On Pеtition To Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 45A03-0405-CV-224
In accordance with our decision in
Quakenbush v. Lackey,
Officer Jeffrey Patrick and the City of Gary (the defendants) appeal the denial of their summary judgment motion on the plaintiff Richard Miresso’s claim for damages from injuries sustained in an automobile collision with the officer. The trial court certifiеd its ruling for interlocutory appeal, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Patrick v. Miresso,
Asserting that Officer Patriсk was pursuing a fleeing burglary suspect at the time of the collision with the plaintiffs vehicle, the defendants sought summary judgment from the trial court on grounds that “Officer Patrick was engaged in the enforcement of the law at the time of the accident.” Appellants’ App’x. at 22. The defendants urged that both Patrick and the City of Gary are immune from civil liаbility under the “enforcement of ... a law” language of the Indiana Tort Claims Act (ITCA), which provides in relevant part:
A governmental entity or an employee acting within the sсope of the employee’s employment is not liable if a loss results from the following:
[[Image here]]
(8) The adoption and enforcement of or failure to adopt or enforce a law (including rules and regulations), unless the act of enforcement constitutes falsе arrest or false imprisonment.
Ind.Code § 34-13-3-3 (emphasis added).
The trial court found that the police vehicle was driving eastbound on 37th Avenue in Gary, Indiana, and entered an intersection “against the rеd light,” colliding with the plaintiffs vehicle, which was traveling northbound on Broadway with a green traffic signal. Appellants’ App’x. at 8. Citing Indiana Code § 9-21-1-8, the trial court noted that “[t]he legislature has imposed a statutory duty to operate an emergency vehicle with due regard for the safety of all persons.” 2 Id. at 9. Express *1085 ly relying on Quakenbush, the trial court recognized that the law enforcement immunity under Section 3(8) 3 of the ITCA “does not grant immunity to government agencies or employees from liability for the breach of the duty of reasonable сare as enumerated in I.C. § 9-21-1-8,” id., and it concluded that whether Officer Patrick breached this statutory duty of care was a genuine issue of material fact that precludеd summary judgment.
In
Quakenbush,
we hold that “a police officer traveling to the scene of a crime is not immune from civil liability for driving in a negligent manner.”
The appеllants’ brief does not, however, challenge or even discuss
Quakenbush,
which is mentioned only in their reply brief, where they declare that the rationale of
Quakenbush
“was abandoned in
Benton v. City of Oakland City,
Benton
does not overrule or undermine
Quakenbush.
The question presented in
Benton
is whether the City of Oakland City owed a duty to warn of shallow water at the city’s beach. In addressing this questiоn,
Benton
explores Indiana’s past common law jurisprudence regarding various tests (nonfeasance/malfeasance, governmental/proprietary function, рublic/private duty) for the existence of a governmental entity’s duty of care. But the discussion addresses only the common law, and not the “protections from tort liability afforded Indiana governmental units by statute.”
Benton,
In
King v. Northeast Security, Inc.,
We reach this conclusion for two principal reasons. First, while
Quakenbush
rests in substantial part upon its public/private duty analysis, its holding is also separately based on a basic principle of statutory construction.
Quakenbush
points out that interpreting the immunity prоvision “to confer immunity in situations involving the operation of police vehicles on public streets conflicts with other statutes which regulate the operation оf such vehicles.”
Quakenbush,
In addition, we observe that the immunity provisions set out in § 34-13-3-3 of the ITCA have been amended eleven times since Quakenbush was handed down in 1993, 6 but without any change that would alter the outcome in Quakenbush. The continued viability of this precedent is thus further supported by the doctrine of legislative acquiescence.
The ITCA law enforcement immunity provision was at issue in Minks and Ref-fitt, the two Court of Appeals cases emphasized by the defendants to support their claim for statutory immunity in the present case. Neither case, however, involved the operation of an emergency vehicle. Instead, both Reffitt and Minks applied the ITCA immunity for “failure to ... enforce a law” to shield police officers from civil damage actions arising from deaths or personal injuries allegedly resulting from the officers’ failures to arrest intoxicated drivers. Neither case under *1087 mined or questioned our decision in Quak-enbush.
We reassert the viability of the Quaken-bush holding that the ITCA’s “enforcement of ... a law” immunity does not shield governmental entities and personnel from liability resulting from a breach of the statutory duty to operate emergеncy vehicles “with due regard for the safety of all persons.” 7 Ind.Code § 9 — 21—1—8(d)(1).
Transfer having been granted, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. While requiring such "due regard for the safety of all persons,” this statute also expressly authorizes emergency vehicle drivers to proceed past red traffic signals or stop signs "but only after slowing down as neces *1085 sary for safe operation/' and to exceed "speed limits if the person who drives the vehicle does not еndanger life or property.” Ind. Code § 9 — 21—1—8(b).
. The trial court's November 2003 order referred to "the law enforcement immunity under Section 3(7),” which corresponded to the seсtion discussed in Quakenbush. In 2001, however, the legislature amended the ITCA to insert a new section 3(5) and redesignated the law enforcement immunity section from 3(7) to 3(8). Pub.L. No. 250-2001, § 6.
. The appellants also contend in this appeal that, separate from the law enforcement immunity provision in Section 3, Section 5 of the ITCA applies to protect Officer Patrick from personal liability. We decline to address this claim because it was not asserted in the trial court nor was it a basis for the denial of summary judgment.
. This is the immunity for "enforcement of ... a law” now identified as section 3(8). See supra note 3.
. See Pub.L. No. 208-2005, § 14; Pub.L. No. 161-2003, § 5; Pub.L. No. 1-2002, § 144; Pub.L. No. 280-2001, §§ 42, 56; Pub.L. No. 250-2001, § 6, 7; Pub.L. No. 142-1999, § 2; Pub.L. No. 220-1996, § 2; Pub.L. No. 151-1996, § 4; Pub.L. No. 146-1995, § 3.
. This also settles the basic issue addressed in
East Chicago Police Dept. v. Bynum,
