Sepega v. DeLaura Concurrence
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Opinion
EVELEIGH, J.
The common-law firefighter's rule provides, in general terms, that a firefighter or police officer who enters private property in the exercise of his or her duties generally cannot bring a civil action against the property owner for injuries sustained as the result of a defect in the premises. See
Levandoski
v.
Cone
,
The defendant filed a motion to strike the amended complaint, and the plaintiff objected. On September 15, 2015, the trial court issued a memorandum of decision denying the defendant's motion to strike. Thereafter, the defendant filed a motion for articulation that the court, sua sponte, recast as a motion for reargument and reconsideration. After hearing argument from the parties, the trial court vacated its original decision and issued a new memorandum of decision granting the defendant's motion to strike on October 29, 2015. The defendant then filed a motion for judgment, which the trial court granted. This appeal followed. 2
"We begin by setting out the well established standard of review in an appeal from the granting of a motion to strike. Because a motion to strike challenges the legal sufficiency of a pleading and, consequently, requires no factual findings by the trial court, our review of the court's ruling... is plenary.... We take the facts to be those alleged in the complaint that has been stricken and we construe the complaint in the manner most favorable to sustaining its legal sufficiency.... Thus, [i]f facts provable in the complaint would support a cause of action, the motion to strike must be denied.... Moreover, we note that [w]hat is necessarily implied [in an allegation] need not be expressly alleged.... It is fundamental that in determining the sufficiency of a complaint challenged by a defendant's motion to strike,
all well-pleaded facts and those facts necessarily implied from the allegations are taken as admitted.... Indeed, pleadings must be construed broadly and realistically, rather than narrowly and technically." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Geysen
v.
Securitas Security Services USA, Inc.
,
On appeal to this court, the plaintiff asserts that the trial court incorrectly granted the motion to strike because his claim is not barred by the firefighter's rule. Specifically, the plaintiff asserts that his claim is controlled by this court's decision in
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
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EVELEIGH, J.
The common-law firefighter's rule provides, in general terms, that a firefighter or police officer who enters private property in the exercise of his or her duties generally cannot bring a civil action against the property owner for injuries sustained as the result of a defect in the premises. See
Levandoski
v.
Cone
,
The defendant filed a motion to strike the amended complaint, and the plaintiff objected. On September 15, 2015, the trial court issued a memorandum of decision denying the defendant's motion to strike. Thereafter, the defendant filed a motion for articulation that the court, sua sponte, recast as a motion for reargument and reconsideration. After hearing argument from the parties, the trial court vacated its original decision and issued a new memorandum of decision granting the defendant's motion to strike on October 29, 2015. The defendant then filed a motion for judgment, which the trial court granted. This appeal followed. 2
"We begin by setting out the well established standard of review in an appeal from the granting of a motion to strike. Because a motion to strike challenges the legal sufficiency of a pleading and, consequently, requires no factual findings by the trial court, our review of the court's ruling... is plenary.... We take the facts to be those alleged in the complaint that has been stricken and we construe the complaint in the manner most favorable to sustaining its legal sufficiency.... Thus, [i]f facts provable in the complaint would support a cause of action, the motion to strike must be denied.... Moreover, we note that [w]hat is necessarily implied [in an allegation] need not be expressly alleged.... It is fundamental that in determining the sufficiency of a complaint challenged by a defendant's motion to strike,
all well-pleaded facts and those facts necessarily implied from the allegations are taken as admitted.... Indeed, pleadings must be construed broadly and realistically, rather than narrowly and technically." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Geysen
v.
Securitas Security Services USA, Inc.
,
On appeal to this court, the plaintiff asserts that the trial court incorrectly granted the motion to strike because his claim is not barred by the firefighter's rule. Specifically, the plaintiff asserts that his claim is controlled by this court's decision in
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
In
Kaminski
, this court considered whether parents could be held liable for injuries that a police officer received when accompanying mental health workers to a home in response to a request for mental health assistance to control the behavior of an adult son. Id., at 30,
In
Levandoski
, a police officer brought a claim against a suspect for injuries he sustained during a pursuit.
