If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
RICHARD KEVIN STEIGER, UNPUBLISHED
November 14, 2019
Plaintiff-Appellee,
V No. 345677
Alpena Circuit Court
ROBERT HAHN, MICHAEL A. CALDWELL, LC No. 16-007474-CZ
PATRICK BOYD, DELMAR PUTNAM, KEN
MILLS, JR., and ALAN BURKE,
Defendants-Appellants
and
BRADLEY SZATKOWSKI,
Defendant.
Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and GADOLA and REDFORD, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendants-appellants, six officers and officials of the Michigan State Police (MSP),
appeal as of right the trial court’s order denying their motion for summary disposition on
grounds of governmental immunity. 1 We reverse.
I. FACTS
This case arises from an unsuccessful attempt to prosecute plaintiff for fraudulently
obtaining controlled substances. See MCL 333.7407(1)(c). Plaintiff earlier filed an action in
1
The trial court dismissed the only defendant who was not affiliated with the MSP, Bradley
Szatkowski, who is not participating in this appeal.
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federal court against the police officers involved in the investigation, setting forth claims under
42 USC 1983 of unreasonable seizure without probable cause, malicious prosecution, retaliation
for exercising First Amendment rights, and violation of Fourteenth Amendment due process,
along with a state-law claim of gross negligence. The federal court granted summary judgment
to defendants. In its opinion and order granting summary judgment, the federal court
summarized the underlying facts as follows:
Plaintiff Richard Steiger [at the relevant time was] the County Prosecutor
for Presque Isle County. . . . Defendant Michael A. Caldwell is Inspector-
Assistant Commander of the Seventh District for the Michigan State Police
(MSP). Defendant Patrick Boyd is a supervisor with the Michigan State Police
who is assigned to the Seventh District Task Force. Defendant Delmer Putnam is
a retired Michigan State Police detective-lieutenant. In late 2011 and early 2012,
Putnam was assigned to and commanded the Huron Area Narcotics Team
(HUNT). Defendant Ken Mills, Jr., is a detective-lieutenant assigned to Straights
Area Narcotics Enforcement (SANE). Defendant Bradley Szatkowski is a police
officer employed by the Presque Isle Sheriff’s Department. Defendant Alan
Burke retired from the Michigan State Police in February 2012. In late 2011 and
early 2012, Burke was a trooper assigned to the Alpena MSP post.
A.
Steiger’s allegations regarding his history of medical issues and pain
management are uncontested. Steiger underwent a nasal surgery in 1993. That
surgery was mishandled and resulted in Steiger facing “continuous pain and
discomfort” as well as chronic “sinusitis and migraine headaches.” On September
11, 2011, Steiger underwent outpatient surgery . . . for treatment of “a substantial
gluteal [abscess].” Steiger was prescribed pain relievers for the pain resulting
from the surgery.
Because Steiger was undergoing medical treatment for the [abscess], he
asked his ex-wife, Kirah Steiger, to take care of their children for several days
while he recovered. Kirah agreed and took the children to Steiger’s home so they
could collect their belongings. Because Ms. Steiger was suspicious that Steiger
was abusing pain medication . . . she searched Steiger’s home for medication.
Ms. Steiger discovered two bottles of medication and a bottle that contained white
powder. . . .
After the search, Ms. Steiger contacted HUNT, a multi-jurisdictional task
force that investigated narcotics offenses in the area and operates under MSP
oversight. . . . Ms. Steiger contacted Defendant Burke, who gave her the contact
information for Detective Hahn. Ms. Steiger then met with Hahn [and] gave
Hahn the substance she had taken from Steiger’s home. Ms. Steiger informed
Hahn that she believed the substance was ground up Percocet and that Steiger was
getting prescriptions for narcotic pain medication from multiple doctors. Hahn
indicated he would run a [Michigan Automated Prescription System (MAPS)]
report and wondered whether Steiger was doctor shopping. Ms. Steiger
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responded: “He is, yeah. He is doctor shopping. It’s going to be Kiel and
Coombs.” Hahn then replied . . . “[Y]ou can have a problem there, particularly if
you are . . . playing them off of each other, but typically a good doctor shopping
case would require at least three, four, maybe five . . . .” Hahn kept the bottle of
Percocet and initiated a criminal investigation into Steiger’s prescription drug use.
Ms. Steiger agreed to become a confidential informant.
B.
