[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *243
¶ 1. Plаintiff appeals from a trial court order dismissing her claims of negligence and gross negligence against defendants State of Vermont and Trooper Maurice Lamothe. These claims arise from an alleged failure by the trooper to properly investigate a reported incident of domеstic abuse against plaintiff that continued after the trooper left the scene. We conclude that the State and the trooper owed no special duty to plaintiff. We therefore affirm the trial court's dismissal.1
¶ 2. In reviewing a motion to dismiss, we accept all of the nonmoving party's alleged faсts as true to determine whether there are any circumstances that may entitle that party to relief. Alger v. Dep't ofLabor Indus.,
¶ 3. Plaintiff's complaint alleges the following relevant fаcts. On November 18, 2002, plaintiffs former boyfriend sexually assaulted and battered her, leaving visible marks. The boyfriend had a history of domestic violence and was on probation at the time of the assault. After the sexual assault and battery, plaintiff's son told the clerk at a nearby store that plaintiff was still in danger. The clerk called 911, and the trooper responded. Plaintiff's son showed the trooper to plaintiff's apartment, where the boyfriend opened the door and let him in. The trooper interviewed the boyfriend separately while plaintiff was in the bedroom. After that interview, the boyfriend retrieved plaintiff from the bedrоom, and the trooper interviewed plaintiff in the apartment doorway within *244 earshot of the boyfriend. The trooper observed the marks on plaintiffs face, but left the apartment without making an arrest or investigating further. After the trooper left, the boyfriend sexually assaulted and battered plaintiff a second time.
¶ 4. In the early morning hours of the following day, the boyfriend broke into plaintiffs apartment and again beat and sexually assaulted her. Afterwards, he dragged plaintiff down the stairs, causing her bodily injury that required medical attention. At the hospital, plaintiff was treated for a bruised lip, depression, anxiety, and post-raрe trauma. A week later, the boyfriend was taken into custody and charged with second-degree aggravated domestic assault, burglary and sexual assault. He was found guilty of domestic assault and sexual assault and was sentenced to twenty to forty-five years.
¶ 5. Plaintiff subsequently filed the present suit, claiming that negligent supеrvision of the trooper by the State and gross negligence by the trooper led to the continued physical and sexual abuse of plaintiff. Defendants moved to dismiss, arguing that sovereign immunity barred the claims against the State under the Vermont Tort Claims Act,
¶ 6. Under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, claims against the State are barred "unless immunity is expressly waived by statute." Sabiav. State,
¶ 7. Before determining whether a private analog exists, we must first determine whether the factual allegations satisfy the necessary elements of a reсognized cause of action. See id. at 487,
¶ 8. Ordinarily, the duty owed between strangers does not extend to controlling the conduct of third persons to prevent physical harm. SeeBreslauer v. Fayston Sch. Dist.,
Sabia,(1) whether a statute sets forth mandatory acts for the protection of a particular class of persons; (2) whether the government has knowledge that particular persons within that class are in danger; (3) whether those рersons have relied on the government's representations or conduct; and (4) whether the government's failure to use due care would increase the risk of harm beyond what it was at the time the government acted or failed to act.
¶ 9. The State's law enforcement duties are provided for by statute. Thе Department of Public Safety was created "to promote the detection and prevention of crime generally."
¶ 10. The Vermоnt State Police Rules Regulations, Operational Policies Procedures ("Manual") sets forth specific procedures for investigating a report of domestic violence. The procedures include interviewing all parties separately and obtaining a sworn statement from the victim. Manual, § 5, Articlе VIII, 4.1(A)(2). The Manual also states that "[a]rrest is the Department's preferred response to domestic violence because arrest offers the greatest potential for ending the violence." Id. § 5, Article VIII, 4.2(A). As the Manual recognizes, however, an arrest may be made only when "there is sufficient evidence to establish probable cause." Id. § 5, Article VIII, 4.2(B). This arrest language is in contrast to the statutorily mandated acts we found sufficient to create a special duty in Sabia, where the Legislature required that the agency responsible for child welfare "shall" undertake certain specific procedures aftеr receiving a report of child abuse.
¶ 11. Additionally, the Manual has not been adopted as a rule pursuant to the Vermont Administrative Procedure Act,
¶ 12. Having concluded that thе State did not owe a special duty to plaintiff that would support a claim of negligence, we consider plaintiff's claim of gross negligence by the trooper.5 Gross negligence is a "heedless and palpable violation of legal duty respecting the rights of others." Shaw, Adm'r v. Moore,
¶ 13. On appeal, plaintiff recounts the trooper's numerous alleged violations of the Manual in support of her argument for gross negligence. Plaintiff, however, had no right to have the boyfriend arrested by the trooper, either pursuant to the law of arrest or under the Manual. Nor did the trooper fail to respond to the distress call made on plaintiffs behalf. As discussed above, the Manual created no duty to plaintiff, and the trooper was under no obligation to plaintiff to follow certain procedures. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the trooper might have better investigated the mаtter and exercised his discretion differently, plaintiff nevertheless failed to set forth a wholesale absence of care or indifference to duty owed to her, as is necessary to state a viable claim for gross negligence. See Hardingham,
¶ 14. Finally, plaintiff contends that dismissal was premature because she did not have adequate time for discovery. However, in deciding the motion to dismiss, all of plaintiffs allegations were accepted as true. The purpose of a motion to dismiss "is to test the law of the claim, not the facts which support it." Powers v. Office of Child Support,
Affirmed.
