delivered the opinion of the Court.
On this appeal we are asked to interpret the language of the New Jersey Tort Claims Act (TCA) that requires, as a prerequisite to public entity liability, that the public property must be in a “dangerous condition at the time of the injury.” N.J.S.A. 59:4-2. Here, the ten-year-old plaintiff suffered severe damage to his left hand after successfully igniting a firework he found in a municipal park following a municipal fireworks display. The explosion occurred on private property over a month after the child removed *203the firework from the park. Plaintiff sued and the public entity moved for summary judgment claiming, among other things, that plaintiff failed to satisfy the requirement in N.J.SA 59:4-2 that the public entity’s property be in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury. The trial court denied the motion and a jury awarded a substantial verdict in plaintiffs favor.
The public entity appealed and a divided panel of the Appellate Division reversed. The majority held that the firework was neither owned nor controlled by the public entity and that the infant plaintiffs removal of it from the park prevented the conclusion that the public property (the park) remained in a “dangerous condition at the time of the injury.” The dissent countered that plaintiffs injury was an inevitable and foreseeable result of harmful “contact” or “exposure” to a dangerous condition on public property and fell squarely within the contemplation of the TCA.
Because we are satisfied that the conclusion of the dissenting opinion more closely conforms with the legislative intent underlying that Act, we now reverse.
I
In 1997, plaintiff Karen Smith, individually and in her capacity as the guardian ad litem of Brenden Wasniewski (collectively plaintiffs), filed a lawsuit against the Township of Deptford, Dept-ford Parks and Recreation, Deptford Fun Day Committee (collectively Deptford), and Fireworks by Girone, Inc. (Girone), alleging that Brenden was injured as a result of a dangerous condition on public property for which all named defendants were responsible.
The facts underlying the claim essentially are uncontroverted and are distilled from the summary judgment documents and proceedings. Deptford owns and maintains Fasola Park, a recreational area containing basketball courts, baseball fields, a swimming pool, walking trail, and picnic area. The park is the setting for “Deptford Day,” an annual festival held in May. To celebrate Deptford’s tricentennial, the 1995 Deptford Day was scheduled to *204culminate in the largest fireworks display ever held in connection with that event.
In anticipation of Deptford Day, Deptford entered into a contract with Girone to conduct the fireworks display. Under the terms of the contract, Girone guaranteed a “Thorough Check Of The Area For Any Misfired Shells” on the night of the show. Deptford, in turn, assumed responsibility for the post-display clean-up: “CUSTOMER will also be RESPONSIBLE for all POST DISPLAY CLEAN-UP with respect to removal of debris and POLICING of area AT FIRST LIGHT following the exhibition.” Both the Fire Marshal and the President of Girone testified in depositions that if unspent shells were found, Girone was to be notified immediately to come and reclaim them; municipal officials were not to touch those items.
Following the display on the evening of May 20, Girone employees and Deptford’s Fire Marshal, using high-powered lamps provided by the Fire Department, conducted a post-display search. That search resulted in the recovery of at least six potentially live fireworks, all of which were turned over to Girone. The following morning, the Fire Marshal returned to the park to search for additional fireworks in accordance with the contract. After two hours, although he found debris, he found no more unexploded charges.
A week after the display, Brenden Wasniewski picked up fireworks and firework debris, both on and near the launch site at Fasola Park. He disposed of all but the largest firework, ultimately hiding it at home. On July 3, Brenden and a friend took the firework to a nearby wooded area, treated it with gasoline and repeatedly cut away the cardboard encasing the actual charge. Eventually the firework exploded in Brenden’s left hand, causing severe injuries. Subsequently, a private investigator hired by plaintiffs found an additional unspent firework in Fasola Park.
After extensive discovery, Deptford moved for summary judgment on a variety of issues. For purposes of this appeal, the pertinent claim is Deptford’s assertion that plaintiffs’ cause of *205action is precluded because it fails to satisfy the TCA requirement that the public property be in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury.
