OPINION
Case Summary
The City of Anderson and Anderson police officer Steven Stoops (collectively, the City), defendants below, appeal the court's judgment, following a bench trial, in favor of Timothy Davis, plaintiff below. In particular, the City contends that it was immune from liability for Davis's personal injuries pursuant to the Indiana Tort Claims Act (ITCA, or the Act). We reverse.
Issue
The sole issue for our review is whether the City was immune from liability for *361 Davis's damages under the law enforcement immunity provision of the ITCA. 1
Facts and Procedural History
On May 24, 1995, Madison County Sheriff Seott Mellinger was driving when he observed a teenage male walking along the road. The individual matched the description of a teenager who had reportedly walked away from the Madison County Juvenile Center, where he was being detained upon charges of auto theft. When the juvenile realized he had been spotted, he retreated into a nearby wooded area. Sheriff Mellinger called his office for assistance. Officers from the Madison County Sheriff's department, including a county police dog and dog handler, as well as officers from the Pendleton police department, the Anderson police department, and the Indiana State Police, arrived and took positions on the perimeter of the area in which the teenager was thought to be hiding. Officer Stoops of the Anderson police department and his dog Chester eventually relieved the Madison County Sheriffs department dog and its handler.
Among the officers who responded to Sheriff Mellinger's call was Davis, who at that time was the Chief Deputy in the Madison County Sheriff's department. Davis parked his police vehicle near the edge of the wooded area into which the suspect fled, and began to search the area on foot. While walking around the area, he heard over the police radio in his car that officer Stoops and Chester had arrived and were located somewhere in the area. At one point, Davis heard something in the woods. He proceeded to investigate, and encountered Madison County Sheriff's department Captain Thompson in the vicinity of Captain Thompson's vehicle. Captain Thompson advised that officer Stoops and Chester were in the area.
At some point, Davis began to walk back to his car.
Around this time, Chester alerted to what officer Stoops thought was the seent of the suspect. Officer Stoops then made an announcement over his police radio that he would deploy Chester in an off-leash search. Officer Stoops also called out and announced that Chester would be released in the area. Davis heard this announcement. Officer Stoops released the dog, and Chester began to search the area. At some point he bolted, and officer Stoops followed. When officer Stoops caught up with his dog, he saw it attacking Davis. Davis sustained bites to his groin, forearm and leg, which required extensive medical treatment.
On May 22, 1997, Davis filed a Complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana against the City, officer Stoops, and then-Anderson Police Chief Ronald Rheam. Davis alleged that the City's use of Chester under the cireumstances amounted to excessive force and violated Davis's civil rights, and that Chester's attack was caused by the defendants's negligence. The defendants apparently moved for summary judgment on Davis's excessive force claims, and on the ground that Davis's remaining negligence claims raised no federal issues. On April 30, 1998, the court issued its Order on Summary Judgment, rejecting Davis's allegations of excessive force, and dismissing Davis's remaining negligence claims for lack of a federal issue. The court contemporaneously issued its Order of Judgment, stating Davis's excessive force claims were dismissed with prejudice, and that this determination constituted a final judgment. There is no indication in the record that Davis appealed this judgment.
*362 On May 29, 1998, Davis filed another Complaint in the Madison County Superior Court against the same defendants, this time raising only negligence claims. The defendants denied Davis's allegations, and asserted the affirmative defense of governmental immunity under the ITCA. They also contended that any excessive force claims implicated in the complaint were barred pursuant to the doctrine of collateral estoppel. The defendants moved for summary judgment based on their immunity claim on July 21, 1998. On September 9, 1998, venue was transferred to the Hancock County Superior Court. The court denied the City's summary judgment motion on June 11, 1999. On June 22, 1999, the defendants moved to dismiss Davis's complaint on the ground that Davis was injured by the actions of a co-employee, and that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to the exclusivity provision in the Indiana Worker's Compensation Act. The court had not ruled on this motion by the time the matter proceeded to bench trial on June 29 and 80, 1999.
The trial court issued its Judgment Order, as well as findings of fact and conclusions of law, on January 4, 2000. The court rejected the defendants's jurisdictional challenge, dismissed Chief Rheam for lack of evidence of his lability, and concluded that the use of Chester under the circumstances was negligent. The court also again concluded that the defendants were not immune under the ITCA, and entered judgment in favor of Davis in the amount of $200,000. The City now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
A. Standard of Review
While the issue of a governmental entity's immunity from liability under the ITCA may require extended factual development, the issue remains a question of law for the courts. Minks v. Pina,
B. Analysis
The City claims that it was immune from liability for officer Stoops's alleged negligence pursuant to the "law enforcement immunity" provision of the ITCA. Davis contends that the City is not immune because the use of Chester under the cireumstances did not constitute the "enforcement of a law" within the meaning of the Act. Our analysis of these competing claims requires a brief review of the confusing and perpetually fluctuating status of the immunity granted to law enforcement personnel under the TTCA.
1. Law Enforcement Immunity Under the ITCA
In Campbell v. State,
*363 A governmental entity or an employee acting within the seope of the employee's employment is not liable if a loss results from:
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(7) the adoption and enforcement of or failure to adopt or enforce a law (including rules and regulations), unless the enforcement constitutes false arrest or false imprisonment.
Inp.Cope § 34-18-8-8(7).