On September 20, 2011, Detective Szatkowski ran a MAPS report at
Hahn’s direction. Hahn summarized the report:
The M.A.P.S. report revealed that in the year 2010, Steiger was
issued a total of 1,840 units of Oxycodone/Oxycontine of varying
milligram strengths and consistencies, as well as 2,075 units of
Hydrocone of varying milligram strengths and consistencies. In
the year 2011, the amounts were 1,868 units of
Oxycodone/Oxycontine and 650 units of Hydrocone. Based upon
the enormous amounts of Hydrocone and Oxycodone/Oxycontine
being prescribed to Steiger in the last two years, it is unlikely that
the prescribing physicians involved in Steiger’s medical treatment
are aware of one-another. Or, at the very least, are aware that the
others are prescribing controlled substances to him in addition to
that which they are prescribing.
Hahn further highlighted seven specific periods of time where Steiger obtained
multiple prescriptions for similar or identical drugs within a short period of time
and from different doctors.
On September 26, 2011, HUNT turned over the investigation to SANE,
another multijurisdictional narcotics task force that typically conducts
investigations in nearby counties. The investigation was transferred because
Steiger was a prosecuting attorney in one of the counties covered by HUNT and
because Steiger was on HUNT’s board of directors. Detective Mills led the
investigation for SANE. At Mill’s request, HUNT officers assisted SANE in the
investigation by executing search warrants and interviewing witnesses.
On October 3, 2011, Assistant Attorney General Richard Cunningham
sent a letter to Dr. Kirk C. Mills at Detroit Receiving Hospital which included
Steiger’s MAPS report. . . . Cunningham requested that Dr. Mills provide an
“expert medical opinion” on whether “there is probable cause to believe that a
person’s medical records will provide evidence that a crime has occurred.” Mr.
Cunningham explained that the investigators were working under the theory that
if there were no notes on the medical records indicating that Steiger informed his
doctors he was receiving other prescriptions, that “would be evidence that the
patient never told the provider about any other prescriptions.” Mr. Cunningham
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asked Dr. Mills whether it was “likely that any physician would have prescribed
the controlled substances prescribed by other physicians so close in time.”
On October 22, 2011, Dr. Mills reported . . . that Steiger’s “pattern of
obtaining pain medication from two different physicians and using multiple
pharmacies to get them filled it [sic] is completely consistent with drug abuse,
misuse, or diversion.” Further, Dr. Mills explained that Steiger’s “pattern of
obtaining medications earlier than predicted based on the quantity described is
consistent with drug misuse, abuse, and/or diversion.” Dr. Mills asserted that
Steiger should have had dozens, if not hundreds, of unused pain tablets left over
because of the frequency with which his medication was changed, and that
“[l]egitimate chronic pain patients typically inform their prescribing physician
that they still have tablets left over.” Finally, Dr. Mills explained that both of
Steiger’s doctors “over prescribed pain medication” and that it was likely that
neither checked Steiger’s MAPS records. Dr. Mills also explained that there
“were obvious oversights by some of the pharmacies utilized” by Steiger. On
January 24, 2012, Dr. Mills sent a notarized letter to Mr. Cunningham attesting
that his medical expert opinion in the October 22, 2011, letter was entirely the
result of Dr. Mills’s “own independent study and analysis.”
C.
Investigators then prepared search warrants for eleven medical facilities
and pharmacies, including the medical offices of Dr. Robert Coombs and Dr.
Jeffrey Kiel, the two doctors who prescribed almost all of Steiger’s pain
medication.
On October 25, 2011, Mills and Detective Rundstrom interviewed Dr.
Kiel. Dr. Kiel informed the officers that Steiger had informed him he was
receiving Oxycontine prescriptions from another doctor. According to Dr. Kiel,
he recommended that Steiger begin treatment at a pain clinic, which resulted in
Steiger’s relationship with Dr. Coombs. However, Dr. Kiel did not know that
Steiger was receiving Oxycodone and Percocet from Dr. Coombs. Dr. Kiel had
not run a MAPS for Steiger. Although Dr. Kiel was surprised that Steiger was
receiving so much medication from Dr. Coombs, Dr. Kiel admitted that he likely
did not document whether Steiger misrepresented his prescriptions from Dr.
Coombs. However, Dr. Kiel did suggest that Steiger “probably [has] got a
problem and it looks like it’s getting the better of him.”
