Showers Appraisals, LLC v. Musson Bros., Inc. , 350 Wis. 2d 509 ( 2013 )


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    2013 WI 79
    SUPREME COURT          OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:               2011AP1158
    COMPLETE TITLE:         Showers Appraisals, LLC, Real Marketing, LLC and
    Mark W. Showers,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    Musson Bros., Inc. and West Bend Mutual
    Insurance Company,
    Defendants-Respondents-Cross-
    Appellants,
    League of Wisconsin Municipalities Mutual
    Insurance and City of Oshkosh,
    Defendants-Cross-Respondents.
    REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    343 Wis. 2d 623
    , 
    819 N.W.2d 316
    (Ct. App. 2012 – Published)
    PDC No: 
    2012 WI App 80
    OPINION FILED:          July 18, 2013
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          March 13, 2013
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:               Circuit
    COUNTY:              Winnebago
    JUDGE:               Barbara H. Key
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:           CROOKS, J., ABRAHAMSON, C.J., BRADLEY, J.,
    concur. (Opinion filed.)
    DISSENTED:
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For        the   plaintiffs-appellants-petitioners,   there   were
    briefs by Daniel J. Posanski and Gerardo Medina Jr. and Dempsey
    Law Firm LLP, Oshkosh, and oral argument by Daniel J. Posanski.
    For defendant-cross-respondents, there was a brief by Bree
    A. Madison and Richard J. Carlson, and Silton Seifert Carlson
    S.C., Appleton, with oral argument by Bree A. Madison.
    For the defendants-respondents-cross-appellants, there was
    a brief by David G. Dudas and Joseph P. Putzstuck, and McCanna,
    Dudas & Kewley, S.C., Appleton, with oral argument by David G.
    Dudas.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed by Martha H. Heidt and
    Bye, Goff & Rohde, Ltd., River Falls, on behalf of the Wisconsin
    Association of Justice.
    2
    
    2013 WI 79
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.       2011AP1158
    (L.C. No.    2009CV1438)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                       :             IN SUPREME COURT
    Showers Appraisals, LLC, Real Marketing, LLC
    and Mark W. Showers,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    FILED
    Musson Bros., Inc. and West Bend Mutual
    Insurance Company,                                          JUL 18, 2013
    Defendants-Respondents-Cross-                    Diane M. Fremgen
    Appellants,                                   Clerk of Supreme Court
    League of Wisconsin Municipalities Mutual
    Insurance and City of Oshkosh,
    Defendants-Cross-Respondents.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.              Reversed and
    remanded.
    ¶1      PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK, J.       This is a review of a
    published decision of the court of appeals1 that affirmed the
    Winnebago County Circuit Court's2 grant of summary judgment in
    1
    Showers Appraisals, LLC v. Musson Bros., Inc., 
    2012 WI App 80
    , 
    343 Wis. 2d 623
    , 
    819 N.W.2d 316
    .
    2
    The Honorable Barbara H. Key presided.
    No.    2011AP1158
    favor of Musson Bros., Inc. (Musson).                   This case arises from
    flood damage to Mark Showers' property in the City of Oshkosh,
    where Musson was conducting sewer removal and installation as a
    contractor for the Wisconsin Department of Transportation (DOT).
    In granting and affirming summary judgment, the circuit court
    and court of appeals concluded that Musson was a governmental
    contractor      entitled   to   immunity      under    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)
    (2011–12),3 based on the court of appeals' decision in Estate of
    Lyons v. CNA Insurance Cos., 
    207 Wis. 2d 446
    , 
    558 N.W.2d 658
    (Ct. App. 1996).
    ¶2      We conclude that where a third party's claim against a
    governmental        contractor4 is    based    on     the   allegation    that the
    contractor negligently performed its work under a contract with
    a governmental entity, the governmental contractor must prove
    both that the contractor meets the definition of "agent" under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), as set forth in Lyons, and that the
    contractor's act is one for which immunity is available under
    § 893.80(4).        Specifically, we conclude that for a contractor to
    come       within   § 893.80(4)'s    shield    of   immunity,    the     contractor
    3
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2011–12 version unless otherwise indicated.
    4
    The court of appeals in Estate of Lyons v. CNA Insurance
    Cos., 
    207 Wis. 2d 446
    , 457, 
    558 N.W.2d 658
     (Ct. App. 1996), used
    the term "governmental contractor" to refer to those independent
    private contractors that it concluded may be entitled to
    immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), based on the nature of
    their contractual relationships with governmental entities.   We
    continue this usage, but emphasize that the contractors involved
    are private entities whose affiliation with the government is
    through a contractual relationship for a particular project.
    2
    No.     2011AP1158
    must prove it was acting as the governmental entity's agent in
    accordance with reasonably precise specifications, as set forth
    in Lyons.     In this case, Musson has not shown that it was acting
    as a governmental entity's agent for purposes of the alleged
    injury-causing conduct because Musson was not acting pursuant to
    "reasonably precise specifications."
    ¶3     Moreover, pursuant to the plain language of 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),      we   also    conclude    that    a   governmental        contractor
    seeking to assert the defense of immunity should clearly allege
    in the pleadings why the injury-causing conduct comes within a
    legislative,       quasi-legislative,          judicial      or     quasi-judicial
    function as set out in § 893.80(4).                    In the context of this
    case, a governmental contractor would be required to assert that
    it was implementing a decision of a governmental entity that was
    made within the scope of the governmental entity's legislative,
    quasi-legislative,           judicial     or      quasi-judicial           functions.5
    Adherence    to   these      statutory    requirements       for    immunity     under
    § 893.80(4) will avoid extending blanket immunity for claims of
    negligently performed work against governmental contractors when
    the   sole   basis     for    immunity    is   that    the   work   was     performed
    5
    In other cases we have used the term "discretionary" to
    refer to those acts that are within 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)'s
    "legislative,   quasi-legislative,  judicial or   quasi-judicial
    functions."   See, e.g., Lifer v. Raymond, 
    80 Wis. 2d 503
    , 511–
    12, 
    259 N.W.2d 537
     (1977) (citing § 893.80(4)'s predecessor,
    
