This appeal arises out of a complaint and third-party complaint filed by Isabella County and its Board of County Road Commissioners (Isabella County), against defendants and third-party defendants seeking contribution or indemnity.
The facts precipitating the filing of this case are detailed in
Converse v Isabella Co,
*103
In
Converse I, supra,
this Court affirmed judgments of dismissal entered in favor of third-party defendants State of Michigan, Department of State Police, and four state police officers. The Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, vacated the case and remanded it to the trial court for reconsideration in view of
Ross v Consumers Power Co (On
Rehearing),
I. Did the Court of Claims err in dismissing Isabella County’s claim for contribution against the state and state police?
Isabella County’s claim for contribution against the state and state police was based on the contribution statute, MCL 600.2925(a); MSA 27A.2925(1). The right to contribution is controlled entirely by statute.
Reurink Bros Star Silo, Inc v Clinton Co Road Comm’rs,
A governmental agency is entitled to governmental immunity when it is engaged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function. MCL 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107). "[A] governmental function is an activity which is expressly or impliedly mandated or authorized by constitution, statute, or other law.” Ross, supra, p 620. The Legislature intended the term "governmental function” to be interpreted broadly. Ross, supra, p 618. The operation of the state police is authorized by statute:
The commissioner and each oflicer of the department are hereby individually vested with the powers of a conservator of the peace.
The commissioner and all officers of said department shall have and exercise all the powers of deputy sheriffs in the execution of the criminal laws of the state and of all laws for the discovery and prevention of crime and shall have authority to make arrests without warrants for all violations of the law committed in their presence including laws designed for the protection of the public in the use of the highways of the state, and to serve and execute all criminal process. It shall be their duty to cooperate with other state authorities and local authorities in the detecting of crime, apprehending of criminals, and preserving law and or *105 der throughout the state. [Emphasis added. MCL 28.6; MSA 4.436.]
The operation of a police department is a governmental function.
Hill v City of Saginaw,
Isabella County cites
Richardson v Jackson Co,
Isabella County also argues that the state and state police should be held vicariously liable for the actions of its officers. In Ross, supra, pp 591-592, the Supreme Court enunciated the prerequisites to the establishment of respondeat superior liability:
Vicarious liability for all other torts may be imposed on a governmental agency only when its *106 officer, employee, or agent, acting during the course of his employment and within the scope of his authority, commits a tort while engaged in an activity which is non-governmental or proprietary, or which falls within a statutory exception.
Accord,
Lockett v Detroit Police Dep’t,
In siahimary, the Court of Claims correctly dismissed on the ground of governmental immunity Isabella County’s claim for contribution from the state and state police.
II. Did the Court of Claims err in dismissing Isabella County’s claim for indemnity against the state and state police?
Isabella County argues that it is entitled to indemnification by the state or state police under an implied contract to indemnify. We disagree.
An implied contract to indemnify arises only if there is "a special relationship between the parties or a course of conduct whereby one party undertakes to perform a certain service and impliedly assures indemnification.” Palomba v East Detroit,112 Mich App 209 , 217;315 NW2d 898 (1982). [Skinner v D-M-E Corp,124 Mich App 580 , 585;335 NW2d 90 (1983).]
The record fails to disclose a factual basis from which to infer that the state or state police in any way implicitly assured the county of indemnification.
*107
Furthermore, implied contractual indemnification is not available to a party who was actively negligent in causing the primary plaintiff’s injury.
Williams v Litton Systems, Inc,
III. Did the circuit court err in denying Officer Frey’s motion for summary disposition on Isabella County’s claim for contribution?
Officer Frey did not assert governmental immunity as a defense to Isabella County’s claim for contribution. Rather, Officer Frey argued that he could not be held liable in tort to the primary plaintiff because, as a matter of law, he owed no duty to Mr. Converse. To be held liable for a contribution claim, Frey must have owed a duty to Converse, the primary plaintiff.
Caldwell v Fox,
In the present case, we do not believe that sufficient facts were revealed at the trial level demonstrating that Officer Philip Frey and Rodney Converse shared a "special relationship” such as to have obligated Officer Frey to have conformed to a particular standard of conduct toward Mr. Converse. Certainly, in his capacity as a dispatcher at a state police post, Officer Frey owed a duty to the general public to nonnegligently inform the appropriate authorities of a stop sign reported to have been destroyed during a traffic accident. That duty to the general public, however, should not be viewed as having been transformed into a duty to any particular individual, such as Mr. Converse, merely because, as a result of a breach of the duty to the general public, a particular individual suffered injury. Such a view only permits the general rule to be subsumed by its exception, i.e., it permits the rule that a police officer’s duty to preserve the peace is owed to the general public to be ignored on the basis of the existence of a "special *109 relationship” between the officer and a particular individual whenever the latter suffers an injury traceable to the officer’s failure to have acted in conformity with his duty to the general public.
In conclusion, in Docket No. 101899, we affirm the order of the Court of Claims granting summary disposition in favor of the state and state police, and in Docket No. 101938, we reverse the order of the circuit court denying summary disposition in favor of Officer Frey.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
