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# Strickland v. University of North Carolina

[712 S.E.2d 888](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=5287003085729716521\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (N.C. Ct. App. 2011)

Court of Appeals of North Carolina

**Donald Ray Strickland, Administrator of the Estate of Peyton Brooks Strickland**\
**v.**\
**The University of North Carolina at Wilmington and The University of North Carolina at Wilmington Police Department**

STEPHENS, Judge.

## \[Facts]

On 1 December 2006, Peyton Brooks Strickland (“Strickland”) was killed in his residence by a member of the New Hanover County Emergency Response Team (the “ERT”). The ERT was serving a warrant for Strickland’s arrest when a member of the ERT mistook the noise of a battering ram hitting the door of Strickland’s residence for the sound of gunfire and discharged his weapon through Strickland’s front door, mortally wounding Strickland.

The ERT had been deployed to serve Strickland’s arrest warrant by the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Department (“Sheriff’s Department”) after the Sheriff’s Department received a request from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington (“UNC-W”) police department for assistance in serving the warrant. The UNC-W police department had been investigating Strickland as a suspect in connection with a 17 November 2006 assault and theft on the UNC-W campus. Based on their investigations of the crime, of Strickland, and of others suspected to be involved in the crime, the UNC-W police department concluded that service of Strickland’s arrest warrant was a potentially dangerous matter that necessitated Sheriff’s Department assistance.

Following Strickland’s death, on 31 October 2008, Plaintiff Donald Ray Strickland (“Plaintiff”), Strickland’s father and the administrator of Strickland’s estate, filed with the North Carolina Industrial Commission an action under the North Carolina Tort Claims Act, asserting a claim for wrongful death against UNC-W and the UNC-W police department (“Defendants”).[<sup>1</sup>](#footnotes) In his complaint, Plaintiff alleged that UNC-W police department officers negligently provided false, misleading, and irrelevant information to Sheriff’s Department officers and ERT members in the process of securing ERT and Sheriff’s Department assistance in serving Strickland’s arrest warrant. Plaintiff further alleged that the provision of this false, misleading, and/or irrelevant information — including the allegedly false facts that Strickland was known to be armed and dangerous, that Strickland had been engaged in gang activity, and that Strickland had been involved in two previous assaults — proximately caused Strickland’s death by leading ERT members to believe that they were entering into what the ERT member who shot Strickland described as a “severely dangerous environment including heavily armed suspects with histories of intentional physical violence causing injuries to persons.”

On 5 February 2010, Defendants filed a motion for [summary judgment](#user-content-fn-1)[^1], asserting that Plaintiff’s claim is barred by the public duty doctrine. The motion was heard on 19 February 2010 by Deputy Commissioner George T. Glenn II, who denied Defendants’ motion in a 26 February 2010 order. Defendants appealed the order to the Full Commission, which affirmed the denial of summary judgment and [remanded ](#user-content-fn-2)[^2]the case for a full evidentiary hearing. On 19 October 2010, Defendants appealed the Full Commission’s order to this Court.<sup>2</sup>

## \[Issue]

The sole issue on this appeal is whether the public duty doctrine applies in this case to bar Plaintiff’s claim. We conclude that it does not.

## \[Legal Standards]

“<mark style="background-color:yellow;">The public duty doctrine is a \[...] rule of common law negligence that may limit tort liability, even when the State has waived sovereign immunity</mark>.” [*Myers v. McGrady*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=18352568810608324812\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p766). “<mark style="background-color:yellow;">The rule provides that when a governmental entity owes a duty to the general public \[...] individual plaintiffs may not enforce the duty in tort</mark>.” [*Id*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=18352568810608324812\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p766)*.* This doctrine has often been described, simply and oxymoronically, as <mark style="background-color:yellow;">“duty to all, duty to none.”</mark> \[...] Despite the presumable simplicity of a doctrine susceptible to such succinct encapsulation, application of the public duty doctrine in the North Carolina courts, as well as in other jurisdictions, has become a particularly prickly issue. \[...] As such, we precede our discussion of the doctrine’s application to this case with a brief discussion of the doctrine’s history in this jurisdiction.