The trial court denied the motion, holding that the combination of the firework and the park constituted a consolidated dangerous condition that satisfied the TCA. According to the court, that dangerous condition was capable of creating a “continuing injury” that began when Brenden picked up the firework and ended when it exploded weeks later.
Plaintiffs settled their claims against Girone and the case against Deptford proceeded to a trial on all issues. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor. In so doing, it found as follows: (1) after the fireworks display, the unexploded firework created a dangerous condition at Fasola Park; (2) the dangerous condition was a proximate cause of Brenden’s accident; (3) the dangerous condition created a foreseeable risk of injury; (4) Deptford’s action or inaction was palpably unreasonable; (5) Girone was negligent; (6) Girone’s negligence was a proximate cause of Brenden’s injuries; (7) Brenden was negligent; and (8) his negligence was a proximate cause of his own injuries. The jury returned a $1,600,000 verdict for plaintiffs and apportioned liability to Deptford at 56%, Girone at 33%, and Brenden at 11%; that is, $896,000 against Deptford, $528,000 against Girone, with $176,000 allocated to Brenden’s comparative negligence.
Deptford appealed and a divided panel of the Appellate Division reversed the denial of the motion for summary judgment. The majority presumed for the purposes of its opinion that a dangerous condition existed at Fasola Park by virtue of the unexploded firework. The court went on to hold that Deptford did not “own” the firework and that when Brenden removed the firework from the park the public entity lost “control” of it. Concomitantly, the court concluded that the park was not in a “dangerous condition at the time of the injury” because Brenden’s removal of the firework rendered it safe at that critical point.
*206In reaching an opposite conclusion, Judge Wecker, dissenting, stated:
In my view, it is counterintuitive to conclude that by picking up the firework and taking it home with him (thereby curing the dangers to others), the very danger that the entity’s negligence created, Brenden has relieved the town of all responsibility for its own palpably unreasonable failure to clean up after the fireworks display.
The temporal separation between Brenden’s picking up the firework and his actually setting it off is what the majority finds fatal to his recovery. To the contrary, I view that separation in time as part of the logical, predictable chain of events prompted by the dangerous condition.
Another way to express my view of the first required element of the cause of action for the injury resulting from a dangerous condition of public property is to consider the word “injury” in this section more broadly than immediate physical injury and to include harmful “contact” or “exposure” that sets into motion a predictable, if not inevitable, resulting injury.
[Footnote omitted.]
Plaintiffs appeal as of right based on the dissent.1 B. 2:2-1(a)(2).
II
Plaintiffs argue that Deptford was the title owner of, or otherwise controlled, the errant firework by contractually assuming responsibility for the post-display cleanup; that the firework itself constituted the dangerous condition of public property, thus satisfying the “dangerous condition at the time of the injury” element of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2; and that, in any event, a literal reading of the TCA to bar its claim would be inconsistent with the legislative intent.
Deptford counters that the fireworks were not public property because its contract with Girone was for services only; that the assumption of some cleanup duties was insufficient to transfer control; that Brenden’s removal of the firework eliminated the *207possibility of public control; that the removal rendered the park safe at the time of Brenden’s injury; and, that the dissenting opinion below would not only chill a municipality’s willingness to undertake recreational activities for its citizens, but would run counter to the legislative intent underlying the TCA
III
In Willis v. Dept. of Conservation & Economic Development, 55 N.J. 534, 537-38, 264 A2d 34 (1970), this Court abrogated the blanket of sovereign immunity that had insulated the State completely from liability in tort. The Legislature thereafter responded by enacting the TCA Malloy v. State, 76 N.J. 515, 518-19, 388 A2d 622 (1978). Although acknowledging the “inherently unfair and inequitable results which occur in the strict application of the traditional doctrine of sovereign immunity,” Kahrar v. Borough of Wallington, 171 N.J. 3, 19, 791 A.2d 197 (2002) (Verniero, J., dissenting) (citing N.J.S.A. 59:1-2), the dominant theme of the TCA was to reestablish the immunity of all governmental bodies in New Jersey, subject only to the TCA’s specific liability provisions. Garrison v. Tp. of Middletown, 154 N.J. 282, 286, 712 A.2d 1101 (1998); Rochinsky v. State, Dep’t of Transp., 110 N.J. 399, 407-08,541 A2d 1029 (1988). Therefore, in balancing the liability and immunity provisions of the TCA, “immunity is the rule and liability the exception.” Posey ex rel. Posey v. Bordentown Sewerage Auth., 171 N.J. 172, 181-82, 793 A.2d 607 (2002) (citing N.J.S.A. 59:2-1a).
