Supreme Court of California
MARY M., Plaintiff and
Respondent,
v.
CITY OF LOS ANGELES,
Defendant and Appellant
No. S005910
54 Cal. 3d 202; 814 P.2d
1341; 285 Cal. Rptr. 99
September 5, 1991
OPINION
Police officers occupy a unique position of trust in our
society. They are responsible for
enforcing the law and protecting society from criminal acts. They are given the authority to detain and
to arrest and, when necessary, to use deadly force. As visible symbols of that formidable power, an officer is
furnished a distinctively marked car, a uniform, a badge, and a gun. Those who challenge an officer's actions do
so at their peril; anyone who resists
an officer's proper exercise of authority or who obstructs the performance of
an officer's duties is subject to criminal prosecution. ( Pen. Code, §§ 69, 148.)
When law enforcement officers abuse their authority by
committing crimes against members of the community, they violate the public
trust. This may seriously damage the
relationship between the community and its sworn protectors, by eroding the
community's confidence in the integrity of its police force.
The issue in this case is: When a police officer on duty, by
misusing his official authority, rapes a woman whom he has detained, can the
public entity that employs him be held vicariously liable for his misconduct?
We conclude that the employer can be held liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior.
I. Facts
About 2:30 a.m. on October 3, 1981, plaintiff Mary M. was driving
home alone when Sergeant Leigh Schroyer of the Los Angeles Police Department
stopped her for erratic driving.
Sergeant Schroyer was on duty as a field supervisor; he was assigned to
supervise and train police officers patrolling the streets. He was in uniform, wore a badge and a gun,
and was driving a marked
black-and-white police car. When he
detained plaintiff, he sent in a radio message that he was out of his vehicle
conducting an investigation.
Sergeant Schroyer asked plaintiff for her driver's license;
plaintiff gave it to him. He then asked
her to perform a field sobriety test to determine whether she was under the
influence of alcohol. Plaintiff, who
had been drinking, did not do well on
the test. She began to cry, and pleaded
with Schroyer not to take her to jail.
Schroyer ordered her to get in the front seat of the police car, but he
did not handcuff her. He then drove to
plaintiff's home.
After entering the house with plaintiff, Sergeant Schroyer told
her that he expected "payment" for taking her home instead of to
jail. Plaintiff tried to run away, but
Schroyer grabbed her hair and threw her on the couch. When plaintiff screamed, Schroyer put his hand over her mouth and
threatened to take her to jail.
Plaintiff stopped struggling, and Schroyer raped her. He then left the house.
From his police car, Sergeant Schroyer sent a radio message that
he was returning from a "lunch" break. The radio operator questioned this, because Schroyer had previously reported that he was conducting
an investigation. Schroyer did not respond to the question, and returned to the
police station.
As a result of this incident, criminal charges were filed
against Sergeant Schroyer, and a jury convicted him of rape ( Pen. Code, § 261,
subd. (2)). The trial court sentenced
him to state prison.
Plaintiff then brought a civil lawsuit against both Sergeant
Schroyer and his employer, the City of Los Angeles (hereafter the City), for
damages arising out of the rape. Plaintiff's complaint originally asserted that
the City was liable for negligence in employing Schroyer and that, as
Schroyer's employer, the City was also vicariously liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior. At trial, however, plaintiff relied solely on the theory
of respondeat superior. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, finding that
"at the time of the events out of which this case arose" Sergeant
Schroyer was "acting within the scope of his employment with the Los
Angeles Police Department." The jury assessed general damages of $150,000
against the City. n1
A divided Court of Appeal reversed the judgment against the
City. The majority held, as a matter of
law, that Sergeant Schroyer was not acting within the scope of his employment
when he raped plaintiff. We granted
plaintiff's petition for review.
II. Discussion
A. General Principles Underlying Employer's Vicarious Liability
(1) Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer may
be held vicariously liable for torts committed by an employee within the scope
of employment. ( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc. (1986) 41 Cal.3d 962,
967 [227 Cal.Rptr. 106, 719 P.2d 676].) The origins of respondeat superior have
been traced to ancient Roman law. (5
Harper et al., The Law of Torts (2d ed. 1986) § 26.2, pp. 8-10; Holmes, Agency
(1891) 4 Harv.L.Rev. 345; but see Wigmore, Responsibility for Tortious Acts:
Its History (1894) 7 Harv.L.Rev. 315, 383 [stating the doctrine has Germanic,
not Latin, origins].) The doctrine is a departure from the general tort
principle that liability is based on fault.