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
In
Levandoski
, we explained the history of the firefighter's rule in this state as follows: "This court first applied the firefighter's rule in
Roberts
v.
Rosenblatt
,
"In
Furstein
v.
Hill
, [
"The first reason was cast in terms of the similarity of the roles of firefighters and police officers, and the reasonable expectations of landowners regarding those two types of public officers.... The second reason was essentially a reiteration of the doctrine of assumption of the risk.... The third reason rested upon the
combination of the avoidance of double taxation upon landowners and the availability of workers' compensation benefits to compensate the injured firefighter or police officer." (Citations omitted; footnote added; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
In
Levandoski
, this court concluded that "[t]his background persuades us that the rule should not be extended to a nonpremises liability case, such as the present appeal. Because the firefighter's rule is an exception to the general rule of tort liability that, as between an innocent party and a negligent party, any loss should be borne by the negligent party, the burden of persuasion is on the party who seeks to extend the exception beyond its traditional boundaries. The history of and rationales for the rule persuade us, however, that it should be confined to claims of premises liability." Id., at 661,
On appeal to this court, the defendant asserts that
Levandoski
can be distinguished on the ground that, unlike the present case, the cause of action in
Levandoski
was not against a homeowner.
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
"The most often cited policy considerations [in support of the firefighter's rule] include: (1) [t]o avoid placing too heavy a burden on premises owners to keep their premises safe from the unpredictable entrance of fire fighters; (2) [t]o spread the risk of ... injuries to the public through workers' compensation, salary and fringe benefits; (3) [t]o encourage the public to call for professional help and not to rely on self-help in emergency situations; and (4) [t]o avoid increased litigation."
Christensen
v.
Murphy
,
By focusing on a firefighter or police officer as a class from whom a premises owner needs immunity from liability, not on the reasonableness of the activity of the premises owner in the circumstances, the first policy consideration operates as a veiled form of an assumption of risk analysis. This legislature of this state, however, has abolished the assumption of risk doctrine. See General Statutes § 52-572h (l) ;
7
see also
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
The defendant asserts that we should recognize a difference between a "primary" assumption of risk, which arises from the "special relationship between the firefighter and the public," and a "secondary" assumption of risk, which arises from an individual firefighter's decision to encounter a particular risk. The defendant argues that, while Connecticut may have abolished the latter, it did not abolish the reasoning underlying the former. Thus, the defendant argues that a firefighter may assume a risk, in the broader sense, when that risk is inherent to his or her occupation. We are not persuaded. There is no indication in § 52-572h (l) that the legislature intended to differentiate between degrees of assumption of risk. The doctrine was abolished in its entirety. It would be both unfair and incongruous, therefore, for this court to rely on the assumption of risk doctrine as a basis for extending the firefighter's rule beyond premises liability claims when the clear public policy of our state is contrary to the very rationale for that doctrine. Regardless of the continuing vitality of the firefighter's rule as it relates to premises liability claims, it certainly should not be extended on the basis of the common-law doctrine of assumption of risk. 8
Furthermore, as this court explained in
Levandoski
, "the firefighter's rule is essentially a rule of premises liability. The distinction upon which it rests, namely, whether the plaintiff is an invitee or licensee, is itself a distinction that exists in our law only with regard to claims based upon premises liability, and the differing duties of care that emanate from those distinctions are cast in terms of a landowner's duty to persons on his or her land. We have recognized that the rule is directly applicable [to] an issue of landowner liability .... We have declined to extend the rule to a case in which the plaintiff firefighters sought to recover damages from the defendant alarm company for injuries and death sustained as a result of a collision caused by the negligent maintenance and failure of brakes on their fire engine while responding to a false alarm transmitted by the defendant.... This essential link to a landowner's liability, as we [have previously] explained ... is the most compelling argument for the rule, because of the reasonable expectations of landowners, and because of the ensuing hardship that would be visited upon a landowner in the absence of the rule. Indeed, we have reiterated
