On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 49405-0805 CV-262
In this case a police officer responded to a complaint of an unruly patron at a nightclub and was assaulted by the patron. The officer sued the club for negligence in failing to maintain adequate security. We hold that the "fireman's rule" bars recovery by a professional emergency responder for the negligence that created the situation requiring the response.
Facts and Procedural History
On November 30, 2005, Patrick Lair, an Indianapolis police officer, responded to a report of an unruly customer at Babes Showelub, an adult entertainment business. Lair claims that shortly after he arrived, he was injured in an assault by an underage male who had been consuming aleohol at Babes. Lair sued Babes Show-club and related defendants, (collectively, *310 "Babes") 1 alleging that Babes maintained a nuisance and was negligent in failing to provide adequate security. Lair also alleged that Babes's violation of Dram Shop laws and statutes prohibiting the sale of aleohol to minors caused his injuries. He sought medical expenses, lost income, and compensation for pain, suffering, and mental anguish. His wife, Lisa Lair, sued for lost services and consortium.
Babes filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on which relief could be granted, citing Indiana's fireman's rule. The trial court denied Babes's motion but certified its order for interlocutory appeal. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the fireman's rule precluded any recovery by Lair. Babes Showclub v. Lair,
Standard of Review
A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim tests the legal sufficiency of the claim, not the facts supporting it. Charter One Mortgage Corp. v. Condra,
I. The Fireman's Rule
Both Lair and Babes ask us to reconsider aspects of the fireman's rule in Indiana, and both rely on a series of prior Indiana decisions.
A. Indiana Precedent
The fireman's rule was initially established in Indiana in 1893 by this Court's decision in Woodruff v. Bowen,
Over the ensuing century the "fireman's rule" was upheld and expanded in a number of decisions by the Court of Appeals. Although the results of these cases can be reconciled, the reasons cited did not develop a consistent theory justifying the rule. In Pallikan v. Mark, the court followed Woodruff and upheld the rule, viewing a firefighter as a licensee for the purposes of a premises liability claim and again holding that the property owner owed the firefighter only the duty of refraining from "positive wrongful acts."
This Court last addressed the fireman's rule in Heck v. Robey, where we invoked the exception to the rule that permitted recovery for "positive wrongful acts."
After Heck, Indiana's appellate courts have issued only one published opinion addressing the fireman's rule. In Johnson v. Steffen,
We think that the Johnson court reached the correct result on the facts before it, but incorrectly viewed the fireman's rule as turning solely on premises liability. The officer in Johnson was responding in the line of duty to a problem, if not an emergency, when he attempted to remove the parked car from the bicycle lane. But the cyclist's negligence in hitting the officer was not the event to which the officer was responding, and the driver of the stopped car was not a defendant. As Judge Patrick Sullivan pointed out in dissent, the organizers of the race were the persons in control of the site, and therefore had potential premises liability to the extent negligence in designing the course contributed to the accident. Johnson,
We do not agree that Heck limited the fireman's rule to injuries sustained on the defendant's premises. In Heck the plaintiff was allowed to recover, but not because the injury was not sustained on the defendants' premises. The "positive wrongful acts" that permitted recovery in Heck were the defendant's actions after the paramedic arrived at the seene of the accident, not the defendant's negligence that caused the accident to which the paramedic responded. Heck,
B. The Basis of the Fireman's Rule
The majority of other jurisdictions follow some form of the fireman's rule, whether adopted as a common law doe-trine or dictated by statute
3
In Fox v.
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Hawkins, the Court of Appeals described the fireman's rule as resting on "three distinct, though related, theoretical pedestals: the law of premises liability, the defense of incurred risk, and public policy."
As explained below, we think public policy is the basis for the rule, and nothing in the Heck decision suggests otherwise. In Heck we merely ruled that a plaintiff's occupation as a responder did not serve as a complete bar to tort recovery. Heck,
Many emergencies are caused by the negligence of some party. The public employs firefighters, police officers, and others to respond to emergencies, and these responders knowingly combat the effects of others' negligence. As the Court of Appeals noted in Fox, if responders can sue for the negligence that caused the emergency,
the poor or underinsured, even though tax dollars go to pay for fire and police protection, might well hesitate to summon public safety officers for fear of being assessed damages. At the same time, public safety officers, fearful of exposure to uncompensated harm, might well spend their time protecting people of means.
