DocketNumber: No. 07 MA 226.
Citation Numbers: 903 N.E.2d 683, 179 Ohio App. 3d 736, 2008 Ohio 6364
Judges: Vukovich, Donofrio, Waite
Filed Date: 12/4/2008
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
{¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Springfield Township, appeals the decision of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court, which denied the township's motion for summary judgment regarding the negligent-road-repair complaint filed by plaintiffs-appellees Mary Bonace ("Bonace") and her husband. The issue on appeal is whether the township is entitled to immunity. For the following reasons, the township has immunity from Bonace's claims, and the judgment of the trial court is reversed. *Page 738
{¶ 3} On December 29, 2005, Bonace filed a complaint against Springfield Township.1 She alleged that the township had failed to provide adequate pitch, grade, berm, and width, had negligently maintained the road regarding these aspects, and had failed to warn of these problems. The complaint also stated that the township had failed to keep the road open, in repair, and free from nuisance, and these failures had directly and proximately caused an unsafe condition within the road that had caused Bonace to lose control.
{¶ 4} According to Bonace's deposition testimony, the road "tipped" to the right at the place she "fell" into the ditch, and this slope pulled or "sucked" her over to the edge line. She stated that she drove this route often and that the tipping sensation had seemed worse after the recent road repaving. Her husband measured the slope as dropping 11 inches from the crown in the center to the edge of the road.
{¶ 5} Bonace also testified that asphalt was missing from the white edge line, which appeared "chewed up" when she viewed it after the accident. Additionally, she complained that the ditch was immediately adjacent to the edge of the road and that the ditch was over 28 inches deep at its center. Her husband, an automotive mechanic, determined that the steering linkage had snapped while the vehicle was traveling in the ditch.
{¶ 6} Bonace produced ah affidavit of a Rapp Road resident who stated that his daughter had been involved in a single-car accident at this same spot in August 2004 and that his sister had been involved in an accident 15 years ago in the vicinity. This resident stated that he had complained to the township about the road and noted that the Springfield Township fire chief was at the scene of his daughter's accident. His daughter submitted an affidavit confirming that her right front tire had suddenly and unexpectedly dropped into a ditch causing her to lose steering ability and to hit the driveway apron. She further disclosed that the police had investigated the accident. *Page 739
{¶ 7} In addition, Bonace submitted the report of an expert on accident investigations. He reviewed another accident report from August 2004, which indicated a possible road defect. The expert stated that at the site where Bonace left the road, the asphalt is deteriorated at the outside edge of the white edge line. He measured an edge drop of 12 inches from the pavement to the land. He concluded that a drop over three and one-half inches is a hazard. He opined that although it is not always attainable, there should be two feet of berm on rural roadways.
{¶ 8} This expert also stated that the side slope was nearly five percent, which is in excess of the normal two percent slope for level straight roadways under national and state standards. He opined that the excessive side slope contributed to the hazard of the drop-off. He also noted that the lane was ten feet wide, which is sufficient but less than desirable considering the other defects. He concluded that the condition of the road should have been known to the township due to accident reports and from the Road Superintendent driving along the road.
{¶ 9} The township's long-time road superintendent was deposed. He did not agree that there was road deterioration at the edge line, claiming that any broken asphalt dropped off during the repaying project. He denied that the natural berm had changed during the repaying projects in 1997 or 2004, stated that there had never been a constructed berm, and noted that the decision to build a berm was left to his judgment.
{¶ 10} The road superintendent denied that he had ever received complaints about the condition of the road. As for prior accidents, he acknowledged hearing of only one that had occurred further south after Bonace's accident. He noted that the fire chief and his long-time assistant road crew member lived within a quarter mile of the accident scene. He also conceded that the crown was greater at the disputed site than elsewhere on the road, but he did not think it was too severe. He disclosed that if a crown is too high, his department can gradually lessen it in repaying projects, but that the road could be torn up to more quickly fix the issue.
{¶ 11} The Mahoning County chief deputy engineer testified that the county evaluates the condition of a road's edge line on a case-by-case basis and considers a deteriorated condition more important if there exists a large edge drop-off. She also stated that the slope of a road should drop one-quarter to three-eighths of an inch per foot from the center crown. She explained that the crown can get higher due to years of resurfacing. She agreed that if two similar accidents had occurred at the same spot within a year, she would have investigated the need for repair if the road were in her jurisdiction. *Page 740
{¶ 12} On June 13, 2006, the township filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that it was entitled to immunity. The township urged that it is not liable for areas outside the regularly traveled portion of the road, which includes only the space between the edge lines. The township also claimed that the expert's belief that the road has an excessive side slope was subjective and unsupported by any standards. Bonace argued that the excessive slope, the lack of a berm, the proximity of the deep ditch to the road, and the asphalt missing from the edge line were all conditions that fell under the statutory exception to immunity for failing to keep a road in repair or free from obstructions.
