Defendant appeals, by leave granted, from orders of the trial court denying its motion for accelerated judgment, granting plaintiffs a default judgment, and denying defendant’s motion to set aside the default judgment.
Because we find that defendant was entitled to accelerated judgment, we reverse.
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that plaintiff James Cassani, hereafter referred to singularly as plaintiff, in his capacity as a Detroit police officer, while in pursuit of a felon, entered a lot owned by defendant city and was severely injured when he struck a wire cable strung between two metal poles on that lot.
Defendant moved for accelerated judgment claiming the Workers’ Disability Compensation Act provided plaintiffs exclusive remedy because his injuries arose out of his employment. MCL 418.131, 418.301(1); MSA 17.237(131), 17.137(301X1). Plaintiff argued below, as he argues here, that his claim is not barred by the exclusive remedy provision of the act because his injuries did not arise out of the employment relationship, but arose out of a separate relationship between himself and defendant city. The trial court denied *575 defendant city’s motion, reasoning that the "dual-capacity” doctrine asserted by plaintiff permitted plaintiff to bring his action in tort against defendant city.
The dual-capacity doctrine recognizes that an employer can, under certain circumstances, occupy a status in addition to that of employer with respect to his employee. See, e.g.,
Mathis v Interstate Motor Freight System,
"An employer may become a third person, vulnerable to tort suit by an employee, if — and only if —he possesses a second persona so completely independent from and unrelated to his status as employer that by established standards the law recognizes it as a separate legal person.” [421 Mich 653 .]
The great majority of American jurisdictions have held that an employer’s status as a landowner does not endow the employer with a second legal persona where the injury to the employee occurs in the course of employment. Larson,
supra,
§ 72.82, p 14-238. See, e.g.,
Jansen v Harmon,
Because we hold that defendant was entitled to accelerated judgment, we need not address defendant’s contention that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to set aside the default judgment. Had we addressed that issue, we would have found no abuse of discretion.
Reversed.