In this case, we are not presented with a conflict among the TCA’s liability provisions and any statutory or common-law immunity. See N.J.S.A 59:2-1b; Rochinsky, supra, 110 N.J. at 408-11, 541 A2d 1029; see also N.J.S.A. 59:2-1.1 to 2-11 (detailing several specific statutory immunities). Plainly, liability for a dangerous condition of public property is expressly provided for in the Act:
A public entity is liable for injury caused by a condition of its property if the plaintiff establishes that the property was in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury, that the injury was proximately caused by the dangerous condition, that *208the dangerous condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury which was incurred, and that either:
a. a negligent or wrongful act or omission of an employee of the public entity within the scope of his employment created the dangerous condition; or
b. a public entity had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition under section 59:4-3 a sufficient time prior to the injury to have taken measures to protect against the dangerous condition.
Nothing in this section shall be construed to impose liability upon a public entity for a dangerous condition of its public property if the action the entity took to protect against the condition or failure to take such action was not palpably unreasonable.
[N.J.S.A 59:4-2.]
N.J.S.A. 59:4-1, in turn, defines these terms as follows:
As used in this chapter:
a. "Dangerous condition” means a condition of property that creates a substantial risk of injury when such property is used with due care in a manner in which it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used.
b. “Protect against” includes repairing, remedying or correcting a dangerous condition, providing safeguards against a dangerous condition, or warning of a dangerous condition.
c. “Public property” means real or personal property owned or controlled by the public entity, but does not include easements, encroachments and other property that are located on the property of the public entity but are not owned or controlled by the public entity.
The 1972 Task Force Comments to N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 provide,2 in relevant part that:
This provision sets forth the conditions of liability under which a public entity may be held liable for the dangerous conditions of its property. This provision comports generally with the principles of liability established by the New Jersey courts for local public entities in their capacity as landowners. See B.W. King, Inc., v. West New York, 49 N.J. 318, 230 A2d 133 (1967); Miehl v. Darpino, 53 N.J. 49, 247 A2d 878 (1968); Hoy v. Capelli 48 N.J. 81, 222 A2d 649 (1966); Amelchenko v. Freehold Borough, 42 N.J. 541, 201 A2d 726 (1964); Henry Clay v. Jersey City, 74 N.J.Super. 490, 181 A2d 545 (Ch.Div.1962). It is anticipated that this section will be developed to the extent possible in accordance with common law principles of landowner liability.
*209[Attorney General’s Task Force on Sovereign Immunity, comment to N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 (1972), as found in, Margolis & Novak, Claims Against Public Entities, comment on N.J.S.A. 59:4-2,107 (Gann 2004).]
That is the backdrop for our inquiry.
IV
The Appellate Division determined that Deptford should have been granted summary judgment because plaintiffs failed to satisfy the temporal requirement in N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 that the public property be in a “dangerous condition at the time of the injury.” That is the sole issue before us.
A.
We turn first to plaintiffs’ contention that the firework was owned or controlled by Deptford, and that it constituted the public property that was in a dangerous condition at the time of Brenden’s injury. We agree with the Appellate Division that Deptford did not own the firework. As noted, Deptford’s contract with Girone was for services and not for goods. Indeed if all had gone as planned, all of the fireworks would have been destroyed in the show. Put another way, the contract was to eliminate the fireworks and not to transfer ownership to the town.