While Dr. Kiel was interviewed, Hahn and Putnam simultaneously
questioned Dr. Coombs. When asked whether he was aware that Steiger was
seeing other doctors, Dr. Coombs indicated he was not [and] explained that if he
had learned that Steiger was getting prescriptions from other physicians, he would
have discharged Steiger from his practice. Dr. Coombs indicated that all of his
patients sign a contract . . . in which they promise not to “attempt to obtain any
controlled medicines . . . from any other doctor.” The officers asked whether Dr.
Coombs had ever run a MAPS on Steiger, and Dr. Coombs indicated that his
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office had not, likely because Steiger was a prosecuting attorney. After the
officers showed him Steiger’s MAPS report, Dr. Coombs indicated that the
behavior on the report would typically be grounds for discharging a patient from
the practice and that he would no longer provide prescriptions for Steiger. Dr.
Coombs further explained that “I don’t even think I’ve had people I have kicked
out that have been this bad,” [but] did admit that he likely did not ask Steiger
whether he was receiving narcotics from other doctors. . . .
Also on October 25, 2011, Mills and Detective Rundstrom interviewed
Steiger at his home. Steiger was shocked by the allegations and fiercely disputed
the assertion that he was doctor shopping or defrauding his doctors. He asserted
that Dr. Kiel was his primary care physician, that Dr. Coombs was his pain care
physician, and that both were aware of what the other was prescribing. He firmly
denied addiction.
Finally, Mills, Putnam, Caldwell, Presque Isle County Sheriff Paschke,
and a Presque Isle County assistant prosecutor met on October 25, 2011, to
discuss the status of the investigation. Mills indicated to the group that he thought
the case against Steiger was weak[, but] later testified that the case became
stronger after medical records were obtained and Steiger’s doctors were further
interviewed.
On October 31, 2011, Dr. Coombs was interviewed again by Hahn. The
two discussed Dr. Coombs[’] medical records relating to Steiger’s treatment [and]
agreed that the records indicated that Steiger had disclosed at least some of the
medication he was receiving from Dr. Kiel. The two [also] agreed that, although
Steiger had disclosed that Dr. Kiel was prescribing Narco to him, he did not
disclose Dr. Kiel’s Percocet prescriptions. Dr. Coombs asserted that he had told
Steiger to stop taking some of the pain medication . . . from Dr. Kiel [and] further
told Steiger to stop getting Norco and Percocet . . . from Dr. Kiel. Dr. Coombs
never expressly authorized Steiger to obtain duplicate prescriptions of pain
medication from Dr. Kiel. In fact, Dr. Coombs indicated that if he had realized
Steiger was getting similar medication from two sources, he would have quickly
put a stop to it. Finally, Dr. Coombs recounts a conversation he had with Steiger
after the allegations of fraud arose. In that conversation, Steiger told Dr. Coombs
that he had made full disclosure. Dr. Coombs responded by saying: “ ‘It’s not full
disclosure when you get a medication from me and then you go to another doctor
and you get the identical medication.’ ”
On November 14, 2011, Mills interviewed Physician’s Assistant Jeffery
Kwiatkowski, who prescribed twenty Percocet pills to Steiger during an
emergency room visit in September 2011. Kwiatkowski indicated that he had not
run a MAPS report for Steiger, but believed that doing so was unnecessary
because Steiger was a prosecuting attorney and had reasons for his pain
complaints. Kwiatkowski further indicated that Steiger disclosed that he was
receiving pain medication from other doctors, but did not disclose the amounts.
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Kwiatkowski said he likely would not have prescribed additional Percocet if he
knew the amount of pills Steiger had already been prescribed.
Also on November 14, 2011, Mills interviewed Dr. Kiel for a second time.
Dr. Kiel told Mills that Steiger “did misrepresent himself” on at least one
occasion because “there is no way [Dr. Kiel] would have given” additional
medication so soon after Steiger received similar medication from Dr. Coombs.
According to Dr. Kiel, Steiger would consistently ask for refills of his
prescriptions early. Further, Dr. Kiel asserted that, even though Steiger had
disclosed that he was getting prescriptions from another doctor, Steiger was
“being deceptive.” Steiger told Dr. Kiel that Dr. Coombs had authorized Dr. Kiel
to prescribe pain medication for Steiger’s migraines. Dr. Kiel accepted Steiger’s
representation and thus prescribed pain medication without talking independently
with Dr. Coombs. . . .
