Plаintiff appeals the trial court’s dismissal, based on the public duty doctrine, of his complaint against defendants City of Burlington and two police officers. The complaint alleged that defendants were negligent by failing to properly invеstigate the credentials of an applicant for a permit to operate a taxicab. Plaintiff contends the defendants’ negligence was the proximate cause of his daughter’s murder by a taxicab driver, who had previоusly been convicted of a felony and was known to have dangerous tendencies. We affirm, holding that defendants did not owe the decedent a legal duty and that plaintiff’s allegations did not fall within an exception to the public duty doctrine.
Plaintiff James W. Clark, administrator of the estate of his daughter, Kathy Clark Fogleman, filed this action on 4 June 1992 against defendants The Red Bird Cab Company (Red Bird Cab); Leonard Warner, the owner of Red Bird Cab; the City of Burlington; Richard Hall (as a police officer employed by the City of Burlington); and Raymond Shelton (as Chief of Police of the City of Burlington). The facts as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint are as follows: In August of 1990, Keith Allen Brown applied to the City of Burlington for a permit to operate a taxicab. Mr. Brown had previously been convicted in North Carolina of common law robbery and assault *402 with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injuries. In addition, Mr. Brown’s general reputation was that of being a dangerous individual.
The Burlingtоn City Code establishes certain procedures which must be followed by the Chief of Police when any person applies for a permit to operate a taxicab within the city’s corporate limits. Once a person submits an аpplication for a permit to drive a cab, “[t]he chief of police or a member of the police department designated by him is hereby charged with the duty of investigating the facts stated in any application recеived . . . .” Burlington City Code, Sec. 35-64. Under grounds for refusal, “[t]he chief of police may refuse to grant or renew a taxi driver’s permit in case of an application from any person . . . [w]ho has been convicted of a felonyf.]” Burlington City Codе, Sec. 35-63. If the chief of police concludes the applicant has satisfied other requirements and is not “an habitual violator of traffic laws, or other criminal laws, the chief of police shall issue a permit to the aрplicant to drive a taxicab.” Burlington City Code, Sec. 35-65.
Plaintiff alleges that Chief of Police Raymond Shelton gave Officer Richard Hall the responsibility of investigating Mr. Brown’s application for a taxicab permit. Sometime after filing his application, Mr. Brown was issued an operator’s permit. On 3 November 1990, Ms. Fogleman telephoned Red Bird Cab to have a taxi take her to a local restaurant. Red Bird Cab dispatched Mr. Brown to Ms. Fogleman’s residence. Mr. Brown drove Ms. Fogleman to a rural area where he assaulted, raped, and murdered her. Mr. Brown committed suicide prior to trial on the criminal charges. Defendants admit that Brown killed Ms. Fogleman after being dispatched to her residence.
Defеndants City of Burlington, Richard Hall, and Raymond Shelton made a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint on 29 July 1992. In an order dated 14 September 1992, the trial court dismissed plaintiff’s cause of action as to those defendants for failure to state a clаim upon which relief could be granted. A second order, identical to the 14 September order, except for a provision indicating there was “no just reason for delay in the entry of this judgment,” was filed 2 October 1992. Plaintiff argues on apрeal that his complaint was sufficient to survive the defendants’ motion to dismiss.
The appeal in this case is interlocutory, since it fails to “[dispose] of the cause as to all the parties, leaving nothing to be judicially determined betwеen them in the trial court.”
Veazey v. City of
*403
Durham,
This Court has found cases which have presented defenses of governmental or sovereign immunity to be immediately appealable because such orders have аffected a substantial right.
See, i.e., Slade v. Vernon,
On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “[t]he question for the court is whether, as a matter of law, the allegations of the complaint, treated as true, are sufficient to state a claim upon which relief may be granted under some legal theory, whether рroperly labeled or not.”
Harris v. NCNB,
In tort, there will be no liability unless the law imposes a duty.
Paschall v. N.C. Dep’t of Correction,
This case is governed by the “public duty doctrine,” or the general сommon law rule that “a municipality and its agents act for the benefit of the public, and therefore, there is no liability for the failure to furnish police protection to specific individuals.”
Braswell v. Braswell,
While this policy is a necessary and reasonable limit оn liability, exceptions exist to prevent inevitable inequities to certain individuals. There are two generally recognized exceptions to the public duty doctrine: (1) where there is a special relationship between the injured party and the police, for example, a state’s witness or informant who has aided law enforcement officers; and (2) “when a municipality, through its police officers, creates a special duty by promising protection to an individual, the protection is not forthcoming, and the individual’s reliance on the promise of protection is causally related to the injury suffered.” Coleman v. Cooper,89 N.C. App. at 194 ,366 S.E.2d at 6 ... .
Id.
at 371,
Our courts have applied the two exceptions to the public duty doctrinе very narrowly in this State. For example, in
Prevette v. Forsyth County,
In this case, plaintiff does not allege the existence of any “special relationship” between defendants and decedent which would exempt plaintiff’s case from the public duty doctrine under the first exception. As for the “special duty” exception, “plaintiff must show that an actual promise was made by the police to create a special duty, that this promise was reasonably relied upon by plaintiff, and that this reliance was causally related to the injury ultimately suffered by plaintiff.”
Braswell v. Braswell,
*406 Here, a review of the applicable city code provisions reveals no specific identification of a particular class оf persons being singled out for protection by the city. We find no language creating a special duty which the police officers would owe to taxicab customers over and above the duty owed to the general public. Consequently, because plaintiff is unable to demonstrate a duty owed to Ms. Fogleman by the defendants, the trial court did not err in dismissing plaintiffs claim.
Finally, plaintiff argues that because his complaint alleges that defendants’ conduct was “grossly nеgligent” as well as “wilful” and “wanton,” the complaint is somehow removed from the shield of the public duty doctrine. Plaintiffs argument is without merit. The public duty doctrine previously has barred claims of gross negligence.
See, e.g., Hull,
Affirmed.
