Court Opinion

ID: 9570623
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-21 20:24:42.818498+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:12:09.789118
License: Public Domain

BISTLINE, Justice,
dissenting.
From the record before us we do not know how serious were the injuries suffered by the child, but we do know that by reason of incomprehensibly irrational holdings of the Idaho Supreme Court she has not and will not be allowed to lay her cause before a jury. This sad case takes a place along side of Johnson v. Sunshine Mining Co., 106 Idaho 866, 684 P.2d 268 (1984), where the unremedied travesty occasioned by a 3-2 majority of this Court was the wrongful death of a young husband and father of two young children. The majority in that case conceded that a roadway on top of a Sunshine-constructed dike had been used by local motorcyclists for at least 18 years prior to the fatality, and that “Sunshine’s employees were aware of the recreational use of Sunshine’s property and did not ask the [motorcyclists] to leave,” also that one employee had specifically authorized use of the roadway — all free of charge. Johnson, supra, 106 Idaho at 867, 684 P.2d at 269.
Knowing all of this, Sunshine in the spring of 1980 made the motorcycle course more interesting, albeit extremely hazardous, by excavating a section of the dike road so as to leave a gap 25 feet across and 15 feet deep. Mr. Johnson, as with Evel Knievel at Twin Falls, was unable to make the jump. Unlike Evel Knievel, Mr. Johnson was not trying to make any jump at all; he did not know of the excavation over this route which he had previously ridden several times. He went to his de*923mise because of Sunshine’s failure to erect any warning whatever. Id.
Johnson’s wife and children were also thrown out of court without a trial. The district court adhering to an earlier case from this Court, Huyck v. Hecla Mining Co., 101 Idaho 299, 612 P.2d 142 (1980), “granted summary judgment to Sunshine, ruling that I.C. § 36-1604 was constitutional and based upon it there was no duty of care on the part of Sunshine either to warn of or refrain from creating a dangerous condition on its property.” Johnson, supra, 106 Idaho at 868, 684 P.2d at 270. There is, however, no language whatever in § 36-1604 such as that which I have italicized. The majority did recognize paragraph (c) of § 36-1604 and quoted the paragraph in its opinion:
(c) Owner Exempt from Warning. An owner of land owes no duty of care to keep the premises safe for entry by others for recreational purposes, or to give any warning of a dangerous condition, use, structure, or activity on such premises to persons entering for such purposes.
The majority cited and relied upon the Huyck case, saying of it, “Huyck was a trespasser to whom a landowner owes no duty other than to ‘refrain from willful or wanton acts which might cause injuries.’ ” Johnson, supra, 106 Idaho at 869 n. 4, 684 P.2d at 271. As to Sunshine’s conduct in not posting any warning whatever of its having dug a huge gap in the roadway, which was beyond question the cause of Mr. Johnson’s death, the 3-2 majority blithely passed over such grossly wanton conduct with the most remarkably irresponsible and irrational ratio decedendi that anyone might ever expect to see from any state’s highest appellate Court:
The activities of the defendant in excavating the ore from the dike does not rise to that [Huyck, willful or wanton] level. Id. at 871, 684 P.2d at 273.
The majority concluded its opinion: “On the facts of this case, I.C. § 36-1604 advances legitimate legislative goals.... ” Johnson, supra, 106 Idaho at 871, 684 P.2d at 273. It is much to be doubted that the legislators who voted for § 36-1604 had in mind a legislative goal of insulating from civil action conduct which responsible citizens would view as amounting to involuntary manslaughter. See Johnson, supra, 106 Idaho at 871, 684 P.2d at 273 (dissenting opinion of Huntley, joined by Bistline, J.) (“It is absurd to immunize a landowner from civil liability when reckless, wanton or willful conduct which is harmful to human life may result in criminal prosecution.”). Not one person in a thousand sitting as a juror at the Johnson trial, had there been one, would have been so callous as the 3-2 majority. Of course, even a child knows that it was not willful or wanton for Sunshine to excavate its own ore. No one disagreed with that — which was not the issue before us. The issue was Sunshine’s knowledge of the dike roadway’s use, foreseeability of what would happen absent any warning to innocent persons, and a complete failure to warn.
But, why revisit the Johnson case? Simply this: It was poorly decided. It was a travesty of justice for which there was no justification, and it is a case that more and more people need to know about. Additionally, to retrace Johnson once again starts the flow of adrenalin as another travesty of the same ilk is now in the making in the same Court. Moreover, a just, fair and entirely supportable reason for not denying the injured child in this case her day in court is readily available. First of all, unlike sovereign immunity, as it existed prior to 1971, the purpose of § 36-1604 was not to immunize all landowners from tort liability. Rather, its declared purpose was not to immunize, but to limit liability:
36-1604. Limitations of liability of landowner. — (a) Statement of Purpose. The purpose of this section is to encourage owners of land to make private land and water areas available to the public without charge for recreational purposes by limiting their liability toward persons entering thereon for such purposes.