C. The Fireman's Rule Restated
In summary, the fireman's rule allows no claim by a professional emergency
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responder for the negligence that creates the emergency to which he or she responds. As the Court of Appeals has stated, "professionals, whose occupations by nature expose them to particular risks, may not hold another negligent for creating the situation to which they respond in their professional capacity." Koehn,
The negligent conduct need not occur after the officer arrives on the scene, but must be separate from and independent of the negligence that caused the situation necessitating the officer's presence. Such a claim will be subject to the provisions of Indiana's Comparative Fault Act. Thus, the automobile driver who negligently causes an accident can call paramedics without fear that they will sue him for causing the accident, but he must behave reasonably once they arrive. Similarly, bar owners may call the police to assist in dealing with an unruly customer, but may not add to the danger faced by the responding officer without exposing themselves to liability. We believe this rule is consistent with the policy underlying the fireman's rule and with the better-reasoned precedents from other states. See W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 61, at 431 (5th ed. 1984) ("[TThe fireman's rule has been held only to apply when the firefighter or police officer is injured from the very danger, created by the defendant's act of negli-genee, that required his professional assistance and presence at the seene in the first place, and the rule will not shield a defendant from lability for independent acts of misconduct which otherwise cause the injury."); see also Davis v. Pinson,
II. Resolution of Lair's Claim
Lair argues that his claim is not one of premises liability and for this reason the fireman's rule does not apply. We do not agree with either the premise or the conclusion of this argument. First, as the Court of Appeals noted, to the extent Babes has any liability grounded solely in failure to control the unruly patron, it is a premises liability claim. Moreover, as already explained, Lair is not correct in asserting that the fireman's rule applies only to claims based on premises liability.
Lair also argues that his claim is not barred by the fireman's rule because Babes violated statutes and an ordinance enacted to protect police officers. Specifically, Lair argues that he can recover from Babes here because Babes allegedly violated a local ordinance prohibiting owners of adult entertainment businesses from allowing customers to commit crimes. He also points out that Indiana's battery statute provides a heightened punishment for battery of a police officer. From these premises, he reasons that violation of the Marion County ordinance is sufficient to take Babes outside the protection afforded by the fireman's rule. Finally, Lair argues that because Babes allegedly violated Indiana's Dram Shop law in serving the underage patron, Ind.Code § 7.1-5-7-8 (2004), he should be able to recover from Babes for his injuries.
Violation of a statute or ordinance enacted specifically to protect emergency
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responders may remove the protection otherwise afforded by the fireman's rule. Woodruff v. Bowen,
Lair's related argument, that the battery statute's enhanced penalty for assaulting a police officer provides evidence that the statute was enacted with the specific intent of protecting police officers, likewise fails The statute enhances the eriminal penalty for battery if it is committed against a law enforcement officer, whether or not responding to an emergency. 1.C. § 35-42-2-1(a)(2) (2004). But an enhanced penalty for all batteries of officers does not suggest any specific purpose to protect police officers responding to emergencies any more than those making arrests or on routine patrols.
We agree with the Court of Appeals that Lair's Dram Shop argument also fails. Lair contends that "under [the Court of Appeals'] holding Detective Lair would be barred from a dram shop claim even if the visibly intoxicated minor Babes served drove his vehicle into Detective Lair while he was on patrol." To the contrary, the fireman's rule as we have expressed it today would not protect Babes in that circumstance.
In sum, Lair's complaint alleged nothing suggesting that Babes was negligent in any respect apart from the negligence that produced the emergent situation with the unruly patron. Without any such allegation, the complaint fails to state a claim against Babes in the face of the fireman's rule. The complaint was therefore properly dismissed for failure to state a claim.
Conclusion
This case is remanded to the trial court with instructions to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
Notes
. The scant record in this case does not reveal the relationship between Babes Showeclub and the other defendants, except insofar as the appellants' brief describes James Altman as the "owner" of Babes Showelub.
. For an explanation of the common-law rules setting out duties owed by a landowner to invitees, licensees, and trespassers, see Burrell v. Meads,
. See, e.g., Ruffing v. Ada County Paramedics,
