In Robinson, the plaintiff was injured in a vehicle accident that he contended was caused by the defendant’s improperly performed road repairs and leaving of debris and construction materials in the roadway. The plaintiff took care to allege that the defendant first started repairs prior to performing the specific acts of negligence. The trial court dismissed the case but the appellate court concluded that the defendant’s acts of repair were the implementation of its maintenance and repair plans to which liability could attach.
The decision in Robinson distances itself from the proposition that minute tasks—like a worker’s deciding how deep to dig or how much soil to remove from a hole—involve discretion may immunize a local government from liability; however, it suggested that such tasks could be immune from liability depending on the facts presented to the court. The Robinson court cited a case where a municipality succeeded in characterizing a construction supervisor’s decision over how much water and debris to remove from a roadway pothole before patching it was a discretionary government function. As such, the municipality in that case was not liable for the plaintiff’s injuries. The Robinson court suggested that a line exists between discretionary and actionable decisions of government employees but declined to describe where that line falls.
The Robinson opinion highlights the need for artful pleading and framing of issues in pursuing subrogation against an Illinois local governmental unit, namely, ensuring that the acts of negligence occur in the implementation or performance of a government repair plan. The opinion also warns plaintiffs that Illinois courts are still free to examine the most minute of tasks to determine whether government employee conduct is actionable which may diminish the chances of recovery.