( Rodgers v. Kemper Constr. Co. (1975) 50 Cal.App.3d 608, 618 [124
Cal.Rptr. 143].) It is "'a rule of policy, a deliberate allocation of a
risk.'" ( Hinman v. Westinghouse Elec. Co. (1970) 2 Cal.3d 956, 959 [88
Cal.Rptr. 188, 471 P.2d 988]; Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra,
41 Cal.3d at p. 967.) Respondeat superior is based on "'a deeply rooted
sentiment'" that it would be unjust for an enterprise to disclaim
responsibility for injuries occurring in the course of its characteristic
activities. ( Rodgers, supra, 50
Cal.App.3d 608 at p. 618, quoting Ira S. Bushey & Sons, Inc. v. United
States (2d Cir. 1968) 398 F.2d 167, 171 [per
Friendly, J.]; see also Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip (1991) 499
U.S. , [113 L.Ed.2d 1, 17, 111 S.Ct. 1032, 1041] [rejecting due
process challenge to respondeat superior liability].)
Recently, we articulated three reasons for applying the doctrine
of respondeat superior: (1) to prevent recurrence of the tortious conduct; (2)
to give greater assurance of compensation for the victim; and (3) to ensure
that the victim's losses will be equitably borne by those who benefit from the
enterprise that gave rise to the injury.
( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p. 967; 5
Harper et al., op. cit. supra, § 26.5, at p. 21.)
(2) For the doctrine of respondeat superior to apply, the
plaintiff must prove that the employee's tortious conduct was committed within
the scope of employment. ( Ducey v. Argo Sales Co. (1979) 25 Cal.3d 707, 721
[159 Cal.Rptr. 835, 602 P.2d 755].) "A risk arises out of the employment
when 'in the context of the particular enterprise an employee's conduct is not
so unusual or startling that it would seem unfair to include the loss resulting
from it among other costs of the employer's business. [Citations.] In other words, where the question is one of
vicarious liability, the inquiry should be whether the risk was one "that
may fairly be regarded as typical of or broadly incidental" to the
enterprise undertaken by the employer.
[Citation.]'" ( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41
Cal.3d at p. 968, citing Rodgers v. Kemper Constr. Co., supra, 50 Cal.App.3d at
p. 619, brackets in original.)
Tortious conduct that violates an employee's official duties or
disregards the employer's express orders may nonetheless be within the scope of
employment. ( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p.
969; Meyer v. Blackman (1963) 59 Cal.2d 668, 679 [31 Cal.Rptr. 36, 381 P.2d
916]; Van Alstyne, Cal. Government Tort Liability Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1980) §
2.22, p. 62.) So may acts that do not benefit the employer ( Perez, supra, 41
Cal.3d at p. 969), or are willful or malicious in nature ( John R. v. Oakland Unified
School Dist. (1989) 48 Cal.3d 438, 447 [256 Cal.Rptr. 766, 769 P.2d 948];
Martinez v. Hagopian (1986) 182 Cal.App.3d 1223, 1227 [227 Cal.Rptr. 763]).
(3) The doctrine of respondeat superior applies to public and
private employers alike. As stated in subdivision (a) of Government
Code section 815.2 (all further statutory references are to the Government
Code): "A public entity is liable for injury proximately caused by an act
or omission of an employee of the public entity within the scope of his
employment if the act or omission would, apart from this section, have given
rise to a cause of action against that employee or his personal
representative." By this language, the Legislature incorporated
"general standards of tort liability as the primary basis for respondeat
superior liability of public entities. . . ." (Van Alstyne, op. cit.
supra, § 2.32, at p. 77.) Courts have construed the term "scope of
employment" in section 815.2 as broadly as in private tort litigation. (Van Alstyne, op. cit. supra, § 2.32, at p.
79; see generally, John R. v. Oakland Unified School Dist., supra, 48 Cal.3d at
p. 447.)