that this is [t]he most compelling argument for the continuing validity of the rule .... This argument simply does not apply if the defendant is not a landowner. Indeed, neither the differing status of the plaintiff nor the reasonable expectations of the defendant
are relevant if the plaintiff is not engaged in entering the land of the defendant. It would be anomalous, therefore, to extend the rule to a case in which the most compelling argument for the rule is inapplicable." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
Indeed, in
Levandoski
, this court explained that "to the extent that the firefighter's rule rests on the doctrine of assumption of the risk, it would be inconsistent with the policy of our general tort law to extend the rule beyond its present confines. That policy is expressed in ... § 52-572h, pursuant to which the legislature has abolished the doctrine of assumption of the risk in negligence actions. Section 52-572h (
l
) provides: 'The legal doctrines of last clear chance and assumption of risk in actions to which this section is applicable are abolished.' Subsection (b) of § 52-572h makes the statute applicable to 'causes of action based on negligence ....' The present action is '[a cause] of action based on negligence ....' " (Footnote omitted.) Id., at 662-63,
We next turn to the claim that the firefighter's rule is supported because it spreads the risk of firefighter's injuries to the public through workers' compensation, salary and fringe benefits. As the Supreme Court of Oregon explained, "[t]he weakness in the loss-spreading rationale ... is obvious. By denying a public safety officer recovery from a negligent tortfeasor, the officer is not directed to recover his damages from the general public; rather the officer is totally precluded from recovering these damages from anyone. Contrast this with other public employees who are injured when confronting dangers on their jobs. The latter can recover workers' compensation and salary benefits from the public, but are also allowed additional tort damages from the third-party [tortfeasors]."
Christensen
v.
Murphy
, supra,
The defendant claims that the firefighter's rule is also justified because police officers and firefighters receive extra benefits as a result of their employment. We disagree. While there may be certain additional benefits negotiated with municipalities as the result of union collective bargaining, we cannot discern any statute in which the legislature has provided extra compensation to police officers or firefighters as a result of their employment. 10
The proponents of the firefighter's rule claim that it encourages the public to call for professional help and not to rely on self-help in emergency situations. This rationale has been criticized by one legal scholar, William L. Prosser, as "preposterous rubbish." W. Prosser, Law of Torts (4th Ed. 1971) § 61, p. 397. Indeed, we conclude that, in an emergency situation, it is unlikely any person would be hesitant to call for help because they are concerned about liability for potential injuries to public safety personnel.
We note that the concurrence disagrees with this conclusion. Although a majority of jurisdictions employ the firefighter's rule, there are many that do not.
11
In total, eighteen states have abolished the firefighter's
rule, severely limited its application, or have not addressed it at all.
12
See
Apodaca
v.
Willmore
,
Although the concurrence correctly states that we provide no evidence to support our agreement with Prosser, this is because there is no significant evidence
for, or against, Prosser's statement. Other jurisdictions have either agreed with his characterization;
Christensen
v.
Murphy
, supra,
The concurrence relies on
Lodge
v.
Arett Sales Corp.
,
In
Lodge
, firefighters were responding to a fire alarm, which was in reality a false alarm, and the fire engine's brakes were defective. Id., at 566-70,
The concern that limiting the firefighter's rule will result in increased litigation is also not persuasive. As this court has recognized in other contexts, "rather than unnecessarily and unwisely increasing litigation, imposing a duty in this case will likely prompt [people] to act more responsibly ... in the interest of preventing foreseeable harm ...."
Ruiz
v.
Victory Properties, LLC
,
Finally, we are not persuaded by the rationale that the firefighter's rule helps to avoid double taxation. This assertion has its genesis in the expectation that "the public should [and does] compensate its safety officers both in pay that reflects the hazard of their work and in workers' compensation benefits for injuries suffered when the risks inherent in the occupation materialize."
Furstein
v.
