Court Opinion

ID: 8181969
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 22:53:37.444118+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:14.211148
License: Public Domain

McGRAW, Justice,
concurring in part, and dissenting in part.
(Filed July 13, 2000)
While I concur with the majority decision to reverse the grant of summary judgment with respect to the hospital, I would have also overturned the grant of summary judgment in favor of West Virginia Institute of Technology.
As the majority states correctly, “[a] motion for summary judgment should be granted only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue of fact to be tried and inquiry concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify the application of the law.” Syl. pt. 3, Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co. v. Federal Ins. Co. of New York, 148 W.Va. 160, 133 S.E.2d 770 (1963).
In this case, I believe that further inquiry concerning the facts would have been desirable with regard to WVIT’s conduct. Though it might eventually be discovered that the equipment was in satisfactory repair and that the plaintiff brought this accident upon herself, we do not know enough, in my view, to make such a finding.
The equipment might have been in extreme disrepair such that it constituted negligence on the part of WVIT to make it available to students. A piece of sporting equipment, made available to students to take down and set up on their own, which produced a laceration to the bone in the normal course of its operation, suggests that *377WVIT may well have been negligent in this ease. We simply do not have enough information to allow the grant of summary judgment to stand. Therefore, I must respectfully dissent.
I am authorized to state that Judge RISOVICH joins in this separate opinion.