    Wis. Stat. § 895.43
    (3)). Our use of the statutory terms in this
    case, rather than the designation "discretionary," is not
    intended as a change to the immunity analysis, but rather as a
    recognition that the applicable standard is based on precise
    statutory language. See infra, ¶35.
    3
    No.    2011AP1158
    pursuant to a contract with a governmental entity.                                  Allowing
    governmental        contractors       to   claim       immunity    in   such       instances
    would vastly expand the doctrine of governmental immunity.
    ¶4     Therefore,       based       on       Musson   failing     to        meet    the
    standard      for   a   
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)       agent,     Musson       is    not
    entitled      to    immunity     under          § 893.80(4).        Additionally,           we
    conclude that the facts set out in support of summary judgment
    would not support a claim of governmental contractor immunity
    because Musson has failed to assert that the acts for which it
    claims immunity were "acts done in the exercise of legislative,
    quasi-legislative,         judicial        or       quasi-judicial      functions,"         as
    required under § 893.80(4).                Accordingly, Showers' claims should
    be analyzed no differently than negligence claims against other
    contractors.
    ¶5     Musson may therefore be liable if Showers is able to
    show that in performing its work under the government contract,
    Musson had a duty of due care to Showers, that Musson breached
    that duty, and that such breach was a cause of Showers' damages.
    Accordingly,        we reverse and          remand      to   the   circuit         court   for
    further proceedings on Showers' claims against Musson consistent
    with   this    opinion.         Additionally,           because    Musson's         and    the
    City's      cross-claims       were   not       fully   litigated       in    the    circuit
    court and were not addressed by the court of appeals, those
    claims should be addressed on remand.
    I.       BACKGROUND
    ¶6     In September 2007, the DOT and the City of Oshkosh
    entered into a state–municipal agreement for a sewer improvement
    4
    No.   2011AP1158
    project along a stretch of Ohio Street in Oshkosh, which is also
    State Highway 44.          Under the agreement, the State (through the
    DOT)    would     provide     substantial          financing      for    the    project,
    although the City was responsible for funding and construction
    of sanitary sewers and water mains, as well as the sealing of
    concrete joints.          The DOT would remain involved in the project,
    including overseeing the bidding process and being onsite during
    construction.
    ¶7      The DOT opened the Ohio Street project for bidding,
    informing potential bidders that, as contractors, they would be
    "responsible for any damages to property or injury to persons
    occurring       through     their     own     negligence       or     that     of     their
    employees or agents, incident to the performance of work under
    this contract, pursuant to the Standard Specifications for Road
    and    Bridge    Construction        applicable       to   this     contract."         The
    specifications         applicable     to    the     project    were     the    State    of
    Wisconsin       Standard    Specifications          for    Highway      and    Structure
    Construction.          These Standard Specifications consist of hundreds
    of     pages    of      directions     and        specifications        regarding       how
    governmental         contractors     are     to    perform     certain       aspects    of
    contracted projects.
    ¶8      After    completion     of    the     bidding      process,      the    DOT
    awarded the contract to Musson, and the two entered into the
    Contract for Highway Work, which provided that DOT would pay
    Musson $4,393,833.15 for its work.                    Musson began work on the
    Ohio Street project in spring 2008.
    5
    No.    2011AP1158
    ¶9      Prior to the commencement of the Ohio Street project,
    Mark       Showers    had    contracted    for    the   construction        of    a    new
    building on the property he owned on the corner of Ohio Street
    and Sixth Avenue in Oshkosh.                    As part of that construction,
    Showers was required by city code to connect his downspouts,
    sump       pump,   and    parking    lot   drainage     to    the   municipal     storm
    sewer.       The construction of Showers' building was completed on
    or about November 30, 2007, and Real Marketing, LLC and Showers
    Appraisals,          LLC,6   began    conducting      their     business     at       that
    location.
    ¶10     When the Ohio Street sewer project commenced in spring
    2008, the City, the DOT, and Musson discussed certain aspects of
    how the project would proceed, one of which was whether the
    roadway was to be removed all at once, or whether it should be
    removed and repaired on a block-by-block basis.                         The parties
    purportedly        agreed    that    the   block-by-block       approach     would      be
    best; however, there is no formal documentation of the parties'
    alleged agreement on this aspect of the project, and indeed,
    Musson       has     at   times     disputed     whether     there    was    such      an
    agreement.
    ¶11     Whatever the parties did or did not agree to, Musson
    removed the entire roadway along Ohio Street, from the storm
    sewer's outlet at the Fox River to the end of the project,
    6
    Mark Showers is the majority owner of Showers Appraisals,
    LLC, and Real Marketing, LLC. These entities collectively will
    be referred to throughout the opinion as "Showers" unless
    otherwise indicated.
    6
    No.    2011AP1158
    around      Ninth    Street;        disconnected          the    storm     sewers    in     that
    reach; and placed a bladder at the discharge at the Fox River so
    that       water    would     not    flow       from      the    river      into    the     non-
    operational sewer system.                  Musson's decision to proceed in this
    manner caused some disputes between City officials and Musson,
    based on the City's concern that by removing the entire storm
    sewer,      Musson       would   compromise         the    City's      ability      to    manage
    storm water.
    ¶12    The DOT concluded that Musson's decision to remove the
    storm sewer along the project's reach, rather than on a block-
    by-block basis, was allowed under a provision in the Standard
    Specifications,            referred        to    as       the    "means      and     methods"
    provision.7         That provision states, in pertinent part, that the
    contractor         "is    solely     responsible           for       the   means,    methods,
    techniques,        sequences,        and    procedures          of    construction.         The
    contractor is not responsible for the negligence of others in
    the    design        or     specification           of    specific         means,    methods,
    techniques, sequences, or procedures of construction described
    in and expressly required by the contract."
    ¶13    On June 8, 2008, rain storms inundated the Ohio Street
    project site, dropping approximately 4.25 inches of rain in the
    area of the project site.                  The storm left water standing in the
    exposed roadbed outside Showers' property, and a manager with
    7
    When Musson sought approval to remove the pavement and
    leave the roadbed exposed, Ryan Schanhofer of DOT informed
    Musson that there was nothing in the contract explicitly
    prohibiting that approach.
    7
    No.       2011AP1158
    Musson      reported      that       Musson's    pumps       were    unable        to    maintain
    drainage for the amount of rain that had fallen.                               After viewing
    the project site outside his property, Showers noted multiple
    conditions that potentially impeded drainage (as well as other
    conditions         that   he     alleged        were       contrary       to   the       Standard
    Specifications), including mounds of soil in the roadbed and
    drainage      inlets clogged with               soil       and    debris.       When       Showers
    spoke with employees from                 the       City    and    Musson      regarding       the
    standing water and the potential for damage from another large
    storm       that   was    predicted,       Showers          was    told     that     there     was
    nothing that either entity could do to remedy the situation.
    ¶14    Following the substantial rain event of June 8, the
    City and Musson began to prepare a contingency pumping plan for
    the next rain storm that was forecast for June 12.                                         On the
    evening       of   June 11,      a    Musson     employee         allegedly        was     placing
    pumps       according     to     the     plan;       however,        Showers         and     other
    neighbors in the area averred that the pumps either were not
    present or were not operating during the June 12 storm event.
    Marc Miller, a water maintenance officer with the City, could
    not confirm the exact number of pumps that he recalled seeing at
    the Ohio Street project site, nor could he confirm how many
    pumps were running at the relevant times.8
    ¶15       By 5:30 p.m. on June 12, water was overflowing from
    the storm sewers in Showers' parking lot, and the Ohio Street
    8
    Schanhofer also stated that by the morning of June 13,
    there were no pumps present at or near Showers' property at the
    intersection of Ohio Street and Sixth Avenue.
    8
    No.   2011AP1158
    roadbed was entirely flooded.                  Additionally, water had begun to
    overflow from another drainage basin into the stretch of Ohio
    Street near Showers' property.                     The June 12 storm was estimated
    to have dropped approximately 4.36 inches of rain on the area
    within      5.5    hours     during     the    evening,          in   addition      to    near-
    continuous, but less intense rain throughout the entire day.
    ¶16       Following the June 12 rains, the basement at Showers'
    property flooded with more than seven feet of water.                                 Showers
    retained an engineer who concluded that approximately 117,500
    gallons      of    water     had   been       trapped       in    the    roadbed     outside
    Showers' property for 15 to 18 hours, and that the hydrostatic
    pressure         caused     by   that     water       eventually        caused      Showers'
    basement floor to rupture, thereby allowing the water to seep up
    into       the    basement.        Showers'          sump    pump       ran    continuously
    following the storm, but because the pump was connected with the
    storm sewers, the discharge of the sump pump merely recycled
    water out into the roadbed, which then seeped back into Showers'
    basement.         Neither the City nor Musson had informed Showers that
    the    storm       sewers    had   been       disconnected.              Because     of    the
    flooding, Showers incurred at least $140,000 in damages to his
    business and personal property, and was forced to relocate his
    businesses for four months while the Ohio Street property could
    be cleaned, repaired, and restored.9
    9
    Notwithstanding these damages, experts averred that Musson
    complied with the Standard Specifications regarding maintenance
    of drainage during all phases of the Ohio Street construction
    project.
    9
    No.     2011AP1158
    ¶17       Showers commenced the present action by serving Musson
    and the City with a summons and complaint on July 23, 2009.10                               In
    pertinent part, Showers alleged that "improper drainage, design,
    maintenance, excavation, construction procedures, and failure to
    take corrective measures" caused flooding in Showers' basement
    following the June 8 and 12 storms.                        Accordingly, Showers sought
    relief        from    the     City   and     Musson    on    the    grounds        that   those
    entities were "jointly and severally liable to [Showers] for
    negligent acts or omissions which caused [Showers'] building to
    flood,        resulting        in    damage     to    the     building       and     personal
    property, including losses for repairs, replacements, clean up,
    diminished           value,    and    loss    of     use    and    related    damages      and
    losses."
    ¶18       The City and Musson moved for summary judgment, each
    arguing that it was entitled to immunity for its acts relating
    to the Ohio Street sewer project; additionally, the City and
    Musson            brought      cross-claims          against        one      another       for
    indemnification.              After considering affidavits and arguments by
    the parties, the circuit court granted summary judgment for the
    City and Musson on the basis that both entities were entitled to
    governmental          immunity       under    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).        Showers
    appealed the grant of summary judgment as to Musson, but not the
    grant        of    summary    judgment       dismissing      his    claims    against      the
    City.        Therefore, Showers' claims against the City are no longer
    10
    Prior to commencing this action, on October 3, 2008,
    Showers served the City with a notice of claim as required under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (1) (2007–08).
    10
    No.    2011AP1158
    a   part     of    this      case.        However,      Musson    did       cross-appeal     the
    dismissal of its indemnification claim against the City.
    ¶19    The court of appeals affirmed the grant of summary
    judgment for Musson.                 Showers Appraisals, LLC v. Musson Bros.,
    Inc., 
    2012 WI App 80
    , ¶1, 
    343 Wis. 2d 623
    , 
    819 N.W.2d 316
    .                                   The
    court concluded that under the test set forth in Lyons, Musson
    was entitled to governmental contractor immunity as a statutory
    "agent"       under     
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).           
    Id.
          Additionally,
    because       the      court      concluded        that       Musson    was     entitled      to
    immunity,         it   did    not      address     Musson's      or    the    City's    cross-
    appeals.      
    Id.
    ¶20     Showers        filed       a     petition       for     review,       which    we
    granted.11
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.     Standard of Review
    ¶21    The      circuit       court      granted      summary    judgment       for   the
    City    and       Musson     on     the    basis      of     governmental      immunity      and
    governmental contractor immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).
    The interpretation of a statute is a question of law that we
    review      independently           of    the    circuit      court     and    the   court    of
    appeals,       although        we      benefit        from    those     courts'      analyses.
    11
    Following summary judgment, the City has appeared in this
    action in response to Musson's cross-appeal against the City for
    indemnification. The City appeared in the court of appeals, was
    included as a party in Showers' petition for review, and has
    submitted briefs and argument before this court in favor of its
    position that both the City and Musson are entitled to immunity
    in this case.
    11
    No.     2011AP1158
    Richards v. Badger Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2008 WI 52
    , ¶14, 
    309 Wis. 2d 541
    ,         
    749 N.W.2d 581
    .       In        addition,    determining      whether
    governmental immunity exists for particular conduct requires the
    application of legal standards to the facts found, which is also
    a question of law for our independent review.                           Estate of Brown
    v. Mathy Constr. Co., 
    2008 WI App 114
    , ¶6, 
    313 Wis. 2d 497
    , 
    756 N.W.2d 417
    .              Also, when we review a grant of summary judgment,
    we will affirm it if no genuine issue of material facts exists
    and "the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law."         Wadzinski v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI 75
    , ¶10, 
    342 Wis. 2d 311
    , 
    818 N.W.2d 819
    .
    B.   Governmental Contractor Immunity
    ¶22        The   City   and     Musson       assert   that,   under     
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),12 Musson is entitled to immunity from liability for
    Showers'           claims.      In     order    to    address    that   claim,    we   must
    interpret § 893.80(4).                 We therefore begin with the language of
    12
    The   statutory   immunity   afforded    under   
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)   has   been    referred   to    as    "municipal"    or
    "governmental" immunity, and is distinct from the sovereign
    immunity that the Wisconsin Constitution grants the State. See
    Anderson v. City of Milwaukee, 
    208 Wis. 2d 18
    , 28 n.11, 
    559 N.W.2d 563
     (1997). Nonetheless, we have acknowledged that there
    is overlap in the principles governing whether a governmental
    entity or officer is entitled to immunity.      See C.L. v. Olson,
    