The classic example of the public duty doctrine’s applicability—and, indeed, the fact pattern of the case in which our Supreme Court first recognized the validity of the doctrine— involves a negligence claim alleging a law enforcement agency’s failure to protect a person from a third party’s criminal act. *See* [*Braswell v. Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p901) (recognizing the public duty doctrine and applying it to a claim against a sheriff for negligent failure to protect a murder victim from her murderer). In such a case, it is alleged, albeit unsuccessfully, that the law enforcement officer breached his duty to protect the victim and that that breach, or failure to protect, caused the victim’s death. As there is <mark style="background-color:yellow;">no general “duty to protect” imposed on individual actors</mark>, *cf.* [*Klassette v. Mecklenburg Cty. Area Mental Health*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=15267768516257659275\&q=364+S.E.2d+179\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p182) (noting that “there exists in this state no general duty to aid individuals in distress”), <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the law enforcement officer’s tort duty to protect allegedly arises from his (or, more accurately, his municipal employer’s) overarching duty to furnish police protection to the public in general</mark>. \[...] However, <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the public duty doctrine provides that because a municipality and its agents furnishing police protection “act for the benefit of the public” and not for a specific individual, the duty to provide police protection is to the general public rather than to a specific individual and, therefore, “there is no liability for the failure to furnish police protection to specific individuals.”</mark> [*Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p901). Stated differently, while <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the law enforcement agency owes a “duty to protect” to the public at large, individual members of the public as plaintiffs generally may not enforce that duty in tort</mark>. [*Myers*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=18352568810608324812\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p766). This limitation on a municipality’s liability is subject to <mark style="background-color:yellow;">two exceptions:</mark>

> <mark style="background-color:yellow;">(1) where there is a special relationship between the injured party and the police, for example, a state’s witness or informant who has aided law enforcement officers; and (2) when a municipality, through its police officers, creates a special duty by promising protection to an individual, the protection is not forthcoming, and the individual’s reliance on the promise of protection is causally related to the injury suffered.</mark>

[*Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p902)*.*

The justification for preventing an individual member of the public from enforcing the duty owed to the public as a whole, as stated by our Supreme Court in the police-protection context, is as follows:

> <mark style="background-color:yellow;">The amount of protection that may be provided is limited by the resources of the community and by a considered legislative-executive decision as to how those resources may be deployed. For the courts to proclaim a new and general duty of protection in the law of tort, even to those who may be the particular seekers of protection based on specific hazards, could and would inevitably determine how the limited police resources . . . should be allocated and without predictable limits.</mark>

[*Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p902). Our Supreme Court in *Braswell* also “refuse\[d] to judicially impose an overwhelming burden of liability for failure to prevent every criminal act” on law enforcement, again recognizing “the limited resources of law enforcement.” [*Id*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p901)*.*

Applying this same reasoning, our Courts have broadened this rule limiting a law enforcement agency’s liability for failure to protect to also limit (1) a state inspection agency’s liability for allegedly negligent inspections or allegedly negligent failure to inspect \[...]; (2) a state correction agency’s liability for allegedly negligent placement or supervision of a probationer \[...]; and (3) a state environmental agency’s liability for allegedly negligent management of a forest fire \[...]. In each of these cases, it was reasoned that the alleged duty was owed to the public in general and was therefore unenforceable in tort by an individual member of the general public. [*Myers* ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=18352568810608324812\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p767)(stating that because the statutes that set forth the powers and duties of a state forest fire fighting agency “are designed to protect the citizens of North Carolina as a whole, \[the agency] does not owe a specific duty to plaintiff or to third-party plaintiffs”); [*Stone* ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=1537566718485590523\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p717)*(*“Although \[the statute governing workplace inspections] imposes a duty upon defendants, that duty is for the benefit of the public, not individual claimants as here. Plaintiffs’ claims thus fall within the public duty doctrine ... .” \[...]; [*Blaylock* ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=17803660801560924208\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p143)(reasoning that the duty to supervise a probationer and prevent his criminal actions was owed to public in general and holding that the public duty doctrine applied to bar plaintiff’s claim). In so limiting the State’s liability, our Courts cited the necessary deference to legislative-executive resource-allocation and/or the specter of overwhelming liability as the justification(s) for their decisions. \[...]

\[...]

## \[Analysis]

In this case, Defendants contend that the alleged duty owed to Strickland is actually one owed to the general public such that Plaintiff should be precluded from enforcing the duty in a negligence action against Defendants. Such a limitation on their liability, Defendants urge, would further the policy justifications generally offered in support of the public duty doctrine. We are unconvinced.

<mark style="background-color:yellow;">The duty that Plaintiff is attempting to enforce in this case is best characterized as a law enforcement officer’s duty to provide accurate information (or not to negligently provide false and misleading information) during a criminal investigation.</mark> Unlike in those cases where the public duty doctrine has been applied, this alleged duty is not one that is owed to the public in general. Rather, <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the duty to provide accurate information clearly benefits a certain, identifiable segment of the general public,</mark> *<mark style="background-color:yellow;">i.e.,</mark>* <mark style="background-color:yellow;">subjects of criminal investigations. In such a case where the plaintiff is not attempting to enforce in tort a duty owed to the public in general, our Supreme Court has held the public duty doctrine to be inapplicable.</mark> \[...]

