(dissenting). Thomas Aquinas tells us that the law is the rule of reason ordained and promulgated for the common good. The need for the law to be promulgated is apparent. Citizens cannot be expected to know the sovereign’s mind until he speaks. If ours is to be a rule of law and not of men, it is necessary that our law be published, that it be made known to those whose lives and .decisions are to be governed by it. In common-law 'countries, such as ours, the decisions of the highest courts are regarded as having the force of law. Since law must be promulgated, the decisions of appellate courts are printed in bound volumes and made available to the legal profession and the public generally. These reports are valuable, however, only to the extent that the reader thereof can determine from reading the decisions what rules of law are applicable to what sets of facts and circumstances.
Appellate judges make law by creating useful precedents. Appellate judges do not have the power to legislate, they do not have the power to declare what the law will be in the future, nor by resolution to ' decide how various classes of eases will be treated in the future. The function of an appellate court, as the function of all courts, is to decide cases. When an appellate court has decided a particular case in a particular way, that decision constitutes a precedent. The judges or justices *215participating in the decision cannot declare that their decision will not he a precedent. Snch a declaration would constitute an attempted disavowal of the entire process of common-law jurisprudence. The distinction between what a court does and what it says must be kept clearly in mind if one is to read the reports of appellate courts with profit. The following appears in the case of Larzelere v. Starkweather, 38 Mich 96, at page 100:
“The reasoning in an opinion is not that of the court, but of the judge who prepares and delivers it. It may or may not be considered sound and unanswerable, and as such is the subject of criticism. The conclusion arrived at and announced upon the several questions discussed and essential to a proper disposition of the case, is that of the court, and in concurring in such conclusions it is not generally supposed or understood that everything contained or said in the opinion is thereby unqualifiedly and unquestionably adopted as the opinion of the court. In the preparation of an opinion, the facts of the case are in mind. It is prepared with reference to such facts, and when considered in connection therewith, will generally be found satisfactory. When, however, an attempt is made to pick out-particular parts or sentences, and apply them indiscriminately in other cases, nothing but confusion and disaster will be likely to follow. In other words, the opinion and decision of a court must be read and examined as a whole in the light of the facts upon which it was based. They are the foundation of the entire structure which cannot with safety be used without reference to them.”
The function of the court is to decide cases. It decides cases by applying the law to the facts. The rules which the court applies to the facts and which result in the decision are the applicable law. Rules *216of law which are not necessary to the decision are mere dicta and have no precedential value.
The case before us is one which presents great problems in terms of distinguishing and understanding the precedents, if any, which have been made by this Court, and which may be useful in the decision we are required to make here. This is the case of a plaintiff injured on June 20, 1964, by the alleged negligent operation of a privately owned automobile being driven by a volunteer fireman on his way to a fire. If this accident had happened sometime after July 1, 1965, there would be no question that the plaintiff could not recover damages from the city of Croswell because of the statute making the city immune from such liability.2 If this accident had happened sometime prior to September 22, 1961, there would be little doubt that the plaintiff could not recover damages from the city of Croswell, because prior to that date it was fairly well settled in this State that the city enjoyed immunity from tort liability to persons injured through acts of its agents while engaged in governmental activity. The rights of persons injured in this State in cases of this kind in the 3 years and 8 days between the celebrated Williams Case3 and the effective date of PA 1964, No 170, are unsettled. And though cases involving similar circumstances have come before this bar of justice on many occasions in those 3 years and 8 days, and since then, it is still nearly impossible for a lawyer to advise his client with any certainty in the matter. Some discussion of these cases is in order.
It all began with a statement by Mr. Justice Edwards in.the Williams Case as follows: “Prom this date forward the judicial doctrine of govern*217mental immunity from ordinary torts no longer exists in Michigan.” Despite the ring of finality which Mr. Justice Edwards’ words carried, the statement simply was not true. In Williams v. City of Detroit, the Court affirmed the trial judge. That is what it did. Mr. Justice Edwards, who sought to reverse the trial court and by his vote set a precedent for denying immunity, was joined by only 3 of his colleagues. Mr. Justice Carr, who wanted to affirm the trial court, was joined in that vote by 3 more of the Brethren, and the whole thing was a stand off. The proposition that a 4-4 affirmance sets no precedent needs no citation. Mr. Justice Black in that case voted to affirm. His desire to see the Court change the rule about immunity in the future, though eloquently expressed, was pure dictum. The rule of law that Mr. Justice Black applied in the Williams Case was the rule that the city of Detroit enjoyed immunity. Thus the common-law rule of governmental immunity remained in Michigan as the applicable law in such cases on the 23d of September, 1961, and through all of the days thereafter until at least the case of Sherbutte v. City of Marine City.4 In the Sherbutte Case, five Justices joined with Mr. Justice O’Hara, in an opinion holding that the city of Marine City did not enjoy immunity.