    143 Wis. 2d 701
    , 716 n.9, 
    422 N.W.2d 614
     (1988).          Therefore,
    although the immunity that Musson claims in this case could be
    the sovereign immunity conferred upon the DOT as a state agency
    (because of Musson's contract with the DOT), principles of
    governmental contractor immunity under § 893.80(4) have been
    raised as being applicable here. Neither the State nor the DOT
    was sued, so the right of a sovereign to consent to suit was
    never at issue. See Holytz v. City of Milwaukee, 
    17 Wis. 2d 26
    ,
    41, 
    115 N.W.2d 618
     (1962).
    12
    No.    2011AP1158
    that statute.       Section 893.80(4) provides, in pertinent part,
    that "[n]o suit may be brought against any [governmental entity]
    . . . or against its officers, officials, agents or employees
    for acts done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative,
    judicial or quasi-judicial functions."
    ¶23    Our task when interpreting a statute is to discern the
    statute's meaning, which we presume is expressed in the language
    chosen by the legislature.         Richards, 
    309 Wis. 2d 541
    , ¶20.             If
    the meaning of the language is plain, we apply that meaning.
    State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    ,
    ¶45, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .               "Statutory language is
    given its common, ordinary, and accepted meaning, except that
    technical or specially-defined words or phrases are given their
    technical or special definitional meaning."              
    Id.
        Our analysis
    of statutory language also may be aided by considering prior
    decisions   examining      the   relevant    statutory   provisions.          See
    DeHart v. Wis. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2007 WI 91
    , ¶15, 
    302 Wis. 2d 564
    ,
    
    734 N.W.2d 394
    .
    ¶24 Wisconsin Stat. § 893.80(4) was enacted in response to
    our decision in Holytz v. City of Milwaukee, 
    17 Wis. 2d 26
    , 39,
    
    115 N.W.2d 618
     (1962).           See Coffey v. City of Milwaukee, 
    74 Wis. 2d 526
    , 532, 
    247 N.W.2d 132
     (1976) (recognizing that what
    is now § 893.80(4) is the codification of Holytz).                   In Holytz,
    