Furthermore, were we to generalize this duty as the duty to conduct non-negligent investigations, it still would not resemble the types of duties to the general public for which the public duty doctrine normally precludes liability. In all cases where the public duty doctrine has been held applicable, the breach of the alleged duty has involved the governmental entity’s negligent control of an external injurious force or of the effects of such a force.[<sup>3</sup>](#footnotes) *See, e.g.,* [*Myers*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=18352568810608324812\&q=628+S.E.2d+761\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (negligent control of a forest fire not started by fire fighting agency); [*Wood v. Guilford Cty*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=15987509701728461688\&q=355+N.C.+161\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50)[*.*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=15987509701728461688\&q=355+N.C.+161\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (2002) (failure to prevent third party’s criminal act on county property); [*Stone* ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=1537566718485590523\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50)(failure to ensure plant worker’s ability to escape plant fire not started by inspection agency); [*Hunt*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=5104015880739015629\&q=499+S.E.2d+747\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (negligent inspection of amusement ride prior to ride’s malfunction, which was not caused by the inspection); [*Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (failure to prevent a third party’s criminal act). In this case, however, the alleged breach is not a negligent action with respect to some external injurious force. Rather, the UNC-W police department’s act of negligently providing misleading and inaccurate information was itself the injurious force.

Conceptually related to this issue is Defendants’ argument that the public duty doctrine bars Plaintiff’s claim because UNC-W police officers did not fire the bullets that killed Strickland and, therefore, UNC-W police officers were not the “direct cause” of the harm. As noted previously by this Court, <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the public duty doctrine only precludes liability in situations where the alleged governmental tortfeasor is not the “direct cause” of the alleged injury. \[...] However, that the doctrine is only applicable where the government entity is not the “direct cause” of a plaintiff’s injury does not mean, as Defendants suggest, that a governmental entity is shielded from liability whenever the entity is not the last link in the chain of causation.</mark>[<sup>4</sup>](#footnotes) R<mark style="background-color:yellow;">ather, it means that the public duty doctrine may shield a governmental entity from liability only where the entity was not the impetus for,</mark> *<mark style="background-color:yellow;">i.e.,</mark>* <mark style="background-color:yellow;">did not bring about, the injurious force.</mark> *See, e.g.,* [*Stone*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=1537566718485590523\&q=360+N.C.+460\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (negligent fire inspection did not bring about fire); [*Hunt*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=5104015880739015629\&q=499+S.E.2d+747\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (negligent amusement ride inspection did not bring about ride malfunction); [*Braswell*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8607638754097783461\&q=410+S.E.2d+897\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (ignoring citizen’s complaints did not bring about criminal action); [*Blaylock* ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=17803660801560924208\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p143)(placement of probationer in victim’s home did not bring about sexual assault); *see also* [*Smith*](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=7192608217567709282\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p406) (“The public duty rule applies only to situations in which a plaintiff has been directly harmed by the conduct of a third person and only indirectly by a public employee’s dereliction of a duty—a duty imposed on him or her solely by his or her contract of employment— to interrupt or prevent the third person’s harmful activity.” \[...]).

In this case, although UNC-W police officers may not have been the last link in the chain of causation for Plaintiff’s injury\[,] the UNC-W police department was the <mark style="background-color:yellow;">impetus for the injurious force,</mark> *<mark style="background-color:yellow;">i.e.,</mark>* <mark style="background-color:yellow;">UNC-W police officers’ negligent provision of inaccurate information</mark> *<mark style="background-color:yellow;">brought about</mark>* <mark style="background-color:yellow;">the ERT member’s decision to fire his weapon through Strickland’s front door.</mark> As <mark style="background-color:yellow;">it was the UNC-W police department’s breach of its “affirmative, but limited,” duty to Strickland that “directly caused” Strickland’s death, we conclude that the public duty doctrine does not shield Defendants from liability for their actions in this case</mark>. \[...]

\[...]

While we recognize the UNC-W police department’s interest in efficiently concluding investigations and in protecting officers participating in those investigations, these interests bear more on the yet-unresolved issues of the existence and breach of the duty alleged by Plaintiff. At this stage in the proceedings, <mark style="background-color:yellow;">this Court is limited to a determination of whether the alleged duty, assuming its existence, is one that is owed to the public in general such that the public duty doctrine should apply to preclude Defendants’ liability. We conclude that it is not.</mark>

Based on the foregoing, we hold that the Industrial Commission did not err in denying Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability preclusion under the public duty doctrine. Therefore, the order of the Industrial Commission is

AFFIRMED.