Before discussing the opinion in the Sherbutte Case, the position of Mr. Justice Black in that case should be clarified. The published report of the case contains the following words: “Black, J., concurred in result.” The profession have no doubt wondered what this means. Some have felt that such concurrence indicates agreement in the result only, and hence disagreement with the reasoning of the opinion. This cannot be so. The Constitution of this State says in article 6, § 6,
*218“Sec. 6. Decisions of the Supreme Court, including all decisions on prerogative writs, shall be in writing and shall contain a concise statement of the facts and reasons for each decision and reasons for each denial of leave to appeal. When a judge dissents in whole or in part he shall give in writing the reasons for his dissent.”
Thus, all of the Justices sitting in the Sherbutte Case, including Mr. Justice Black, having been sworn to uphold the Constitution, were obligated to give in writing the reasons for their dissent whether such be in whole or in part. Since Mr. Justice Black gave no reasons for any dissent, it must be assumed that he did not dissent in whole or in part. He signed the majority opinion. He indicated his concurrence in the result of the opinion. By saying that he concurred in the result, he merely emphasized that by placing his signature upon the majority opinion he did not indorse or approve any dicta contained in the O’Hara opinion. But it must be conclusively presumed that by concurring in the result he concurred as well in the conclusion arrived at and announced upon those questions of law essential to and controlling of the disposition in the case. This discussion on the meaning of concurrence in result will be more pertinent later in this opinion.
The decision in the Sherbutte Case was wrong. It was wrong because it misinterpreted the result of the Williams Case. In Sherbutte, it was said that Williams abolished the rule of governmental immunity. This was simply not true. Williams was not a precedent for that proposition. Not only did the Sherbutte decision misinterpret the effect of the Williams decision, but it further compounded the error by attempting to repeal a statute enacted by the legislature. The statute involved in the Sherbutte Case is the same statute involved in this case *219of Smith, though since amended to include firemen. The statute is PA 1951, No 59, and the involved provisions were quoted in Sherbutte as follows,
“Sec. 1. In case an action is brought against á policeman of a political subdivision of this State for torts, * * * while such policeman is engaged in the performance of his duties * * * the political subdivision * * * may indemnify such policeman for any judgment recovered against such policeman. * * *
“Sec. 2. * * * That such political subdivision shall not be made a party to any such action.”
It was reasoned in Sherbutte that the legislature provided that a city could not be made party to an action against one of its policemen because the legislature was aware of the common-law rule of governmental immunity. The Sherbutte opinion says that the Williams Case abolished the common-law rule of governmental immunity and the statute thereby “lost the basis for its clear legislative intent.” The majority in Sherbutte was telling us that when an act of the legislature loses the basis of its intent it may be ignored. The act was not ruled unconstitutional nor was it found to be inapplicable. There was no question of interpreting the words of an ambiguous act. The Court merely said that a statute which provides that a political subdivision shall not be made a party to an action against one of its police officers is no longer to be recognized as authority for prohibiting the naming as defendant a political subdivision in an action against a police officer thereof. The statute, according to the majority in Sherbutte, though it is constitutional, though it is clear and unambiguous, just does not count. And it does not count presumably because the legislature never would have enacted it in the first place if the common-law rule of government immunity had *220been abolished prior to the time the statute was enacted.
Now, in the present ease, counsel for the city of Croswell point out to us that in 1963, some two years after the Williams Case, the legislature had occasion to re-examine PA 1951, No 59, and instead of repealing the law, they expanded it and added firemen to the class of persons with whom a city could not he joined as a defendant. Counsel for the city of Croswell, having read the Sherbutte Case, says to us in effect: “In the Sherbutte Case, this Court treated the act as presumptively repealed on account of the Williams Case. But how can we presume its repeal when the legislature expanded it and reenacted it after the Williams Case?” The argument cannot be refuted. When a Court takes it upon itself to say that a clear, unambiguous, constitutional act of the legislature is no longer to he recognized as authority for what it says, the Court has shed all pretense of looking for legislative intent and has substituted its will for the will of the legislative assembly. There is no way out of this blind alley except to back up, and the Sherbutte Case should be overruled.
