Parker v. City of Highland Park
This text of 273 N.W.2d 413 (Parker v. City of Highland Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Plaintiff Vincent Parker fell through a glass storm door on September 12, 1970. He was treated for serious lacerations on the back and neck at the emergency room of Highland Park General Hospital, a municipal hospital operated by the City of Highland Park. In 1972, Vincent Parker and his father, Casey Parker, filed a malprac[190]*190tice suit against the hospital; Physicians Emergency Service, the corporation which operated the emergency room; and the doctor who had treated Vincent Parker.
In their complaint plaintiffs alleged that the treating physician had failed to take X-rays, that Vincent Parker had continued to feel pain in his back after treatment at Highland Park General Hospital, and that in 1972 treatment at another hospital revealed that a large piece of glass had remained lodged underneath the skin of Vincent Parker’s back since his accident.
The city moved for summary judgment, contending that plaintiffs had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, because the city, as a governmental agency engaged in the exercise or discharge of a governmental function, was immune from tort liability under MCL 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107).1 The Court of Appeals denied leave to appeal. We granted leave to consider whether the day-to-day operation of a hospital2 is a "governmental function” as that phrase is used in the statute.
In the past this Court did hold that the operation of a hospital was a governmental function. Nicholson v Detroit, 129 Mich 246; 88 NW 695 [191]*191(1902), Martinson v Alpena, 328 Mich 595; 44 NW2d 148 (1950).3
We do not believe that because we once held the operation of a hospital to be a governmental function we must do so today.4 A comparison of the reasoning employed by this Court in Nicholson with that of Martinson shows that the meaning of the term "governmental function” has varied as the judiciary’s thinking on the nature of government has evolved.5
[192]*192Nor do we believe that the Legislature intended that we must today hold the operation of a hospital to be a governmental function because we did so in 1902 and 1950. As was stated in the Kavanagh-Fitzgerald dissenting opinion in Thomas v Dep’t of State Highways, 398 Mich 1, 17, fn 4; 247 NW2d 530 (1976), to read the second sentence of MCL 691.1407; MSA 3.996(107)6 as "preserving for all time state governmental immunity heretofore recognized by case law” would be to "assume that the Legislature failed to recognize that the evolution of case-law precedent is exclusively committed to the judicial branch of government”.7
Determining whether or not a certain activity is or is not a "governmental function” is a matter of statutory interpretation. In the absence of a legislative definition of the term, statutory interpretation is a function committed to the judiciary. The term "governmental function” is particularly subject to judicial interpretation because the phrase is of judicial origin.
It is time we recognize that our case-law precedent, as it attempts to distinguish between a governmental and a proprietary function, is "inher[193]*193ently unsound”.8 In abrogating common-law judge-made immunity (Pittman v Taylor, 398 Mich 41, 49; 247 NW2d 512 [1976]), we recognized the appropriateness of the analysis used to overrule a hospital’s charitable immunity to the governmental immunity area of the law. By substituting "definition of governmental function” and "governmental function” for "charitable” and "charities” in Parker v Port Huron Hospital, 361 Mich 1, 25; 105 NW2d 1 (1960), we said about charitable immunity then what we wish to say about governmental immunity today:
"The old rule of charitable immunity [definition of governmental function] was justified in its time, on its own facts. Today we have a new set of facts. It is true that the new facts are still described by the same word in our English language — "charities” [governmental function] — but that is because our language has not changed as the facts of our life have changed. We have new facts described by old nomenclature. To say that the old rule of law still applies is to reach a result on the basis of nomenclature, not of facts; it is to apply a rule, proper in its time, to completely new facts, and to justify doing so by reference to language merely without regard to the facts.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Again, we reject the rigid dichotomy of the past. Because an activity is not proprietary, it does not necessarily follow that the activity is governmental. We would limit the term "governmental function” to those activities sui generis governmental —of essence to governing. This principle was rec[194]*194ognized in Lykins v Peoples Community Hospital, 355 F Supp 52, 53 (ED Mich, 1973):
"This court does not believe the statutory scheme contemplates immunity for the day-to-day operations of a hospital. The statute speaks of immunity for 'governmental functions,’ and this court is of the opinion that while it may be an appropriate goal or objective of government to establish a hospital authority, it does not follow that the daily operations of such a hospital authority constitute a governmental function. Governmental functions more properly refer to the tasks of governing. There is, for example, a governmental character to activities such as the collection of taxes or the operation of a court system. But the services of healing offered by a public hospital are not governmental functions.”
The operation of a hospital is not an activity of a peculiar nature such that the activity can only be done by government. Rather, government participates alongside private enterprise, charitable and religious organizations in operating hospitals.9
In adopting the "of essence to government” test for defining the term "governmental function”, we reject the "common good of all” test applied in Martinson v Alpena, supra. The operation of a hospital is a noble undertaking on the part of a unit of government. But, the fact that the government-operated hospital contributes to the "common good” does not distinguish the government-operated hospital from the non-government-oper[195]*195ated hospital.10 We feel safe in assuming that hospitals operated by non-government entities, who do not enjoy immunity from tort liability, also contribute to the "common good”.
The modern hospital, whether operated by a city, a church, or a group of private investors, is essentially a business.* 11 As such, there is no rational ground upon which immunity for the government-operated hospital can rest.12
Reversed and remanded. No costs, a public question.
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273 N.W.2d 413, 404 Mich. 183, 1978 Mich. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-city-of-highland-park-mich-1978.