Chief Judge MARTIN and Judge THIGPEN concur.

## Footnotes

1 The Tort Claims Act provides, in relevant part, as follows:

> The North Carolina Industrial Commission is hereby constituted a court for the purpose of hearing and passing upon tort claims against the State Board of Education, the Board of Transportation, and all other departments, institutions and agencies of the State. The Industrial Commission shall determine whether or not each individual claim arose as a result of the negligence of any officer, employee, involuntary servant or agent of the State while acting within the scope of his office, employment, service, agency or authority, under circumstances where the State of North Carolina, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the laws of North Carolina....

N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-291(a) (2009).

2 Although the denial of a motion for summary judgment is an interlocutory order generally not immediately appealable, this Court has previously allowed immediate appeal of a summary judgment order declining to apply the public duty doctrine to bar a claim against a governmental entity based on the doctrine’s interrelated effect on the existence of a governmental defendant’s sovereign immunity. *Smith v. Jackson Cty. Bd. of Educ.,* [608 S.E.2d 399, 405](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=7192608217567709282\&q=608+S.E.2d+399\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p405) (2005).

3 We also note that section 143-299.1A of the Tort Claims Act, applicable to causes of action arising on or after 1 October 2008, provides that the public duty doctrine is only a defense for (1) law enforcement failure to protect from acts of third parties and acts of God, and (2) failure to perform health or safety inspections. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-299.1A (2009).

4 Indeed, this Court has held that the public duty doctrine only applies to duty and not causation, *Drewry v. N.C. Dept. of Transp.,* [607 S.E.2d 342, 346-47](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=13573830901051779017\&q=607+S.E.2d+342\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p346) \[...], and that the normal rules of negligence, including proximate cause, apply in the Tort Claims Act context. *Barney v. N.C. State Highway Comm’n,* [192 S.E.2d 273, 277 ](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=11272687004691083658\&q=192+S.E.2d+273\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50#p277)(1972) (“Under the Tort Claims Act\[,] negligence, contributory negligence and proximate cause .. . are to be determined under the same rules as those applicable to litigation between private individuals.” (quoting *MacFarlane v. Wildlife Res. Comm’n,* [93 S.E.2d 557](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=16050727453301522247\&q=93+S.E.2d+557\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (1956))). Accordingly, in a case such as this, where the breach is the first link in a multi-link chain of causation (negligent provision of inaccurate information caused a high state of alarm, caused an ERT member to mistake a battering ram for a gunshot, caused the ERT member to fire his weapon, caused Strickland to die), liability is not precluded solely because the allegedly negligent act is not the last link in the chain of causation.

***

<details>

<summary>Editorial Notes and Licensing</summary>

Editing to the original by Matthew L. Mac Kelly. Many of the court's original citations to authorities and other content may have been omitted for length and readability purposes. Many elisions of text are not identified, particularly string citations and original footnotes when not materially necessary to the purpose of this portion of the sourcebook. However, some elisions are identified by bracketed ellipses (e.g., \[...]).

Judicial decisions and annotations thereto by third parties are not subject to copyright protection and are in the public domain. *See, e.g., Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc*., [140 S. Ct. 1498](https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8288711378870515248\&q=Georgia+et+al.+v.+Public.Resource.Org,+Inc.\&hl=en\&as_sdt=6,50) (2020).

Note: Hyperlinks within this case are not original. Some of these hyperlinks (such as cases and footnotes) may direct you to an external publicly accessible display of the case. This is helpful for reference purposes, and no copyright is claimed here over a third party's hyperlinking choices and methodologies, if applicable.

Subject to limitations above, if any, this page is in the public domain.  [CC0 1.0](https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) <img src="/spaces/gb3latek59GhBxzDZlwy/files/QmHRafhs91JkSMDBSHez" alt="" data-size="line">

</details>

[^1]: A motion for "summary judgment" is a motion asking the court to enter judgment in the moving party's favor, based on the argument that (1) there are no factual issues for a jury to decide, so the court can make a ruling based on the law without a jury and (2) the law favors the moving party. To learn more, [see here.](https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/summary_judgment)

[^2]: "When an appellate court reverses the decision of a lower court, the written decision often contains an instruction to remand the case to the lower court to be reconsidered in light of the appellate court's ruling."[\*](https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/remand) To learn more, [see here](https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/remand).


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