32-12.2 Claims Against the State

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CHAPTER 32-12.2CLAIMS AGAINST THE STATE32-12.2-01. Definitions. As used in this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:1.&quot;Claim&quot; means any claim for money damages brought against the state or a state<br>employee for an injury caused by the state or a state employee acting within the<br>scope of the employee's employment whether in the state or outside the state.2.&quot;Injury&quot; means personal injury, death, or property damage.3.&quot;Occurrence&quot; means an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to a<br>condition, which results in an injury.4.&quot;Personal injury&quot; includes bodily injury, mental injury, sickness, or disease sustained<br>by a person and injury to a person's rights or reputation.5.&quot;Property damage&quot; includes injury to or destruction of tangible or intangible property.6.&quot;Scope of employment&quot; means the state employee was acting on behalf of the state<br>in the performance of duties or tasks of the employee's office or employment lawfully<br>assigned to the employee by competent authority or law.7.&quot;State&quot; includes an agency, authority, board, body, branch, bureau, commission,<br>committee, council, department, division, industry, institution, instrumentality, and<br>office of the state.8.&quot;State employee&quot; means every present or former officer or employee of the state or<br>any person acting on behalf of the state in an official capacity, temporarily or<br>permanently, with or without compensation.The term does not include anindependent contractor.9.&quot;State institution&quot; means the state hospital, the developmental center at westwood<br>park, Grafton, the state penitentiary, the Missouri River correctional center, the North<br>Dakota youth correctional center, the North Dakota vision services - school for the<br>blind, the school for the deaf, and similar facilities providing care, custody, or<br>treatment for individuals.32-12.2-02. Liability of the state - Limitations - Statute of limitations.1.The state may only be held liable for money damages for an injury proximately<br>caused by the negligence or wrongful act or omission of a state employee acting<br>within the employee's scope of employment under circumstances in which the<br>employee would be personally liable to a claimant in accordance with the laws of this<br>state, or an injury caused from some condition or use of tangible property under<br>circumstances in which the state, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant.<br>No claim may be brought against the state or a state employee acting within the<br>employee's scope of employment except a claim authorized under this chapter or<br>otherwise authorized by the legislative assembly. The enactment of a law, rule, or<br>regulation to protect any person's health, safety, property, or welfare does not create<br>a duty of care on the part of the state, its employees, or its agents, if that duty would<br>not otherwise exist.2.The liability of the state under this chapter is limited to a total of two hundred fifty<br>thousand dollars per person and one million dollars for any number of claims arising<br>from any single occurrence. The state may not be held liable, or be ordered to<br>indemnify a state employee held liable, for punitive or exemplary damages. Any<br>amount of a judgment against the state in excess of the one million dollar limitPage No. 1imposed under this subsection may be paid only if the legislative assembly adopts<br>an appropriation authorizing payment of all or a portion of that amount. A claimant<br>may present proof of the judgment to the director of the office of management and<br>budget who shall include within the proposed budget for the office of management<br>and budget a request for payment for the portion of the judgment in excess of the<br>limit under this section at the next regular session of the legislative assembly after<br>the judgment is rendered.3.Neither the state nor a state employee may be held liable under this chapter for any<br>of the following claims:a.A claim based upon an act or omission of a state employee exercising due care<br>in the execution of a valid or invalid statute or rule.b.A claim based upon a decision to exercise or perform or a failure to exercise or<br>perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of the state or its<br>employees, regardless of whether the discretion involved is abused or whether<br>the statute, order, rule, or resolution under which the discretionary function or<br>duty is performed is valid or invalid. Discretionary acts include acts, errors, or<br>omissions in the design of any public project but do not include the drafting of<br>plans and specifications that are provided to a contractor to construct a public<br>project.c.A claim resulting from the decision to undertake or the refusal to undertake any<br>legislative or quasi-legislative act, including the decision to adopt or the refusal<br>to adopt any statute, order, rule, or resolution.d.A claim resulting from a decision to undertake or a refusal to undertake any<br>judicial or quasi-judicial act, including a decision to grant, to grant with<br>conditions, to refuse to grant, or to revoke any license, permit, order, or other<br>administrative approval or denial.e.A claim relating to injury directly or indirectly caused by a person who is not<br>employed by the state.f.A claim relating to injury directly or indirectly caused by the performance or<br>nonperformance of a public duty, including:(1)Inspecting, licensing, approving, mitigating, warning, abating, or failing to<br>so act regarding compliance with or the violation of any law, rule,<br>regulation, or any condition affecting health or safety.