Plaintiff’s first amended complaint alleged defendants were hable to him under theories of assault and battery, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence as a result of his being illegally arrested by a bounty hunter and tаken to Missouri. In Missouri it was confirmed that the actual person who should have been sought was plaintiff’s brother, who had been arrested on a drug charge there. The trial court granted summary disposition for defendants pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). The Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal, holding the existence of the facially valid Missouri arrest warrant provided authority to arrest plaintiff. We reverse the grant of summary disposition and remand for further proceedings.
i
The pertinent facts are not in disрute. We borrow the Court of Appeals statement of facts:
Plaintiff’s brother Vincent Bright was arrested by Missouri police on a drug charge. Vincent identified himself as plaintiff Dennis Bright, using plaintiff’s address, date of birth and social security number. Vincent enterеd into a bond agreement with defendant, A-Able Bail Bonds, which was issued in plaintiff’s name and which Vincent signed using plaintiff’s name. When Vincent subsequently absconded on the bond, an arrest warrant was issued in plaintiff’s name, again using plaintiff’s address, date of birth and social security number. Defendant Tim Moore apprehended plaintiff in Detroit and returned him to the Missouri court, where he was later released and the arrest warrant wasamended to name Vincent. Plaintiff brought this action, alleging assault and battery, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence. The trial court granted summary disposition to defendants, finding that the facially valid Missouri warrant provided the authority to arrest plaintiff.[ 1 ]
The Court of Appeals affirmed. Plaintiff has applied for leave to appeal.
h
The Court of Appeals held that, given probable cause, a private citizen may make an arrest for a felony committed in the person’s presence or otherwise. MCL 764.16;
People v Bashans,
in
This case concerns the interpretation of MCL 764.16. In construing statutes, “[t]he primary goal of judicial interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature.”
McJunkin v Cellasto Plastic Corp,
IV
We deal with a plainly written statute in this matter. MCL 764.16 provides:
A private person may make an arrest in the following situations:
(a) For a felony committed in the private person’s presence.
(b) If the person to be arrested has committed a felony although not in the private person’s presence.
(c) If the private person is summoned by a peace officer to assist the officer in making an arrest.
(d) If the private person is a merchant, an agent of a merchant, an employee of a merchant, or an independent contractor providing security for a merchant of a store and has reasonable cause to believe that the person to be arrested has violated section 356c or 356d of the Michigan penal code, Act No. 328 of the Public Acts of 1931, being sections 750.356c and 750.356d of the Michigan Compiled Laws, in that store, regardless of whether the violation wаs committed in the presence of the private person.
The plain language of subsection (b) provides authority for a private person to arrest another, if the other has committed a felony. The statute does not grant arrest authority where the other has not committed a felony even if the private person has probable cause to believe
Therefore, because it is undisрuted that plaintiff had not committed a felony, defendants did not have authority to arrest him. The facially valid Missouri warrant did not, under these facts, provide the authority to arrest plaintiff. 6 The trial court erred in granting summary disposition. Accordingly, we rеverse the judgments of the circuit court and Court of Appeals, and remand this case to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. MCR 7.302(F)(1).
Notes
Unpublished opinion per curiam, issued April 10, 2001 (Docket No. 219182), p 1.
While numerous states have similar statutes, several are more expansive and essentially grant authority to private parties to arrest on the basis of reasonable causе. For example, Cal Penal Code 837 provides:
A private person may arrest another:
1. For a public offense committed or attempted in Ms presence.
2. When the person arrested has committed a felony, although not in Ms presence.
3. When a felony has in fact bеen committed, and he has reasonable cause for believing the person arrested to have committed it.
It is noteworthy that the key phrase in subsection (b) is “committed a felony” (emphasis added). Of course, a felony is “committed” when a person engages in the conduct that constitutes a felony. Thus, an arrest by a private person of another person who has actually committed a felony would be valid regardless of whether the arrested person is ever tried for or convicted of the felony. In the presеnt case, it is undisputed that plaintiff is innocent of the alleged Missouri felony underlying his purported arrest. Accordingly, we need not consider the proper allocation of the burden of proof with regard to whether a person committed a felony in a case where that is a disputed issue. Likewise, we assume without deciding for purposes of our analysis that MCL 764.16(b) provides authority for a private person to arrest for the commission of a felony under the laws of anоther state.
While the plain language of subsection (b) is dispositive, it is noteworthy that subsection (d) of MCL 764.16 authorizes a merchant (and certain affiliated parties) to make an arrest merely on the basis of “reasonable cause” to bеlieve that a person has committed retail fraud in violation of MCL 750.356c or MCL 750.356d in the merchant’s store. The absence of any such “reasonable cause” language in subsection (b) underscores that it means what it states in providing authority to arrest only if the person to be arrested has committed a felony.
We note that this opinion is consistent with the result and basic analysis of our recent decision in
People v Hamilton,
However, Hamilton did include the following language that may warrant further explanation:
Under MCL 764.16, a private person has the authority to make a felony arrest, but lacks the authority to make a misdemeanor arrest except in nonapplicable circumstances. “ ‘No one without a warrant has any right to make an arrest in the absence of actual belief, based on actual facts creating probable cause of guilt.’ ” People v Panknin,4 Mich App 19 , 27;143 NW2d 806 (1966), quoting People v Bressler,223 Mich 597 , 600-601;194 NW 559 (1923), paraphrasing People v Burt,51 Mich 199 , 202;16 NW 378 (1883). Here, the officer only had probable cause to make an arrest for a misdemeanor, i.e., ouil. Hie fact that defendant may have committed a felony, i.e., ouil, third offense, was only discovered after the arrest. Accordingly, the officer lacked the statutory authority to make the arrest under MCL 764.16. [Id. at 531-532 (emphasis added).]
The critical point was that the police officer in Hamilton did not realize that the defendant in that case may have committed the felony of ouiL-3d. Accordingly, the officer in that case plainly did not even purport to arrest the defendant for a felony, but only for the misdemeanor of simрle ouil. Thus, MCL 764.16 did not provide authority for the misdemeanor arrest made in Hamilton. To the extent that the language from prior cases in the above quotation from Hamilton suggests that the existence of probable cause is relevant to determining whether a private person’s arrest of another person for a felony is permitted by subsection (b) of MCL 764.16, it is incorrect. Rather, as explained in this opinion, the plain language of subsection (b) means that the question is whether the seized pеrson actually committed a felony. Of course, regardless of MCL 764.16, a police officer or other state actor acting as such is constitutionally precluded by the Fourth Amendment from making an arrest without probable cause. Hamilton, supra at 533.
Defеndants argue that Moore’s status as a bounty hunter insulates him from liability because of alleged wide-ranging common-law powers based in part on the bail bond contract. It is not necessary to determine the extent of those powers, if any, since plaintiff was not a party to the contract.