D.
On December 16, 2011, Putnam and Mills met with members of the
Attorney General’s office, including Richard Cunningham. . . . Mr. Cunningham
told the investigators that the Attorney General’s office would review the findings
and determine whether to file charges. On December 18, 2011, Mr. Cunningham
told Mills that Steiger would be charged with one count of obtaining prescription
narcotics by fraud. On December 19, 2011, Mills sent an email to Mr.
Cunningham requesting an arrest warrant for Steiger. Daryl Vizina, the [then]
elected prosecutor for Cheboygan County, asserts that Mills told him after
Steiger’s arrest that Mills was surprised the charges had been brought because it
was not “a great case.” On December 21, 2011, Hahn sent a letter to Mr.
Cunningham which . . . stated that “the sensitive nature of this investigation is
quite the departure from our normal routine here in North Eastern Michigan, and
when made public, will have a negative impact on the public’s faith in Mr.
Steiger’s office. I believe that this impact will be short-lived and that the citizens
of Presque Isle County will one day . . . be thankful that Mr. Steiger’s actions
were uncovered.”
On January 24, 2012, and February 2, 2012, a preliminary examination
was conducted in the 88th District Court. Judge Theodore Johnson asserted that
although Steiger had obtained a tremendous amount of pills over the period of
time in question, he was not charged with prescription drug abuse. Rather, he was
charged with fraudulently obtaining prescriptions. Judge Johnson concluded that
Mr. Steiger did not make misrepresentations to his physicians. Rather, every time
Steiger saw Dr. Coombs, he filled out a form indicating he was receiving
medication from another doctor. Likewise, Dr. Kiel knew that Dr. Coombs was
prescribing pain medication. Accordingly, Judge Johnson found that the
government had not shown probable cause of fraud sufficient to bind the case
over for trial.
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The state appealed the district court’s decision. Circuit Judge Michael G.
Mack denied the prosecution’s appeal. He reasoned that fraud can be both actual
and constructive. Accordingly, the question was whether Steiger had shielded
himself from criminal liability by disclosing his treatment regimen. Judge Mack
admitted that there was ambiguity as to whether a constructive fraud theory would
justify binding over the matter for trial, but found that, under an abuse of
discretion standard, there was no reason to “second-guess the determination of the
district court.” In fact, Judge Mack reasoned that “to put him in criminal jeopardy
would be to effectively hold him criminally accountable for his physician’s
negligent review of his medical records.” He further found that the conclusory
statements by Dr. Coombs and Dr. Kiel were self-serving.[2]
E.
Steiger contends that the case was investigated and prosecution was
brought in this case because he had criticized HUNT officers, including Caldwell,
Hahn, Boyd, and Putnam, for engaging in unlawful actions. Specifically, Steiger
believes that Caldwell retaliated against Steiger because Steiger publically alleged
that Caldwell improperly pressured investigators to close an investigation into
whether Caldwell’s son was guilty of home invasion and criminal sexual conduct.
An internal affairs investigation . . . concluded that the case was properly closed
because none of the victims wanted to pursue charges. Steiger has also criticized
Hahn because, in Steiger’s opinion, HUNT officers were inappropriately
intimidating suspects, releasing deceptive press releases, and requesting Steiger to
prosecute blatantly unconstitutional cases. [Steiger v Hahn, Case No. 15-CV-
12627 (ED Mich, 2016), pp 1-11 (record citations and footnote omitted; some
alterations in original), aff’d 718 F Appx 386 (CA 6, 2018).
Upon the conclusion of the criminal proceedings against him, plaintiff commenced an
action against the involved police officers, including the instant defendants, in the federal district
court. The MSP defendants in that case—the same six defendants here—moved for summary
judgment. The court granted the motion, concluding that “[e]ven construing the facts in a light
most favorable to [plaintiff], a reasonable officer could have concluded that probable cause
existed.” Id. at 15. The court noted that the decision against binding plaintiff over for trial was
not dispositive because “the existence of probable cause must be determined without the benefit
of hindsight.” Id. The court dismissed all of plaintiff’s federal claims with prejudice, but
declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state-law claim of gross negligence and
so dismissed that claim without prejudice. Id. at 21-22.