(2)Enforcing, monitoring, or failing to enforce or monitor conditions of<br>sentencing, parole, probation, or juvenile supervision.(3)Providing or failing to provide law enforcement services in the ordinary<br>course of a state's law enforcement operations.g.&quot;Public duty&quot; does not include action of the state or a state employee under<br>circumstances in which a special relationship can be established between the<br>state and the injured party. A special relationship is demonstrated if all of the<br>following elements exist:(1)Direct contact between the state and the injured party.(2)An assumption by the state, by means of promises or actions, of an<br>affirmative duty to act on behalf of the party who allegedly was injured.Page No. 2(3)Knowledge on the part of the state that inaction of the state could lead to<br>harm.(4)The injured party's justifiable reliance on the state's affirmative<br>undertaking, occurrence of the injury while the injured party was under<br>the direct control of the state, or the state action increases the risk of<br>harm.h.A claim resulting from the assessment and collection of taxes.i.A claim resulting from snow or ice conditions, water, or debris on a highway or<br>on a public sidewalk that does not abut a state-owned building or parking lot,<br>except when the condition is affirmatively caused by the negligent act of a state<br>employee.j.A claim resulting from any injury caused by a wild animal in its natural state.k.A claim resulting from the condition of unimproved real property owned or<br>leased by the state.l.A claim resulting from the loss of benefits or compensation due under a<br>program of public assistance.m.A claim resulting from the reasonable care and treatment, or lack of care and<br>treatment, of a person at a state institution where reasonable use of available<br>appropriations has been made to provide care.n.A claim resulting from damage to the property of a patient or inmate of a state<br>institution.o.A claim resulting from any injury to a resident or an inmate of a state institution<br>if the injury is caused by another resident or inmate of that institution.p.A claim resulting from environmental contamination, except to the extent that<br>federal environmental law permits the claim.q.A claim resulting from a natural disaster, an act of God, a military action, or an<br>act or omission taken as part of a disaster relief effort.r.A claim for damage to property owned by the state.s.A claim for liability assumed under contract, except this exclusion does not<br>apply to liability arising from a state employee's operation of a rental vehicle if<br>the loss is not covered by the state employee's personal insurance or by the<br>vehicle rental company.4.An action brought under this chapter must be commenced within the period provided<br>in section 28-01-22.1.5.This chapter does not create or allow any claim that does not exist at common law<br>or has not otherwise been created by law as of April 22, 1995.32-12.2-03.State to be named in action - Personal liability and defense ofemployees - Indemnification of claims and final judgments.1.An action for an injury proximately caused by the alleged negligence, wrongful act,<br>or omission of a state employee occurring within the scope of the employee's<br>employment must be brought against the state.Page No. 32.A state employee is not personally liable for money damages for an injury when the<br>injury is proximately caused by the negligence, wrongful act, or omission of the<br>employee acting within the scope of employment.3.A state employee may not be held liable in the employee's personal capacity for acts<br>or omissions of the employee occurring within the scope of the employee's<br>employment. A state employee may be personally liable for money damages for an<br>injury when the injury is proximately caused by the negligence, wrongful act, or<br>omission of the employee acting outside the scope of the employee's employment.