Defendant appeals by leave granted from a November 25, 1987, order of the Oakland Circuit Court denying its motion for summary disposition on the basis that the common-law rule enunciated in
Kreski v Modern Wholesale Electric Supply Co,
The record reveals that plaintiff Rodney C. Hill is an Oakland County deputy sheriff and that plaintiff Janette Hill is his wife. On January 19, 1985, Hill responded to a call for police assistance from defendant, Adler’s Food Town, Inc., a local food store at which employees had apprehended two shoplifting suspects. When Hill and his partner arrived at the store, an employee led them to the shoplifting suspects, who were being detained in the manager’s office in an area accessible by a *497 flight of four steps and not open to the public. After spending about twenty minutes in the manager’s office, Hill and his partner began to escort the two shoplifting suspects out of the store. While descending the flight of steps from the manager’s office, Hill slipped, he alleges, on "water and other foreign substances” which had accumulated on the top step, causing him to fall and injure his head and left leg.
Hill filed a complaint and, subsequently, two amended complaints against the store, alleging negligence. The store filed a motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (0(10), contending that Hill’s action was barred by the police officer’s rule as set froth in Kreski, supra. The circuit court, after hearing the parties’ positions as presented during oral argument, denied defendant’s motion without prejudice, finding that plaintiffs’ claim was not barred by the police officer’s rule because it fell within the rule’s "exceptions” recognized by the Supreme Court in Kreski.
In denying the store’s motion for summary disposition, the circuit court failed to indicate the particular subrule under which it was proceeding. It is apparent, however, from the focus of the parties’ counsel and of the court on the significance of the Kreski opinion as well as from the lack of focus on any disputed factual issues, that the order was issued pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) —failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted. Regarding this subrule, this Court has stated:
A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) will be granted only where the claim is unenforceable as a matter of law. Because such a motion tests the legal basis of the complaint, its *498 factual allegations are taken as true, along with any reasonable inferences or conclusions which may be drawn from them. Rathbun v Starr Commonwealth For Boys,145 Mich App 303 , 307;377 NW2d 872 (1985), lv den424 Mich 908 (1986); Local 80 Sheet Metal Workers v Tishman Construction Corp,103 Mich App 784 , 787;303 NW2d 893 (1981). [Kauffman v Shefman,169 Mich App 829 , 833;426 NW2d 819 (1988).]
On appeal, the store maintains that the rule in Kreski "bars plaintiffs negligence action because he was injured from an inherent risk in the performance of his employment as an Oakland County sheriffs deputy.” Hill, in response, contends that the rule in Kreski is inapplicable in this case because "[p]laintiffs fall had absolutely nothing to do with the nature and purpose of police work, which is to confront danger and protect the public,” and that, even if the rule were applicable, certain exceptions to the rule, recognized by the Supreme Court in the Kreski decision itself, are applicable in this instance.
In Kreski, supra, p 372, the Supreme Court stated:
[A]s a matter of public policy, we hold that fire fighters or police officers may not recover for injuries occasioned by the negligence which caused their presence on the premises in their professional capacities. This- includes injuries arising from the normal, inherent, and foreseeable risks of the chosen profession.
We find that a police officer’s slipping and falling on a negligently maintained step in a store to which he was summoned to exercise his authority to detain, question and arrest apprehended shoplifting suspects constitute occurrences stemming from the performance of the officer’s police duties. *499 It is impossible to imagine that Hill could have fulfilled his obligation to investigate the situation and, if necessary, to escort the shoplifting suspects from the store to the sheriffs office without, in this case, entering the manager’s office where the shoplifting suspects were being detained and transporting the suspects from the store to the sheriff’s office. In order to accomplish these functions, it was necessary that Hill ascend the four steps leading to the manager’s office and later descend them with the shoplifting suspects in custody. Thus, the negligence, if any, of the store relating to the condition of the steps leading to the manager’s office created a hazard which posed a threat to the safety of Hill in the performance of his duties. Such is precisely the type of action to which the rule in Kreski was intended to apply.
Our conclusion that the rule in
Kreski
is applicable in this case is buttressed by cases from other jurisdictions cited by the
Kreski
Court. For example, in
Flowers v Rock Creek Terrace,
308 Md 432;
Moreover, we discern no merit in plaintiffs contention that "exceptions” to the rule in
Kreski
apply in this case. First, the Supreme Court in
Kreski
did not specifically adopt any exceptions to the rule but merely noted, with some discussion on the matter, that "[s]everal exceptions involving factual situations not presented here have developed in the states employing a fireman’s rule.”
Based on language on page 371 of the
Kreski
opinion, Hill asserts that several exceptions to the general rule exist. He further asserts that three of those exceptions concern actions by a police officer or fire fighter regarding injuries sustained in a building (1) when the building was open to the
*501
public for business, (2) when the building’s owners or occupiers were on the premises at the time of the incident and were aware of the safety officer’s presence, and (3) when the building’s owners or occupiers had a present ability to warn the safety officer of the danger on the premises. The first exception is inapplicable because the area in which Hill sustained his injuries was not "open to the public.”
Having determined that the rule in Kreski is applicable in this case arid that the claimed exceptions to that rule recited in Hill’s appellate brief are inapplicable, we reverse the order of the circuit court and hold that Hill’s action against Adler’s Food Town, Inc., does not state a claim for which relief can be granted.
Reversed.