    17 Wis. 2d at 39
    ,    we   abrogated    the    common    law     rule    of
    governmental immunity for governmental entities, and stated that
    "henceforward, so far as governmental responsibility for torts
    13
    No.     2011AP1158
    is    concerned,       the      rule    is   liability            [and]    the     exception     is
    immunity."
    ¶25    Holytz excepted from that abrogation the acts of a
    governmental           entity          exercising           its      legislative,           quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial functions.                                      See 
    id. at 40
    .      That      language carving           out      an    exception       to     governmental
    liability       now     appears        in    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),          with   the
    addition      of      immunity       for     governmental           officers,        agents     and
    employees, thereby including those individuals for whose acts
    the governmental entity would be liable under the doctrine of
    respondeat superior.              See id.; see also Kettner v. Wausau Ins.
    Cos., 
    191 Wis. 2d 723
    , 729-30, 
    530 N.W.2d 399
     (Ct. App. 1995)
    (limiting       the    type     of     agents     for       which    § 893.80       may    provide
    immunity).
    ¶26   When analyzing and applying 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), we
    often have used the term "discretionary" as a shorthand to refer
    to    decisions       of    a   governmental           entity       that    are     legislative,
    quasi-legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial. See, e.g., Willow
    Creek Ranch, L.L.C. v. Town of Shelby, 
    2000 WI 56
    , ¶25, 
    235 Wis. 2d 409
    , 
    611 N.W.2d 693
    ; C.L. v. Olson, 
    143 Wis. 2d 701
    , 710
    n.5, 
    422 N.W.2d 614
     (1988); Lifer v. Raymond, 
    80 Wis. 2d 503
    ,
    511–12, 
    259 N.W.2d 537
     (1977); see also Lyons, 207 Wis. 2d at
    453–54.       Legislative and quasi-legislative functions generally
    refer    to   those        policy      choices      made     in     an    official       capacity,
    e.g., when a governmental entity chooses one project design over
    another.         See       Lyons,      207   Wis. 2d         at     453.          Quasi-judicial
    functions       generally        refer       to     those         acts     that    involve      the
    14
    No.       2011AP1158
    exercise of discretion in coming to a judgment; the availability
    of a public hearing on the judgment before a specialized board;
    and the imposition by a board of an appropriate final decision.
    See Coffey, 
    74 Wis. 2d at 534-35
    .
    ¶27    In the present case, the parties' arguments center on
    the   application      of    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)      in   regard        to    a
    governmental       contractor      who    claims     immunity     derived        from     the
    governmental entity with which the contractor has a contractual
    relationship.13        The        court   of     appeals     addressed       a    similar
    situation     in    Lyons.         There,      the   court    examined       whether       a
    governmental        contractor        was      entitled      to    immunity          under
    § 893.80(4) when the contractor implemented a bridge design that
    had   been    selected       by     the     contracting      governmental         entity.
    Because the court of appeals' decision in Lyons was grounded in
    the United States Supreme Court's decision in Boyle v. United
    Technologies Corp., 
    487 U.S. 500
    , 510–13 (1988), it is necessary
    to understand Boyle to place Lyons in proper perspective.
    ¶28    In Boyle, a governmental contractor was sued based on
    its sale of a helicopter to the United States Marine Corps.                               
    Id. at 502
    .      The helicopter was alleged to have a design defect in
    the co-pilot's escape system, which prevented the opening of the
    13
    Musson does not specify whether the immunity it seeks is
    legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial in
    nature. We need not make that determination because we conclude
    that Showers' allegation that Musson negligently performed its
    construction responsibilities does not implicate any of the
    governmental entity functions excepted from liability pursuant
    to 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).
    15
    No.   2011AP1158
    escape hatch when the helicopter was submerged.                             Id. at 503.
    The alleged design defect resulted in the death of a pilot who
    survived a crash into water, but drowned because he could not
    escape from the helicopter.           Id. at 502.
    ¶29     In    analyzing      whether    the        contractor's       governmental-
    contractor    defense       had    merit,        the    Supreme    Court     focused     on
    whether    the     government      contract        required       the    contractor      to
    "deliver   helicopters        with    the    sort       of   escape-hatch        mechanism
    shown by the specifications" of the helicopter that the Marine
    Corps had chosen.          Id. at 509.       The Supreme Court reasoned that
    "the selection of the appropriate design for military equipment
    to be used by our Armed Forces is assuredly a discretionary
    function."        Id. at 511.     The Court then concluded by setting out
    a three-part test to determine whether the relationship between
    the governmental contractor and the governmental entity was such
    that the contractor should be immune from liability for design
    defects in military equipment chosen by the Armed Forces:                              "(1)
    the United        States   approved    reasonably            precise    specifications;
    (2) the equipment conformed to those specifications; and (3) the
    supplier warned the United States about the dangers in the use
    of the equipment that were known to the supplier but not to the
    United States."       Id. at 512.
    ¶30     In explaining its test, the Supreme Court said, "[t]he
    first two of these conditions assure that the suit is within the
    area where the policy of the 'discretionary function' would be
    frustrated——i.e.,          they   assure         that    the      design     feature    in
    question was considered by a Government officer, and not merely
    16
    No.    2011AP1158
    by    the     contractor           itself."            Id.    (emphasis        added).         In    so
    explaining, the Supreme Court made clear that a discretionary
    act   of      a    governmental           officer        is    a    necessary        component       to
    potential              immunity           for      the         governmental            contractor.
    Accordingly,            a    governmental          contractor's           own       "discretionary
    actions"          would      not    have        sufficed       to    afford      the       contractor
    immunity for its actions in Boyle.
    ¶31       In    Lyons,      the    court        of    appeals     also       focused    on    a
    design defect that allegedly was a cause of an accident.                                       Lyons,
    207 Wis. 2d at 449.                     It is important to note that, as was the
    case in Boyle, it was the governmental entity in Lyons that made
    the choice of design that allegedly was a cause of the accident.
    Id.         This       design       choice       was     made       in   the     exercise       of    a
    legislative            or quasi-legislative              function        of    the     governmental
    entity.           Id.       at   453.       Because          the    governmental           contractor
    performed          its       contractual          tasks        under      reasonably          precise
    specifications              pursuant       to     the    governmental           entity's       quasi-
    legislative design decision, the contractor functioned as a 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) agent of the governmental entity when carrying
    out   the     entity's           design     decision.           See      
    id.
       at    457–58,     461.
    Therefore, the governmental contractor was entitled to the same
    level    of       immunity         as    would    be     accorded        to    the     governmental
    entity had it been sued directly for its design choice.                                        Id. at
    454 (explaining the court's reliance on the rationale of Boyle
    where the governmental contractor defense precluded suit "if the
    challenged design choice was made by military officials").
    17
    No.        2011AP1158
    ¶32    Lyons adopted Boyle's three-part test.                    Id. at 457-58.
    The court of appeals explained that a governmental contractor
    that follows governmental specifications is an "agent" within
    the meaning of 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) when the contractor meets
    the three-part test of Boyle.                   
    Id.
          "This three-part test will
    ensure that state and municipal government, and the public at
    large,    is    able    to     make     the   best    use     of    professional          design
    assistance, but that professional contractors are not unfairly
    burdened by lawsuits when they follow governmental directives."
    Id. at 458.
    ¶33    Subsequent       court    of     appeals     decisions     have        affirmed
    the     Lyons       court's     rationale       regarding          contractor        immunity,
    stating, for example, that "[i]n Lyons, we expressly held that
    an independent contractor meeting the three-part test was an
    agent    within       the     meaning    of   § 893.80(4)."            Jankee        v.    Clark
    Cnty., 
    222 Wis. 2d 151
    , 165, 
    585 N.W.2d 913
     (Ct. App. 1998),
    rev'd on other grounds, 
    2000 WI 64
    , 
    235 Wis. 2d 700
    , 
    612 N.W.2d 297
    .     The language of some of these cases may be read to suggest
    that    the     relevant       question       is     merely    whether     a     contractor
    satisfies       the    three-part        test      and   is    therefore        an    "agent"
    entitled       to    immunity.        See     id.;    see     also    Woychik        v.   Ruzic
    Constr. Co., 
    2001 WI App 280
    , ¶8, 
    248 Wis. 2d 983
    , 
    638 N.W.2d 18
    No.      2011AP1158
    394   (unpublished         decision).14        Indeed,       the       court      of    appeals'
    decision in the case at hand suggests that satisfaction of the
    elements     of     the    Lyons     test    will    be     sufficient            to     immunize
    governmental contractors' conduct.                   See Showers Appraisals, 
    343 Wis. 2d 623
    , ¶22; see also Bronfeld v. Pember Cos., 
    2010 WI App 150
    , ¶12, 
    330 Wis. 2d 123
    , 
    792 N.W.2d 222
    .
    ¶34    However,         analyzing        whether           the        conduct        of     a
    governmental contractor was undertaken as a statutory "agent"
    within      the    scope     of     the     immunity       accorded         by     
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) solely by reference to the three-part Lyons test may
    lead a court to err.              Rather, an equally dispositive question in
    the   § 893.80(4)          immunity       analysis     is     whether            the     relevant
    decision      of    the     governmental          entity     that       the       governmental
    contractor        implements      is,     itself,    entitled          to    immunity       under
    § 893.80(4)        because     it    was    made     through       the       exercise       of    a
    legislative,         quasi-legislative,             judicial           or     quasi-judicial
    function of the governmental entity.                         Stated otherwise, only
    certain     types     of     acts    fall     within       the     immunity            shield    of
    § 893.80(4).         It was on such a foundation that both the Lyons
    and Boyle decisions stand because the governmental decision in
    14
    Wisconsin Stat. § 809.23(3) does not prohibit this
    court's discussion of unpublished decisions when such discussion
    relies on the opinion solely to demonstrate that courts have
    used particular language from other cases, and does not rely on
    the decision for authoritative or persuasive value.    See State
    v. Higginbotham, 
    162 Wis. 2d 978
    , 996–97, 
    471 N.W.2d 24
     (1991).
    Moreover, because such use of unpublished decisions has such
    longstanding acceptance, see 
    id.,
     we need not decide now whether
    § 809.23(3) imposes any other limitations on this court's use of
    unpublished decisions in its opinions.
    19
    No.     2011AP1158
    each    case,     i.e.,      the    choice       of    design,        was     made     by    a
    governmental entity in the exercise of its legislative or quasi-
    legislative function.
    ¶35   Immunity is available to a governmental entity only
    for those governmental decisions that are made as an exercise of
    "legislative,         quasi-legislative,           judicial         or      quasi-judicial
    functions" as set out in 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).                            Any statutory
    immunity to which an agent of the governmental entity may be
    entitled is dependent upon the immunity of the governmental act
    or decision that the agent was implementing when it caused an
    injury.        This    immunity     inquiry        under      § 893.80(4)——examining
    whether a governmental entity's conduct was an exercise of a
    "legislative,         quasi-legislative,           judicial         or      quasi-judicial
    function"——gives           effect    to      the      legislature's              prerogative
    regarding the circumstances in which immunity may be available
    under § 893.80(4).            Although     some       of    our     cases    have    equated
    § 893.80(4)'s         "legislative,        quasi-legislative,                judicial       or
    quasi-judicial"        standard     with     the      term    "discretionary,"           see,
    e.g., Olson, 
    143 Wis. 2d at
    710 n.5; Lifer, 
    80 Wis. 2d at
    511–
    12, and although our decision is not intended in any way to
    alter   that    standard,      we   do     emphasize         that    the     legislatively
    selected policy decision regarding immunity under § 893.80(4) is
    best    honored       by    applying       the     legislature's            chosen      plain
    language, rather than a judicial distillation thereof.                                   This
    approach     comports       with    fundamental            principles       of     statutory
    interpretation, under which the plain language of a statute is
    20
    No.     2011AP1158
    presumed to most directly convey what the legislature means.
    See Kalal, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , ¶44.
    ¶36        From   the    foregoing,      when      a   governmental     contractor
    seeks immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), the contractor must
    show both that the contractor was an agent as that term is used
    in § 893.80(4), i.e., as is expressed in the Lyons test, and
    that     the       allegedly        injurious        conduct    was    caused     by    the
    implementation of a decision for which immunity is available for
    governmental entities under § 893.80(4).                         As discussed below,
    Musson has failed to show that it is an agent in accordance with
    Lyons.       Nonetheless, because the plain language of § 893.80(4)
    demonstrates that the immunity analysis requires an element in
    addition       to what is        required       by    Lyons'    agency   test    (namely,
    allegations that the injury-causing act was legislative, quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial in character), we set
    forth the applicable standard so that litigants and courts may
    engage       in    a     complete    analysis        of   whether     immunity    may    be
    available in future cases.
    ¶37     The first and second requirements of the Lyons test,
    i.e.,    whether          the    governmental         entity     approved      reasonably
    precise specifications that the governmental contractor adhered
    to when engaging in the conduct that caused the injury, limit
    when a governmental contractor is a statutory agent under Wis.
    21
    No.     2011AP1158
    Stat. § 893.80(4).15              Stated otherwise, the governmental entity
    must have had the right to control the tasks performed by the
    contractor        with    "reasonably          precise         specifications"             and    the
    contractor must have followed those specifications.                                      When these
    facts are proved, the contractor is a § 893.80(4) agent of the
    governmental entity.              See, e.g., Kettner, 191 Wis. 2d at 733–37
    (explaining       that     not    all conduct            of    agents       comes        within   the
    scope of § 893.80; rather, only that conduct that may be imputed
    to a governmental entity as the act of the entity's servant
    comes within § 893.80).16
    ¶38    The    principles          of    immunity         for    particular          types    of
    agents     under    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    ,         as   discussed        in     Kettner,
    should be read in harmony with the Lyons test and with the
    principles of governmental immunity enunciated in § 893.80(4).
    For   example,       the     allegation           in     Lyons       that    the     bridge       was
    improperly        designed        by        the        governmental         contractor,           who
    undertook     the        design    at       the    direction          of    the     governmental
    entity,     was    the    act of        a    § 893.80(4)–type              agent     because      the
    15
    We note that the third criterion for statutory agency set
    out in Lyons, that the contractor warned the governmental entity
    about dangers known to the contractor but unknown to the
    governmental entity, does not bear on whether statutory agency
    is present.    Rather, it is grounded in a concern that the
    immunity accorded does not cut off information highly relevant
    to governmental decisions.   Boyle v. United Techs. Corp., 
    487 U.S. 500
    , 512-13 (1988).
    16
    The primary consideration in determining whether an act
    was undertaken by one who acts in the capacity of a servant is
    whether the principal had the right to control the conduct of
    the agent.   Pamperin v. Trinity Mem'l Hosp., 
    144 Wis. 2d 188
    ,
    198-99, 
    423 N.W.2d 848
     (1988).
    22
    No.     2011AP1158
    governmental          entity     controlled        the    design       choice        and   design
    choices       are    legislative        or   quasi-legislative             functions.           See
    Lyons,    207       Wis. 2d     at     452–58;    see     also       Chart     v.     Dvorak,    
    57 Wis. 2d 92
    , 100–01, 
    203 N.W.2d 673
     (1973) (recognizing that the
    decision to undertake a project, or how to design the project,
    may be immunized as the exercise of a legislative or quasi-
    legislative function).
    ¶39      However, if the allegation in Lyons were not that the
    design was a cause of the accident, and were instead that the
    contractor did not construct the bridge in a workman-like manner
    and     thereby       caused      injury,        such     an        allegation        would     not
    implicate a legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or quasi-
    judicial function under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).                               Accordingly, an
    allegation of negligent workmanship would not have the potential
    for immunity under § 893.80(4) for that specific injury-causing
    conduct,       and        no   Lyons     inquiry        (to        determine        whether     the
    contractor          was   a    § 893.80(4)-type          agent)       would     be    necessary.
    This conclusion is based on the scope of immunity contemplated
    by this court in Holytz, and by the legislature's codification
    of Holytz in what is now § 893.80(4).
    ¶40    Some cases applying Kettner's agency principles in the
    context       of    immunity inquiries           could        be    read   to    suggest      that
    "agent" may be interpreted broadly to afford immunity to all
    governmental contractors' conduct.                        However, in light of 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)'s           explicit     language             limiting     the    scope     of
    governmental immunity, immunity will be extended to governmental
    contractors only where the contractor acted as a "servant" for
    23
    No.   2011AP1158
    the    purposes         of    the     challenged        conduct.              See    Kettner,      191
    Wis. 2d       at    734–36.           Indeed,          as    we       explained       above,      this
    definition         of    "agent"      is    manifest         in       the    Lyons    test,    which
    requires that a governmental contractor adhere to "reasonably
    precise       specifications."             Cf.   Arsand          v.    City    of    Franklin,      
    83 Wis. 2d 40
    , 45–46, 
    264 N.W.2d 579
     (1978) (defining servant as
    "one employed to perform service for another in his affairs and
    who, with respect to his physical conduct in the performance of
    the    service,         is    subject      to    the    other's           control     or   right    to
    control").
    ¶41     Other cases following Lyons also illustrate that care
    in analysis is needed when a claim of governmental contractor
    immunity       is   made.           For    example,         in     Bronfeld,        the    court    of
    appeals addressed an allegation that a subcontractor negligently
    erected barricades and failed to maintain the construction site
    so as to protect public safety.                        The plaintiff claimed that the
    contractor was therefore liable for the plaintiff's injuries,
    which    occurred            when   she     tripped         over      a     barricade      that    the
    contractor had placed at the site.                            See Bronfeld, 
    330 Wis. 2d 123
    , ¶¶10, 12.
    ¶42    In Bronfeld, the government's general contractor had
    provided a detailed traffic control plan that the City of River
    Falls approved, and the subcontractor followed that plan.                                         Id.,
    ¶6.      The court of appeals began by noting that placement of
    barricades is a discretionary duty, and therefore, if the City
    had placed the barricades itself, it would have been immune from
    suit    pursuant         to    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).                Id.,     ¶19.       This
    24
    No.   2011AP1158
    cursory determination of whether the governmental entity would
    have been entitled to immunity under the language of § 893.80(4)
    highlights the need for a more thorough immunity analysis for
    claims of governmental immunity.
    ¶43    After making this primary determination, the court in
    Bronfeld       applied       the     Lyons     test        to     determine     whether    the
    contractor was an agent.               The court concluded that the test was
    satisfied, and that the contractor was entitled to immunity,
    because        (1)     the     City      had        provided           reasonably     precise
    specifications regarding traffic control and barricade placement
    by requiring and approving the traffic control plan the general
    contractor submitted; (2) the subcontractor complied with the
    those specifications; and (3) the subcontractor had not been
    aware     of     any       dangers      posed       by          the    reasonably     precise
    specifications.            See id., ¶¶24–33.
    ¶44    Bronfeld's cursory analysis of governmental contractor
    immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) may be attributable to
    Brown, where the language used to apply Lyons' reasoning could
    be   construed        to    afford    immunity        to    governmental        contractors'
    actions       where    the     alleged       injury        did        not   arise   from   the
    contractor's implementing a governmental entity's decision that
    was made pursuant to a "legislative, quasi-legislative, [etc.]
    function," such as the adoption of a design or plan.                                In Brown,
    the court seemed to emphasize the importance of whether there
    existed         "reasonably            precise             specifications,"           without
    acknowledging that, for such specifications to afford immunity
    to a governmental contractor, the contractor's alleged injury-
    25
    No.     2011AP1158
    causing actions must have been due to its implementation of a
    governmental entity's exercise of one of the functions for which
    immunity is accorded under § 893.80(4).                        See Brown, 
    313 Wis. 2d 497
    , ¶11 (stating that "[t]he question is not what other safety
    precautions        might      have    been     taken,        but    whether           the    safety
    requirements           provided       by     DOT        were        reasonably              precise
    specifications,"            without    analysis         of    whether           the    allegedly
    injurious conduct had been undertaken pursuant to a legislative
    or quasi-legislative function of the governmental entity).
    ¶45   In sum, in addition to satisfying the Lyons test for
    governmental           contractor      immunity,         a         contractor           asserting
    immunity must be able to demonstrate that the conduct for which
    immunity     is     sought      was    the     implementing          of     a     governmental
    entity's    decision         made     during      the   exercise           of    the     entity's
    legislative,           quasi-legislative,          judicial           or        quasi-judicial
    functions.        To apply Lyons without analyzing the applicability
    of immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) to the particular act
    for   which       liability      is    alleged      could          grant    a     governmental
    contractor broader immunity than the governmental entity itself
    would be entitled to under the statute.                             Accordingly, in the
    future,     when       a    governmental       contractor          asserts        that       it    is
    entitled to immunity under § 893.80(4), we encourage litigants
    and courts        to    adhere to      the     statutory       standard          to    determine
    whether       the          alleged     immunity-supporting                  functions             are
    legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial.
    ¶46   Our        conclusion      regarding        the        intersection             of    the
    agency principles embodied in the Lyons test and the type of
    26
    No.   2011AP1158
    acts for which governmental immunity may be afforded under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4) is well-supported nationwide.                     For example,
    other   jurisdictions    have     concluded      that       while      governmental
    contractors will     not be liable        for    injuries      alleged     to    have
    arisen from defects in a design the government chose, "it is
    well settled that this rule of non-liability does not exempt a
    contractor   from    liability    where    the       injury    arises     from    the
    contractor's   negligent    performance         of    the     work."      Gaunt    &
    Haynes, Inc. v. Moritz Corp., 
    485 N.E.2d 1123
    , 1126 (Ill. App.
    Ct. 1985); Rodriguez v. New Jersey Sports & Exposition Auth.,
    