But, and of even stronger persuasion, is the title of the act, H.B. No. 518, which on *924enactment became ch. 95 of the 1976 Session Laws. A broad act, recodifying Fish and Game laws, its lengthy title, as applicable to § 36-1604 was: “PROVIDING FOR RECREATIONAL TRESPASS AND LIMITING LANDHOLDER LIABILITY.” Extremely obvious, the purpose of the act was to obtain access to private and public lands for fishing, hunting, and other sports enthusiasts, who are willing to acquiesce in the trespasses of such sporting people, the quid pro quo being that forbearance of charging for the use of the property may limit the tort liability of the owner.
While the act defined “land,” “owner,” and “recreational purposes,” it did not define trespass, nor need it have done so. “Trespass” is not a word of art the usage of which is peculiar to only the legal profession, but a word of common usage. Similarly with “trespasser” — who is, of course, a person who trespasses. Recourse can be had to any dictionary and to Black’s Law Dictionary. Generally, a trespasser is one “who enters on the property of another without any right, lawful authority or an express or implied invitation or license. Morris v. Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co. [198 Kan. 147 (1967)], 422 P.2d 920, 927-28.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1348 (5th ed. 1979).
The drafters of § 36-1604, whoever they may have been, were obviously aware that they were attempting to create a statute which would make of an intruder on lands belonging to others an invitee or permittee, and thus not a trespasser, provided always, of course, that the owner or possessor of the land made no charge.
It is not and never has been the law that a person using a public park, i.e., a park maintained by a municipality, a county, or a state, for the use of the public is within the definition of a trespasser. Maybe there is one justice on the Court who knows of such a principle of law — but he has yet to step forward.
And, as goes without saying, where public parks forever have been just that, parks for public use, those persons using these parks are not trespassers, and accordingly, they are not within the class of recreational trespassers. Recreational users, yes; trespassers, no.
Thus, when those justices who comprise today’s majority recite the judicial verity that in reviewing statutory language “we will assume the legislature intended what it said in the statute, and we will construe statutory terms according to their plain, obvious and rational meanings [citation omitted]” they don’t really mean it. Otherwise, their opinion would mention the small fact that Idaho Code Title 36 is entitled' “Fish and Game”; Chapter 16 of this title is headed “Recreational Trespass— Landholder Liability Limited.” Presumably these titles are statutory language on a par with the text of the laws.
What would one suppose is the plain, obvious, and rational meaning of a statute so entitled? That it applies to invited users of a municipal park? Hardly. Members of the trial bench and bar will be amazed when they learn of this feat of judicial legerdemain. Municipalities and their insurers will be pleased to learn that this Court has legislated an exception to the Tort Claims Act as yet undreamed of by our legislature — that a governmental entity shall not be liable for injuries to members of the public who have been and are free to use the playground equipment in a public park. From where the sun now stands, cities need maintain their park equipment no more forever. Nor waste money buying liability coverage insurance.
The obvious applicable law is Title 6, Chapter 9, “Tort Claims Against Governmental Entities," curiously absent from the majority’s analysis. The Court today acts totally outside its authority by, in effect, amending the Tort Claims Act. A truly conservative judiciary would shrink from the specter of such activism. A court dealing in reality would never so extend the particular chapter of the Fish and Game Code.
Another insurmountable problem with the statute as drafted, and making it incapable of just and evenhanded administration, is the failure to require a before-the-fact implied or direct invitation. I mention a *925strong concern as to the constitutionality of language which does not place upon an owner an obligation to directly, and in some positive manner, signify that his lands are open for recreational purposes. How an owner, especially an absentee owner, can be expected to know that his property is being trespassed upon is beyond my ken. If made aware of his land being used for recreational purposes, whether he would demand a charge, or acquiesce therein, is an unknown. It is readily foreseeable that, in many cases, whether the land owner had or had not elected to come under the act will be an after-the-fact determination. On that basis it is grossly unfair to the recreational use? who, after his trespass, is then informed that he either owes a fee, or is guilty of a misdemeanor under § 36-1603 for nonconsensual trespass, or informed that he is a permitted recreational trespasser under § 36-1604, depending on what has occurred, and at the owner’s election. This is an intolerable state of uncertainty, and hence highly suggestive of being so vague and indefinite as to be unconstitutional. A trespasser is entitled to know beforehand whether he is being regarded as a criminal trespasser or a recreational trespasser. Putting that problem aside for another day, I express my amazement that the view of Justice Huntley in Johnson, supra, failed to command a majority of this Court, and now the sins of Johnson are revisited on another innocent victim.
My comment, and lament as well, in Corey v. State, 108 Idaho 921, 925, 703 P.2d 685, 689 (1985), bears repeating:
The people of Idaho at the least are entitled to the protection of Posted Notices in recreation lands that by virtue of unfathomable decisions of this Court the owners or possessors of those recreational areas incur no liability whatever for that which is clearly tortious conduct. Legislation intended for beneficial purposes has been judicially so perverted that it is instead disastrous. Perhaps there will be corrective legislative action on that unfortunate day when it is a legislator or a member of a legislator’s family who is injured or killed — only to learn from the courts that it is a clear case of damnum absque injuria.
HUNTLEY, J., concurs.