Thе plaintiff is a correctional officer employed by the defendant. On October 5, 1976, while attempting to reсapture an escaped prisoner, plaintiff’s private vehicle was struck in the rear by a stolen vehicle operated by the escapee. Plaintiff’s civil action for damages alleged a count of negligence for allowing the prisoner to escape, and a count of unjust enrichment.
At the close of thе plaintiff’s case in a trial by jury the defendant moved for a directed verdict upon each count on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to establish a prima facie case. The court granted the motion, and the рlaintiff appeals. We affirm.
In reviewing the trial court’s ruling the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to thе plaintiff, without regard to any modifying evidence.
Condosta
v.
Condosta,
The plaintiff, an off-duty Chittenden Correctional Center officer, first learned of the escape from a radio scаnner located in his car while he was visiting a friend in St. Albans. The *605 plaintiff’s friend was a lieutenant at the St. Albans Correctionаl facility. When the lieutenant was told of the escape, he had plaintiff call the St. Albans facility to inform them that he thought he knew where the escapee would go, and that he and the plaintiff would attempt to find him. With plaintiff driving, they proceeded in the plaintiff’s car to a trailer park, and there they observed the escapee backing into the highway. A chase ensued, until plaintiff, at the direction of the lieutenant, attempted to cut оff the escapee by pulling his vehicle in front of the escapee’s car and stopping. When they werе almost stopped, the escapee’s car suddenly shot forward, struck the trunk area of plaintiff’s vehiclе, and then fled from the scene. Further pursuit that day proved futile. The escapee was later apprehended by other officers.
Although the escapee was considered dangerous, he had undergone screening and counseling during the month prior to the escape, and he had achieved a level of performance that qualified him for work outside the walls. This work release program is authorized by statute, and is an integral part of the rehabilitative function of the correctional centers. See 28 V.S.A. §§ 751-760.
The plaintiff contends that undеr this state of the evidence a jury question was raised as to whether the defendant was negligent in allowing the inmate to work outside the walls under the supervision of one unarmed officer who was not apprised of the inmatе’s propensity to escape. Furthermore, plaintiff claims that a jury question was raised as to whether the damage to his automobile was a foreseeable consequence of the alleged negligencе. As Mr. Chief Justice Barney stated in
Rivers
v.
State,
There are two interrelated legal concerns involved here. The first is whether оr not the acts of the defendants as set out in the pleadings constitute negligence. The second is the related question of whether, if negligence, those acts formed any part of the proximate cause. Without thаt connection, negligence itself does not support recovery. Paquin v. St. Johnsbury Trucking Co., Inc.,116 Vt. 466 , 470,78 A.2d 683 (1951).
Foreseeability, although an ingrediеnt of the determination of negligence, is not a factor in determining proxi
*606
mate cause,
Dodge
v.
McArthur,
The plaintiff’s claim of unjust enrichment is equally without merit. His evidence simply fails to disclose such facts and circumstances as would give rise to a duty or legal obligation on the part of the defendant to pay for the damage to his automоbile. Furthermore, the evidence fails to reveal any benefit received by the defendant the retention of which would be inequitable. The plaintiff volunteered the use of his vehicle, but in this state one is not permitted to recover for benefits voluntarily conferred.
Morse
v.
Kenney,
Judgment affirmed.