The Indiana Supreme Court originally interpreted this provision to mean that government entities would be immune under the ITCA for "all acts of enforcement save false arrest and imprisonment." Seymour National Bank v. State,
The supreme court revisited the issue and overruled Titéile two years later in Quakenbush v. Lackey,
The supreme court's recent decision in Benton v. City of Oakland City,
2. Application of Law
In light of our supreme court's abrogation of the public duty/private duty test for ascertaining the existence of law enforcement immunity under the ITCA, and the court's reaffirmation of the primacy of the intent of the legislature, our task in this case is clear. We must determine whether, under the terms of the ITCA, the City was entitled to immunity for officer Stoops's alleged negligence. As noted above, the law enforcement immunity provision of the ITCA shields "a government entity or an employee acting within the seope of the employee's employment" from lability for losses resulting from the "enforcement of ... a law ... unless the act of enforcement constitutes false arrest or false imprisonment." Inp.Cope § 34-13-3-3(7). There is no question here that officer Stoops was the City's employee at the time of the incident, and Davis has not alleged false arrest or false imprisonment. Moreover, Davis does not contend that officer Stoops was acting outside the seope of his employment when he deployed Chester 3 We must therefore determine whether officer Stoops was engaged in the "enforcement of a law" at the time of Chester's attack.
[6] As noted above, the supreme court in Mullin explained that "the scope of the term 'enforcement' is limited to those activities in which a government entity or its employees compel or attempt to compel the obedience of another to laws, rules or regulations, or sanction or attempt to sancetion a violation thereof."
Here, the City deployed Chester to assist in locating and apprehending an individual who had escaped from a juvenile detention facility, where he was being held on charges of auto theft, and who was evading recapture by the police. The City's use of Chester under the cireum-stances plainly constituted an "activit{y] in which a government entity or its employees compel or attempt to compel the obedience of another to laws, rules or regulations, or sanction or attempt to sanction a violation thereof," and therefore amounted to the "enforcement of a law" within the meaning of the ITCA.
Finally, we note that a portion of Davis's brief may be construed to suggest that, regardless of whether Officer Stoops was enforcing a law in the scope of his employment, the City is not entitled to immunity because Officer Stoops's use of Chester to apprehend the fleeing subject under the cireumstances amounted to an unconstitutional use of excessive force. It is unclear if a police officer enforcing the law in the seope of his employment would be exempt from immunity under the ITCA if his actions amounted to excessive force, or were illegal in some other way. 4 How *366 ever, we need not determine this question here because, as the City notes, the legality of the City's use of force was an issue resolved against Davis in the prior federal court action, and Davis was collaterally estopped from raising it again in his state case.
The doctrine of collateral estop-pel bars the re-litigation in a subsequent action of a fact or issue adjudicated in a prior lawsuit. Shell Oil Co. v. Meyer,
Davis pursued his excessive force claims in the United States District Court. The federal court entered summary judgment against Davis on these claims, a final judgment from which Davis apparently took no appeal. Davis conceded in the trial court that his excessive force claims were rejected by the federal court, and he presents no argument upon appeal that he did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate his excessive force claim in the prior action, or that application of collateral estoppel would be otherwise unfair. Thus, the federal court's judgment dismissing Davis's excessive force claims must be given pre-clusive effect here, and to the extent Davis argues that the City is not entitled to law enforcement immunity because its use of Chester amounted to an illegal use of excessive force, that argument would fail.
In sum, because Davis's damages resulted from officer Stoops's deployment of Chester, which constituted the enforcement of law in the seope of his employment, the City is immune from lability pursuant to the ITCA.
Reversed.
Notes
. The City also challenges the qualification and testimony of one of Davis's experts, claims that Davis was contributorily negligent, and argues that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case by virtue of the exclusivity provision of the Worker's Compensation Act. Because of our resolution of the governmental immunity issue, it is not necessary to address these claims.
. The supreme court quickly reined in Quak-enbush's definition of law enforcement in Mullin v. Municipal City of South Bend, 639 NE.2d 278, 283 (Ind.1994), in which the court explained that Quakenbush actually meant "that the scope of 'enforcement' is limited to those activities in which a government entity or its employees compel or attempt to compel the obedience of another to laws, rules or regulations, or sanction or attempt to sanction a violation thereof."
. We would conclude that officer Stoops was acting within the scope of his employment, if called upon to determine the issue. The supreme court recently explained the meaning of "scope of employment" in the context of governmental immunity in the case of Celebration Fireworks, Inc. v. Smith,
. In Kemezy, the supreme court applied the test from Quakenbush, which had been issued the same day, and determined that the ITCA did not immunize a police officer's use of excessive force, reasoning that "law enforcement officers owe a private duty to refrain from using excessive force in the course of making arrests." Id. at 1297. However, as noted above, the supreme court in Benton explicitly disavowed the Quakenbush public duty/private duty test, upon which the holding of Kemezy is based. Thus, the excessive force exception to ITCA immunity announced in Kemezy cannot be regarded as good law to the extent that it is based on the Quakenbush test. The Act itself does not provide an explicit immunity exemption for excessive force or other illegal acts. The only exceptions specifically recognized are false arrest and false imprisonment. The interpretation of the ITCA to include a free standing illegality or excessive force exception, without any explicit support in the Act itself, would appear to run afoul of the supreme court's admonition in Benton that "it is the legislature, and not the courts, that is in the best position to determine the nature and extent to which governmental units in Indiana should be insulated from tort liability." Id. at 232. But see O'Bannon v. City of Anderson,