Hill
, supra,
As this court explained in
Levandoski
, "to the extent that the firefighter's rule rests on the avoidance of double taxation of the landowner and the presence of workers' compensation benefits for the injured firefighter or police officer, the rationale does not apply to the present case. The defendant is not a taxpayer, as is a landowner who pays taxes on his or her property. Of course, although in any given case a negligent tortfeasor who injures a firefighter or police officer may also pay taxes to the local municipality, that fact would be wholly fortuitous. The point of the rule, however, is that the landowner who owes a lesser degree of duty to the police officer who enters his or her land has that benefit because, as a landowner, he or she also indirectly pays the salary of the officer through property taxes. Furthermore, we are not persuaded that, simply because the firefighter or police officer has recourse to workers' compensation benefits, he or she should not also be able to recover from a third party based on negligence. We do not ordinarily put such an elevated burden on recovery where, for example, the third party is a product manufacturer, and we see no persuasive reason to do so in the context of the present case. In addition, as the present case indicates, permitting the plaintiff to recover for the defendant's negligence will tend to reduce workers' compensation costs by permitting the plaintiff's employer to recoup those benefits."
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
Further, we recognize that most homeowners are insured against the risk of people being injured on their property due to the fault of the homeowner. The homeowner
is able to insure against such a risk. Therefore, it hardly constitutes double taxation when a homeowner's insurance carrier must pay money to a person injured on the homeowner's property due to the homeowner's
negligence. Given these facts, public policy considerations strongly suggest that the firefighter's rule should be, at the very least, limited to premises liability claims.
14
Although the defendant points to several jurisdictions that have extended the firefighter's rule beyond premises liability claims, we note that some of those jurisdictions have not specifically rejected the doctrine of assumption of risk as the legislature has in Connecticut. Further, we are persuaded by the reasoning of those cases that have either refused to adopt the firefighter's rule at all or limited it to premises liability. See
Thompson
v.
FMC Corp.
,
Accordingly, we are persuaded by the plaintiff's argument that the present case is controlled by
Levandoski.
To the extent that the defendant asserts that
Kaminski
supports barring negligence claims against third parties by public safety officers, we conclude that assertion is foreclosed by
Levandoski.
As we stated in
Levandoski
"[w]e disagree with the defendant's suggestion that we ought to extend the firefighter's rule beyond situations in which the plaintiff is injured while on the defendant's land; instead, we agree with those jurisdictions that have framed the rule as one that relates specifically to premises liability and defines the duty owed
by an
owner or occupier of land.
" (Emphasis in original.)
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
In this opinion ROGERS, C. J., and ESPINOSA and VERTEFEUILLE, Js., concurred.
ROBINSON, J., with whom PALMER and McDONALD, Js., join, concurring in the judgment.
I agree with the majority's conclusion that the common-law firefighter's rule
1
does not bar the claims of ordinary negligence
made by the plaintiff, Robert Sepega,
2
a municipal police officer, against the defendant, Lawrence R. DeLaura. Specifically, I agree with the majority that this case, which arises from injuries that the
plaintiff sustained when he forcibly entered a home inside of which the defendant had barricaded himself while violating a protective order, is controlled by this court's decision in
Levandoski
v.
Cone
,
I agree with the majority's statement of the relevant facts, procedural history, and standard of review. Turning to the applicable legal principles, it is well settled that a "cause of action in negligence is comprised of four elements: duty; breach of that duty; causation; and actual injury." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Lawrence
v.
O & G Industries, Inc.
,
"Whether a duty exists is a question of law for the court, and only if the court finds that such a duty exists does the trier of fact consider whether that duty was breached....
"Duty is a legal conclusion about relationships between individuals, made after the fact, and imperative to a negligence cause of action. The nature of the duty, and the specific persons to whom it is owed, are determined by the circumstances surrounding the conduct of the individual.... Although it has been said that no universal test for [duty] ever has been formulated ... our threshold inquiry has always been whether the specific harm alleged by the plaintiff was foreseeable to the defendant. The ultimate test of the existence of the duty to use care is found in the foreseeability that harm may result if it is not exercised.... By that is
not meant that one charged with negligence must be found actually to have foreseen the probability of harm or that the particular injury [that] resulted was foreseeable .... [T]he test for the existence of a legal duty entails (1) a determination of whether an ordinary person in the defendant's position,
knowing what the defendant knew or should have known, would anticipate that harm of the general nature of that suffered was likely to result, and (2) a determination, on the basis of a public policy analysis, of whether the defendant's responsibility for its negligent conduct should extend to the particular consequences or particular plaintiff in the case." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Lawrence
v.
