LEE
v.
CITY OF UTICA
Docket No. 77-915.
Michigan Court of Appeals.
Decided June 5, 1978.LaBarge, Zatkoff & Dinning, P.C. (by Robert G. Lyons), for plaintiffs.
Joselyn, Rowe, Jamieson & Grinnan, P.C. (by Gary W. Carravas), for defendant.
Before: D.C. RILEY, P.J., and D.F. WALSH and A.C. MILLER,[*] JJ.
D.F. WALSH, J.
The relevant facts of this case are ably reported in our colleague's dissenting opinion and are adopted here. We find no error, however, in the trial court's entry of accelerated judgment, GCR 1963, 116.1, dismissing plaintiffs' suit against the City of Utica on the grounds of governmental immunity.
The act of a policeman in making an arrest is an activity "in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function". MCL 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107). The suggestion that it might not be was expressly rejected by the majority in Thomas v Department of State Highways, 398 Mich. 1, 13-14; 247 NW2d 530 (1976):
"Under the guise of `judicial refinement', the KAVANAGH/FITZGERALD *681 opinion has sought to impose rather novel standards for governmental immunity. For example, the opinion suggests that if a police commission plans a particular type of war on crime, that is a governmental function, but if a police officer under that plan performs the traditional police function of arresting a criminal, that is not a governmental function. This certainly does not in any way correspond to the meaning the Legislature intended." (Emphasis added, footnote omitted.)
Moreover we find the case before us to be distinguishable from Kriger v South Oakland County Mutual Aid Pact, 399 Mich. 835; 250 NW2d 67 (1977), relied upon in the dissenting opinion. In Kriger the police officer assailants were not involved in the governmental function of making an arrest but were engaged in an unprovoked assault.[1]
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. No costs, a public question.
A.C. MILLER, J., concurred.
D.C. RILEY, P.J. (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent.
In this matter, plaintiffs appeal an adverse accelerated judgment, GCR 1963, 116.1, which dismissed their suit against defendant City of Utica *682 on grounds of governmental immunity. MCL 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107).
The complaint alleges that on February 22, 1976, defendant Poynter,[1] a sergeant in the Utica Police Department, while wearing his uniform, driving a marked police car and acting under color of authority, stopped a 1975 Vega driven by plaintiff Tung Gan Lee. According to the complaint, defendant Poynter then assaulted plaintiffs without justification, uttered racial epithets and engaged in other acts of brutality and harrassment against plaintiffs. In successive counts, the complaint also alleges false arrest; false imprisonment; malicious prosecution; violations of plaintiffs' civil rights under 42 USC 1983 and US Const, Am XIV; and "the tort of insult and outrage".
In Thomas v Department of State Highways, 398 Mich. 1; 247 NW2d 530 (1976), the Supreme Court held:
"The key to determining the applicability of the immunity defense is in ascertaining whether or not the particular case is one `wherein the * * * agency is engaged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function'.
* * *
"`Governmental function' is a term of art which has been used by the courts of this state to describe those activities of government which due to their public nature should not give rise to liability at common law. Through many years of application, the label of governmental function has been attached to a number of governmental activities.
* * *
"[T]he Legislature, in choosing the precise terminology of `governmental function' to describe the limits of governmental immunity, intended that activities described *683 as governmental functions at common law at the time of enactment of the new legislation would enjoy statutory immunity from tort liability.
* * *
"Under the present statutory scheme the judiciary, looking to past precedents (which in many cases are less than clear), must decide on a case-by-case basis which activities may be classified as governmental functions and thus entitled to immunity." Id. at 9, 10, 13. (Emphasis in original.)
Until recently, Tzatzken v Detroit, 226 Mich. 603, 607-608; 198 N.W. 214 (1924), epitomized the common law rule in Michigan:
"While the courts have encountered difficulties in determining in particular instances whether or not certain officials, employees and agents of municipalities are in the discharge of governmental functions and therefore carry with them the immunity from liability by the municipality for their torts, as to policemen the courts have found little difficulty in putting them in the category of public officers (Blynn v City of Pontiac, 185 Mich. 35 [151 N.W. 681 (1915)]), and the discharge of their duties the discharge of governmental functions. They do not act for the municipality in its proprietary character but act for the State in its sovereign capacity. Although they may be personally liable for their unlawful acts, the municipality of which they are officers is not. The municipality in so far as it performs governmental functions acts in a sovereign capacity and carries with it, in the absence of statute to the contrary, the immunity of the sovereign."
See also, Hirych v State Fair Commission, 376 Mich. 384; 136 NW2d 910 (1965), and McPherson v Fitzpatrick, 63 Mich. App. 461; 234 NW2d 566 (1975).