In affirming the district court’s decision, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals noted that
“qualified immunity protects ‘all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the
2
This Court denied leave “for lack of merit in the grounds presented.” People v Steiger,
unpublished order of the Court of Appeals entered March 5, 2013 (Docket No. 310680).
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law,’ ” and concluded that, “[t]hough evidence supporting fraud might have been murky due to
ambiguity in the doctors’ testimony, in the absence of evidence of deliberate or reckless
falsehoods, these officers could rely on the AG’s Office’s independent judgment that probable
cause existed to charge Steiger.” Steiger, 718 F Appx 386, 391 (CA 6, 2018), quoting Malley v
Briggs, 475 US 335, 341; 106 S Ct 1092; 89 L Ed 2d 271 (1986). The federal appellate court
also approved of the lower court’s decision not to exercise jurisdiction over the state-law gross
negligence claim. Steiger, 718 F Appx at 392.
After the federal district court dismissed plaintiff’s state-law claim, plaintiff brought this
gross negligence action in the Alpena Circuit Court. Defendants filed a motion for summary
disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7) (“prior judgment, immunity granted by law”), (C)(8) (failure
to state a claim), and (C)(10) (failure to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material
fact). The trial court entered a stipulated order staying proceedings in deference to the appeal of
the federal case then pending in the Sixth Circuit.
On January 3, 2018, the Sixth Circuit affirmed the decision of the district court in its
entirety. Steiger, 718 F Appx 386. Defendants then filed a supplemental brief in this case,
urging that plaintiff be “bound by [the federal court’s] preclusive determination of the
undisputed facts and the underlying legal issues.”
The trial court responded with an order directing the parties to file discovery addressing
whether defendants were in possession of any exculpatory evidence concerning plaintiff, and if
so, what such evidence, if any, was provided to the Attorney General. Plaintiff responded by
referring to medical records involving, and interviews with, his treating physicians, statements of
defendant Mills to the effect that he did not see merit in the criminal allegations against plaintiff,
and the report of the doctor engaged by the Attorney General, Kirk Mills, in which Dr. Mills
stated that there was evidence of drug abuse but did not specifically opine that plaintiff had
engaged in fraudulent conduct. The trial court thereafter denied defendants’ motion for summary
disposition without prejudice “pending further discovery on the specific issues listed in this
Court’s August 21, 2018 order.” Defendants now appeal.
II. GROSS NEGLIGENCE
Defendants argue that the trial court should have granted their motion for summary
disposition because plaintiff failed to set forth an actionable claim of gross negligence, and
instead tried to revive his failed claims of intentional misconduct by recasting them under a
gross-negligence rubric. We agree.
A trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition is reviewed de novo as a
question of law. Ardt v Titan Ins Co, 233 Mich App 685, 688; 593 NW2d 215 (1999).
Defendants moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7), (8), and (10). A motion
for summary disposition based on governmental immunity under MCR 2.116(C)(7) is decided by
examining all documentary evidence submitted by the parties, accepting all well-pleaded
allegations as true, and construing all evidence and pleadings in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party. Tarlea v Crabtree, 263 Mich App 80, 87; 687 NW2d 333 (2004). When
reviewing an order of summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), this Court examines all
documentary evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party to determine whether
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there exists a genuine issue of material fact. Ardt, 233 Mich App at 688. In reviewing a (C)(8)
motion, this Court accepts as true all factual allegations supporting the claim “to determine
whether the claim is so clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development
could establish the claim and justify recovery.” Smith v Stolberg, 231 Mich App 256, 258; 586
NW2d 103 (1998).
MCL 691.1407(2) provides that every “officer and employee of a governmental
agency . . . shall be immune from tort liability for injuries to persons . . . caused by the officer . . .
while in the course of employment or service,” if that officer “is acting or reasonably believes he
or she is acting within the scope of his or her authority,” provided that the officer’s conduct does
not constitute “gross negligence that is the proximate cause of the injury or damage.” MCL
691.1407(8)(a) defines “gross negligence” as “conduct so reckless as to demonstrate a
substantial lack of concern for whether an injury results.”
