Plaintiff, Diane Davis, in her individual capacity and as the personal representative of the estate of Lester Davis, deceased, filed suit in Wayne County Circuit Court on June 21, 1979, against the City of Detroit after the decedent hanged himself while in police custody. The complaint alleged that the decedent’s death resulted from the defective condition of the 11th Precinct holding cell where the decedent was detained and that the police violated the decedеnt’s constitutional rights. On January 23, 1984, after a lengthy trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff on her defective building claim, but found no constitutional rights violation. The jury awarded the plaintiff $190,000 which was reduced to $123,500 based on a finding by the jury that decedent had been 35% negligent in his death. The city appeals as of right. We affirm.
I
On June 22, 1976, at approximately 11:15 a.m., Detroit police responded to a radio call that a
Decedent was transported to the 11th Precinct for processing and was then placed in a detention cell in the precinct. At about 12:30 р.m., Officer Kovacik made a check of the cellblock area and removed the only other prisoner from his cell to be refingerprinted. When he returned the prisoner, he discovered decedent hanging by his shirt from the crossbars of his cell.
Other police officers who had contact with decedent both immediately after his arrest and at the 11th Precinct testified that they were unaware that decedent was a drug user and that they had not observed any signs of drug use or that decedent needed medical care. Sergeant Yeager, the desk sergeant at the precinct, evaluated decedent on his arrival at the precinct and testified at trial that if decedent had appeared injured, distraught or otherwise in need of medical care he would have been immediately transferred to the hospital.
At trial, the defendant objected to the plaintiff’s use of the Department of Corrections’ Rules for Jails, Lockups and Security Camps as evidence to establish that the holding cells were defective. The city argued that the regulations did not apply to the holding сells at the 11th Precinct. The trial court ruled that plaintiff could use the rules as evidence based on the case of
Young v Ann Arbor,
The detention facilities at the 11th Precinct consisted of 12 cells, 6 on each side separated by an aisle. The individual cells were constructed of concrete сinderblock on the rear wall and solid steel on the side walls which separate the cells. The front of the cells, including the doorways, were constructed of bars and crossbars. As a result
Frank Donley, the Supervisor for Facilities Inspection for the Depаrtment of Corrections, was the primary witness offered by the plaintiff to establish that the 11th Precinct was defective. Donley testified that he inspected the lockup facilites at the 11th Precinct to determine if they were in compliance with the Rules for Jails, Lockups and Security Camps promulgated by the Department of Corrections. He found several instances of noncompliance, including no two-way audio communications system to allow for communication between the cell area and the desk, too few exits in case of emergencies, no detoxification cell, exposed steel plates, and inadequate lighting and cell size. Donley further testified that the department’s rules provide for the granting of a variance from the rules, but that none was requested by the city. He also noted that drug addicts were more likely to commit suicide while in police custody and that detoxification cells usually prevent such suicides beсause of continuous visual observation and their special design. According to Donley, a suspect who is anxious, sweating heavily and has needle marks
II
In Young v Ann Arbor, supra, this Court was called upon to interpret MCL 791.262; MSA 28.2322 to determine whether regulations promulgated by the Department of Corrections applied to local penal facilities. Prior to its amendment in 1984, § 62 of the Department of Corrections act provided in relevant part:
"The department shall supervise and inspect local jails and houses of correction for the purpose of obtaining facts in any manner pertaining to the usefulness and proper management of said penal institutions and of promoting proper, efficient and humane administration thereof, and shall promulgate rules and standards with relation thereto; * *
The Court in Young ruled that the statute applied to a holding facility maintained by the City of Ann Arbor and therefоre it was. error not to have instructed the jury on the mandatory applicability of supervisory rules that had been promulgated by the department pursuant to its stautory authority. See 1979 AC, R 791.501 through 791.657. The Court stated:
"We conclude that the Legislature intended to give the department the authority to supervise and inspect all local penal institutions, however specifically designated. We hold that the statutory term 'local jail’ was meant to encompass any facility operаted by a unit of local government for the physical detention of persons charged with or convicted of a criminal offense. This includes, at least, city and county jails and local lockups.” Young, supra, p 517.
The Court further noted that such an interpreta
In the present case, the trial court relied heavily on Young in resolving many of the issuеs raised at trial. The court also instructed the jury based on Young and indicated that the department had adopted certain regulations pursuant to statutory authority which the jury should consider in determining whether the city was negligent in the maintenance of its lockup. Rule 791.555 required that a jail or lockup have at least one detoxification cell "designed for detention of chemically impaired persons during the detoxification process”. In this appeal, defendant argues that the trial court should not have relied on Young and makes numerous arguments concerning the proper interpretation of the department’s enabling legislation, most of which arguments were rejected in Young.
Initially, defendant asserts that in § 4 of the Department of Corrections act, the Legislature explicitly limited the department’s jurisdiction to post-conviction correctional facilities. Section 4 grants exclusive jurisdiction to the department over, among other arеas, penal institutions. Defendant incorrectly reasons that the grant of jurisdiction contained in § 4 is an express limitation on the supervisory powers of the department, when clearly it is not. The exclusive grant of jurisdiction found in § 4 simply provides that no other agency of the state government can regulate that area. In fact, the statute expressly provided in § 62 that the department shall supervise the operation of local jails.