    472 A.2d 146
    , 149 (N.J. App. Div. 1983) ("A public contractor
    may . . . be held liable when negligent in the execution of the
    contract.").     Furthermore, a legal encyclopedia notes that "the
    courts are practically unanimous" in support of the proposition
    that a governmental contractor is not entitled to governmental
    immunity for injuries arising from negligent performance of the
    contract work.       A.E. Korpela, Annotation, Right of contractor
    with federal, state, or local public body to latter's immunity
    from tort liability, 
    9 A.L.R. 3d 382
     §§ 2(a), 5 (1966); see also
    64 Am. Jur. 2d, Public Works and Contracts § 109 (2013 update)
    (discussing contractors' negligence in performing work; neglect
    or failure to comply with contract).             This understanding of the
    doctrine of governmental contractor immunity has been echoed by
    legal   commentators.      See,    e.g.,    Richard         Ausness,      Surrogate
    Immunity:      The    Government     Contract         Defense       and    Products
    Liability, 
    47 Ohio St. L.J. 985
    , 995 (1986).
    27
    No.     2011AP1158
    C.   Application
    ¶47     With       the above     principles          in    mind,       we    turn     to   the
    present case.           Although the parties have framed their arguments
    solely in terms of the Lyons test, we analyze Musson's claim for
    immunity    under        both   requirements         of    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).
    This includes whether Musson is an agent under § 893.80(4), as
    determined by the Lyons test, as well as whether the conduct
    that is alleged to be a cause of injury is entitled to immunity
    under § 893.80(4) as the implementation of a legislative, quasi-
    legislative, etc. decision.                  We conclude first that, under the
    Lyons tests, Musson has failed to demonstrate that it is an
    agent      entitled            to     governmental              contractor              immunity.
    Furthermore, as guidance to future litigants, we examine why
    Musson's   allegations          in    support      of     summary          judgment      fail   to
    demonstrate that Musson was entitled to immunity as an agent
    implementing        a     legislative,        quasi-legislative,                  judicial      or
    quasi-judicial function of a governmental entity.
    ¶48     Under        the    Lyons       test    as     applied          to     
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),    Musson was            not   an     agent       for    which       immunity      was
    available.      The       relevant        contractual          language          (the    Standard
    Specifications)          demonstrates       that     Musson          was    not    subject      to
    "reasonably precise specifications" as is necessary to invoke
    28
    No.   2011AP1158
    contractor immunity as an agent of a governmental entity.17                 The
    primary provision upon which the parties focus their arguments
    and upon which we rely in concluding that the Lyons test is not
    satisfied is the "means and methods" provision in the Standard
    Specifications.18          The conduct for which Musson was responsible
    under        the   means   and   methods    provision   are,   by   definition,
    distinguishable from conduct for which immunity may be available
    for agents under § 893.80(4), as set forth in Lyons.
    17
    As our discussion below should make clear, our reference
    to the Specifications as support for our conclusion that
    immunity is not available should not be read to suggest that the
    terms of a government contract may create immunity where none
    would otherwise exist by virtue of the legislative, quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial nature of the activities
    at issue.   Our reference to the Standard Specifications merely
    demonstrates that the parties apparently contemplated that
    Musson's performance of its construction responsibilities would
    not entitle Musson to the immunity that may be afforded to
    agents under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).
    18
    Other sections in the Standard Specifications also
    support the contention that the parties contemplated that Musson
    was not subject to reasonably precise specifications under Lyons
    and could be held liable for any negligence in the performance
    of the construction. For example:
    - § 107.1(2), requiring the contractor to "[p]rovide
    all   necessary  safeguards,  safety   devices,  and
    protective equipment.   Take all other actions that
    are reasonably necessary to protect the life and
    health of employees on the project and the safety of
    the public."
    - § 107.11.1(3), requiring the             contractor to "[a]ssume
    liability for all damage                 to public or private
    property   resulting  from               contractor  operations,
    defective work or materials,             or non-execution of the
    contract."
    29
    No.     2011AP1158
    ¶49    The means and methods provision states, in relevant
    part, that Musson "is solely responsible for the means, methods,
    techniques,           sequences,         and     procedures         of       construction."
    (Emphasis added.)            In this context, being "responsible" for the
    "means, methods, [etc.]" involves both powers and duties.                                  That
    is, Musson was not only empowered to take actions involving how
    the construction process was to proceed, Musson also had the
    responsibility         for    the    actions        it    took,    including        incurring
    liability       if    its    actions      caused         injury.       See    Black's       Law
    Dictionary      1427       (9th    ed.   2009)      (defining       "responsibility"         as
    "liability");         see    id.    (noting      that     "responsible        . . .     simply
    means liable to be made to account or pay") (quoting H.L.A.
    Hart,    "Changing         Conceptions     of       Responsibility,"         in    Punishment
    and Responsibility           186, 196–97 (1968)).
    ¶50    Many of Musson's day-to-day actions at the Ohio Street
    project site are chronicled in the daily logs of onsite activity
    kept by one of the DOT's engineers, Ryan Schanhofer.                               These logs
    note numerous instances of Musson taking actions without DOT or
    City approval, pursuant to Musson's independent responsibility
    under the means and methods provision.                      Throughout the course of
    the project, there were multiple occasions on which Schanhofer
    had to inform City officials that he could not stop Musson from
    proceeding       on    a    certain      course      because       Musson's       action   was
    within the "means and methods" provision.                          One of these actions
    was the removal of the entire roadbed of Ohio Street, rather
    than removing portions on a block-by-block basis.                                  Other such
    actions       included      whatever      steps      Musson    would     take      to   ensure
    30
    No.     2011AP1158
    proper       drainage,     as    demonstrated       by     Schanhofer's    note   that
    Musson's cleaning silt screens in drainage areas was "up to the
    contractor."19
    ¶51     As discussed above, the nature of Musson's actions,
    taken pursuant to the means and methods provision, demonstrates
    that        Musson   had        substantial        independent      decision-making
    authority       in    performing       its        tasks,     such   that     Musson's
    relationship with the DOT for the conduct that is alleged to
    have    resulted     in    harm   cannot     be    characterized    as     that   of   a
    servant.       See Arsand, 
    83 Wis. 2d at
    45–46 (defining servant as
    one subject to the master's control or right of control).                         Such
    independent discretion is also contrary to Lyons' "reasonably
    precise specifications" requirement, in that a contractor may
    not possess such control over the alleged injury-causing action
    19
    Moreover, the mere fact that DOT personnel were onsite
    during Musson's performance of the Ohio Street sewer work does
    not   transform   Musson's  contractual   performance  into   the
    implementation of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or
    quasi-judicial   actions   that   are   entitled   to   immunity.
    Tellingly, § 105.2(4) of the Standard Specifications provides
    that "[t]he department's review does not relieve the contractor
    of the responsibility for obtaining satisfactory results."
    Similarly, where the Standard Specifications are silent on
    the safety measures or performance standards applicable in a
    given scenario, a contractor may not rely on that silence as a
    license to undertake whatever measures the contractor selects
    without threat of liability.     Governmental contractor immunity
    must be based on the prior exercise of legislative, quasi-
    legislative,   judicial   or   quasi-judicial   functions  by   a
    governmental entity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), which the
    governmental   contractor implements as a       statutory  agent.
    Silence, without more, does not demonstrate the exercise of
    necessary governmental decision-making.
    31
    No.    2011AP1158
    and still be considered an agent for purposes of governmental
    contractor immunity under 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).                                  Musson thus
    fails        to   satisfy       the     Lyons    test    and    is   not    an    agent     under
    § 893.80(4).20
    ¶52       Next, having concluded that Musson is not entitled to
    immunity          as    an    agent     under   the     Lyons   test,      we    also    examine
    Musson's claim for immunity in light of the injury alleged and
    the   plain            language    of    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),          which    limits
    immunity to "acts done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial functions."                                    Beginning
    with the injury that Showers has alleged, we note that Showers'
    allegations             are     different        in     kind    from       the     allegations
    underlying the Lyons test for governmental contractor immunity.
    The substance of Showers' claim is not that Musson was negligent
    in its implementation of a decision made in the exercise of a
    governmental             entity's     legislative,        quasi-legislative,            judicial
    or quasi-judicial function, as was the case in Lyons.                                    Rather,
    Showers           alleges         that     Musson       negligently         performed         its
    excavation,             construction,      and    drainage       responsibilities           under
    the   contract.               Specifically,       Showers'      complaint        alleges     that
    20
    Because Musson has failed to demonstrate that there were
    reasonably precise specifications that controlled any alleged
    injury-causing decision or conduct, we have no need to examine
    the second and third requirements of the Lyons test (i.e.,
    whether   the   contractor   followed  such   reasonably    precise
    specifications    and   whether   the   contractor    warned    the
    governmental   entity   of  any   dangers   associated   with   the
    specifications that were known by the contractor, but not by the
    governmental entity).
    32
    No.        2011AP1158
    Musson    is    liable      for     "improper    drainage,        . . .    maintenance,
    excavation,       construction         procedures,        and     failure        to       take
    corrective measures."
    ¶53    These assertions are fundamentally different from the
    assertion       that   a    governmental        entity    negligently       selected         a
    design that a contractor implemented for a government project.
    Design selection is a type of governmental entity decision that
    we   have      determined         is   within     the     legislative           or     quasi-
    legislative       function        immunized     under    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4).
    See, e.g., Chart, 
    57 Wis. 2d at
    100–01 (recognizing legislative
    or quasi-legislative nature of design decision); Lange v. Town
    of Norway, 
    77 Wis. 2d 313
    , 318–20, 
    253 N.W.2d 240
     (1977) (same).
    ¶54    In contrast, Showers alleges that Musson's performance
    of its construction duties, such as maintaining drainage at the
    worksite, did not meet the standard of due care for construction
    work.     Cf. Brooks v. Hayes, 
    133 Wis. 2d 228
    , 234–35, 
    395 N.W.2d 167
     (1986) (recognizing that a construction contract implicitly
    imposes a duty on contractors to perform work according to the
    standard of due care).              An allegation such as Showers makes does
    not implicate the types of acts for which 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)
    affords       immunity     to   a   governmental        entity.      Therefore,           they
    cannot form the basis for immunity for a contractor.                                    For a
    governmental entity to be accorded immunity under § 893.80(4),
    the entity must be able to show that the allegedly injurious act
    was done in the exercise of a legislative, quasi-legislative,
    judicial or quasi-judicial function.                    Musson has not shown that
    the acts that Showers asserts were a cause of injury——Musson's
    33
    No.     2011AP1158
    alleged       improper          drainage,     maintenance,          excavation,           and
    construction at the Ohio Street project——were the implementation
    of     a   governmental         entity's    exercise      of    legislative,        quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial functions.                              Therefore,
    immunity under § 893.80(4) is not available for those acts.
    ¶55    In     future      cases,     governmental        contractors        seeking
    immunity should include in their pleadings sufficient facts to
    demonstrate         that    the     governmental         entity     from        which     the
    contractor      would      derive       immunity   was    engaged    in     one    of     the
    functions      for     which     immunity     is   available      under     
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), and that the contractor was an agent with respect
    to injury-causing conduct.
    ¶56    Accordingly, Showers' claims, that Musson negligently
    performed the work required by the government contract, should
    be analyzed under standard negligence principles.                           See Coffey,
    