B. California Decisions
Discussing Public Employer Liability for Sexually Assaultive Conduct by Police
When the Court of Appeal decided this case, only one published
decision in this state had addressed the issue of whether a law enforcement
officer who commits a sexual assault while on duty can be deemed to have acted
within the scope of employment. In White v. County of Orange (1985) 166 Cal.App.3d
566 [212 Cal.Rptr. 493], a deputy sheriff detained a female motorist late at
night, placed her in the back of his patrol car, drove her around for hours in
an isolated area, and repeatedly threatened to rape and kill her. When she promised to go out with him that
weekend, he returned her to her car.
After she drove away, he again stopped her, this time to obtain a
"goodnight kiss." Based on this entire incident, the officer was
convicted of kidnapping and false imprisonment.
Thereafter, the motorist brought a civil suit against the
officer's employer, the County of Orange, on a theory of vicarious liability.
The trial court granted the county's motion for summary judgment; the Court of
Appeal reversed. The appellate court observed that an officer is entrusted with
a substantial degree of authority, and that the motorist submitted to that
authority, stopping her car solely because the officer had ordered her to do
so. Accordingly, the court held, the
officer's wrongful acts "flowed from the very exercise of this
authority," and the county could be held liable for the officer's
conduct. ( White v. County of Orange,
supra, 166 Cal.App.3d at pp. 571-572.)
Recently, this court had occasion to examine White in John R. v.
Oakland Unified School Dist., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438 (hereafter John R.), which
involved the application of respondeat superior in a different context. In John R., a junior high school student
sued the school district, alleging he had been sexually molested by his teacher
while at the teacher's apartment as part of an officially sanctioned,
extracurricular program. The trial
court ruled that the school district could not be held vicariously liable for
the molestation, and granted the district's motion for nonsuit. We upheld the trial court's ruling.
The lead opinion n2 in
John R. did not consider whether the case was factually similar to other cases
in which employers had been held liable for the tortious acts of their
employees. Instead, it focused on the
rationale underlying the imposition of such liability: to prevent recurrence of
the tortious conduct, to give greater assurance of compensation for the victim,
and to ensure that the victim's losses will be equitably borne by those
who benefit from the enterprise that
gave rise to the injury. ( Perez v. Van
Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p. 967.) After evaluating these
three factors, the lead opinion in John R. concluded that imposition of
liability against the teacher's employer was not warranted. ( John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 452.)
Although the opinion declined to determine whether White v. County of Orange,
supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566, was correctly decided, it suggested that the policy
reasons underlying the doctrine of respondeat superior would justify its
application when a police officer uses his authority to enable him to commit a
sexual assault. ( John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 452.)
The City contends that White v. County of Orange, supra, 166
Cal.App.3d 566, was wrongly decided, and that a police officer's act of rape,
even when preceded by an assertion of authority, is outside the scope of his
employment as a matter of law. Before addressing the merits of this contention,
we first consider whether the doctrine of invited error precludes the City from
asserting it.
C. Application of Invited
Error Doctrine
In this case, the trial court instructed the jury, based on
White v. County of Orange, supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566, that when "a police
officer who, as a result of the exercise of his authority, legally causes
injury," the employer may be held liable regardless of the employer's
rules or knowledge of the wrongful conduct, and regardless of whether the
employer or the employee benefited from the act itself. n3 Because the record indicated that the City
had requested the instruction, we solicited briefing from the parties to
determine whether the doctrine of invited error should bar the City from
contending that, as a matter of law, Sergeant Schroyer was acting outside the
scope of his employment when he raped plaintiff.
The record shows that the instruction was proposed under the
following circumstances. Throughout the
proceedings in this matter, the City challenged the decision in White v. County
of Orange, supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566. The trial court correctly considered
itself to be bound by the appellate court's decision in White. (See Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior
Court (1962) 57 Cal.2d 450, 455 [20 Cal.Rptr. 321, 369 P.2d 937].) At the instruction
conference, the court told the parties that notwithstanding the City's
objections, it would instruct the jury in accordance with White, and that
unless the City proffered an alternative instruction it would give plaintiff's
proposed instruction, which was based on White. The City then submitted, and the court gave, the instruction
quoted above.
Immediately after the case was submitted to the jury, the trial
court gave the parties an opportunity to "tie up any loose ends"
relating to any matter that had not yet been "put on the record."
