Associate Chief Justice NEHRING, opinion of the Court:
¶ 1 This case presents an issue of first impression for this court — whether law enforcement owes a duty of care to fleeing suspects. Under a plain language analysis of the governing statute, we hold that law enforcement officers engaged in pursuit owe a duty to all persons, including fleeing suspects. The appellants, however, fail to meet their burden on appeal on their separate claim that Weber County owes a fleeing suspect a duty of care with respect to its law enforcement agency's implementation of policies and procedures regarding vehicular pursuits and with regard to the training and supervision provided to its officers.
¶ 2 On March 23, 2010, sixteen-year-old Wayne Torrie returned home from school upset because he had been teased by classmates. After an argument with one of his siblings, and against his mother's wishes, Wayne left home in his family's red Chevrolet Suburban. Mrs. Torrie called the Cache County Sheriff's Office and reported that her son had taken the family vehicle. She requested that officers locate Wayne and bring him into custody. While Mrs. Torrie was on the phone with police dispatch, Wayne returned home and pulled into the driveway next to his mother and rolled down the window of the Suburban. Wayne then left again after hearing his mother on the phone speaking with dispatch.
¶ 3 After speaking with the police, Mrs. Torrie attempted to reach Wayne on his cell phone. Wayne did not answer his mother's calls but responded with text messages indicating that he was suicidal. Mrs. Torrie informed dispatch that her son was threatening to commit suicide by crashing the vehicle if police attempted to apprehend him, but she did not ask law enforcement to stop their search efforts.
¶ 4 Cache County personnel eventually determined that Wayne had entered Weber County and contacted the Weber County Sheriff's Office. Cache County provided Weber County with a summary of the situation, including a description of Wayne and the vehicle he was driving, a warning that he was likely suicidal, and that he had texted his parents saying that he was almost out of gas. Cache County also requested that Wayne be brought into custody if he was located.
¶ 5 Deputy Denton Harper of the Weber County Sheriff's Office spotted Wayne in unincorporated Weber County. When he first saw Wayne, the two were traveling in opposite directions. Deputy Harper waited for Wayne to pass him, then turned around and pulled up behind him. Deputy Harper verified
¶ 6 Wayne's parents filed a lawsuit against Deputy Harper and Weber County, alleging various theories of negligence in connection with Deputy Harper's pursuit of their son.
¶ 7 "We review the district court's decision to grant summary judgment for correctness, affording the trial court no deference."
¶ 8 The district court dismissed the Torries' claims on summary judgment, determining that there was no legal duty owed to their son. The Torries argue that the district court erred because the statutory language exempting emergency vehicle operators from general traffic laws imposes a duty, including to fleeing suspects. We agree and reverse, determining that the district court prematurely dismissed the Torries' cause of action. The Torries also contend that a common law duty should be imposed.
¶ 9 For a plaintiff to prevail on a claim of negligence, the plaintiff must establish: "(1) that the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty, (2) that the defendant breached that duty, (3) that the breach of duty was the proximate cause of the plaintiff's injury, and (4) that the plaintiff in fact suffered injuries or damages."
¶ 10 "`For a governmental agency and its agents to be liable for negligently caused injury suffered by a member of the public, the plaintiff must show a breach of a duty owed him as an individual, not merely the breach of an obligation owed to the general public at large....'"
The Torries argue that the first example applies here and that Deputy Harper had a statutory duty to use reasonable care in deciding whether to pursue Wayne and in his subsequent execution of that high speed pursuit.
¶ 11 We previously determined in Day v. State ex rel. Utah Department of Public Safety that a law enforcement officer engaged in high speed pursuit of a suspect owes a statutory duty of care to innocent third parties.
¶ 12 While we recognize that other jurisdictions have looked to the plain language of similar statutes and interpreted that the duty did not extend to fleeing suspects,
¶ 13 Further bolstering our decision, the conclusion we reach today was alluded to in the dicta of Day v. State ex rel. Utah Department of Public Safety.
¶ 14 Day acknowledged that sometimes pursuit is not the proper course of action:
¶ 15 The Day decision further recognized that in some instances "threat of injury to the safety of the person fleeing and to the safety of the bystanders is significant enough, and the magnitude of the possible harm so momentous, to dictate that the fleeing person be allowed to escape rather than imperiling his safety or the safety of others."
¶ 16 While we do not per se adopt this test in the case at bar, many of the enumerated factors will likely remain relevant on remand in this case. Additionally, the Weber County Sheriff's Office policy and procedures manual may be relevant in determining whether Deputy Harper's pursuit of Wayne was reasonable.
¶ 17 In reaching the conclusion that law enforcement officers owe a legal duty to fleeing suspects, we reiterate that the imposition of a duty is a separate and distinct analysis from breach and proximate cause. The Torries recognize in their briefing that a "police officer may engage in the pursuit so long as it is reasonable to do so." "An essential difference among the elements is that duty is a question of law determined on a categorical basis, while breach and proximate cause are questions for the fact finder determined on a case-specific basis."
¶ 18 Under the law, the Torries are entitled to an opportunity to attempt to establish that Deputy Harper did not conduct his pursuit of Wayne "as a reasonably prudent emergency vehicle operator in like circumstances."
¶ 19 With regard to the issue of whether a separate duty of care is owed by Weber County, the Torries fail to meet their burden of persuasion before this court. Appellants bear the burden of demonstrating
¶ 20 The plain language of Utah Code section 41-6a-212 imposes upon law enforcement officers in pursuit of a fleeing suspect a "duty to act as a reasonably prudent emergency vehicle operate in like circumstances." We decline to interpret the statute beyond the plain wording chosen by the legislature but acknowledge that the ultimate negligence analysis including breach and proximate cause is very case-specific and fact-intensive. Accordingly, we determine that summary judgment is not appropriate and reverse and remand for further proceedings as it relates to the Torries' negligence claim against Deputy Harper. Because the Torries have failed to meet their burden on appeal as to the Sheriff's Office as an agency, we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment as to Weber County.
Associate Chief Justice NEHRING authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice DURRANT, Justice DURHAM, Justice PARRISH, and Justice LEE joined.
The defendants argue that Utah Code section 41-6a-210, which requires vehicles to stop when an officer signals them to do so and does not include a corollary to 41-6a-212's duty for emergency vehicle operators, is more applicable than section 41-6a-212. We disagree. An emergency vehicle operator's exemption from general traffic laws, which allows a law enforcement officer the ability to engage in a pursuit, originates in section 41-6a-212. Our court of appeals has relied on section 41-6a-212 in a case involving a yielding motorcyclist — rather than section 41-6a-904, which requires vehicles to yield to emergency vehicles and includes a subsection stating this does not eliminate the duty of emergency vehicle operators to others on the road — when considering an emergency vehicle operator's duty, further affirming this conclusion. Willden v. Duchesne Cnty., 2009 UT App 213, ¶¶ 3, 4, 6-15, 217 P.3d 1143.