Plaintiff appeals from a grant of summary judgment by the Court of Claims dismissing plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice as failing to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. GCR 1963,117.2(1). We affirm.
Plaintiff commenced this action on August 17, 1971 stating in his complaint that he had been the owner and publisher of a newspaper in Traverse City, and that on September 3, 1970 the plaintiff’s newspaper commenced publication of a series of *328 articles concerning the death of one John D. Cronk, a former mental patient at Traverse City State Hospital. The complaint further alleged that the article sought to raise the question of whether John D. Cronk expired from natural causes, criminal activity, negligence or gross negligence on the part of certain hospital personnel.
Plaintiff contends that as a result of the publication of the aforementioned articles, certain employees of the state hospital embarked on a campaign to destroy plaintiff’s business enterprise. Plaintiff claims that the medical superintendent of the hospital, administrative officer of the hospital, community relations director of the hospital, and director of nursing, as well as numerous lesser employees, "willfully, wantonly, and maliciously, by persuasion, economic and social pressure, threats and innuendos directed at claimant’s customers, advertisers, and claimant himself, did attempt to cause the demise and destruction” of his newspaper. These said employees did this by contacting various advertisers and customers by telephone and letter attempting to convince them to withdraw their support of plaintiff’s newspaper.
Plaintiff alleges that as a result of the above-stated activities by staté hospital employees, he lost most of his advertising customers. This ultimately led to the insolvency of his business accompanied by mental suffering and anxiety. On April 16, 1971, plaintiff instituted an action in the United States District Court against the above-referred-to state employees in their individual capacity, the substance of this action being identical to that which was subsequently filed in the Michigan Court of Claims.
In its opinion dated February 17, 1972, the Court of Claims states:
*329 "But one may look in vain for any affirmative legislation that manifests an intent on the part of the State of Michigan that it must respond in damages for intentional tortious acts or conduct on the part of employees of State agencies whereby they interfere with or even destroy an established business for profit enterprise or libel or slander the owners and operators thereof.
"The Michigan Court of Claims is a court of limited jurisdiction and the State of Michigan having clearly retained its defense of sovereign immunity in this particular action asserted against it by the plaintiff this Court is simply without any power to afford plaintiff any relief by way of damages on the claim or claims asserted.”
A brief review of the complicated judicial and, most importantly, legislative history of governmental immunity in Michigan will be useful. By
By
The constitutionality of § 7,
"We think that the constitutionality of § 7 cannot be sustained if it is construed as applying to all tort liability when the title is limited to negligence. We agree with the point made in the brief on behalf of the intervenor that legislators might have been misled by the title into voting affirmatively, thinking that immu *331 nity from liability for negligence desirable, yet not wishing to go so far as to grant immunity from assault and battery, false arrest, invasion of privacy, direct trespass,. nuisance, and other torts.” Maki v East Tawas,18 Mich App 109 , 123 (1969), aff’d385 Mich 151 (1971).
The effect of the Maki decision was to temporarily leave the state without immunity from tort liability, since immunity had become a creature of the Legislature and since a key section of the most recent statute had been declared void.
The Legislature acted quickly to cure this defect. By
"An act to make uniform the liability of municipal corporations, political subdivisions, and the state, its agencies and departments, when engaged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function, for injuries to property and persons.”
Section 7 was reenacted with the only change being the substitution of the word "the” in lieu of the word "said” following the word "wherein” in the first sentence:
"Except as in this act otherwise provided, all governmental agencies shall be immune from tort liability in all cases wherein the government agency is engaged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function. Except as otherwise provided herein, this act shall not be construed as modifying or restricting the immunity *332 of the state from tort liability as it existed heretofore, which immunity is affirmed.” MCLA 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107).
The effect of the 1970 amendment was to bring § 7 into conformity with the title of the act, thus curing the constitutional infirmity which was the basis of our holding in Maki, supra.
For the purpose of our review, each and every well-pleaded fact and allegation supported by fact must be presumed true and viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
Bielski v Wolverine Insurance Co,
Plaintiff urges that the "tort” in this case is not the type which would slow the process of government if allowed to be sued upon; that there is no legitimate governmental function which would be in jeopardy if employees of the state were aware that they could not deliberately attempt to cause the demise of a man’s livelihood; and that we should judicially fashion an intentional-wrong exception to the state’s tort immunity in much the same way that our courts and the Legislature have molded the proprietary-function exception thereto.
Bofysil v Highway Department,
However attractive this invitation might be, such an attempt would require us to engage in judicial legislation of the same nature eschewed by this Court and our Supreme Court in
Maki, supra.
The issue there was whether the Legislature clearly understood the impact of the distinction between "torts” and "negligence”. However, it
*333
would be a dangerous use of hindsight indeed for us to say that the Legislature failed in 1970 to realize the distinction between intentional torts and negligent torts when it chose to retain the all-encompassing term of "tort liability” in § 7. Furthermore, we are mandated by MCLA 8.3a; MSA 2.212(1) to construe words that have acquired "a peculiar and appropriate méaning in the law” according to such peculiar and appropriate meaning. We are not free to adopt another construction merely because it would more closely align itself with our notions of sound public policy. By its terms,
Plaintiff, however, has failed to fit himself within any of the exceptions to the doctrine of governmental immunity enumerated above. He does not deny that a state hospital as an entity carries on a role that is traditionally classified as a governmental, as opposed to a proprietary, function. He argues, however, that the phrase "in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function” has an active meaning which focuses on the immediate setting occasioning the wrongs complained of. Thus, the argument goes that the state has no immunity in this case because its employees were *334 not engaged in a governmental function, although they may have believed that they were protecting the state hospital by attacking plaintiff and his business. The argument is tempting, except for the fact that it is grounded in the theory of waiver of immunity by implication and is thus contrary to the second sentence of MCLA 691.1407; MSA 3.996 (107):
"Except as otherwise provided herein, this act shall not be construed as modifying or restricting the immunity of the state from tort liability as it existed heretofore, which immunity is affirmed.”
Although plaintiffs complaint sounds in tort, perhaps tortious interference with economic relations and defamation, he has made valiant attempts to argue for the first time on appeal that his cause of action really goes to a state-created nuisance. The origin of nuisance exception seems to be that the creation of the nuisance amounts to a taking of property or alternatively that the government as proprietor of land is subject to the same responsibilities as private landowners. Prosser, Law of Torts (3d ed), § 125, p 1009. There are, however, no conflicting real property interests in the case at bar. We grant that the term "nuisance” encompasses a multitude of evils, but we decline to seize upon the "catchword as a substitute for any analysis of a problem”. Prosser, § 87, p 592. Having found that one effect of
*335 Affirmed. No costs, a public question being involved.