<br>The plaintiff in such an action bears the burden of proof to show by clear and<br>convincing evidence that the employee was acting outside the scope of the<br>employee's employment. The extent to which an employee may be personally liable<br>under this section and whether the employee was acting within the scope of<br>employment must be specifically stated in a final judgment.4.Except for claims or judgments for punitive damages, the state shall indemnify and<br>save harmless a state employee for any claim, whether groundless or not, and final<br>judgment for any act or omission occurring within the scope of employment of the<br>employee if the employee provides complete disclosure and cooperation in the<br>defense of the claim or demand and if the employee has given written notice of the<br>claim or demand to the head of the state entity that employs the state employee and<br>to the attorney general within ten days after being served with a summons,<br>complaint, or other legal pleading asserting that claim or demand against the state<br>employee.5.A judgment in a claim against the state is a complete bar to any claim by the<br>claimant, resulting from the same injury, against the employee whose act or<br>omission gave rise to the claim.6.The state shall defend any state employee in connection with any civil claim or<br>demand, whether groundless or otherwise, arising out of an alleged act or omission<br>occurring within the scope of the employee's employment if the employee provides<br>complete disclosure and cooperation in the defense of the claim or demand and if<br>the employee requests such defense in writing within ten days after being served<br>with a summons, complaint, or other legal pleading asserting a cause of action<br>against the state employee arising out of a civil claim or demand. The request for<br>defense must be in writing and provided to the head of the state entity that employs<br>the state employee and the attorney general.The head of the state entity thatemploys the state employee shall advise the attorney general as to whether that<br>person deems the employee's actions that are the subject of the action to have been<br>within the scope of the employee's employment. The determination of whether a<br>state employee was acting within the scope of employment must be made by the<br>attorney general. If the attorney general determines that the employee was acting<br>within the scope of the employee's employment, the state shall provide the<br>employee with a defense by or under the control of the attorney general or the<br>attorney general's appointee. This section is not a waiver, limitation, or modification<br>of any immunity or other defenses of the state or any of its employees, nor does it<br>create any causes of action against the state or any of its employees.7.For any claim brought under this chapter, a state employee may choose to hire the<br>employee's own separate defense counsel to represent the state employee in the<br>litigation.If the state employee chooses to hire separate defense counsel,subsections 4 and 6 do not apply to the state employee in that litigation and the state<br>will not indemnify, save harmless, or defend the state employee nor pay for the state<br>employee's defense or any judgment against the state employee.32-12.2-04. Notice required - Payment of claims.Page No. 41.A person bringing a claim against the state or a state employee for an injury shall<br>present to the director of the office of management and budget within one hundred<br>eighty days after the alleged injury is discovered or reasonably should have been<br>discovered a written notice stating the time, place, and circumstances of the injury,<br>the names of any state employees known to be involved, and the amount of<br>compensation or other relief demanded. The time for giving the notice does not<br>include the time during which a person injured is incapacitated by the injury from<br>giving the notice. If the claim is one for death, the notice may be presented by the<br>personal representative, surviving spouse, or next of kin within one year after the<br>alleged injury resulting in the death.2.After receipt of notice of a claim, the director of the office of management and<br>budget shall, in a timely manner, notify the head of the state entity involved, the<br>attorney general, and any insurer or self-insurance pool providing coverage for that<br>state entity. For claims over ten thousand dollars, the director, in consultation with<br>the head of the state entity involved and the attorney general, may settle claims<br>covered by the state risk management fund if the claim is made in writing and<br>settlement is approved by the attorney general.The director of the office ofmanagement and budget may independently settle any claim covered by the state<br>risk management fund if the claim is made in writing and the settlement is for not<br>more than ten thousand dollars.3.A claim shall be paid out of the risk management fund unless that claim is covered<br>by insurance or participation in a government self-insurance pool. All necessary loss<br>adjustment expenses must be included as a component of the claim and be paid out<br>of the fund. Loss adjustment expenses include investigation costs and attorney's<br>fees associated with a claim.4.The acceptance by the claimant of a settlement is final and conclusive on the<br>claimant and constitutes a complete release of any claim against the state and the<br>state employee whose act or omission gave rise to the claim.5.A person bringing a legal action against the state or a state employee for a claim<br>shall deliver a copy of the summons, complaint, or other legal pleading in which the<br>claim is first asserted in the action to the director of the office of management and<br>budget at the time the summons, complaint, or other legal pleading is served in the<br>action. This provision is in addition to any applicable rule of civil procedure.32-12.2-05.