DOYLE, Judge.
Lillian and Charles Waits sued Donnie D. Scott, the school resource officer for Woodland High School in Bartow County, after Lillian was involved in an accident on school property. Scott filed a motion for summary judgment, and the trial court denied the motion. Scott appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by concluding that he was not shielded from liability in his individual capacity by the doctrine of official immunity. We agree and reverse.
So viewed, the record shows that Lillian was leaving the campus of Woodland High School in Bartow County after dropping her son off at the field house during fall break when she drove into a metal, free-swinging gate. The gate struck the hood of her SUV and penetrated her vehicle, exiting through the rear driver's side window and injuring her. Lillian and her husband sued Scott, alleging that he had a duty to secure the gate, to report the gate's broken latch to the
Following the trial court's order, Scott filed an application for interlocutory appeal, which we granted.
The metal gate at issue consisted of two separate pieces that swung out over the roadway and were secured in the middle with a padlock in order to close off the road. When opened, the gates swung back to each side of the road and over a small post secured with a latching device. Although previously the gates were locked and unlocked on a regular basis, the gates were left in the open position throughout the fall of 2007.
Scott testified that he noticed that the gate was dislodged from the latching post on fewer than five occasions, and he secured it on the post each time. Scott, who was not on duty the day of the incident, never noticed that the latch was not functioning at any time before then. Two school coaches deposed that the gate had become dislodged in the past, swinging slightly into the roadway. Neither coach reported any information about the gate to anyone, including Scott or Dr. Sabin. One of the coaches testified that he observed the gate swinging into the roadway three times in the two weeks preceding the accident, and during that period, the gate could not be secured because the locking mechanism was bent.
At his deposition, Scott was asked whether "it is the duty of the school police officer to secure the gate if it's found swinging," and he replied, "If I see it, yes, sir, I will." Scott also testified that he checked the gate every day to see whether it was latched open. When asked whether it was his "standard policy and procedure" to do so, Scott replied, "That's just something I do just to make sure incidents don't happen." Scott was also asked about what conversations he had with the principal, Dr. Sabin, regarding the gates "at all at any time," and he responded, "Just to check them to make sure they are latched back."
Dr. Sabin was also deposed, and he agreed that "it is the policy and practice of Woodland High School" that school resource officers would secure any gate that they observed "swinging." However, Dr. Sabin further testified as follows:
Dr. Sabin further explained that the responsibility for opening the gates varied, and that "it would be incorrect for me to tell you that I have a person that's responsible to go
The assistant principal for the school was also deposed, and he explained that in 2007, the general duties of the school resource officer were "the safety and protection of the faculty, staff[,] and students of Woodland High School." According to the assistant principal, the school resource officer had an obligation to report any unsafe condition or maintenance issue that he observed on the school campus.
The Waitses also offered the affidavit of Susie Cole, who served as a school resource officer for the Bartow County School System, was then appointed interim director of safety and security for the school system from 1996 to 1998, and served as the assistant director of safety and security for the system from 1998 through 2002; Cole's office was located at Woodland High School from 1999 through 2002. Cole deposed that "[o]ne of the primary duties of a resource officer at a school is to [e]nsure the safety of the students, faculty, parents, and visiting public." Cole also testified that:
On appeal, Scott argues that the trial court erred by denying summary judgment in his favor based on the doctrine of official immunity because the acts of inspecting the gate, and then reporting any damage or repairing it were discretionary, not ministerial. The doctrine of official immunity, also known as qualified immunity, provides "that although a public officer or employee may be held personally liable for his negligent ministerial acts, he may not be held liable for his discretionary acts unless such acts are wilful, wanton, or outside the scope of his authority."
"Whether the acts upon which liability is predicated are ministerial or discretionary is determined by the facts of the particular case."
Here, the Waitses claim that Scott was negligent in failing to inspect the gates and/or to report or repair any problems with the gate or its locking mechanism. Construing the evidence in favor of the Waitses as nonmovants, there is no evidence of any formal policy or procedure that created a ministerial duty on Scott's part to inspect the gates. The school principal was unaware of any policy or practice that required Scott to inspect the gates. And although Scott admitted at deposition that he checked the gates regularly, he did not testify that he was required to do so. The testimony of Cole, the former school resource officer, that "in her opinion" Scott was required to make daily inspections of the gate, is insufficient to establish that Scott's employer informed him of "clear, definite[,] and certain" instructions or procedure that required him to conduct the purportedly "relatively simple, specific" duty to inspect the gates.
The Waitses also claim that Scott had a duty to repair and/or report any defective or broken gate and/or locking mechanism. We have previously held that absent a specific and clear procedure or method for dealing with hazards on school property, the methods used to eliminate or avoid a hazard "are left to the discretion of the school district employees."
Under these circumstances, in the absence of any evidence that Scott breached a ministerial duty to inspect the gates or to repair or report a broken gate, the trial court erred by denying Scott's motion for summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
ANDREWS, P.J., and ELLINGTON, J., concur.