Plaintiff, Eleanor Peters, sued de
Plaintiff is the personal representative of the estate of Leo Peters, who was killed by an escaped convict. William Solomon was serving a sentence for armed robbery and was housed at the Camp Cusino prison camp under the control of defendant. Solomon was sent to a job site outside the prison. He made his escape from that site and broke into the home of Patrick Peters, Leo’s son. Leo Peters arrived at the house while Solomon was there and was fatally shot.
We review a grant of summary disposition de novo.
Borman v State Farm Fire & Casualty Co,
Plaintiff argues that this case falls within the "trespass-nuisance” exception to governmental tort immunity recognized in
Hadfield v Oakland Co Drain Comm’r,
Therefore, we find that plaintiffs will successfully avoid a governmental immunity defense whenever they allege and prove a cause of action in trespass or intruding nuisance. Trespass-nuisance shall be defined as trespass or interference with the use or enjoyment of land caused by a physical intrusion that is set in motion by the government or its agents and resulting in personal or property damage. The elements may be summarized as: condition (nuisance or trespass); cause (physical intrusion); and causation or control (by government).
Plaintiff alleges that all these elements were sufficiently pleaded. Defendant argues, inter alia, that the facts of this case could not lead to a conclusion that any trespass-nuisance was "set in motion” or caused or controlled by the government or its agents. Specifically, defendant argues that there was an intervening cause for Leo Peters’ death, i.e., Solomon’s independent actions.
In
Continental Paper & Supply Co, Inc v Detroit,
Much like defendant here, the City of Detroit argued that it could not be held liable "because an arsonist was the intervening cause of the instant fire.” Id. at 410. This Court concluded otherwise, reasoning that the "defendant could be found liable even if an act of God were the source of the fire, because the claim made is that the warehouse was a nuisance precisely because it was a fire hazard.” Id. "[A]n intervening event (i.e., arson) will not preclude liability where the intervening event is part of the very nature of the nuisance involved.” Id. at 411. In other words, the fact that an intervening agent was involved was considered irrelevant because the fire damage to the plaintiff’s property was a likely result of Detroit’s maintainance of a fire hazard adjacent to the plaintiff’s property, regardless of the source of ignition.
Here, in contrast to Continental Paper, Solomon, as the intervening agent, was not an irrelevant factor. While defendant may have maintained the nuisance plaintiff alleges, i.e., an insecure prison system, the decedent’s death was the result of Solomon’s decisions after his escape, not the result of the allegedly insecure prison system. The fire damage to the plaintiff’s property in Continental Paper was the natural and likely result of the defendant’s maintainance of an adjacent firetrap. Here, the decedent’s death was not the natural and likely necessary result of the insecure prison; instead, it resulted from Solomon’s criminal actions following escape.
We agree with defendant that the element of control required by
Hadfield
cannot be established under the facts of this case. The trespass-nuisance
We affirm.