{¶ 13} On November 23, 2007, the trial court overruled the township's motion for summary judgment. The township filed timely notice of appeal, which is permissible under R.C.
{¶ 15} The second tier in the analysis involves a determination of whether any of the exceptions to immunity apply. For instance, there is an exception to immunity for negligent performance of a proprietary function. R.C.
{¶ 16} "[P]olitical subdivisions are liable for injury, death, or loss to person or property caused by their negligent failure to keep public roads in repair and other negligent failure to remove obstructions from public roads * * *." R.C.
{¶ 17} Finally, only if we find that an exception to immunity applies must we continue to the third tier of the analysis. This analysis involves the evaluation of whether sovereign immunity can be reinstated by statutorily listed specific *Page 741
defenses or specific immunities, such as the discretionary defenses set forth in R.C.
{¶ 19} "The trial court erred in denying the. appellant's motion for summary judgment, as there were no genuine issues of material fact pertinent to the immunity defenses asserted by the appellants, Springfield Township, Ohio and Springfield Township Trustees."
{¶ 20} Prior to reaching the crux of the case, the township sets forth some peripheral arguments. For instance, the township seems to seek application of a former version of R.C
{¶ 21} More substantively, the township argues that the conditions set forth by Bonace do not fall under the exception to immunity in R.C.
{¶ 22} Under the former version, the Supreme Court set forth a two-part test for analyzing the second tier, specifically for determining the existence of nuisance: (1) the condition alleged to constitute a nuisance creates a danger for ordinary traffic on the regularly traveled portion of the road and (2) the cause of the condition is something other than a decision regarding design or construction. Haynes v.Franklin,
{¶ 23} As aforementioned, after these cases, the legislature acted to narrow the exception to immunity, thus providing more protection to political subdivisions. The legislature added that the political subdivision's failure had to be negligent; the new statute maintained "in repair" but changed "nuisance" to "failure to remove obstructions." See R.C.
{¶ 24} In analyzing the obstruction portion of the new statute, the Supreme Court recently explained that "nuisance" was substituted with "obstruction" in order to further limit government liability. Howard v. Miami Twp.Fire Div.,
{¶ 25} In applying the new statute, we begin with the allegedly excessive side slope. Initially, we dispose of the township's argument that the expert's opinion on the slope is without support. This argument is without merit for various reasons. The expert stated that the road's side slope was excessive because a cross slope on a relatively straight and flat road should be between 1.5 and 2 percent, but this road's slope fluctuated between 3.5 and 5 percent. The expert initially stated that his figures were pursuant to national and state standards and later specified in a revised affidavit the particular standards utilized. Additionally, the Mahoning County Deputy Chief Engineer stated that a slope should run about one-quarter of an inch per foot, and testimony provided that the drop from the crown to the edge of the road was 11 inches on a ten-foot wide lane. *Page 743
{¶ 26} This evidence would sufficiently establish an excessive side slope for purposes of avoiding summary judgment only if the excessive side slope here were not afeature of the design or construction of the road as opposed toan obstruction or failure to repair. Although the expert stated that the deterioration of the asphalt at the edge was the result of deterioration, no one alleged that the side slope was the result of that factor. Rather, Bonace claimed that the side slope existed as a construction feature in the past and worsened each time the township repaved the road.
{¶ 27} Notably, the Supreme Court's prior second-tier analysis concerning the nuisance element required the dangerous condition to be related to a failure to maintain rather than a feature of the road's design or construction.Haynes,
{¶ 28} The "in repair" portion of the immunity exception in R.C.
{¶ 29} Even without resorting to whatHaynes did not say, "in repair" in its ordinary sense refers to maintaining a road's condition after construction or reconstruction, for instance by fixing holes and crumbling pavement. It deals with repairs after deterioration of a road or disassembly of a bridge, for instance. Heckert v.Patrick (1984),
{¶ 30} Moreover, under the Supreme Court's recentHoward decision, the side slope would not fit within the alternative exception to immunity. That is, the side slope does not fall under the definition of an obstruction, as it does not block or clog the roadway. Howard,
{¶ 31} We now turn to Bonace's complaints regarding the failure to make a berm and the failure to move the ditch. First, these conditions do not deal with the failure to make a repair, but rather constitute failures to construct or problems with design. Under the analysis set forth above, they would thus not fall under the exception to immunity regarding road care. Even under the prior, broader statute andHaynes, the exception to immunity would have been inapplicable due to the mere allegation of a failure to initially construct. In other words, there would be a nuisance under Haynes only if a previously constructed berm had not been kept in good repair.