Nor do we agree with defendant that there is a
However, as defendant correctly points out, § 62 was amended in 1984, after Young was decided, to take away the department’s supervisory and rule-making power over local detention facilities. As amended, the statute now provides in relevant part:
"(4) Except as provided in subsection (3), the department shall not supervise and inspect, or promulgate rules and standards for the administration of, holding cells, holding centers, or lockups. However, the department shall provide advice and services concerning the efficient and humane administration of holding cells, holding centers, and lockups at the request of a local unit of government.”
According to defendant, the statutory amendments are remedial and evidence that the Legislature did not ever intend for the department to exercise authority over municipal facilities and, therefore, the amendments should be given retroactive effect to this action. We disagree.
In general, statutory amеndments are applied prospectively only, unless the Legislature expressly or impliedly indicates its intention to give them retroactive effect.
Gormley v General Motors Corp,
It is readily apparent that the amendments are not remedial in nature and, in fact, afford less protection for those held in local holding cells and lockups. The amendments changed existing substantive law and should be limited to prospective application. Furthermore, there is no suggestion in the text of the 1984 amendments that the Legislature intended the amendments to apply retroactively. We further note that the amendments to § 62 were adopted several months after the jury rendered a verdict in this case. The jury was instructed based on the law that existed at the time. It would lead to absurd results if a jury verdict could be overturned every time a statute is subsequently amended.
Defendant next argues that the trial court should not have relied on Young because an application for leave to appeal from that decision is presently pending and thus the dеcision has no precedential value. This argument too is without merit.
After
Young
was originally decided, this Court granted a rehearing solely on the issue of whether governmental immunity applied to an individual
We also reject defendant’s argument that
Young
should be applied prospectively only because it was decided six years after Davis died. The general rule is that court decisions should be given full retroactive effect.
Placek v Sterling Heights,
Ill
Defendant argues that the verdict is contrary to the doctrine of governmental immunity because the operation of a jail is a governmental function. Defendant further argues that the defective public building exception to the governmental immunity doctrine does not apply in this case.
All governmental agencies are immune from tort liability when they are engаged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function.
Ross, supra.
The operation of a jail or detention facility
In the present case, plaintiff argued at trial that Lester Davis would not have been able to commit suicide if he had not been placed in а defective detention facility which failed to meet the standards required for lockups promulgated by the Department of Corrections.
However, defendant asserts that any negligence stems not from a defective condition in the holding cell, but, rather, from the alleged failure of the defendant’s agents to properly supervise the activities conducted within the cell. According to the defendant, the holding area where Lester Davis was confined was being used prеcisely as intended and the plaintiffs claim against the city is based on the officers’ alleged negligent failure to diag
We disagree and conclude that there was enough evidence from which the jury could have found that, had there been a detoxification cell, decedent would have been put in it. In light of the evidence tending to show that decedent was under the influence of drugs or undergoing withdrawal at the time of his arrest, the jury could have disbelieved testimony by police officers that they observed no signs of drug use. There was sufficient evidence introduced at trial from which the jury could conclude that the absence of a detoxification cell was a proximate cause of decedent’s death and constituted a building defect. In
Lowery v Dep’t of Corrections,
“With respect to allegations regarding the lack of a padded cell and an inadequate physical structure, it is clear that plaintiffs injuries did not arise from such alleged defects, but from the assaults allegedly inflicted by unknown guards and inmates. Accordingly, we believe that summary judgment was properly granted on this claim.”146 Mich App 358 .
In this case we had evidence that the lack of a
Dеfendant further asserts that the issue of whether a building defect existed should not have been submitted to the jury because the plaintiff failed to plead facts in avoidance of governmental immunity in her complaint. As defendant points out, we have previously held that to sufficiently plead the issue of the applicability of the public building defect exception to governmental immunity, the plaintiff must make specific allegations of the defect and cite the statutory excеption in the complaint.
Mosqueda v Macomb County Youth
Home,
IV
The defendant next raises a number of instances where allegedly irrelevant and prejudicial evidence was presented to the jury. First, defendant
The defendant next argues that testimony suggesting that the police may have brutalized Lester Davis prior to his death was irrelevant and should not have been admitted. We find no reversible error. MCR 2.613(A). Suggestions by the plaintiffs counsel that Davis may have been brutalized by the police were of a very limited nature, given the
Finally, defendant argues that the accumulation of other prejudicial testimony warrants reversal. Much of this testimony was relevant either to establish plaintiff’s claims or prove damages. Defendant has not explained in its brief in what manner the other testimony resulted in prejudicial error. This Court may not set aside a verdict because of an error in the admission of evidence "unless refusal to take this action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial justice”. MCR 2.613(A). We find no reversible error.
V
Defendant asserts that the jury award of $123,-500 (after the 35% reduction for decedent’s comparative negligence) rendered in this case was excessive and influenced by passion or prejudice and that the trial court abused its discretion in denying its motion for a new trial or
remittitur.
In
May v Grosse Pointe Park,
There is no exact mathematical formula which would allow a jury or court to precisely determine what amount would adequately compensate a party for the loss of society and companionship and pain and suffering due to the death of a close family member. As a result, it is generally recognized that such determinations should be left to the jury and a reviewing court should not arbitrarily substitute its judgment for that of the fact-finder, unless clear error appears in the record. May, supra, p 298.
Plaintiff provided evidence of her loss of society and companionship, as well as decedent’s pain and suffering. We conclude that the jury’s award of $123,500 for the plaintiff’s loss of society and companionship with her husband and decedent’s pain and suffering was not unreasonable and cannot be said to shock the judicial conscience.
Affirmed.
