and, if they prevailed, recover the damages caused by the
    Breaches. The statutory definition of “governmental function” eliminates completely
    any right of the Jenkinses to recover. Where the remedy selected is not narrowly
    tailored and no alternative is provided, our supreme court has held that the legislation
    in question violates the open courts clause, article I, section 11, of the Utah Constitution.
    See Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 17; Laney v. Fairview City, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶¶ 69‐71, 
    57 P.3d 1007
    (plurality opinion). Therefore, the GIAU is unconstitutional as applied to the Jenkinses’
    claims, and the District cannot take advantage of the immunity that statute purportedly
    provides.
    ¶102 In reaching this conclusion, we have attempted to afford great deference to the
    Utah Legislature’s judgments, while also following the controlling precedent of the
    Utah Supreme Court concerning our role in interpreting and applying the open courts
    clause of the Utah Constitution. Meeting both of those obligations is not without its
    difficulties. Indeed, this analysis highlights the tension between the open courts clause
    and the separation of powers clause of the Utah Constitution that has caused
    disagreement among the members of our supreme court. See Utah Const., art. I, § 11; id.
    art. V, § 1 (“The powers of the government of the State of Utah shall be divided into
    three distinct departments, the Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial; and no
    person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these
    departments, shall exercise any functions appertaining to either of the others, except in
    the cases herein expressly directed or permitted.”); see also Judd, 
    2004 UT 91
    , ¶ 64
    (Durham, C.J., and Nehring, J., dissenting) (stating that the damages cap was a
    “legislative attempt to mandate legal conclusions and clearly violates the separation of
    powers provision” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Laney, 
    2002 UT 79
    , ¶ 85
    (Wilkins, J., and Durrant, J., dissenting) (noting that the court’s interpretation of the
    open courts clause “creates separation of powers problems”). Indeed, one former
    member of our supreme court reevaluated his position on the substantive nature of the
    open courts clause due to concern about intrusion on the legislative function. Compare
    Condemarin v. University Hosp., 
    775 P.2d 348
    , 366‐69 (Utah 1989) (Zimmerman, J.,
    concurring in part) (endorsing the Berry test), with Craftsman, 
    1999 UT 18
    , ¶¶ 108‐55
    (Zimmerman, J., concurring in the result) (calling for the reversal of Berry).
    20100400‐CA                                  55
    CONCLUSION
    ¶103 We remand to the trial court to resolve the factual issue of whether, and the
    extent to which, the Jenkinses had knowledge of their lost wages and emotional distress
    damages when they filed their notice of claim. Only those damages that were known
    but not included in that notice of claim are barred by the GIAU.
    ¶104 We also hold that the Jenkinses have a special relationship to the District due to
    their proximity to the Water Line Section that was identified for replacement by the
    District’s Engineers three years before the first of the Breaches. Thus, the District owed
    a duty of care to the Jenkinses in determining how long to delay replacing the Water
    Line Section, and the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the
    District under the public duty doctrine.
    ¶105 The issue of whether the District acted negligently in waiting three years after the
    Engineers’ recommendation to replace the Water Line Section is within the knowledge
    and analytical ability of the average layperson. Therefore, the Jenkinses were not
    required to designate an expert on the standard of care or whether that standard was
    breached to prove their negligence claim against the District.
    ¶106 The District’s decisions concerning the order in which Identified Pipe would be
    replaced, the amount of money allocated to capital improvements, and the coordination
    of replacements with road projects of the relevant municipalities involved the expertise
    and policy decisions of the District. Thus, the decision of when to replace the Water
    Line Section was a discretionary function entitled to immunity under the GIAU.
    ¶107 The District concedes that the all‐inclusive definition of governmental function
    contained in the 1987 amendments to the UGIA, as well as the 2004 enactment of a
    substantially similar definition of governmental function, resulted in the abrogation of
    the Jenkinses’ preexisting remedy. We conclude that the legislature did not provide the
    Jenkinses any reasonable alternative remedy. While the adoption of the “governmental
    function” definition is logically designed to address, to some measure, the social and
    economic evils identified by the legislature, it eliminates all claims for damages caused
    by the District’s negligence in the provision of water, irrespective of the amount or
    character of those damages. As a result, the means employed by the legislature to
    eliminate the social and economic evils it has identified are not narrowly tailored.
    Therefore, the definition is unconstitutional as applied here because it violates the
    20100400‐CA                                 56
    Jenkinses’ rights under the open courts clause of article I, section 11 of the Utah
    Constitution. The District may not rely on the GIAU as a basis for immunity from
    liability to the Jenkinses for its negligence, if any, in deferring the replacement of the
    Water Line Section.
    ¶108 We reverse the summary judgment in favor of the District and remand for trial
    on the Jenkinses’ negligence claims in accordance with this decision.
    ____________________________________
    Carolyn B. McHugh,
    Presiding Judge
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    ¶109 WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    J. Frederic Voros Jr.,
    Associate Presiding Judge
    ____________________________________
    Gregory K. Orme, Judge
    20100400‐CA                                   57