Searching plaintiff’s complaint for factual allegations of negligence (gross or otherwise)
as opposed to intentional misconduct brings little to light.3 Plaintiff’s gross negligence count
asserted generally that defendants “had a duty to perform their employment activities so as not to
endanger or cause harm to Plaintiff,” that defendants “breached their duty with deliberate
indifference and gross negligence and without regard to Plaintiff’s rights and welfare, which
caused injuries and damages to Plaintiff,” and that defendants “knew or should have known that
by breaching these duties, harm would come to Plaintiff.” But the general factual allegations
incorporated by reference into the gross negligence count describe little conduct by defendants
that could be characterized as negligent. Instead, several of the allegations tend to establish that
defendants had reason to feel hostility toward plaintiff, and that defendants acted deliberately,
prompted by their pernicious motives.
Plaintiff correctly concedes on appeal that attempts to litigate claims involving elements
of intentional torts under the rubric of gross negligence are highly disfavored. See VanVorous v
Burmeister, 262 Mich App 467, 483; 687 NW2d 132 (2004) (“this Court has rejected attempts to
transform claims involving elements of intentional torts into claims of gross negligence”); Sudul
v Hamtramck, 221 Mich App 455, 459; 562 NW2d 478 (1997) (the trial court erred by
instructing a jury that the municipal defendants “could be liable for assault and battery by an act
of gross negligence”).
Malicious prosecution is an intentional tort. See Odom v Wayne Co, 482 Mich 459, 464-
465; 760 NW2d 217 (2008); Radu v Herndon & Herndon Investigations, Inc, 302 Mich App
3
While plaintiff points out that the district court in the original state court proceedings held that
there was not probable cause to bind plaintiff over on the brought charge, he advisedly stops
short of asserting that this precludes a determination that defendants unreasonably investigated
plaintiff, or lacked probable cause to arrest him, in the first instance. As the federal district court
noted, the actions of investigating officers should not be viewed with the benefit of hindsight.
Steiger, Case No. 15-CV-12627, p 14, citing Michigan v DeFillippo, 443 US 31, 36; 99 S Ct
2627; 61 L Ed 2d 343 (1979).
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363, 372; 838 NW2d 720 (2013).4 Defendants contend that “[t]he four corners of the complaint
do not paint a picture that some grave mistake was made or that anything was done with a
reckless disregard for whether anyone would be harmed. . . . The gravamen of the complaint is
that law enforcement specifically targeted [plaintiff].” We must agree that plaintiff has
overwhelmingly alleged that defendants conspired against him because of personal animosities.
Indeed, plaintiff’s final assertion in his complaint is that defendants’ “actions were so egregious
and so outrageous” as to entitle plaintiff to exemplary damages. The characterizations
“egregious” and “outrageous” comport with allegations of intentional misconduct far better than
with allegations of even gross negligence.
Plaintiff argues that a claim relating to police misconduct may alternatively be
maintained under the rubric of gross negligence where the challenged conduct does not involve
tortious bodily contact. For this proposition, plaintiff relies on Bell v Porter, 739 F Supp 2d
1005 (WD Mich, 2010), where the plaintiff alleged that a Lansing police officer pushed her off a
bus and caused her to fall, and claimed excessive force, assault and battery, and gross negligence
against the officer; the officer maintained that he was merely trying to create space between them
and did not intend to cause the plaintiff to lose her balance. Id. at 1010-1015. The federal
district court noted that the gross negligence claim was predicated on the same conduct that gave
rise to the allegations of excessive force and assault and battery, but concluded that gross
negligence was a valid alternative because the plaintiff’s claim that the offending officer failed to
treat her with respect and dignity, to avoid foreseeable injury to her, and to “avoid conduct or a
failure to act that is so reckless that it demonstrates a substantial lack of concern for whether an
injury will result,” did not “rely on an intentional, offensive touching.” Id. at 1015,
distinguishing VanVorous, 262 Mich App 467.
Though this Court is not bound by federal decisions construing Michigan law, see Allen v
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp, 225 Mich App 397, 402; 571 NW2d 530 (1997), even if we
were to treat Bell as authoritative, it does not rehabilitate plaintiff’s gross negligence claim. In
Bell, the federal district court observed that the plaintiff’s factual account suggested intentional
physical aggression against her, while the defendant police officer’s account revealed, at worst,
some form of negligence. In contrast, plaintiff identifies no factual issue whose resolution might
reveal gross negligence instead of intentional misconduct. Further, the federal court’s concern
over whether offensive physical contact took place is better understood as acknowledging the
competing factual accounts before it than as recognizing the existence of offensive physical
contact as dispositive whether an intentional tort may be characterized as gross negligence.5
4
We recognize that this Court has acknowledged “nonintentional negligent prosecution”
resulting from a police officer’s selection of facts to include in an incident report, but note that,
in doing so, this Court held that such allegations sounded in negligence thus coming under
governmental tort immunity, with no suggestion that such an exercise of discretion might ever
constitute gross negligence. King v Arbic, 159 Mich App 452, 463; 406 NW2d 852 (1987).