O & G Industries, Inc.
, supra,
With respect to the public policy aspect of the duty analysis, it is well established that: "Many harms are quite literally foreseeable, yet for pragmatic reasons, no recovery is allowed.... A further inquiry must be made, for we recognize that duty is not sacrosanct in itself ... but is only an expression of the sum total of those considerations of policy [that] lead the law to say that the plaintiff is entitled to protection.... The final step in the duty inquiry, then, is to make a determination of the fundamental policy of the law, as to whether the defendant's responsibility should extend to such results.... [I]n considering whether public policy suggests the imposition of a duty, we ... consider the following four factors: (1) the normal expectations of the participants in the activity under review; (2) the public policy of encouraging participation in the activity, while weighing the safety of the participants; (3) the avoidance of increased litigation; and (4) the decisions of other jurisdictions.... [This] totality of the circumstances rule ... is most consistent with the public policy goals of our legal system, as well as the general tenor of our [tort] jurisprudence." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
I
Like the majority, I begin my analysis with a review of this court's decision in Levandoski. I conclude that: (1) much of Levandoski is based on flawed reasoning, errors that the majority compounds by extending that decision in a way that is inconsistent with the significant public policy of encouraging Connecticut's citizens to seek professional help in emergencies; and (2) it was not necessary for the court in Levandoski to reach that broader conclusion because the facts of that case, like those of the present case, did not implicate the fundamental public policies underlying the firefighter's rule insofar as those facts did not involve a civil action against a citizen who requested or is receiving aid from first responders.
A
I begin with the broader firefighter's rule analysis in
Levandoski
, in which this court held that the firefighter's rule did not bar the claim of the plaintiff, a police officer, who was injured while chasing the defendant, whom he suspected of possessing marijuana while attending a house party that the officer had been called to break up.
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
I start with the assumption of risk doctrine. In
Levandoski
, this court stated that, "to the extent that the firefighter's rule rests on the doctrine of assumption of risk, it would be inconsistent with the policy of our general tort law to extend the rule beyond its present confines. That policy is expressed in General Statutes § 52-572h, pursuant to which the legislature has abolished the doctrine of assumption of risk in negligence actions." (Footnote omitted.) Id., at 662-63,
I next address the court's determination in
Levandoski
that the "distinction upon which [the firefighter's
rule] rests, namely, whether the plaintiff is an invitee or licensee, is itself a distinction that exists in our law only with regard to claims based upon premises liability, and the differing duties of care that emanate from those distinctions are cast in terms of a landowner's duty to persons on his or her land."
4
Levandoski
v.
Cone
, supra,
In my view, Levandoski 's reliance on the defendant's status as a property taxpayer, echoed by the majority in the present case, is a distinction without a difference that manages to raise the unappealing specter of economic classism by, in effect, bestowing tort immunity only on landowners. 6
More fundamentally,
Levandoski
ignores the fact that renters of property also contribute to the property tax coffers of the municipalities in which they live, both directly through personal property tax payments on vehicles and indirectly through rental payments to their landlords.
Levandoski
also ignores the fact that not all first responders are solely compensated through property tax revenues.
7
Even putting aside
those first responders who are employed by the state of Connecticut, such as state troopers, income, sales, and other tax receipts flow to municipalities though various state aid payments to municipalities. See, e.g., General Statutes § 12-19a (providing grants to municipalities in lieu of property tax for state-owned property). Unlike the majority, which perpetuates these flawed distinctions in its firefighter's rule analysis, I agree with those jurisdictions who understand that the entire community pays indirectly for the services of first responders,
8
shares in
the benefits of their services,
and spreads the cost of their injuries.