(Contingent expiration date - See note) Arbitration of claims.Thedirector of the office of management and budget, in consultation with the head of the state entity<br>involved and the attorney general, may agree to submit a claim covered by the state risk<br>management fund to mediation or binding arbitration. If a claim is submitted to arbitration, the<br>arbitrator must apply the limitations on liability imposed under this chapter in deciding the claim.32-12.2-06. Liability insurance - Reinsurance. Upon approval of the director of theoffice of management and budget, an entity of the state may participate in a government<br>self-insurance pool or may purchase insurance against liability of the entity and its employees for<br>damages resulting from claims under this chapter.The director shall limit participation ingovernment self-insurance pools and, except as provided in this section, the purchase of<br>insurance to exposures determined to cause an excessive financial risk to the state risk<br>management fund, including exposures reasonably expected to deplete the fund and have a<br>significant detrimental impact on the state's budget.The director shall develop a stateself-retention program that provides as much coverage as possible of potential liability<br>recognized by this chapter, but that includes insurance purchases in a manner that is determined<br>appropriate by the director in consultation with the state risk manager. The insurance may be<br>provided by an insurance company authorized to do business in this state which the insurance<br>commissioner has determined to be responsible and financially sound, considering the extent of<br>the coverage required, or coverage may be provided by a government self-insurance pool. If a<br>premium savings will result and the director of the office of management and budget approves,Page No. 5the insurance policy or memorandum of coverage may be in force from one through three years<br>from the date of issue. The director may procure an excess loss reinsurance contract for the<br>state.32-12.2-07. Risk management fund - Appropriation.1.The director of the office of management and budget shall implement and administer<br>a program of self-retention against liability for the state through the establishment of<br>a risk management fund. Each entity of the state shall participate in the program by<br>contributing the appropriate share of its costs as determined by the director.2.The state risk management fund is a special fund in the state treasury administered<br>by the director of the office of management and budget. The fund is a revolving fund<br>consisting of contributions from participating state entities, all payments received by<br>the fund from its activities, and other appropriations by the legislative assembly. The<br>state investment board shall invest the fund in accordance with chapter 21-10.<br>Funds received as contributions from state entities, all other payments deposited in<br>the fund, and interest and income received on investments are hereby appropriated<br>on a continuing basis for the purposes of the fund. Section 54-44.1-11 does not<br>apply to the fund.3.The director of the office of management and budget shall:a.Review the state's exposure to various types of potential risks in consultation<br>with affected state entities and advise state entities as to the reduction of risk<br>and fiscal management of those losses.b.Be responsible for statewide risk management coordination, evaluation of<br>funding and insuring alternatives, and the approval of all liability insurance<br>purchases or government self-insurance pool participation in consultation with<br>affected state entities.c.Identify methods to eliminate redundant efforts in the management of state risk<br>management and insurance programs.d.Administer the state risk management fund or contract for a third-party<br>administrator.4.The director of the office of management and budget may request bids from<br>insurance carriers or government self-insurance pools or negotiate with insurance<br>carriers and government self-insurance pools and may enter into contracts of<br>insurancewithcarriersormemorandumsofcoveragewithgovernmentself-insurance pools that are best qualified to underwrite and service insurance or<br>coverage programs for the state through the risk management fund.32-12.2-08. Duties of director of the office of management and budget. The directorof the office of management and budget is responsible for determining the specifications for<br>liability insurance or coverage for the state. The director shall require an insurance company or<br>government self-insurance pool providing coverage for the state to guarantee that its policy or<br>memorandum of coverage provides