5
Plaintiff makes several other assertions that we believe should be briefly addressed. Plaintiff
characterizes defendants’ actions as “ultra vires,” but that term describes activity that the
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Also militating against plaintiff’s claim of gross negligence is that liability is confined to
“the proximate cause of the injury or damage.” MCL 691.1407(2). For this purpose, “the
proximate cause” means “the one most immediate, efficient, and direct cause preceding an
injury.” Robinson v Detroit, 462 Mich 439, 446; 613 NW2d 307, 311 (2000) (emphasis added).
Plaintiff conceded that the assistant attorney general took the initiative to submit plaintiff’s
MAPS information to an expert for review. Although plaintiff characterized that expert’s
resulting report as “reckless,” he acknowledged that defendant Mills drafted affidavits for search
warrants in reliance on that expert’s work. Plaintiff additionally asserted that defendants
Caldwell and Hahn urged plaintiff’s arrest upon the office of the Attorney General, but also that
the decision to arrest him for fraudulently obtaining prescription medicines originated in that
office. To the extent that plaintiff claims any damages resulting from actions or decisions
originating with the office of the Attorney General, that office is “the” proximate cause of them,
not the individuals plaintiff named as defendants.
For these reasons, we conclude that the trial court erred by denying defendants’ motion
for summary disposition predicated on governmental immunity.6
III. COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL
Underscoring the trial court’s error is that the earlier federal litigation resulted in several
determinations adverse to plaintiff’s position that carry through to the instant case through
operation of preclusion doctrine.
In particular, collateral estoppel precludes relitigation of an issue in a different,
subsequent action between the same parties or their privies when the earlier proceeding resulted
in a valid final judgment and the issue in question was actually and necessarily determined in
that prior proceeding. See Taylor v Sturgell, 553 US 880, 891-892; 128 S Ct 2161; 171 L Ed 2d
governmental actor lacks legal authority to perform, not activity that a governmental actor
performs in an unauthorized manner. See Richardson v Jackson Co, 432 Mich 377, 387; 443
NW2d 105 (1989). Police officers clearly have the legal authority to investigate whether a
consumer of unusually large amounts of controlled substances resorted to fraud to obtain such
quantities.
Plaintiff also asserts that defendants “knew or should have known from the medical
records they seized from Dr. Coombs and their interviews with Dr. Coombs and Dr. Kiel that
[plaintiff] had a history of pain from botched surgery,” thus suggesting that persons seeking
treatment for bona fide medical conditions cannot reasonably be suspected of resorting to false
representations in hopes of obtaining palliative medications. Any such implication is at odds
with the common knowledge that some persons resorting to illegal means of obtaining opiates
suffer from dependencies that began with legitimate medical prescriptions.
6
Although the trial court denied defendants’ motion for summary disposition “pending further
discovery on the specific issues” as set forth in an earlier order, the parties in their briefs on
appeal do not suggest that any actual or anticipated further discovery would improve their
respective positions.
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155 (2008); People v Gates, 434 Mich 146, 154; 452 NW2d 627 (1990); 1 Restatement
Judgments, 2d, § 27, p 250. Preclusion doctrine applies to state litigation in connection with
earlier federal litigation. See Pierson Sand & Gravel, Inc v Keeler Brass Co, 460 Mich 372,
382-383; 596 NW2d 153 (1999); VanVorous, 262 Mich App at 469; Howell v Vito’s Trucking &
Excavating Co, 386 Mich 37, 41; 191 NW2d 313 (1971).
The propriety of the federal court’s decision not to address the merits of the state-law
gross negligence claim is not a matter of controversy. See Pierson Sand & Gravel, 460 Mich at
382. Nonetheless, collateral estoppel now precludes relitigation of several pertinent issues.
As noted, the federal district court stated that “[e]ven construing the facts in a light most
favorable to [plaintiff], a reasonable officer could have concluded that probable cause existed.”