Counsel for the City then explained the circumstances which led it to submit
the instruction at issue: "[D]uring our many, many hours of discussions
concerning jury instructions, I did indicate to the court that we did not
believe that White was an appropriate case with which the jury should be
instructed as it was . . . not an appropriate statement of the law. [para.] The court indicated that it would
follow White and unless I wanted Plaintiff's instructions to be the ones to go
to the jury, I would be requested to draft an instruction based upon the
language in White. [para.] In response
to that, the defense submitted an instruction based upon White which the court
. . . read to the jury. [para.] For the
record, I would like it to be clear that we do not believe that White is the
authority that should be followed and that we objected to giving any
instructions in accordance with the White case, albeit, we did submit an
instruction based upon the court's request." The trial court agreed with
counsel's account, but pointed out that the precise wording of the instruction
was the City's.
(4) Under the doctrine of invited error, when a party by its
own conduct induces the commission of error, it may not claim on appeal that
the judgment should be reversed because of that error. ( People v. Perez (1979) 23 Cal.3d 545,
549-550, fn. 3 [153 Cal.Rptr. 40, 591 P.2d 63]; Jentick v. Pacific Gas &
Elec. Co. (1941) 18 Cal.2d 117 [114 P.2d 343]; 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed.
1985) Appeal, § 301, p. 313.) But the doctrine does not apply when a party,
while making the appropriate objections, acquiesces in a judicial
determination. ( People v. Perez,
supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 550, fn. 3.) As this court has explained: "'An
attorney who submits to the authority of an erroneous, adverse ruling after
making appropriate objections or motions, does not waive the error in the
ruling by proceeding in accordance therewith and endeavoring to make the best
of a bad situation for which he was not responsible.'" ( People v. Calio (1986)
42 Cal.3d 639, 643 [230 Cal.Rptr. 137, 724 P.2d 1162], quoting Leibman v.
Curtis (1955) 138 Cal.App.2d 222, 225 [291 P.2d 542].)
Here, the City did not invite the trial court to instruct the
jury that liability for a sexual assault can arise from a police officer's
exercise of official authority. To the contrary, it took the opposite position
throughout the case, including the
instruction conference. The City never induced
the trial court to follow White v. County of Orange, supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566;
it merely acquiesced -- after objecting -- to the court's decision to instruct
in accordance with White, and submitted an instruction in accordance with that
decision. n4 Although the City would be barred from attacking the specific
language of the jury instruction it submitted, it is, under the circumstances
of this case, not precluded from asserting that White v. County of Orange,
supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566, was
erroneously decided and that, as a matter of law, the evidence presented here
established that Sergeant Schroyer acted outside the scope of his employment
when he raped plaintiff. n5
D. Imposition of Liability in This Case
(5) Ordinarily, the determination whether an employee has acted
within the scope of employment presents a question of fact; it becomes a
question of law, however, when "the facts are undisputed and no
conflicting inferences are possible." ( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons,
Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p. 968.) In some cases, the relationship between an
employee's work and wrongful conduct is so attenuated that a jury could not
reasonably conclude that the act was within the scope of employment. (See,
e.g., John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 1452; Rita M. v. Roman Catholic
Archbishop (1986) 187 Cal.App.3d 1453, 1461 [232 Cal.Rptr. 685]; Alma W. v.
Oakland Unified School Dist. (1981) 123 Cal.App.3d 133, 139-140 [176 Cal.Rptr.
287].)
(6a) The City contends that such is the case here, asserting
that even if all conflicts in the facts and the inferences to be drawn from
those facts are resolved in plaintiff's favor, Sergeant Schroyer was acting
outside the scope of employment when he raped plaintiff. n6
We do not agree. As we
shall explain, Sergeant Schroyer's conduct was not so divorced from his work
that, as a matter of law, it was outside the scope of employment. Rather, the
question of whether Sergeant Schroyer acted within the scope of his employment
was one properly left for the jury to decide.
As we mentioned earlier, the test for determining whether an employee
is acting outside the scope of employment is whether "'in the context of
the particular enterprise an employee's conduct is not so unusual or startling
that it would seem unfair to include the loss resulting from it among other
costs of the employer's business.'"
( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p. 968.)
To assist us in that determination, we first consider whether the three policy
objectives underlying respondeat superior would be achieved by applying the
doctrine when a police officer on duty misuses his official authority and
commits an act of rape. The lead opinion in John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438,
concluded that because under the facts of that case application of respondeat
superior would not further the doctrine's underlying rationale, it should not
be invoked. That is not the case here.