    74 Wis. 2d at 531
    , 535–40 (setting forth elements of standard
    negligence         analysis        and     applying       those     elements            after
    determining         that     municipal       officer      was     not      entitled        to
    immunity).         Although ultimately Musson may be found not to have
    been       negligent       in     its     performance      of     its      construction
    activities,        summary      judgment     was   inappropriate        based      on     the
    substance of Showers' complaint.
    III.     CONCLUSION
    ¶57    We conclude that where a third party's claim against a
    governmental        contractor      is     based   on    the    allegation       that     the
    contractor negligently performed its work under a contract with
    a governmental entity, the governmental contractor must prove
    34
    No.    2011AP1158
    both that the contractor meets the definition of "agent" under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4), as set forth in Lyons, and that the
    contractor's act is one for which immunity is available under
    § 893.80(4).       Specifically, we conclude that for a contractor to
    come    within     § 893.80(4)'s     shield       of       immunity,     the    contractor
    must prove it was acting as the governmental entity's agent in
    accordance with reasonably precise specifications, as set forth
    in Lyons.      In this case, Musson has not shown that it was acting
    as a governmental entity's agent for purposes of the alleged
    injury-causing conduct because Musson was not acting pursuant to
    "reasonably precise specifications."
    ¶58    Moreover, pursuant to the plain language of 
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4),       we   also    conclude    that       a    governmental        contractor
    seeking to assert the defense of immunity should clearly allege
    in the pleadings why the injury-causing conduct comes within a
    legislative,        quasi-legislative,            judicial        or     quasi-judicial
    function as set out in § 893.80(4).                         In the context of this
    case, a governmental contractor would be required to assert that
    it was implementing a decision of a governmental entity that was
    made within the scope of the governmental entity's legislative,
    quasi-legislative,            judicial      or      quasi-judicial              functions.
    Adherence     to   these      statutory    requirements           for    immunity    under
    § 893.80(4) will avoid extending blanket immunity for claims of
    negligently performed work against governmental contractors when
    the    sole   basis     for    immunity    is     that      the   work    was   performed
    pursuant to a contract with a governmental entity.                               Allowing
    governmental       contractors     to     claim    immunity       in     such    instances
    35
    No.       2011AP1158
    would    vastly      expand      the    doctrine       of    governmental          immunity.
    Applying this rationale to this case, we conclude that Musson
    would    not    be    entitled     to    immunity      for    Showers'          claims      that
    Musson       negligently        performed       its    work    under        a     government
    contract, because Musson has not made a showing that Musson was
    an   agent     implementing        a    governmental        entity's    decision            made
    within the scope of the entity's legislative, quasi-legislative,
    judicial or quasi-judicial functions.
    ¶59     Therefore,       based     on       Musson    failing    to        meet      the
    standard      for    a   
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4)         agent,   Musson          is    not
    entitled       to    immunity     under        § 893.80(4).         Additionally,            we
    conclude that the facts set out in support of summary judgment
    would not support a claim of governmental contractor immunity
    because Musson has failed to assert that the acts for which it
    claims immunity were "acts done in the exercise of legislative,
    quasi-legislative,         judicial       or       quasi-judicial      functions,"           as
    required under § 893.80(4).               Accordingly, Showers' claims should
    be analyzed no differently than negligence claims against other
    contractors.
    ¶60     Musson may therefore be liable if Showers is able to
    show that in performing its work under the government contract,
    Musson had a duty of due care to Showers, that Musson breached
    that duty, and that such breach was a cause of Showers' damages.
    Accordingly, we reverse and                   remand   to    the   circuit        court     for
    further proceedings on Showers' claims against Musson consistent
    with    this    opinion.         Additionally,         because     Musson's           and   the
    City's   cross-claims           were    not    fully   litigated       in       the    circuit
    36
    No.     2011AP1158
    court and were not addressed by the court of appeals, those
    claims should be addressed on remand.
    By   the   Court.—The   decision   of   the   court   of     appeals   is
    reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court.
    37
    No.    2011AP1158.npc
    ¶61   N.    PATRICK    CROOKS,       J. (concurring).              This       case    is
    about    whether     Musson     Bros.,     Inc.    (Musson)         is   an     agent    of    a
    governmental        entity    under    the      test    established        in     the    Lyons
    case.     See Estate of Lyons v. CNA Ins. Cos., 
    207 Wis. 2d 446
    ,
    
