This is a legal malpractice case. Plaintiff appeals from a summary judgment in favor of defendant attorneys. We reverse and remand.
Plaintiffs claim in this case arose out of a 1981 tort case in which she sued the Oregon State Police and the Klamath Falls Police Department for damages. Defendants were her attorneys in that case. Plaintiffs complaint in the earlier case alleged that, in 1980, as she was driving on Shasta Way crossing Alameda Street in Klamath County, her car was struck by another car that was being chased by employes of the defendant police agencies, who were acting within the scope of their employment; that at that time the police had posted road blocks at all streets crossing Alameda Street except Shasta Way; and that the police believed the driver of the car being chased had committed the crime of second-degree theft, a misdemeanor. Her complaint alleged the necessary tort claim notice and that the police were negligent:
“1. In conducting a high speed chase to pursue a suspected misdemeanant through the heavily populated suburbs of Klamath Falls, Oregon; and
“2. In allowing the subject of the high speed chase to enter the heavily populated suburbs of Klamath Falls, Oregon; and
“3. In failing to block traffic across Shasta Way at its intersection with Alameda Street to prevent an accident.”
She also alleged damages.
The police agencies admitted that plaintiffs car was struck by the car being chased by their employes and that the chase was being conducted in part because the police believed that the driver of the car being chased had committed misdemeanor theft. As an affirmative defense, each defendant alleged that it was engaged in the exercise of a discretionary function or duty and was immune from liability. See ORS 30.265.
The police agencies moved for judgment on the pleadings and, in the alternative, for summary judgment. 1 On June *44 3, 1982, the circuit court signed and filed an order allowing both motions. On June 22, the circuit court signed a judgment dismissing plaintiffs complaint and entering judgment for defendants. That judgment was filed with the clerk on July 1. On June 23, plaintiffs attorneys had filed a notice of appeal from the June 3 order. On August 11, the City of Klamath Falls moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that we lacked jurisdiction, because the June 3 order being appealed was not a final judgment. We agreed and dismissed plaintiffs appeal as to all parties. No appeal was taken from the July 1 judgment, which was final.
Thereafter, plaintiff brought this action against her former attorneys, alleging that they had committed malpractice in failing to file a timely appeal in her 1981 case. The attorneys moved for judgment on the pleadings and, in the alternative, for summary judgment. The circuit court allowed the motion for summary judgment and entered judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.
On appeal, plaintiff contends that the circuit court erred in holding that police agencies are immune from liability for damages suffered by persons injured by vehicles being chased by the police.
2
Plaintiffs action is based on the theory that, if an appeal had been timely filed, the appellate court
*45
would have reversed the circuit court’s ruling in that case. Whether the circuit court’s judgment in the 1981 case would have been reversed on appeal is a question of law.
Chocktoot v. Smith,
In
Ollison v. Weinberg Racing Assoc.,
“To state a cause of action in negligence, a plaintiff must allege that the defendant owed a duty of care, that defendant breached that duty and that the breach was the cause in fact of some legally cognizable damage to the plaintiffs. Brennen v. City of Eugene,285 Or 401 ,591 P2d 719 (1979). In evaluating a Rule 21A(8) dismissal, we take as true the allegations of the complaint and ‘any facts which might conceivably be adduced as proof of such allegations.’ See Brennan v. City of Eugene, supra,285 Or at 405 ; see also Mezyk v. National Repossessions,241 Or 333 , 339,405 P2d 840 (1965).”
In her 1981 complaint, plaintiff first alleged that the police were negligent:
“1. In conducting a high speed chase to pursue a suspected misdemeanant through the heavily populated suburbs of Klamath Falls, Oregon[.]”
The majority of jurisdictions which have considered the question whether the police have a duty to refrain from chasing a criminal suspect, even when risk of harm to the public arising from the chase is foreseeable, decline to impose such a duty. 4 *46 That is true even if the criminal suspect is being chased for committing a misdemeanor. 5 We adopt the majority rule.
Plaintiffs second and third allegations in her 1981 complaint claimed that the police were negligent:
“2. In allowing the subject of the high speed chase to enter the heavily populated suburbs of Klamath Falls, Oregon; and
“3. In failing to block traffic across Shasta Way at its intersection with Alameda Street to prevent an accident.”
We take those allegations to be claims that the police were negligent
in the manner in which they conducted the chase.