Recognizing, however, that all of the fireworks might not be disposed of during the display, the contract specifically provided that Girone would search for and retrieve “misfired shells” on the night of the show. Although Deptford undertook first-light cleanup of “debris,” along with a “policing” function, the testimony of the Fire Marshal and the president of Girone established that if any unspent shells were found at Fasola Park, Girone was to be called to the scene immediately to retrieve them. Under no circumstances were the municipal officials even to “pick up” the unexploded fireworks.
Clearly, then, there is no support for the notion that Deptford became the title owner of the errant firework within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 59:4-1. Moreover, even if Deptford could be said to *210have temporarily “controlled” the firework while it was present at Fasola Park, see Posey, supra, 171 N.J. at 183-85, 793 A.2d 607 (discussing State v. Schmidt, 110 N.J. 258, 267, 540 A.2d 1256 (1988)), Brenden’s removal of it from the park ended that control. In short, we agree with the Appellate Division majority that, at the moment of Brenden’s injury, Deptford neither owned nor controlled the firework, thus precluding the firework itself from being characterized as the dangerous public property.
We assume for this analysis, as did all of the courts below, that the dangerous condition of public property was the combination of the unexploded firework and the public park. The pivotal question is whether the language of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 that requires the public property to be in a “dangerous condition at the time of the injury” was satisfied when Brenden was injured on private property after removing the firework from the park.
B.
The Appellate Division’s negative answer to that question was fueled, in part, by the idea that plaintiffs’ cause of action is a “novel one” under the TCA that courts should “exercise restraint” in accepting. Attorney General’s Task Force on Sovereign Immunity, supra; e.g., Burg v. State, 147 N.J.Super. 316, 320, 371 A.2d 308 (App.Div.), certif. denied, 75 N.J. 11, 379 A.2d 242 (1977). Our research reveals that that conclusion is flawed. According to the Attorney General’s Task Force, N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 was meant to comport with common-law principles of landowner liability. Under the common-law, landowners were liable for injury resulting from dangerous conditions on their property. See Snyder v. I. Jay Realty Co., 30 N.J. 303, 311, 153 A.2d 1 (1959) (affirming historically based view of common-law duty owed by landowner); Vega by Muniz v. Piedilato, 154 N.J. 496, 502, 713 A.2d 442 (1998) (finding distinctions of personal status at common-law arise from culture deeply rooted in land); Hopkins v. Fox Lazo Realtors, 132 N.J. 426, 625 A2d 1110 (1993) (noting common-law tradition of landowner liability). Because of that, claims against public enti*211ties generally premised on common-law theories of landowner liability have not been considered novel. Bligen v. Jersey City Hous. Auth., 131 N.J. 124, 134-35, 619 A.2d 575 (1993) (imposing liability on housing authority that failed to use due care to safeguard its premises by clearing ice is not “novel”).
Nor are fireworks liability cases somehow distinct. At common law, private landowners holding fireworks displays were not immune from damages to children injured by unexploded shells after the exhibition. See Spenzierato v. Our Lady Monte Virgine Soc. of Mut. Benefit of E. Orange, N.J., 112 N.J.L. 93,169 A 831 (E. & A.1934); Doughty v. Atlantic City Bus. League, 80 A 473 (N.J. E. & A.1911); Sebeck v. Plattdeutsche Volkfest Verein, 64 N.J.L. 624, 46 A. 631 (E. & A.1900). Moreover, public entities sponsoring such fireworks displays have been held to the same standard as private landowners. See, e.g., Cook v. Gettysburg Borough, 39 Pa. D. & C. 4th 342, 346 (Pa.Com.Pl.1997) (finding cause of action based on infant plaintiffs injury on private property after removal of unexploded firework from public park fell within real property exception to Pennsylvania TCA); Lottes v. Pessina, 174 S.W.2d 893, 897 (Mo.Ct.App.1943) (holding removal of errant explosive by child from public park and subsequent injury on private property did not absolve city of liability); Kingsland v. Erie County Agr. Soc., 298 N.Y. 409, 84 N.E.2d 38, 46 (1949) (determining removal of fireworks from public park by child who was subsequently injured on private property readily foreseeable); see also T.C. Williams, Annotation, Liability for Injury by Explosive or The Like Found By, or Left Accessible To, a Child, 10 A.L.R.2d 22 (1950).