9
See, e.g.,
Moody
v.
Delta Western, Inc.
,
Second, limiting the firefighter's rule to premises liability cases creates an absolutely illogical distinction in both theory and practice. My research has revealed only one other case, where, akin to the language in
Levandoski
, the Illinois Supreme Court, holding that the firefighter's rule did not preclude a products liability
action against automobile dealer and manufacturer, also specifically "reject[ed] the opportunity to extend the 'fireman's rule' beyond its limited context of landowner/occupier liability."
Court
v.
Grzelinski
,
An even more glaring error in
Levandoski
, which is amplified by the majority in the present case, was the short shrift given
to
Kaminski
v.
Fairfield
, supra,
Turning to the second consideration, the court cited the firefighter's rule case law and emphasized that the parents "cannot be held liable to the defendant for risks that inhered in his presence, as a police officer acting as a trained escort for a mental health team on a visit to a disturbed patient known to be agitated and to have access to axes. '[
F
]
undamental concepts of justice prohibit a police officer from complaining of negligence in the creation of the very occasion for his engagement
.... This fundamental concept rests on the assumption that governmental entities employ firefighters and police officers, at least in part, to deal with the hazards that may result from their taxpayers' own future acts of negligence. Exposing the negligent taxpayer to liability for having summoned the police would impose upon him multiple burdens for that protection.'
Berko
v.
Freda
,
Looking beyond
Kaminski
, public policy aspects of the duty analysis in
Lodge
v.
Arett Sales Corp.
, supra,
Indeed, even after
Levandoski
, our Appellate Court has followed
Lodge
and
Kaminski
in recognizing, as a policy matter, that it is undesirable to allow first responders to bring negligence actions against citizens who have called for their help. In addition to recognizing their compensation via workers' compensation and other statutory benefits, these decisions observe that it is bad public policy to create a specter of liability that chills the reporting of emergencies. See
Hollister
v.
Thomas
,
The majority, however, relies on Dean William L. Prosser's criticism of this policy justification as "preposterous rubbish," and contends that the absence of a firefighter's rule will not deter citizens from calling for emergency aid. W. Prosser, Law of Torts (4th Ed. 1971) § 61, p. 397. The majority, however, cites no legal authority or empirical evidence tending to support Prosser's view. My research demonstrates that, although one court has agreed with Prosser;
12
see
Christensen
v.
Murphy
, supra,
Baldonado
v.
El Paso Natural Gas Co.
, supra,
As one scholarly commentator, Professor Robert H. Heidt, observes in disagreeing with Prosser, "once a fire has started at a business ... it is not preposterous to think that fear of liability to the firefighters may lead
the business to delay calling the professionals in the hope that its employees-the preferred firefighters-can deal with the fire. Abolishing the fireman's rule, therefore, sends a potential defendant who discovers a peril the message: 'First, see if your employees can handle it.' "
13
R. Heidt, " When Plaintiffs Are Premium Planners for Their Injuries: A Fresh Look at the Fireman's Rule,"
Moreover, "government entities employ and train firefighters and policemen, at least in part, to deal with those hazards that may result from the actions or inaction of an uncircumspect citizenry, it offends public policy to say that a citizen invites private liability merely
because he happens to create a need for those public services.... Citizens should be encouraged and not in any way discouraged from relying on those public employees who have been specially trained and paid to deal with these hazards. Additionally, a citizen does not have the right to exclude public safety officers from emergency situations or to control their actions once they have been alerted to an emergency and arrive on the scene. Indeed, a citizen may have a legal duty to summon a public safety officer in some instances and [saying that] he may, in the course of discharging that duty, risk tort liability to officers who are specially trained and hired to cope with these hazards, [would be] inconsistent and unfair." (Citation omitted.)
Pottebaum
v.