minimum coverages pursuant to required specifications and<br>is primary coverage to any coverage under the risk management fund.32-12.2-09.Insurance no waiver of immunity.No purchase of insurance orparticipation in a government self-insurance pool or self-retention fund by the state may be<br>construed as a waiver of any immunity to suit.32-12.2-10. (Contingent expiration date - See note) Eleventh Amendment immunitypreserved. This chapter does not waive the state's immunity under the Eleventh Amendment toPage No. 6the United States Constitution in any manner, and this chapter may not be construed to abrogate<br>that immunity.32-12.2-11. Certain records relating to claims against the state or state employeesprivileged and exempt from open records law.1.The following records in the possession of the office of management and budget or a<br>public entity are privileged and exempt and are not subject to section 44-04-18 or<br>section 6 of article XI of the Constitution of North Dakota:a.Records containing information relating to that portion of the funds or liability<br>reserves of the risk management fund established for the purpose of satisfying<br>a specific pending or reasonably predictable claim against the state or a state<br>employee; andb.Incident reports, investigation reports, or other risk management fund records<br>of a pending or reasonably predictable claim against the state or a state<br>employee.2.The office of management and budget shall make available for public disclosure<br>records identified in subsection 1 when disclosure of the record will not prejudice any<br>outstanding claim or reasonably predictable claim against the state or a state<br>employee, all civil litigation or adversarial administrative proceedings, including the<br>exhaustion of all appellate remedies, have been completed, and, in the case of<br>reasonably predictable claims, the applicable statute of limitations has expired.32-12.2-12. State agency loss control committee records and meetings privilegedand exempt from open records and open meetings law. The portions of the records and<br>meetings of any state agency loss control committee dealing with confidential records are not<br>public records or public meetings subject to sections 44-04-18 and 44-04-19 and sections 5<br>and 6 of article XI of the Constitution of North Dakota.Those records and meetings of thecommittee are privileged and are not subject to subpoena or discovery or introduction into<br>evidence in any civil action. The records of the committee include all information, data, reports,<br>or records created by or made available to the committee.Any information, data, report, orrecord otherwise available from original sources is not confidential or immune from discovery or<br>use in any civil action merely because it was presented or considered during the proceedings of<br>the committee.A person who testified before the committee or who is a member of thecommittee may testify as to matters within that person's knowledge but may not be asked about<br>the records of, the testimony before, or the discussions of the committee. This section does not<br>relieve any person of any liability incurred as a result of actions reviewed by the committee.32-12.2-13.Contract between the state and a political subdivision.A contractbetween the state and a political subdivision may not contain a provision that requires one party<br>to assume the liability of the other or the liability of a third party or to bear the costs of defense of<br>actions against the other or against a third party.32-12.2-14.Risk management motor vehicle accident review board - Powers -Records - Meetings. The director of the office of management and budget shall establish a risk<br>management motor vehicle accident review board to review any accident involving a motor<br>vehicle owned or leased by the state and operated by a state employee. The board is composed<br>of the director of the department of transportation, or the director's designee, who shall serve as<br>chairman of the board; the director of the office of management and budget, or the director's<br>designee; the superintendent of the highway patrol or the superintendent's designee; and two<br>state employees selected by the other board members to serve two-year terms.The risk management motor vehicle accident review board shall review accidentsinvolving state-owned or state-leased vehicles operated by state employees in order to improve<br>traffic safety and driver training and to reduce the number of traffic accidents. The board shall<br>adopt rules concerning receiving accident reports, holding meetings, receiving verbal or writtenPage No. 7information, making recommendations, communicating with state agencies and employees, and<br>informing state agencies of its recommendations. Three members of the board constitute a<br>quorum and an affirmative vote of at least three board members is required for the board to take<br>action and make a recommendation.The duties of the chairman include scheduling meetings; notifying participants; receivingand maintaining board records, reports, and other material; and