From the CBC:
“Supreme Court says people can
sue cities over snow removal activities that cause injury”
The Supreme Court of Canada has
unanimously ruled that municipal snow removal activities are not immune from
negligence and liability claims, a decision that could affect cities across the
country. The case at the centre of the decision is a lawsuit brought against
the City of Nelson, B.C. by Taryn Joy Marchi, who injured her leg while
climbing over a snowbank in 2015. Marchi lost her initial suit but the B.C.
Court of Appeal overturned the ruling and the city appealed to the Supreme
Court.
The key question the seven
Supreme Court justices were tasked with deciding was the legal distinction
between "core policy decisions" made by governments — which are
immune from liability and negligence claims — and "operational
decisions" that are taken while implementing policy, which are subject to
liability claims. The court dismissed
the City of Nelson's appeal, dismissing the city's argument that snow removal
is a "core policy decision" and is therefore immune from negligence
claims. The court ordered a new trial. "The City has not met its burden of
proving that Ms. Marchi seeks to challenge a core policy decision immune from
negligence liability," the court ruled. "While there is no suggestion
that the City made an irrational or bad faith decision, the City's 'core policy
defence' fails and it owed Ms. Marchi a duty of care. "The regular principles of negligence law
apply in determining whether the City breached the duty of care and, if so,
whether it should be liable for Ms. Marchi's damages." The case is
significant because it could affect cities across the country. The attorneys
general for Canada, Alberta, B.C. and Ontario were all interveners in the case,
as was the City of Toronto and the City of Abbotsford B.C.
Core policy vs. operational
decision The ruling said that core policy decisions are choices made by
cities based on broad public policy considerations such as economic, social and
political factors. The City of Nelson argued that its snow removal
decisions are dictated by the availability of financial resources, saying the
snowfall of Jan. 4 and 5 was the first of the year and significant enough to
consume 20 per cent of the city's annual snow removal budget. Marchi's
lawyers argued that while clearing snow is a general policy, decisions made
about which parking stalls should be cleared and whether paths should be cut to
allow pedestrians to access the sidewalk were not detailed in any policy
document — and were therefore "the operationalization of implementation of
snow removal." The Supreme Court sided with Marchi, saying that the
decision to create snowbanks without clearing pathways for sidewalk access was
not a matter of core policy. The top court said that the original trial
judge's decision in the case, which found that the "city's actions were
the result of policy decisions," was too broad and merged together all of
the City of Nelson's snow removal "decisions and activities" under
the policy umbrella."The fact that the word 'policy' is found in a written
document, or that a plan is labelled as 'policy' may be misleading and is
certainly not determinative of the question," said the Supreme Court
decision.
City invited people to use
sidewalk: Supreme Court When Marchi injured her leg on Jan. 6, 2015, snow
removal services in Nelson had cleared a block of angled parking spaces in the
city centre, pushing the snow from the spaces to the curb and creating a long
snowbank separating the parking spaces from the sidewalk. The city did
not clear paths through the snowbank to allow pedestrians to get from their
parking spots to the sidewalk. "By plowing the parking spaces on
Baker Street, the City invited members of the public to use them to access
businesses along the street," the ruling states. "The plaintiff was
attempting to do just that when she fell into a snowbank that had been created
by the City during snow removal." In the initial court case, the
judge ruled that snow removal was a core policy decision, that Marchi assumed
the risk when she tried to climb over the snowbank and that she was the
"author of her own misfortune." The City of Nelson argued that
it was not reasonably foreseeable that someone living in a city prone to heavy
snowfall would behave as Marchi did. The Supreme Court disagreed, saying
that all Marchi had to prove was that, "on the balance of
probabilities," she would not have injured herself if it hadn't been for
the way the city plowed snow.
^ This is a major ruling and one
I am glad the Supreme Court has made. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/top-court-snow-removal-liability-1.6219354
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