6
We conclude that those allegations state claims that should have been submitted to a trier of fact. Whether there is evidence to support them, or whether a trier of fact would find that the police were negligent in the manner in which they
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conducted the chase, is not for us to decide. Neither do we decide whether plaintiff is entitled to recover from defendants in this case. We only conclude, as a matter of law, that if defendant attorneys had timely filed an appeal in plaintiffs 1981 case, the judgment in that case would have been reversed on appeal, because plaintiffs 1981 complaint stated claims against the police agencies.
See
ORS 487.075(4) (a) and (b);
7
Dodson v. Lemon,
Although defendants were negligent in failing to file a timely appeal on plaintiffs behalf in the earlier case, whether plaintiff is entitled to recover damages in this case depends
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upon a future determination of whether the police were in fact negligent in the earlier case. That determination must be made on remand.
See St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. v. Speerstra,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
ORCP 21B authorizes the filing of a motion for judgment on the pleadings after the case is at issue, provided that trial on the merits is not thereby delayed. ORCP 21G(3). ORCP 47B authorizes a defending party to move for summary judgment as to any and all parts of a complaint.
Neither party filed affidavits. Plaintiffs brief states:
“The question presented and argued to the trial court by the motion for summary judgment and judgment on the pleadings was whether police officers may be liable for damage caused by a vehicle being operated by a pursued, suspected law violator. No other grounds for the motions were argued and each side addressed that issue alone, rather than the propriety of the pleadings or the sufficiency of the record supporting the motion for summary judgment. Since defendants’ liability ultimately rests on this question, both parties desire the court to determine the issue.”
Defendants’ brief states:
“The question of whether the case would have been reversed on appeal is a question of law for the court to decide and involves no questions of fact. Chocktoot v. Smith, [supra]. In order to recover in this case, the plaintiff is obliged to establish that she would have prevailed on appeal, i.e., that the appellate court would have ruled that the police officers are liable for injuries to third persons caused by the fleeing vehicle in a high-speed pursuit, and if reversed, established (sic) that she would have prevailed at the trial. If the plaintiff is unable to establish that the decision on summary judgment motion against her would have been reversed on appeal, she has no claim against any of the defendants. This issue alone was addressed by the parties to the trial court, and both parties desire this Court to determine the state of the law in Oregon as to this question.” (Emphasis in original).
Stovall v. Perius,
See United States v. Hutchins,
268 F2d 69 (6th Cir 1959);
Schatz v. Cutler,
Almost without exception, the cases relied on by plaintiff involved allegations that the police were negligent in the
manner
in which a chase was conducted.
See, e.g., Tetro v. Stratford,
See United State v. Hutchins, supra; Wilson v. City of Tucson, supra; Chambers v. Ideal Pure Milk Co., supra; Roll v. Timberman, supra; Stanton v. State of New York, supra; Wrubel v. State, supra.
In evaluating an ORCP 21 A(8) dismissal, we take as true the allegations of the complaint and any facts which might conceivably be adduced as proof of such allegations.
Ollison v. Weinberg Racing Assoc., supra,
ORS 487.075 provides in pertinent part:
“(1) The driver of an emergency vehicle, when responding to an emergency call or when in the pursuit of an actual or suspected violator of the law or when responding to but not upon returning from an emergency, is subject to the privileges and conditions set forth in this section.
<<* * * * *
“(4) The provisions of this section:
“(a) Do not relieve the driver of an emergency vehicle from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all other persons.
“(b) Are not a defense to the driver of an emergency vehicle in an action brought for criminal negligence or reckless conduct.”
In
Fiser v. City of Ann Arbor, supra,
It may be argued that our decision in this case will have a chilling effect on the performance of police officers. The Michigan Supreme Court answered that argument in
Fiser v. City of Ann Arbor, supra,
“The defendants argue that a reversal of the decision of the Court of Appeals would be contrary to good public policy because it would have a chilling effect on the performance of police officers. Whatever the merits of defendant’s argument, it is not for us to decide. The Legislature has determined the public policy embraced in [Michigan statutes], and, if the performance of police officers is chilled thereby, undoubtedly the Legislature was satisfied that a higher public good was served by enacting the statutes. Even if we were persuaded that the policy is unwise, we would not be free to change it.”
A similar policy decision is apparent in ORS 487.075(4)(a) and (b), supra.
In Chocktoot v. Smith, supra, the Supreme Court explained:
“The jury in the malpractice case is called upon, in effect, to decide what the outcome for plaintiff would have been in the earlier case if it had been properly tried, a process that has been described as a ‘suit within a suit.’ ”280 Or at 570 .