Steiger, Case No. 15-CV-12627, p 15. The court elaborated:
To begin with, the mere fact that the prosecution was not bound over to
trial for lack of probable cause is insufficient to overcome Defendants’ qualified
immunity. . . . [T]he existence of probable cause must be determined without the
benefit of hindsight. Simply because Judge Johnson determined at the
preliminary hearing that probable cause was not present does not mean that no
reasonable officer could have concluded that probable cause existed. On the
contrary, there is sufficient evidence to conclude that probable cause was present.
[Id.]
In affirming the district court, the Sixth Circuit characterized the district court’s probable-cause
decision as a “[f]inding that probable cause supported charging and arresting [plaintiff] . . . .”
Steiger, 718 F Appx at 387.
This determination in the earlier litigation that plaintiff was investigated, charged, and
arrested on the basis of probable cause thus carries over into the instant case, through operation
of collateral estoppel. Further, instructive for present purposes is the principle that “[p]olice
officers’ ‘[s]ubjective intentions play no role in ordinary, probable-cause Fourth Amendment
analysis.’ ” People v Antwine, 293 Mich App 192, 200-201; 809 NW2d 439 (2011), quoting
Whren v United States, 517 US 806, 813; 116 S Ct 1769; 135 L Ed 2d 89 (1996).
Bearing on plaintiff’s protestations concerning medical records ostensibly withheld in
connection with defendant Mills seeking an arrest warrant is the federal district court’s
observation that “even if the Attorney General’s office did not receive the medical records until
after December 19, 2011, there is no evidence that those records were not turned over to and
reviewed by the Attorney General’s office before [plaintiff] was informed of the charges on
December 27, 2011.” Steiger, Case No. 15-CV-12627, p 16. The Sixth Circuit in turn noted that
“not only is there no evidence of a decision to withhold the medical records, the record shows
that Detective Mills’s email to request the arrest warrant includes the express promise to send the
medical records—a promise the record confirms he kept when Detective Hahn mailed the
medical records.” Steiger, 718 F Appx at 391. The appellate court further stated:
Once the police detectives were on to [plaintiff’s] prescription history, the rest of
the investigation focused on the drug prescribers and any duplicity by [plaintiff]
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in his obtaining those prescriptions from them. And pointing to Detective Mills’s
opinion on the weakness of the fraud evidence gets [plaintiff] nowhere. No such
expression of skepticism establishes incompetence or unlawfulness. [Id.]
Plaintiff does not suggest that, in its order denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition,
the trial court’s invitation to provide additional discovery concerning withheld exculpatory
information has brought or might bring to light anything to call into question the above
conclusions. Accordingly, plaintiff’s protestations concerning the withholding of ostensibly
exculpatory medical records that were unavailing in the federal litigation are not subject to
relitigation in this case.
The federal district court also acknowledged “the Attorney General Office’s independent
review and determination that probable cause to charge existed.” Steiger, Case No. 15-CV-
12627, p 17. The Sixth Circuit likewise held that defendants “could rely on the AG’s Office’s
independent judgment that probable cause existed to charge [plaintiff].” Steiger, 718 F Appx at
391. This determination concerning the role of the Attorney General establishes that the
Attorney General, not defendants, was the prime mover behind the decisions to charge and arrest
plaintiff. Accordingly, as noted earlier, to the extent that plaintiff relies on those actions against
him as bases for any claim of damages, the proximate cause must be attributed to the office of
the Attorney General, not defendants. See Robinson, 462 Mich at 446.
Moreover, the federal district court held that, viewing the facts at the time defendants
submitted the case to the Attorney General in a light most favorable to plaintiff, defendants’
actions were not “plainly incompetent” or a knowing violation of the law. Steiger, Case No. 15-
CV-12627, p 18. The Sixth Circuit noted that conclusion with approval. Steiger, 718 F Appx at
391. Carrying the factual conclusion that defendants were not “plainly incompetent” in how they
developed the case as presented to the Attorney General into the instant case through operation
of collateral estoppel defeats a claim that defendants were grossly negligent in the matter.
The trial court thus erred in failing to recognize that several determinations arising from
the federal litigation that are not subject to relitigation through operation of collateral estoppel
militated against plaintiff’s attempt to maintain a cause of action in gross negligence.
For these reasons, we reverse the result below and remand this case to the trial court with
instructions to grant summary disposition to defendants and dismiss the case.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Colleen A. O’Brien
/s/ Michael F. Gadola
/s/ James Robert Redford
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