{¶ 32} Second and regardless, the conditions concern items that are no longer part of the public road. Clearly, under the new definition of public road, ditches and berms are not encompassed in the immunity exception in R.C.
{¶ 33} This leads to Bonace's claim of crumbling of asphalt outside and into the white edge line. In order to determine the township's liability for this area, we must determine where the public road ends and where the berm, shoulder, or right of way begins on the road in question. The Supreme Court previously encompassed everything within the right-of-way as potentially destroying immunity. However, nuisance as an exception to immunity has been eliminated, and the public-roads definition specifically applicable to the immunity statutes has explicitly excluded berms, shoulders, and rights of way from the definition of public road. Thus, as used in Chapter 2744:
{¶ 34} "``Public roads' means public roads, highways, streets, avenues, alleys, and bridges within a political subdivision. ``Public roads' does not include berms, shoulders, rights-of-way, or traffic control devices unless the traffic control devices are mandated by the Ohio manual of uniform traffic control devices." R.C.
{¶ 35} We note that there is no longer an immunity exception for problems with traffic-control devices unless those devices are mandated. So, for instance, one could not complain about a faded or absent edge line unless it was mandatory. See R.C.
{¶ 36} Unlike Bonace, we do not interpretSech v. Rogers, as holding that the berm or shoulder is only the nonpaved area next to the pavement or that the pavement to the right of the edge line is not berm or shoulder. See Sech v. Rogers (1983),
{¶ 37} As for the procedural background, we acknowledge that after properly defining the relevant statutory terms such as roadway as not including the berm or shoulder, the trial court in Sech then seemed to state that the bus had the right of way if it was operating on the hard surface of the highway. Upon objection, the court clarified that hard means paved, rather than gravel, grass, or the berm.
{¶ 38} The Supreme Court noted that the trial court had originally defined the relevant terms in accordance with statute. Id. at 465, 6 OBR 515,
{¶ 39} From all of this, we conclude thatSech in fact held that the trial court's instruction contained a misstatement or ambiguity regarding the paved portion of the road, but decided that it was not prejudicial due to the original statutorily correct definitions. SeeSiders v. Reynoldsburg School Dist. (1994),
{¶ 40} We note that at the same time asSeek, the Supreme Court reversed a dismissal that had granted immunity to the government. In that case, a motorcyclist had been injured by an 18-foot-long pothole to the right of the travel lanes on Interstate 77 in Canton.Dickerhoof v. Canton (1983),
{¶ 41} Unfortunately, shoulder and berm are not defined in the statutes. However, the common definition of shoulder is the area adjacent to or along the edge of a more important part, or more specifically, the part of the roadway outside of the traveled way. See Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary. In this same dictionary, berm is then defined as the shoulder of a road. The space between the lines is the traveled way. See R.C.
{¶ 42} In addition, the manual regarding Uniform Traffic Control Devices contains definitions implying that the paved portion to the right of the edge line is considered berm or shoulder. For instance, the manual's definitions state that one of the places a rumble strip can exist is on the shoulder; however, if "shoulder" does not include the paved portion, this definition would make no sense, as a rumble strip is not placed in a grass or gravel shoulder.
{¶ 43} Contrary to the suggestions of Bonace, we do not believe that the asphalt to the right of the white edge line is still part of the public road. Rather, that pavement is considered berm or shoulder. Under the new limited definition of "public road," which excludes berm or shoulder, any asphalt missing from the space to the right of the edge line is covered by sovereign immunity.
{¶ 44} We also hold that the edge line itself also falls under the berm or shoulder category. Notably,Sech also found a lack of prejudice from the erroneous jury instruction because there was no evidence that the bus had operated "on or over the white line." Sech,
{¶ 45} In conclusion, if there were no edge line on the road, then the public road could be considered to reach to the edge of the pavement. If said road is missing asphalt, it could be considered a failure to keep the public road in repair. However, by painting an edge line within which the public is to travel, the political subdivision can now limit its liability and provide itself guides within which its road repairs and obstruction removals must occur.
{¶ 46} We recognize that the failure to keep a road in repair involves no discretion, policy-making, or engineering judgment. Franks v. Lopez (1994),
{¶ 47} For all of the foregoing reasons, the township is immune from the claims of Bonace, which do not fall within the immunity exception provided in R.C.
Judgment reversed.
DONOFRIO and WAITE, JJ., concur.
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