But it may be said that although the Williams Case did not change the rule of governmental immunity in this State, the case of Myers v. Genesee County Auditor5 did. We cannot quarrel with that proposition, and although there was much disagreement as to what the Myers Case accomplished, as can be seen in the case of Keenan v. County of Midland,6 a proper reading of the Myers Case will disclose that it is in fact a precedent for the “no immunity” rule. Myers involved a child negligently injured while a paying patient at a county hospital in February *221of 1961. In the Myers Case, Mr. Justice O’Hara wrote to overrule governmental immunity as applied to counties in “pending and future cases.” He was joined by Justices T. M. Kavanagh and Black who, though he “concurred in result,” must be counted as having concurred in the controlling reasons given for the decision in the opinion he chose to sign. Justices Souris and Adams were of the opinion that governmental immunity for counties had already been abolished. All five applied the same rule of law to the facts at hand, and the decision therefore constituted a precedent for the proposition that a county does not enjoy immunity.
As an aside, it is interesting to note that young Sharon Myers was already dead almost 7 months when Mr. Justice Edwards made his now famous fiat on the subject of immunity. It would appear that in September of 1961, not a single member of the Court would have granted Sharon’s administratrix the relief the Court ultimately saw fit to give her. This aside is included here to point out what we have already said about the limited function of an appellate court. Pronouncements about all future cases and pending cases, or all cases arising before or after the date of this or that opinion are, in the nature of things, meaningless poppycock. Each case will be decided when it gets to Court. It will be decided according to the best judgment of the Justices then sitting. It will be decided according to their view of and respect for the precedents which have been set.
In any event, it must be conceded that the Myers Case is a 5-to-2 precedent for the abolition of the rule of governmental immunity as it applies to counties. This precedent was set on March 1, 1965. It can thus be said that in the Smith Case we are actually confronted with the situation which a majority *222of '.this Court mistakenly thought was presented in the1: Sherbutte Case. If we were to re-echo Sherbutte, we would now say that although the legislature re-enacted PA 1951, No 59 by PA 1963, No 83, it lost the- basis of its legislative intent when governmental immunity was abolished by the Myers Case on March 1, 1965, and therefore the statute should no longer be recognized as authority for what it says. Such an error should not be repeated. The idea that a few plaintiffs, who happened to have been injured during the 2,928 hours between March 1, 1965, and July 1,1965, should be permitted to recover damages from cities and counties, while others whose injuries were less fortuitously timed should be left to garnisliee the wages of police officers and firemen, does not sound like an important addition to the jurisprudence of this State. When judges get into the area of.deciding policy they get into trouble. Those who sought unsuccessfully and later successfully to abolish governmental immunity have thought it the wiser policy. The legislature has since vindicated the minority who felt otherwise. If the common-law rule holding the various levels of government immune from civil liability by reason of the tortious acts of their agents when engaged in governmental functions was indeed an ancient wrong crying out for redress, we must marvel that it has been re-perpetrated by a modern legislature. The truth is that the rule is not a wrong, ancient or recent. It is simply a rule of reason ordained for the common good. In the last analysis, the preservation of civil government is thought to be a greater good, even for the unfortunate plaintiff, than compensation of his injuries from the public coffers. In a'government whose power to borrow money is. constitutionally circumscribed,, it is thought to be *223a prudent policy to deny to civil juries the unfettered power to increase the public indebtedness.
This is no outmoded theory that “the King can do no wrong.” It is merely a recognition that in a government of the people, by the people, and for the people, the wrongs inflicted by government upon the people are wrongs they inflict upon themselves. Defendant Ginther was a volunteer fireman on his way to a fire, in his own car. Plaintiff can sue Mr. Ginther. Plaintiff can collect from Mr. Ginther, if he was at fault. The people of Croswell didn’t injure this plaintiff. Mr. Ginther did. The city merely maintained a volunteer fire department for the protection of the lives and property of persons in its area, including the plaintiff.
When fire rages, when the dam breaks, when the enemy attacks, the people, through their government, must act. They must act vigorously and boldly or they perish. It is not for judges, serene in their robes and far removed by time and space from the common peril, to brand them negligent in their travail and suffer their fortunes and their labors to be further taxed to pay compensatory damages to those who chanced to be injured in the community’s efforts to overcome the disaster rather than in the disaster itself.
In the interests of justice, uniformity, and good common sense, we should apply the rule of governmental immunity in this case, reverse the order dismissing the motion for summary judgment, and award no costs, this being a public question.
Dethmers, C. J., and Kelly, J., concurred with Brennan, J. Black, J., did not sit.PA 1964, No 170, § 7, CL 1948, § 691.1407 (Stat Ann 1965 Cum Supp § 3.996 [107]).
Williams v. City of Detroit, 364 Mich 231.
Sherbutte v. City of Marine City, 374 Mich 48.
Myers v. Genesee County Auditor, 375 Mich 1.
Keenan v. County of Midland, 377 Mich 57.