    558 N.W.2d 658
     (Ct. App. 1996).                  I agree with the majority that
    under the Lyons test, Musson is not an agent because Musson has
    not shown that it was acting pursuant to "reasonably precise
    specifications" as the first prong of the Lyons test requires.
    Musson is therefore not entitled to immunity.                                  The grant of
    summary judgment should therefore be reversed.                             Although I do
    not join the majority opinion, I respectfully concur for reasons
    stated herein.
    ¶62      In    past cases,       we   have    not    focused        on     whether      the
    governmental         entity's     decisions            were    legislative,             quasi-
    legislative,        judicial,    or    quasi-judicial          as    a    first       step    in
    answering the Lyons question.                    Even if the court chooses to
    adopt that framework for the Lyons test, I am concerned that the
    majority      may    have    taken    an     approach     to    the       Lyons       immunity
    analysis      itself   that     could      be    read    as    changing         the    law    on
    governmental contractor immunity.                      If that is the majority's
    intent, the best way to do so is to acknowledge that, and to
    offer more guidance to litigants, lawyers, and courts.
    ¶63      While the majority opinion (at ¶2 n.5) says that there
    is no intention to adopt a fundamental change in our immunity
    jurisprudence, I am also concerned that, due to some notable
    similarities, the majority opinion could be read as endorsing
    the type of fundamental change that Justice Gableman advocates
    1
    No.    2011AP1158.npc
    in a concurrence in an unrelated governmental immunity case.1
    While I share Justice Gableman's dismay with some aspects of
    this       court's   immunity    jurisprudence,        I    favor    an     incremental
    approach to correcting the problems.                       A good place to start
    would be to recognize that our prior cases have construed the
    ministerial duty exception to immunity too narrowly.2
    ¶64     The majority's approach provides little guidance as to
    how    the     showing   it     requires    could      be    met.         The    majority
    concludes       that   "[T]he    facts     set   out    in    support       of   summary
    judgment would not support a claim of governmental contractor
    immunity because Musson has failed to assert that the acts for
    which it claims immunity were 'acts done in the exercise of
    1
    See Bostco, LLC v. Milwaukee Metro. Sewerage Dist., 
    2013 WI 78
    , ¶103, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___ N.W.2d ___ (Gableman, J.,
    concurring):
    I would . . . do away with the ministerial duty and
    known danger exceptions and restore our immunity
    jurisprudence to conform with § 893.80(4) and Holytz.
    That   is,   governmental  entities,   officials,   and
    employees should be entitled to immunity only for
    "acts done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-
    legislative, judicial, or quasi-judicial functions."
    