It may be that the Appellate Division viewed the circumstances of this case as somehow unusual because the injury took place off the public premises. However, the opposite is true. “[I]n the majority of the cases in our courts as well as the courts of other States involving explosives, the injured child has taken the explosive either to his home or to some other place than where he found it before being injured.” Lottes, supra, 174 S.W.2d at 896.
*212Further, our courts specifically have recognized that injuries occurring off dangerous public property are neither novel nor insulated from liability. In Saldana v. DiMedio, 275 N.J.Super. 488, 646 A2d 522 (App.Div.1994), a series of fires spread from an old building on public property causing damage to surrounding private property. The trial court granted summary judgment to the public entity. Id. at 494, 646 A.2d 522. The Appellate Division reversed and allowed the plaintiffs action to go forward. Id. at 506-07, 646 A.2d 522. In so doing, the court held that it was for the jury to determine whether dilapidated city buildings were a dangerous condition of public property that caused injury on private property even though the damage was also caused by unauthorized persons in the buildings who started the fires. Id. at 501-03, 646 A.2d 522. According to the Appellate Division, independent intervening acts did not absolve Camden from liability as a landowner for the condition of the property, which, together with the intervening acts, caused the damage. Id. at 503, 646 A.2d 522.
In Roe by M.J. v. N.J. Transit Rail Operations, Inc., 317 N.J.Super. 72, 721 A.2d 302 (App.Div.1998), certif. denied, 160 N.J. 89, 733 A.2d 494 (1999), a twelve year-old plaintiff took a shortcut to a swimming pool through a New Jersey Transit Train Station gate that was bolted into an open position. The gate opened onto park land under a highway overpass. The area was poorly lit, surrounded by thick vegetation and had a history, known to the authorities, of criminal assault. The New Jersey Transit route into the park was regularly taken by citizens. On the day in question, a man dragged the plaintiff off and raped her as she crossed through the gate. The trial court granted summary judgment to New Jersey Transit. The Appellate Division reversed, concluding that even though the injury took place in the park, a jury could determine that by bolting its gate open, New Jersey Transit invited the public “to traverse the perilous foot path under the 1-280 overpass, thereby substantially enhancing the public’s risk of harm.” Id. at 82, 721 A.2d 302. In sum, the court recognized that a dangerous condition on public property could underpin liability for injuries occurring off the site where the *213dangerous condition of public property “increased the risk that persons accepting the invitation [to walk through the gate] would encounter the dangers lurking beyond the gate.” Id. at 80, 721 A2d 302.
In Ayers v. Jackson Township, 106 N.J. 557, 565, 525 A2d 287 (1987), contamination in a landfill operated by a public entity leached into and poisoned an aquifer that, in turn, supplied the private wells of Jackson Township residents. In that case, the public entity was not insulated from liability although the injury complained of took place on private property some distance from the dangerous landfill.
Finally, in Posey, supra, we were faced with a case involving a culvert owned by a pubhc entity that led to a pond on private property in which a child drowned. Plaintiff sued on the theory that the unexpected drop-off in the private pond was caused by scouring or channeling created by the force of the water running through the culvert as part of the pubhc entity’s storm drainage system. The trial court granted summary judgment to the pubhc entity and the Appellate Division affirmed. We reversed, holding that a pubhc entity eañ be hable for injuries occurring on private property if they are caused by its “activities” on pubhc property. Id. at 184, 793 A.2d 607. More particularly, we held that the pubhc entity “treated” the private property as its own by using it as part of an integrated storm drainage system and thus was hable because it “controlled the property” within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 59:4-1. Ibid.