(7) The first of the three policy objectives supporting the
application of respondeat superior is that imposing liability on the employer
may prevent recurrence of the tortious conduct, because it "creates a
strong incentive for vigilance by those in a position 'to guard substantially
against the evil to be prevented.'" (Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip,
supra, 499 U.S. at p. [113 L.Ed.2d
at p. 17, 111 S.Ct. at p. 1041], quoting an earlier case.) In John R., the lead
opinion concluded that this policy did not support the imposition of liability
on the school district whose teacher committed sexual misconduct because the
preventive measures that the employer could be forced to take would do more
harm than good. To impose vicarious
liability in that situation, the opinion explained, "would be far too
likely to deter districts from encouraging, or even authorizing,
extracurricular and/or one-on-one contacts between teachers and students or to
induce districts to impose such rigorous controls on activities of this nature
that the educational process would be negatively affected." ( John R.,
supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 451.)
By contrast, imposition of liability here would not be likely to
cause public entities to take preventive measures that would impair the effectiveness of law enforcement
activities. As the lead opinion in John
R. said: "We doubt that police departments would deprive their officers of
weapons or preclude them from enforcing the laws . . . ." ( John R.,
supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 452.)
The imposition of liability on public entities whose law
enforcement officers commit sexual assaults while on duty would encourage the
employers to take preventive measures.
n7 There is little or no risk that
preventive measures would significantly interfere with the ability of police
departments to enforce the law and to protect society from criminal acts. We therefore conclude that the first policy
basis for respondeat superior -- encouraging the employer to take measures to
prevent recurrence of the tortious conduct -- supports the jury's verdict
against the City in this case. n8
We now consider the second reason underlying the application of
respondeat superior: to give greater assurance of compensation to the victim.
(8) The Legislature has recognized that the imposition of
vicarious liability on a public employer is an appropriate method to ensure
that victims of police misconduct are compensated. It has done so by declining to grant immunity to public entities
when their police officers engage in violent conduct. Since the enactment of the California Tort Claims Act in 1963 (§
810 et seq.), a governmental entity can be held vicariously liable when a
police officer acting in the course and scope of employment uses excessive
force or engages in assaultive conduct.
( City of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (1973) 33 Cal.App.3d 778, 782
[109 Cal.Rptr. 365]; Larson v. City of
Oakland (1971) 17 Cal.App.3d 91, 98 [94 Cal.Rptr. 466]; Scruggs v.
Haynes (1967) 252 Cal.App.2d 256, 268 [60 Cal.Rptr. 355]; Griffith v. City of
Monrovia (1982) 134 Cal.App.3d Supp. 6 [184 Cal.Rptr. 709]; see also Jones v.
City of Los Angeles (1963) 215 Cal.App.2d 155 [30 Cal.Rptr. 124].) The decisions
cited have recognized, at least implicitly, that vicarious liability is an
appropriate method to ensure that victims of police misconduct are compensated.
n9
The only difference between those cases and the one now before
us is that here the assault victim was raped rather than beaten. Surely the victim's need for compensation in
this instance is as great as in other cases of violent tortious conduct by a
police officer while on duty. Accordingly, the second policy objective of the
doctrine of respondeat superior supports the jury's verdict imposing liability
on the City.
(9) Finally, the third policy consideration -- the
appropriateness of spreading the risk of loss among the beneficiaries of the
enterprise -- also favors the imposition of vicarious liability against the
City. Here, too, John R. is
instructive. The lead opinion
recognized that school districts and the community at large benefit from the
authority that teachers are given over students, but it concluded that the
connection between that authority and a teacher's sexual abuse of a student was
"simply too attenuated to deem a sexual assault as falling within the
range of risks allocable to a teacher's employer," and thus did not
support vicarious liability in that context.
( John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 452.) The opinion contrasted the
difference in authority, "in both degree and kind," between a teacher
and a police officer: "[T]he authority of a police officer over a motorist
-- bolstered most immediately by his uniform, badge and firearm, and only
slightly less so by the prospect of criminal sanctions for disobedience --
plainly surpasses that of a teacher over a student." (Ibid.)