    Wis. Stat. § 893.80
    (4); see also [Holytz v. City of
    Milwaukee, 
    17 Wis. 2d 26
    , 40, 
    115 N.W.2d 618
     (1962)].
    2
    A brief definition of a "ministerial duty" is something
    that is "absolute, certain and imperative, involving merely the
    execution of a set task, and when the law which imposes it
    prescribes and defines the time,      mode and occasion for its
    performance with such certainty that nothing remains for
    judgment or discretion." This definition is cited in Lister v.
    Board of Regents, 
    72 Wis. 2d 282
    , 301, 
    240 N.W.2d 610
     (1976),
    which takes language from Meyer v. Carman, 
    271 Wis. 329
    , 332, 
    73 N.W.2d 514
     (1955) (quoting 18 Eugene McQuillin, Municipal
    Corporations § 53.33, at 225 (3d ed.)).
    2
    No.    2011AP1158.npc
    legislative,        quasi-legislative,              judicial         or     quasi-judicial
    functions.'"        Majority op., ¶4.
    ¶65    In cases involving immunity, the analysis has usually
    focused on whether the alleged negligent acts were discretionary
    or non-discretionary, and immunity determinations often turned
    on such analysis.              Here, the majority holds that Musson must
    make an initial showing before application of the three prongs
    of    the    Lyons       test     for    governmental              contractors         claiming
    immunity.      Specifically, the majority faults Musson for failing
    to "assert that the acts for which it claims immunity were 'acts
    done in the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial
    or quasi-judicial functions' . . . ."                         See majority op., ¶59.
    Litigants may be unable to discern from this opinion what sort
    of facts they must allege in order to establish that immunity
    applies.      When this court crafts a somewhat different analytical
    framework, the best practice is to clearly lay out the reasons
    for   the    change,      and    articulate        what      litigants       must      show   to
    satisfy the standard.
    ¶66    There are striking similarities between the language
    of the majority and the language of Justice Gableman's Bostco
    concurrence.            Both    opinions      read      the    statute          as   requiring
    parties      who   would       claim    immunity        to    show    that       the    alleged
    negligent     act    was       related   to       the   exercise       of       "legislative,
    quasi-legislative, judicial, or quasi-judicial functions."                                    In
    Justice Gableman's Bostco concurrence, he advocates "restor[ing]
    Holytz by placing the burden on the government to show that it
    is    entitled     to    immunity,       as   opposed         to    the     status      quo   in
    3
    No.    2011AP1158.npc
    Wisconsin, where it is now the plaintiff's responsibility to
    prove that immunity was pierced."                   Bostco,        LLC    v.   Milwaukee
    Metro. Sewerage Dist., 
    2013 WI 78
    , ¶113, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___
    N.W.2d ___ (Gableman, J., concurring).                  The Bostco concurrence
    endorses a test under which "[t]he governmental entity seeking
    to    establish     immunity    bears    the    burden       of    proving"      certain
    facts.       
    Id.
         Similarly, under the majority's holding in this
    case, a governmental contractor who seeks to invoke statutory
    immunity bears at least the initial burden of establishing that
    the    government      entity's       decisions     were     legislative,        quasi-
    legislative,       judicial,    or    quasi-judicial.             Majority     op.,   ¶2.
    Compare      Bostco,     ___    Wis.     2d    ____,       ¶103     (Gableman,        J.,
    concurring)        ("governmental      entities,      officials,         and   employees
    should    be    entitled   to    immunity      only    for    'acts       done   in   the
    exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial, or quasi-
    judicial functions'"), with majority op., ¶27 n.13 ("Musson does
    not specify whether the immunity it seeks is legislative, quasi-
    legislative, judicial or quasi-judicial in nature.").
    ¶67     Further, in this case, there was extensive briefing on
    the potential application of the ministerial duty exception to
    immunity, and yet the majority does not address the arguments or
    acknowledge its potential application.                 This might be viewed by
    some as consistent with Justice Gableman's suggestion that in
    immunity cases analysis of ministerial duty should be "do[ne]
    away   with."        Bostco,    ___    Wis.    2d   ___,     ¶103    (Gableman,       J.,
    concurring).
    4
    No.      2011AP1158.npc
    ¶68    An incremental approach that would be more consistent
    with our jurisprudence would be one that addresses the problem
    of   this      court's    overly     narrow    interpretation        of   ministerial
    duty.         Our    ministerial     duty    analysis   at   times    turns    into   a
    search to find any discretion that could have been exercised,
    and then declaring immunity is required.                     Ruling out liability
    wherever        any    discretion      is     exercised      essentially       creates
    immunity for almost all actions.                   As an influential treatise
    noted:
    Stating the reasons for the discretionary-ministerial
    distinction is much easier than stating the rule....
    [T]he    difference    between  "discretionary"   and
    "ministerial" is artificial. An act is said to be
    discretionary when the officer must exercise some
    judgment in determining whether and how to perform an
    act. The problem is that "[i]t would be difficult to
    conceive of any official act, no matter how directly
    ministerial, that did not admit of some discretion in
    the manner of its performance, even if it involved
    only the driving of a nail."
    McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 53.04.10 (3d ed.) (quoted in
    Willow Creek Ranch, L.L.C. v. Town of Shelby, 
    2000 WI 56
    , ¶136,
    
    235 Wis. 2d 409
    , 
    611 N.W.2d 693
     (Prosser, J., dissenting)).
    ¶69    The     fact   that    even     a   "directly    ministerial"        act
    involves "some discretion in the manner of its performance" can
    make it easy for courts to decline to find a ministerial duty
    where one in fact exists.              Like Justice Gableman, I believe our
    cases have sometimes failed to recognize this and have employed
    too restrictive an interpretation of ministerial duty.                             (See
    Bostco, ¶109 (Gableman, J., concurring).                  While I do not favor a
    fundamental shift in our jurisprudence, we should be mindful of
    the fact that declining to determine that a ministerial duty
    5
    No.    2011AP1158.npc
    exists where any exercise of discretion can be detected leads to
    immunizing too much government conduct.                       We should apply the
    test     concerning      ministerial   duty         in   a   way    that   serves    the
    important public policy objectives that underlie the reasons for
    permitting liability where a ministerial duty exists.                           We must
    do   a    better   job    of   striking       the    balance       between    too   much
    immunity, which creates a heavy burden for those who suffer harm
    from negligent government acts, and too much liability, which
    creates a heavy burden for taxpayers.
    ¶70   For the reasons stated, I respectfully concur.
    ¶71   I am authorized to state that Chief Justice SHIRLEY S.
    ABRAHAMSON and Justice ANN WALSH BRADLEY join this opinion.
    6
    No.   2011AP1158.npc
    1
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2011AP001158

Citation Numbers: 350 Wis. 2d 509, 2013 WI 79, 835 N.W.2d 226, 2013 Wisc. LEXIS 289

Judges: Roggensack, Crooks

Filed Date: 7/18/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/16/2024

Authorities (21)

Chart v. Dvorak , 57 Wis. 2d 92 ( 1973 )

Lister v. Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin ... , 72 Wis. 2d 282 ( 1976 )

DeHart v. Wisconsin Mutual Insurance , 302 Wis. 2d 564 ( 2007 )

Jankee v. Clark County , 235 Wis. 2d 700 ( 2000 )

State Ex Rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane County , 271 Wis. 2d 633 ( 2004 )

State v. Higginbotham , 162 Wis. 2d 978 ( 1991 )

Lifer Ex Rel. Grutzner v. Raymond , 80 Wis. 2d 503 ( 1977 )

Brooks v. Hayes , 133 Wis. 2d 228 ( 1986 )

Estate of Brown v. Mathy Construction Co. , 313 Wis. 2d 497 ( 2008 )

State v. Palmer , 638 N.W.2d 18 ( 2002 )

Richards v. Badger Mutual Insurance , 309 Wis. 2d 541 ( 2008 )

C.L. v. Olson , 143 Wis. 2d 701 ( 1988 )

Meyer v. Carman , 271 Wis. 329 ( 1955 )

Rodriguez v. NJ SPORTS & EXPOSITION AUTHORITY & PINKERTON'S,... , 193 N.J. Super. 39 ( 1983 )

Arsand v. City of Franklin , 83 Wis. 2d 40 ( 1978 )

Gaunt & Haynes, Inc. v. Moritz Corp. , 138 Ill. App. 3d 356 ( 1985 )

Lange v. Town of Norway , 77 Wis. 2d 313 ( 1977 )

Coffey v. City of Milwaukee , 74 Wis. 2d 526 ( 1976 )

Anderson v. City of Milwaukee , 208 Wis. 2d 18 ( 1997 )

Holytz v. City of Milwaukee , 17 Wis. 2d 26 ( 1962 )

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