Although those cases are not identical to each other or to this ease, what can be distilled from them is that there is nothing novel or unusual about holding a pubhc entity liable for foreseeable injury caused by a dangerous condition on pubhc property even if the injury occurs off the pubhc premises. In short, we see no basis whatsoever for denominating plaintiffs’ claim as novel.
C.
In this case, however, we are faced with the specific language of the TCA that requires the pubhc property to be in a “dangerous *214condition at the time of the injury.” The Appellate Division held that Brenden’s removal of the firework essentially rendered Fasola Park “safe” at the time of the injury, thus confounding the statutory requirement. However, plaintiffs submitted evidence on the motion for summary judgment that, after Brenden’s accident, at least one more unexploded firework was found at Fasola Park. That evidence established, at least for the motion, that the park was still in a dangerous condition when Brenden was injured several weeks after the fireworks display. Therefore, applying summary judgment standards, (that is, according plaintiffs the benefit of all favorable evidence and inferences, see Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 142 N.J. 520, 523, 666 A2d 146 (1995)), the complaint should have survived Deptford’s motion. The case could end here.
It seems to us, however, that that happenstance is not a principled basis on which to decide the matter. Rather we need to address a broader question: Did the Legislature intend N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 to be interpreted in such a way that there can be public entity liability where a child comes upon a live firework in a public park and is injured when it explodes on the spot, but that there would be public entity immunity if the same child finds the live firework in the park and carries it across the street to private property where it explodes and injures him?
To answer that question, we return to the language of the TCA:
A public entity is liable for injury caused by a condition of its property if the plaintiff establishes that the property was in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury, that the injury was proximately caused by the dangerous condition, that the dangerous condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury which was incurred.
[N.J.S.A 59:4-2.]
The Legislative history of the Act is silent regarding the words at issue here and no New Jersey ease has ever addressed them. Our research further reveals that among the tort claims statutes of our sister jurisdictions, only two incorporate the “at the time of the injury” language, see Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.600 (West 2004); 2004 Cal. Legis. Serv. § 835, and that no court in either state has been *215called upon to interpret it. Thus, we are writing on a proverbial clean slate.
Plaintiffs argue, and the Appellate Division rejected, properly we think, the view that the “at the time of the injury” language is a restatement of proximate cause. As a perusal of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2 reveals, the statute separately enunciates dangerous condition, forseeability and proximate cause as elements of liability. Under plaintiffs’ view, the language at issue would be entirely duplicative. State v. Reynolds, 124 N.J. 559, 564, 592 A2d 194 (1991) (courts should avoid construction that will render part of a statute meaningless); 447 Assocs. v. Miranda, 115 N.J. 522, 530, 559 A.2d 1362 (1989) (same).
Nor can we countenance the suggestion that the intent of that language was that public entities are to be liable for injuries that occur only at the point in time and at the location of the dangerous condition. Our courts have rejected that interpretation consistently for over seventeen years, see Saldana, supra, Roe, supra, Posey, supra, and Ayers, supra, in favor of allowing recovery for injuries occurring on private property after the passage of time, so long as the injury was foreseeable and was proximately caused by the dangerous condition on public property.
In construing a statute it is to be assumed that the Legislature is thoroughly conversant with its own legislation and the judicial construction placed thereon. Barringer v. Miele, 6 N.J. 139, 144, 77 A2d 895 (1951). And the construction of a statute by the courts, supported by long acquiescence on the part of the Legislature or by continued use of the same language or failure to amend the statute, is evidence that such construction is in accord with the legislative intent. Egan v. Erie R. Co., 29 N.J. 243, 250, 148 A2d 830 (1959).
[Quaremba v. Allan, 67 N.J. 1, 14, 334 A2d 321 (1975).]
We therefore must assume that whatever initially brought about the insertion of the language at issue into the TCA, the Legislature is now satisfied that the ultimate injury sustained by a plaintiff need not occur at the time and location of the dangerous condition on public property for public entity liability to attach.