At the outset, we observed that society has granted police
officers extraordinary power and authority over its citizenry. An officer who detains an individual is
acting as the official representative of the state, with all of its coercive power. As visible symbols of that power, an officer
is given a distinctively marked car, a uniform, a badge, and a gun. As one court commented, "police
officers [exercise] the most awesome and dangerous power that a democratic
state possesses with respect to its residents -- the power to use lawful force
to arrest and detain them." ( Policeman's Benev. Ass'n of N.J. v.
Washington Tp. (3d Cir. 1988) 850 F.2d 133, 141.) Inherent in this formidable power is the potential for
abuse. The cost resulting from misuse
of that power should be borne by the community, because of the substantial
benefits that the community derives from the lawful exercise of police power.
As demonstrated, each of the three policy reasons supports the
imposition of vicarious liability on the employer of a police officer who,
while on duty, commits a sexual assault by misusing his official authority.
(6b) The City nevertheless maintains that a police officer who commits rape
while on duty can never be acting within the scope of his employment because the conduct is so unusual that to
impose liability on the officer's employer in that instance would be unfair.
The City relies on our decision in Perez v. Van Groningen &
Sons, Inc., supra , 41 Cal.3d 962. In that case, the defendant employer
assigned an employee to drive a tractor through an orchard while pulling a disking
attachment. The employee invited his
nephew to ride with him. A branch
knocked the nephew off the tractor and into the disking attachment. We held that the employee was acting within
the scope of his employment, and therefore the employer could be held liable
for the employee's negligent acts. We
explained: "A risk arises out of the employment when 'in the context of
the particular enterprise an employee's conduct is not so unusual or startling
that it would seem unfair to include the loss resulting from it among other
costs of the employer's business. . . . [T]he inquiry should be whether the
risk was one "that may fairly be regarded as typical of or broadly
incidental" to the enterprise undertaken by the employer. [Citation.]'" ( Perez v. Van Groningen
& Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at p. 968, italics added.) Seizing on the
italicized language, the City contends that the tortious act -- rape --
committed by Sergeant Schroyer is so "unusual or startling" that it
cannot "fairly be regarded as typical of or broadly incidental" to
the task of law enforcement. We disagree.
As noted previously, society has granted police officers great
power and control over criminal suspects.
Officers may detain such persons at gunpoint, place them in handcuffs,
remove them from their residences, order them into police cars and, in some circumstances, may even use deadly
force. The law permits police officers
to ensure their own safety by frisking persons they have detained, thereby
subjecting detainees to a form of nonconsensual touching ordinarily deemed
highly offensive in our society. (
Terry v. Ohio (1968) 392 U.S. 1 [20 L.Ed.2d 889, 88 S.Ct. 1868].) In view of
the considerable power and authority that police officers possess, it is neither
startling nor unexpected that on occasion an officer will misuse that authority
by engaging in assaultive conduct. The
precise circumstances of the assault need not be anticipated, so long as the
risk is one that is reasonably foreseeable.
Sexual assaults by police officers are fortunately uncommon;
nevertheless, the risk of such tortious conduct is broadly incidental to the
enterprise of law enforcement, and thus liability for such acts may
appropriately be imposed on the employing public entity. n10
In arguing against such liability, the City relies on Alma W. v.
Oakland Unified School Dist., supra, 123 Cal.App.3d 133. There, the Court of
Appeal upheld a trial court's ruling that a school district could not be held
vicariously liable for the sexual molestation of an 11-year-old child by a
school custodian on school grounds. As
the court observed, "There is no aspect of a janitor's duties that would
make sexual assault anything other than highly unusual and very
startling." ( Id. at p. 143.) By contrast, the very nature of law enforcement
employment requires exertion of physical control over persons whom an officer
has detained or arrested. The authority
to use force when necessary in securing compliance with the law is fundamental
to a police officer's duties in maintaining the public order. (Nat. Advisory Com. on Crim. Justice Stds.
and Goals, Police (1973) p. 18.) That authority carries with it the risk of
abuse. The danger that an officer will
commit a sexual assault while on duty arises from the considerable authority
and control inherent in the responsibilities of an officer in enforcing the
law. Those responsibilities do not at
all resemble the duties of a school custodian, as involved in Alma W., supra.
n11
The City argues that when Sergeant Schroyer raped plaintiff, he
was not acting in the course of his employment, but was primarily pursuing his
own interests. (10) In Hinman v.
