Francis v. State
Annotate this CasePlaintiffs were camping with their young son, Sam, when a bear pulled Sam from out of his tent and killed him. The bear was the same bear that had attacked another camper in the same campsite earlier that day. Plaintiffs sued the State, alleging that the State negligently failed to warn them of the dangerous condition created by the bear. The district court initially dismissed Plaintiffs' claims under the permit exception to the Utah Governmental Immunity Act. The Supreme Court reversed. On remand, the State filed a motion for summary judgment, raising two alternative arguments that the Supreme Court declined to address in Francis I. The district court subsequently granted summary judgment for the State on both duty and immunity grounds. The Supreme Court reversed, holding (1) the State was entitled to present its alternative arguments on remand; (2) the State owed Plaintiffs a duty because it undertook no specific action to protect them as the next group to use the campsite; and (3) the natural condition exception to the Immunity Act did not immunize the State from liability because a bear is not a "natural condition on publicly owned or controlled lands."
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