Review Waire v. Joseph (1992) regarding the legal concept of tort immunity
Review Waire v. Joseph (1992) regarding the legal concept of tort immunity.
What was the primary holding (decision) from the case? What is the significance of that decision on education today? Should tort immunity be granted to school districts within your state? Why or why not?
Sample Review
Waire v. Joseph, 308 Ark. 528, 825 S.W.2d 594 (Ark. Mar. 2, 1992) (Williams, Sp. J.)
Facts. On April 18, 1989, Jerry Myers was injured during track practice at Searcy Junior High School. His mother, Connie Waire, sued as next friend — naming the Searcy School District, two district employees (William Joseph and Reid Simmons, the track coaches), the Arkansas School Boards Insurance Cooperative (ASBIC), the Arkansas Department of Education (ADE), and the Self-Insurance Fund of the Arkansas Department of Education (SIFADE). The theory against the coaches was breach of a duty of reasonable supervision. Notably, Waire conceded that the District and ADE were immune under Ark. Code Ann. § 21-9-301 — her argument was that the Direct Action Statute, § 23-79-210, gave her a cause of action straight against their liability insurers. The trial court granted summary judgment across the board and dismissed as to the coaches on § 21-9-301 immunity. The Supreme Court affirmed in part, reversed and remanded in part. Justia
The doctrinal architecture
The case is a clean teaching vehicle because it exposes the structure of Arkansas immunity as a two-step inquiry, and students almost always stop after step one.
Step one — the grant. Section 21-9-301 declares it the public policy of Arkansas that counties, municipalities, school districts, improvement districts, and other political subdivisions are immune from liability for damages, and that no tort action shall lie against such a subdivision because of the acts of its agents and employees. And Cousins v. Dennis, 298 Ark. 310, 767 S.W.2d 296 (1989), extended that immunity to school employees for negligence arising out of their official duties. On that much, the trial court looked right.
Step two — the carve-out, which is the whole case. The statutory immunity runs only “except to the extent that they may be covered by liability insurance.” Immunity in Arkansas is therefore not absolute for political subdivisions — it is defeasible, and the defeating condition is the existence of insurance coverage. Purchase coverage, and you have waived immunity pro tanto. That is the hinge, and it converts what looks like a sovereign-immunity question into an insurance-contract interpretation question.
The two holdings
(1) ASBIC’s agreement was not insurance — affirmed. Waire argued the Restated Intergovernmental Cooperative Agreement was ambiguous: its Memorandum of Intent disclaimed being a policy of insurance and disclaimed waiver of immunity, yet elsewhere it provided personal-injury and general-liability coverage, and it carried policy exclusions, a subrogation clause, and an “other insurance” provision. The court disagreed. Applying the statutory definition of insurance in § 23-60-102(1) — a contract to indemnify or pay upon determinable contingencies — the Agreement did not qualify, because its language specifically excluded the very claims over which the District could assert tort immunity.
The reasoning is elegantly circular, and worth sitting with: the Agreement covered liability imposed upon participants by law, and Arkansas law imposes no liability on school districts for employee negligence. So the coverage was real but empty — a set with no members. There was nothing to waive immunity as to, because immunity itself defined the coverage out of existence. Add the express non-waiver clause and the intent was unmistakable. No insurance → no waiver → no direct action under § 23-79-210. Justia
(2) Summary judgment for the coaches was premature — reversed and remanded. This is the part that repays close attention. Waire argued that even if ASBIC and SIFADE didn’t insure Joseph and Simmons, the record was devoid of proof that they were not otherwise insured — and the court agreed. Citing Carter v. Bush, 283 Ark. 16, 677 S.W.2d 837 (1984), it reaffirmed that employees are not immune to the extent they are covered by liability insurance, and that under Prater v. St. Paul Ins. Co., the burden rests on the summary-judgment movant to show no genuine issue of fact. The record established only that the coaches were not covered by ASBIC or SIFADE — not that they were uninsured. Remanded for that determination.
What the case actually teaches about tort immunity
Immunity is a status, not a shield you can assume. The doctrinally sharp move here is procedural. The coaches almost certainly were immune. But immunity was an affirmative defense whose applicability depended on a fact — the existence of any liability policy — that the movants never negated. The party asserting immunity bears the burden of establishing the conditions that make it apply. A defendant who says “I am statutorily immune” and stops has not carried it, because the statute’s own terms make immunity contingent.
The policy irony is worth naming. This regime creates a perverse incentive structure: a political subdivision that buys insurance to protect injured children forfeits immunity to the extent of the coverage, while one that buys nothing keeps it intact. That is a live critique in the Arkansas literature, and Waire shows the sophisticated institutional response — a risk pool deliberately architected to deliver the financial benefits of coverage while disclaiming the legal status of insurance. Whether that is prudent stewardship of public funds or an end-run around the legislature’s waiver condition is exactly the question a good analysis should press.
Note also the boundary conditions the case sits within: Waire remains the only occasion on which the courts have construed § 21-9-302, and the Arkansas Supreme Court has consistently held that § 21-9-301 immunizes only negligence, not intentional torts. So the plaintiff’s framing choice — negligent supervision — was itself what put her inside the immunity bar.
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