Westinghouse Elec. Co., supra, 2 Cal.3d at page 960, we said that those cases
that have considered recovery against an employer for injuries occurring within
the scope and during the period of employment
have established a general rule of liability "with a few
exceptions" in instances where the employee has "substantially
deviated from his duties for personal purposes."
To determine whether a particular set of facts falls into one of
those "few exceptions," it is necessary to examine the employees'
conduct as a whole, not simply the tortious act itself. (See, e.g., Carr v. Wm. C. Crowell Co.
(1946) 28 Cal.2d 652 [171 P.2d 5] [employee who threw a hammer at another
employee after a dispute held to have acted within the scope of employment].)
"'The fact that an employee is not engaged in the ultimate object of his
employment at the time of his wrongful act does not preclude attribution of liability
to an employer.'" ( John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d at p. 447, quoting Alma W.
v. Oakland Unified School Dist., supra, 123 Cal.App.3d at p. 139.) As we said
in Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d at page 970:
"[T]he proper inquiry is not '"whether the wrongful act itself was
authorized but whether it was committed in the course of a series of acts of
the agent which were authorized by the principal."'"
(6c) Here, Sergeant Schroyer was acting within the scope of his
employment when he detained plaintiff for erratic driving, when he ordered her
to get out of her car and to perform a field sobriety test, and when he ordered
her to get in his police car. Then,
misusing his authority as a law enforcement officer, he drove her to her home,
where he raped her. When plaintiff
attempted to resist Sergeant Schroyer's criminal conduct, he continued to
assert his authority by threatening to take her to jail. Viewing the transaction as a whole, it
cannot be said that, as a matter of law, Sergeant Schroyer was acting outside
the scope of his employment when he raped plaintiff.
The City cites authorities from other jurisdictions in arguing
that it should not be held vicariously liable when a police officer in its
employ commits a sexual assault while on duty. Those decisions, however, do not
support the City's position in this case.
In one case cited by the City ( Lyon v. Carey (D.C. Cir. 1976) 533 F.2d
649 [174 App.D.C. 422]), the court upheld a verdict finding an employer liable
under the doctrine of respondeat superior. In that case, a delivery man brought
a mattress to the plaintiff's home and, following a dispute over the manner of
payment for the delivery, physically and sexually assaulted her. Concluding that the jury could have reasonably
found that the delivery man's tortious conduct arose out of the delivery
dispute, the federal appellate court upheld the jury's verdict imposing
liability on the man's employer. ( Id.
at p. 655.)
Other decisions relied on by the City are distinguishable
because they involved sexual assaults by private security guards. ( Heindel v. Bowery Savings Bank (1988) 138
A.D.2d 787 [525 N.Y.S.2d 428]; Webb by Harris v. Jewel Companies, Inc. (1985)
137 Ill.App.3d 1004 [485 N.E.2d 409]; Rabon v. Guardsmark, Inc. (4th Cir. 1978)
571 F.2d 1277 [diversity case applying South Carolina law].) Because such
persons do not act as official representatives of the state, any authority they
have is different from, and far less than, that conferred upon an officer of
the law. Still other cases relied on
by the City are distinguishable because
they involved sexual assaults by police officers who were not on duty when they
committed the sexual assaults. ( Bates v. Doria (1986) 150 Ill.App.3d 1025 [502
N.E.2d 454]; Gambling v. Cornish (N.D.Ill. 1977) 426 F.Supp. 1153.)
By contrast, the facts of Applewhite v. City of Baton Rouge
(La.Ct.App. 1979) 380 So.2d 119 more closely resemble those of this case. There, the City of Baton Rouge was held
vicariously liable when one of its police officers detained a teenage girl for
vagrancy while she was walking with friends, ordered her into his police car to
be taken to jail, then took her to another location where he forced her to
engage in acts of sexual intercourse and oral copulation.
In arriving at its conclusion, the court in Applewhite v. City
of Baton Rouge, supra, 380 So.2d 119, explained why it was appropriate to
impose vicarious liability on the employers of police officers who commit sexual
assaults: "We particularly note that [the officer] was on duty in uniform and armed, and was
operating a police unit at the time of this incident. He was able to separate the plaintiff from her companions because
of the force and authority of the position which he held. He took her into police custody and then
committed the sexual abuses upon her in the vehicle provided for his use by his
employer. [para.] A police officer is a
public servant given considerable public trust and authority. . . . [W]here excesses are committed by such
officers, their employers are held to be responsible for their actions even
though those actions may be somewhat removed from their usual duties. This is
unquestionably the case because of the position of such officers in our
society." ( Id. at p. 121; see also Turner v. State (La.Ct.App. 1986) 494
So.2d 1292 [state held vicariously liable when National Guard recruiter told
four applicants to undress for physical exam, then molested them].)
