Public parks are supposed to be places of joy—where children climb, families relax, and communities come together. But when a park becomes a place of injury instead of peace, the emotional fallout is real—and often completely avoidable.
A cracked sidewalk. Rusted playground bolts. A rotting tree limb crashing down near a group of kids. These aren’t “accidents.” These are warning signs ignored, responsibilities ducked, and safety sacrificed in the name of budget or bureaucracy. And when a loved one—especially a child—is injured in a city-maintained park, the damage goes far beyond bruises or broken bones. It shakes your sense of trust in the very institutions meant to protect you.
If this happened to your family in Kent County, you’re not alone. But you’re probably wondering: Can I even sue the city? Is it worth it? Do I have any rights?
The short answer? Yes—but it’s complicated. Michigan law protects cities and municipalities through something called governmental immunity, which makes it notoriously difficult to sue a public entity—even when clear negligence is involved. But “difficult” doesn’t mean impossible. In some cases, you can take legal action against a city or third party responsible for unsafe park conditions. The key is knowing the law—and knowing who will fight to apply it.
Governmental Immunity in Michigan: Why Suing the City Is So Difficult
The Michigan Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA)
Under MCL 691.1407, cities, townships, and other government entities are generally immune from civil lawsuits, even when their own negligence results in injury. This means that if your child gets hurt on a rusted-out jungle gym or your spouse trips on a broken sidewalk in a city park, you usually can’t sue the city for ordinary negligence—no matter how obvious the danger.
Legal Exceptions to Governmental Immunity
Public Building Exception – MCL 691.1406
If your injury happened inside or because of a dangerous condition in a public building, you may have a claim. But here’s the catch: most playgrounds, park benches, trails, and picnic areas don’t count.
Gross Negligence Exception
If a government employee acted with gross negligence—that is, conduct so reckless it showed a substantial lack of concern for whether injury would result—you might be able to sue the individual employee (not the city itself, unless the conduct is tied to a city policy or known risk).
Proprietary Function Exception
This rare exception applies when the city is acting more like a for-profit business than a government. It might apply to:
- A paid event held in the park (e.g., a city-sponsored carnival)
- Rental of city park space for private functions
But even then, the activity must generate revenue and not be essential to the city’s basic government duties. In most park injury cases, this exception won’t apply—but it’s worth investigating.
Why Most Park Injuries Don’t Qualify Under the Building Exception
The Legal Fine Print: What “Building” Really Means
Under MCL 691.1406, you can sue a government entity if your injury was caused by a “dangerous or defective condition of a public building.” Unfortunately, Michigan courts have taken a very narrow view of what counts as a “building.” Structures must be:
- Enclosed
- Permanent
- Built for human occupancy or use
That means that most of what you find in a public park doesn’t qualify.
What Doesn’t Count as a Building?
- Playground equipment (swings, slides, jungle gyms)
- Benches, picnic tables, or barbecue grills
- Fountains, open pavilions, bleachers
- Natural features like trees, rocks, or ponds
- Trails, sidewalks, or parking lots
Even when these things are affixed to concrete or maintained by city staff, they’re still not considered buildings under Michigan law.
When the Exception Might Apply
To trigger the public building exception, the injury must result from a dangerous condition within the structure itself, such as:
- A roof collapse inside a park pavilion
- Structural failure of a public restroom
- Faulty lighting or exposed wiring inside a building
Even in those situations, the burden is on you to prove that the defect was the direct cause of the injury—and that the city knew or should have known about it in time to fix it.
Even equipment that’s attached to a building, like a swing bolted to a shelter, won’t qualify unless the building itself was somehow the direct source of the hazard.
When You Can Sue the City or a Third Party
Proving Gross Negligence by the City
If city workers or officials acted with gross negligence—a level of recklessness that shows they just didn’t care about your safety—you may be able to hold them individually accountable. Under Michigan law, gross negligence is defined as “conduct so reckless it demonstrates a substantial lack of concern for whether an injury results.”
What does that look like in a public park context?
- Ignored Warnings or Complaints: If neighbors or city workers had previously reported broken playground equipment, exposed rebar, or dangerous structures—and the city failed to act.
- Inspection Failures: Maintenance logs showing the city hadn’t inspected the area in months, or ignored glaring safety hazards.
- Shocking Conditions: If the danger was so obvious—like rusted metal, loose bolts, or fallen trees—that no reasonable city official would’ve allowed public access.
Third-Party Liability: The Loophole in Immunity
Governmental immunity does not protect private entities. That means if someone other than the city contributed to your injury, you may have a strong personal injury case. These lawsuits follow standard negligence law—not the immunity fortress surrounding public bodies.
Examples of viable third-party claims:
- Private Contractors: Landscaping crews, construction companies, or maintenance providers hired by the city—but operating independently. If they created a hazard or failed to secure a dangerous area, they can be held liable.
- Manufacturers of Defective Equipment: If the injury was caused by poorly designed or dangerously manufactured playground equipment, you may have a product liability claim against the company.
- Event Organizers: If a private company or group hosted an event in the park and failed to provide proper safety measures, fencing, security, or signage, they can also be sued.
Compensation: What You Can Recover
Medical Expenses
You shouldn’t have to pay out of pocket for injuries someone else caused. A successful claim can cover:
- Emergency room visits
- Surgeries and hospitalization
- Specialist appointments
- Ongoing medical care and medications
- Future medical needs, like additional procedures or long-term monitoring
Rehabilitation and Therapy
Injuries don’t end when the bleeding stops. Many victims require:
- Physical therapy
- Occupational therapy
- Psychological counseling (especially for trauma, PTSD, or anxiety—common after childhood injuries)
- Assistive devices or home modifications
Lost Wages and Future Earnings
If the injury kept you from working—or permanently impacted your earning ability—you may be compensated for:
- Missed paychecks
- Reduced work hours
- Loss of future earning capacity
Pain and Suffering
Michigan law allows victims to be compensated for noneconomic damages—the human costs that don’t show up on a receipt, including:
- Chronic pain
- Nightmares, flashbacks, or anxiety
- Sleep disturbances
- Emotional trauma
- Long-term loss of confidence or independence
Permanent Disability or Disfigurement
If your injury resulted in long-term impairment, scarring, amputation, or mobility issues, this can dramatically increase the value of your case. The law recognizes how permanent injuries impact not just your body, but your identity and lifestyle.
Loss of Enjoyment of Life
Were you once an avid runner, a daily park visitor, or simply someone who loved to play with your kids? If your injury robs you of activities that brought you joy, that loss deserves recognition—and financial accountability.
Loss of Consortium
Serious injuries affect more than just the person hurt. If your spouse, partner, or child is suffering because of the injury’s impact on your relationship, this harm—known as loss of consortium—can be included in your compensation.
The City Doesn’t Get a Free Pass
No one expects a trip to the park to end in the ER. But when a city fails to maintain its public spaces—when they ignore hazards, delay repairs, or cut corners—they put lives at risk. And when that risk turns into real harm, they don’t get to walk away without consequence.
Yes, Michigan’s immunity laws make it harder to hold cities accountable—but harder doesn’t mean impossible. You just need a legal team that knows how to cut through the red tape and build a case the city can’t ignore.
At Marko Law, that’s what we do. We’ve gone up against cities, school districts, and government agencies across Michigan—and we don’t blink. If you or your child was seriously injured in a Kent County park, we’ll investigate every detail, uncover who’s really responsible, and fight for the justice your family deserves.
Contact Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation
📞 Phone: +1-313-777-7777
📍 Main Office: 220 W. Congress, 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48226
🌐 Website: www.markolaw.com