The continuing validity of the Tzatzken line of decisions has been called into question, however, *684 by a fresh, but terse,[2] decision of the Supreme Court. See Kriger v South Oakland County Mutual Aid Pact, 399 Mich. 835; 250 NW2d 67 (1977).
In Kriger, the facts (as reported by the Court of Appeals) were these:
"On August 25, 1970, a disturbance took place at Memorial Park in Royal Oak, Michigan. Police were ordered to the scene to restore order. Plaintiff, a 17-year-old amateur photographer, had been observing the altercation from a vantage point across the street. Suddenly and without provocation, three police officers assaulted and beat him, causing severe and lasting injuries. The assailants were not attempting to arrest plaintiff. The incident was recorded by newspaper photographers and TV cameramen and later published and broadcast. The officers involved could not be identified.
"Plaintiff sued the South Oakland County Mutual Aid Pact, the 18 member cities of the Pact, and 3 unidentified police officers. His complaint sounded in tort for assault and battery, libel and slander, and the negligence of the Mutual Aid Pact and the 18 defendant cities in training police officers. Plaintiff sought compensatory damages and injunctive relief." 49 Mich. App. 7, 9; 211 NW2d 228 (1973).
The City of Berkley then requested and obtained a summary judgment, GCR 1963, 117.2(1), dismissing it as a defendant on the basis of governmental *685 immunity. The Court of Appeals, addressing various constitutional objections to the immunity statute, affirmed.
In lieu of granting leave to appeal, the Supreme Court in an order peremptorily reversed the summary judgment, observing:
"The complaint states a claim for which relief may be granted because it pleads facts which, if proved, demonstrate that the activity complained of is not activity `in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function' under MCLA 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107), and, therefore, `does not fall within the ambit of immunity established by the Legislature in 1970 PA 155.' McCann v Michigan, 398 Mich. 65, 77 [247 NW2d 521] (1976)." 399 Mich. at 835.
While I can fathom distinctions between the facts in Kriger and those in the case at bar, none compels or counsels a different result. If the governmental immunity statute affords no protection to a municipality for the intentional torts of police officers committed while quelling a disturbance, Kriger, supra, then the statute can offer no greater succor to the instant municipality for Sergeant Poynter's allegedly intentional torts stemming from a traffic stop.[3]
Accordingly, I would reverse the judgment below and remand the matter for trial.
NOTES
[*] Circuit judge, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment.
[1] In the Court of Appeals opinion in Kriger v South Oakland County Mutual Aid Pact, 49 Mich. App. 7, 9; 211 NW2d 228 (1973) the facts were stated to be as follows:
"On August 25, 1970, a disturbance took place at Memorial Park in Royal Oak, Michigan. Police were ordered to the scene to restore order. Plaintiff, a 17-year-old amateur photographer, had been observing the altercation from a vantage point across the street. Suddenly and without provocation, three police officers assaulted and beat him, causing severe and lasting injuries. The assailants were not attempting to arrest plaintiff. The incident was recorded by newspaper photographers and TV cameramen and later published and broadcast. The officers involved could not be identified." (Emphasis added.)
[1] Defendant Poynter is not a party to this appeal.
[2] I would offer an observation on the Supreme Court's frequently recurring practice of issuing peremptory orders in lieu of granting leave.
Given the ever-increasing number of litigants filing applications for leave, it is understandable that the Court might be inclined to act with dispatch in a case it believes has been wrongly decided and thus, by issuing a peremptory order, to avoid the problem of justice delayed being justice denied. But to act with speed can only be countenanced in situations where the Supreme Court nonetheless satisfies its duty of concise statement, Const 1963, art VI, § 6, and its "general obligation to explain and reconcile the law for bench, bar and populace". People v Clemons, 74 Mich. App. 448, 461 n 1; 253 NW2d 795 (1977) (D.C. RILEY, J., concurring). Otherwise, justice unexplained is surely justice denied. See, e.g., Pierce v Riley, 81 Mich. App. 39; 264 NW2d 110 (1977).
[3] Kriger v South Oakland County Mutual Aid Pact, 399 Mich. 835; 250 NW2d 67 (1977), rather than being an aberrant decision, stands as a clear departure from prior law. See Mattox v City of Detroit, 399 Mich. 832; 250 NW2d 70 (1977), and Oglesby v Walker, 399 Mich. 832; 250 NW2d 69 (1977), where the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, reversed unpublished decisions of the Court of Appeals which had affirmed summary judgments dismissing the City of Detroit on grounds of governmental immunity. In Mattox, plaintiff claimed that a municipal police officer had intentionally and maliciously shot him without provocation. Likewise, in Oglesby, plaintiff, by her next friend, alleged that a city officer had arrested her and, prior to taking her to the police station, took her to an apartment where he forced her to engage in sodomy and fellatio.