Hinds
, supra,
I, therefore, agree with the Utah Supreme Court's characterization of Prosser's view as mere "rhetoric," along with its "prefer[ence] to inhabit a society in which the consequences of one's inattention do not include the compensation of those on whom all of us collectively confer the duty to extricate us from our distress. We are confident that most citizens, including those who are conversant with comparative negligence law, believe that they now inhabit such a society. While judges do not perform their judicial responsibilities by enshrining widely held assumptions into the common law, the widely held belief that one is not exposed to tort liability for negligence requiring rescue emanates from a broadly shared value about the workings of a well-ordered society." Fordham v. Oldroyd , supra, 171 P.3d at413-14. Put differently, in the absence of contrary public policy direction from our legislature, I do not countenance an approach to the common law that has the effect of encouraging the citizens of Connecticut to undertake self-help in emergency situations, rather than calling 911 immediately. 15
B
Beyond what I believe is the majority's misunderstanding of
Levandoski
, I suggest that the breadth of the majority's opinion, which renders the firefighter's rule completely dead letter with respect to ordinary negligence claims, carries with it numerous unintended consequences. Specifically, I believe that the majority's wholesale rejection of the firefighter's rule and its supporting public policies in nonpremises liability cases carries the consequence of inviting first responders to bring civil actions against victims of crime and motor vehicle accidents. In addition to its inconsistency with
Kaminski
v.
Fairfield
, supra,
To begin, the mischief of the majority's outright rejection of the firefighter's rule beyond premises liability cases is illustrated by the kinds of cases that would get their ill-deserved day in court, including: 16 (1) an action against a domestic violence victim, claiming that, although she had told an emergency dispatcher that her husband was occasionally violent and had guns in the home, she had negligently failed to warn police of certain specific threats, after which two police officers were shot while escorting her home; 17 (2) an action against parents after their teenage daughter hosted a wild house party resulting in an injury to a police officer in the course of arresting a party attendee for public drunkenness; 18 (3) an action against the owner of a stolen vehicle, claiming that the keys had been negligently left inside of the ignition, after the resulting chase injured a police officer; 19 (4) an action against a residential care facility who summoned police for assistance with an agitated and incoherent resident; 20 (5) an action against a restaurant or tavern owner who summoned police for assistance in dealing with a disturbance; 21 (6) an action against the driver of a car involved in an accident by an emergency medical technician, who sustained a hernia while extricating a passenger from a vehicle; 22 and (7) an action against the driver of a car involved in an accident, after a police officer that had been assisting him was struck and injured by another car. 23
I cite these cases only for illustration, as it may well be that the facts of particular cases militate in favor of recognizing a duty of care, even on the part of someone receiving help. Indeed, I emphasize that the flexible nature of the public policy-based firefighter's rule allows us to leave the courthouse doors open to first responders injured in the line of duty under circumstances that do not implicate penalizing citizens who have called for emergency help, such as the present case. Indeed, other courts have allowed actions against independent tortfeasors who injure first responders acting in the line of duty. See, e.g.,
Melton
v.
Crane Rental Co.
, supra,
Thus, I emphasize that I would join those jurisdictions that have retained the common-law firefighter's rule as a matter of public policy, notwithstanding underlying doctrinal changes such as the statutory abolition of assumption of risk or differing landowners' duties.
24
As
the New Mexico
Supreme Court has observed, given these shifts in the common law, "[m]ost modern decisions base the firefighter's rule on a public policy rationale."
25
Baldonado
v.
El Paso Natural Gas Co.
, supra,
I agree, then, with the Rhode Island Supreme Court that the firefighter's rule "bar[s] an injured public-safety official from maintaining a negligence action against a tortfeasor whose alleged malfeasance is responsible for bringing the officer to the scene of a fire, crime, or other emergency where the officer is injured.... To be shielded from liability under the public-safety officer's rule, the defendant, or alleged tortfeasor, must establish three elements: (1) that the tortfeasor injured the [first responder] ... in the course of [the first responder's] employment; (2) that the risk the tortfeasor
created was the type of risk that one could reasonably anticipate would arise in the dangerous situation which [the first responder's] employment requires [him or her] to encounter; and (3) that the tortfeasor is the individual who created the dangerous situation which brought the [first responder] ... to the ... accident scene ...." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Ellinwood
v.