communicating with agencies<br>concerning the board's recommendations.The department of transportation shall report state motor vehicle-related accidents to theboard for review if it appears further training could have rendered the accident preventable or if<br>there was a citation issued to the state employee operating the state-owned or state-leased<br>motor vehicle. After review, the board may recommend driver training; defensive driver training;<br>emergency vehicle operational training; physical, written, or operational examinations; or<br>restrictions on the use of state-owned or state-leased motor vehicles.The state agencyemploying the employee operating the state-owned or state-leased motor vehicle involved in the<br>traffic accident shall decide whether to implement the board's recommendation.State employees must be paid and may not be required to take any leave for time neededto assist the board, and all state employers shall reimburse their employees for travel expenses<br>incurred in assisting the board.The board must be deemed to be a state agency loss-control committee under section32-12.2-12 and all of the board's current or former members and all participants providing any<br>verbal or written information to the board are entitled to the rights against production of records or<br>testimony as contained in this section.32-12.2-15. Contracts limiting liability to the state - Assumption of certain excessliability by the risk management fund. Notwithstanding any provision in this chapter to the<br>contrary, if the attorney general and the director of the office of management and budget<br>determine it is in the best interest of the state, an agency may agree to limit the liability of a<br>contractor to the state. The liability limitation must be approved by the attorney general and<br>director of the office of management and budget in writing and may only be approved for<br>contracts for the purchase or lease of, or services related to, software, communication, or<br>electronic equipment. For any uninsured losses, the director of the office of management and<br>budget may approve the risk management fund to assume all or part of the contractor's liability to<br>the state in excess of the limitation.Contracts for economic forecasting for the office ofmanagement and budget may contain a provision limiting the state's ability to seek and recover<br>indirect consequential damages if the director of the office of management and budget and the<br>attorney general determine that such services cannot be effectively obtained without such<br>limitation and that the limitation does not pose any significant risk of loss to the state and is in the<br>best interests of the state. A contract under this section may not limit any direct loss to the state<br>or loss resulting from property damage or personal injury.32-12.2-16. Ratifying contracts limiting liability to the state. Any employee or officialof an agency who entered into a contract prior to March 17, 2005, requiring the agency to limit<br>the liability of the contracting party will be deemed to be acting within the scope of the<br>employee's or official's employment provided the contract is approved or ratified by the attorney<br>general and the director of the office of management and budget and otherwise meets the<br>conditions contained in section 32-12.2-15.32-12.2-17. Indemnification and insurance requirements in state contracts.1.The director of the office of management and budget shall establish guidelines for<br>indemnification and insurance provisions in contracts that may be entered by an<br>executive branch state agency. The director shall consult with representatives of<br>executive branch state agencies, the insurance industry, and the business<br>community to establish and revise the guidelines and provisions. The guidelinesPage No. 8must establish procedures for determining the appropriate indemnification and<br>insurance provisions in contracts.2.If a contract for services requires a provision for indemnification, the contract must<br>require the contractor to indemnify the state and its agencies, officers, and<br>employees for vicarious liability, but may not require indemnification for the<br>contributory negligence, comparative degree of fault, sole negligence, or intentional<br>misconduct of the state or its agencies, officers, and employees, unless the director<br>of the office of management and budget or the director's designee determines a<br>more stringent indemnification provision is appropriate.If indemnification isrequired, the contract must require that the state be endorsed on the contractor's<br>commercial general liability policy as an additional insured or must require an<br>equivalent form of protection for the state.3.This section does not apply to a contract between an executive branch state agency<br>and another person that is the owner of private property that is being used to<br>accommodate a state construction project.4.The failure of the state to comply with subsection 2 does not void any part of a<br>contract.Page No. 9Document Outlinechapter 32-12.2 claims against the state