However, knowing what a statute does not mean is a far cry from the contrary, as Deptford’s failure to proffer a single *216rationale for the disputed language reveals. Deptford simply urges us to interpret the words literally as requiring the public property to “remain” in a dangerous condition at the time of injury, despite its inability to suggest any reason for such a requirement. However, it is well settled that statutory construction should not turn on literalisms, but on the objectives of the legislation and the common sense of the situation. Velazquez ex rel. Velazquez v. Jiminez, 172 N.J. 240, 257, 798 A2d 51 (2002) (quoting LaFage v. Jani, 166 N.J. 412, 481, 766 A.2d 1066 (2001)). On that backdrop and given the design of the TCA, we conclude that the literal and hyper-technical interpretation accorded the “dangerous condition at the time of the injury” language by the appellate majority cannot stand. That interpretation results in the conclusion that a child who finds a left-over firework in a public park and is injured on the spot has recourse against a careless public entity, but that a child who picks up the firework and takes it across the street to his home where he is killed or maimed, a likely more common scenario, is remediless. Not only is that unreasonable, it flies in the face of the overall purpose of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2, which is to hold a public entity liable for the dangerous condition of its property.
To be sure, this case is not a perfect fit with the words of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2. However, the same can be said of Saldana, Roe, Posey, and Ayers. Those cases teach us that our courts have been willing to approach the language in the TCA in accordance with Chief Justice Weintraub’s instructions to us that:
It is frequently difficult for a draftsman of legislation to anticipate all situations and to measure his words against them. Hence cases inevitably arise in which a literal application of the language used would lead to results incompatible with the legislative design. It is the proper function, indeed the obligation, of the judiciary to give effect to the obvious purpose of the Legislature, and to that end “words used may be expanded or limited according to the manifest reason and obvious purpose of the law. The spirit of the legislative direction prevails over the literal sense of the terms.” Alexander v. New Jersey Power Light Co., 21 N.J. 373, 378, 122 A.2d 339 (1956); Wright v. Vogt, 7 N.J. 1, 6, 80 A.2d 108 (1951); Glick v. Trustees of Free Public Library, 2 N.J. 579, 584, 67 A.2d 463 (1949).
[New Capitol Bar & Grill Corp. v. Div. of Employment Sec., 25 N.J. 155, 160, 135 A.2d 465 (1957).]
*217So informed, we interpret the requirement that public property be “dangerous at the time of the injury” as having two distinct parts. One is the element of dangerousness that is derived from common-law landowner liability principles. The other is the “at the time of the injury” notion. Although the former is obviously mandatory, the latter is not. Rather we view it as a reflection of what the Legislature expected the heartland of TCA cases to be. That expectation generally was correct. Most “dangerous condition” cases involve injuries occurring at the point of danger. People fall on ice and tumble over loose guardrails. Nevertheless, as this matter demonstrates, occasionally a dangerous condition on public property leads ineluctably and foreseeably to an injury on private property at a point at which the public property may no longer be dangerous. We believe that band of cases escaped the attention of the draftsman of N.J.S.A. 59:4-2, see National City Mortgage v. Smith, 324 N.J.Super. 509, 515, 735 A.2d 1221 (Ch. Div.1999), and that if faced with the question presented, the Legislature would not subscribe to the Appellate Division’s literal view.
We hold, therefore, that when a public entity creates or suffers a dangerous condition on public property that leads ineluctably and foreseeably to injury, it is not insulated from liability under N.J.S.A. 59:4-2, even if the ultimate injury takes place off the public site at a point at which the public premises is no longer dangerous.
V
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed.
A petition for certification on an unrelated surety issue remains pending.
The comments appended to the TCA by the Attorney General’s Task Force "have precedential weight and the value of legislative history.” Rochinsky, supra, 110 N.J. at 407 n. 4, 541 A.2d 1029.