Cohen
, supra,
With respect to the circumstances under which it is appropriate for our first responders to seek redress, I find instructive the Kansas Supreme Court's recent formulation of exceptions to the firefighter's rule, under which "law enforcement officers, like firefighters, who suffer injuries as a result of discharging their duties at the scene of negligently caused hazards or conditions their jobs require them to mitigate and eliminate cannot recover from the person or persons responsible for the existence of the hazards or conditions, unless one of the three exceptions ... applies. Under those exceptions, a law enforcement
officer will not be barred from recovery [1] for negligence or intentional acts of misconduct by a third party, [2] if the individual responsible for the [officer's] presence engages in a subsequent act of negligence after the [officer] arrives at the scene,
26
or [3] if an individual fails to warn of known, hidden dangers on his premises or misrepresents the nature of the hazard where such misconduct causes the injury to the [officer]." (Footnote added; internal quotation
marks omitted.)
Apodaca
v.
Willmore
, supra,
Legislative action, as in some of our sister states, would be ideal for making the appropriate findings and articulating the contours of Connecticut's firefighter's rule. See footnote 15 of this concurring opinion. Nevertheless, until such time as our legislature can act, I would adopt a formulation of the firefighter's rule as a matter of common law that encourages citizens to seek help in emergencies, while not slamming the courthouse door to appropriate claims of our first responders.
II
Although I respectfully disagree with its firefighter's rule analysis, I nevertheless agree with the majority's order reversing the judgment of the trial court on the ground that the firefighter's rule does not bar the plaintiff's claims. I reach this conclusion because the facts of the present case, as in Levandoski , do not implicate the public policy of encouraging calls for emergency assistance. I suggest that Levandoski may be more narrowly read to hold that the firefighter's rule does not preclude the imposition of a duty of care on persons fleeing or resisting police officers, which is not inconsistent with the public policy of encouraging Connecticut's citizens to summon emergency services when they are needed.
Specifically, Pennsylvania's intermediate appellate court has cited
Levandoski
in support of its conclusion that a person who fled from a police officer owed that officer, who was injured during the chase, a duty of care given factors such as: (1) "the utter dearth of social utility of ... conduct in fleeing from an officer"; (2) "the obvious risk and foreseeability of possible injury to the pursuing officer"; (3) "the positive consequences of discouraging flight and encouraging apprehension of
criminals"; and (4) "the public interest in empowering police to enforce the law and keep the communities safe ...."
Schemberg
v.
Smicherko
,
Indeed, in holding that the firefighter's rule, as a matter of public policy, barred a police officer injured after a high speed
chase from bringing a civil claim against the owner of a stolen vehicle, claiming negligence for leaving the keys in the ignition, the New Jersey Supreme Court emphasized that "nothing in the 'fireman's rule' prevents [the police officer] from suing the thief."
Berko
v.
Freda
, supra,
To me, this is where the reach of Levandoski should end, namely, with a holding that the firefighter's rule does not preclude police officers from bringing civil actions against suspects or perpetrators who have endangered them through their conduct in fleeing from or resisting apprehension. Indeed, like the fleeing defendant in Levandoski , the defendant in the present case, by barricading himself in the house after violating a protective order, actively engaged in conduct that had the effect of endangering the plaintiff after his arrival at the scene. Put differently, the defendant was not the party who sought or received emergency aid; instead, his conduct was consistent with the plaintiff, a law enforcement officer, being the last person he wanted to see. 28 Given that the relatively high risks created by the defendant's conduct bring with them minimal social utility, it does not implicate any fundamental principle of justice to hold that he owed the plaintiff a duty of reasonable care. Accordingly, I agree with the majority that the trial court improperly granted the defendant's motion to strike in the present case.
I concur in the majority's judgment reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding the case for further proceedings according to law.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
167 A.3d 916, 326 Conn. 788, 2017 Conn. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sepega-v-delaura-concurrence-conn-2017.