The City has also cited two federal decisions, City of Green
Cove Springs v. Donaldson (5th Cir. 1965) 348 F.2d 197, and Bates v. United
States (8th Cir. 1983) 701 F.2d 737, which concluded that under applicable
state law the public entity involved could not be held vicariously liable for a
rape committed by a police officer on duty. Neither decision is
persuasive. Each failed to consider the
significance of the extraordinary authority wielded by law enforcement
officers, and in each instance the federal court was required to apply state
law that is materially and substantively different from California law.
The final case cited by the City, Desotelle v. Continental Cas.
Co. (1986) 136 Wis.2d 13 [400 N.W.2d 524], does not assist the City, for it
supports our conclusion that the City can be held liable in this case. In Desotelle, the court concluded that the
question of whether an officer who commits a sexual assault is acting in the
scope of his employment is one of fact, and the court upheld a determination by
the trier of fact that an officer acted outside that scope when he committed a
sexual assault. (400 N.W.2d at pp. 529-530.) Like the court in Desotelle, we
reject the assertion that the appellate court should decide as a matter of law
whether a law enforcement officer who commits a sexual assault is acting
outside the scope of employment. The question of scope of employment is
ordinarily one of fact for the jury to determine.
For the reasons set forth above, we hold that when, as in this
case, a police officer on duty misuses his official authority by raping a woman
whom he has detained, the public entity that employs him can be held
vicariously liable. This does not mean that, as a matter of law, the public
employer is vicariously liable whenever
an on-duty officer commits a sexual assault. Rather, this is a question of fact
for the jury. In this case, plaintiff
presented evidence that would support the conclusion that the rape arose from
misuse of official authority. Sergeant Schroyer detained plaintiff when he was on duty, in uniform, and
armed. He accomplished the detention by
activating the red lights on his patrol car.
Taking advantage of his authority and control as a law enforcement
officer, he ordered plaintiff into his car and transported her to her home,
where he threw her on a couch. When
plaintiff screamed, Sergeant Schroyer again resorted to his authority and
control as a police officer by threatening to take her to jail. Based on these facts, the jury could
reasonably conclude that Sergeant Schroyer was acting in the course of his employment
when he sexually assaulted plaintiff. n12
Conclusion
Our society has entrusted police officers with enforcing its
laws and ensuring the safety of the
lives and property of its members. In
carrying out these important responsibilities, the police act with the
authority of the state. When police
officers on duty misuse that formidable power to commit sexual assaults, the
public employer must be held accountable for their actions. "'It is, after
all, the state which puts the officer in a position to employ force and which
benefits from its use.'" ( Thomas v. Johnson (D.D.C. 1968) 295 F.Supp.
1025, 1032, quoting Jaffe, Suits Against Governments and Officers: Damage
Actions (1963) 77 Harv.L.Rev. 209, 229.)
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed. The matter is remanded to the Court of
Appeal for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
FOOTNOTES:
n1
Sergeant Schroyer did not appear to defend the action, either in person or
through counsel. Based on the evidence
presented to the jury in plaintiff's action against the City, the trial court
entered judgment finding Schroyer jointly and severally liable with the City
for the jury's $150,000 damage award.
In addition, the court imposed punitive damages of $150,000 against Schroyer. Schroyer did not appeal the judgment.
n2 Two
of the seven justices signed the lead opinion. Three justices concurred
"in the majority's holding" on the question of vicarious liability,
and did not express disagreement with the lead opinion's analysis of that
issue; they dissented on an unrelated issue.
The remaining two justices would have held the school district
vicariously liable.
n3 The
instruction in full read: "An employer is liable for the wrongful acts of
a police officer who, as the result of the exercise of his authority, legally
causes injury even though the wrongful acts occurred without the employer's
knowledge, were not related to the duties he was employed to perform, were not
for the benefit of the employer, were done solely for the personal benefit of
the employee, and were done in violations [sic] of the employer's rules or
grant of authority."
n4
Justice Baxter's concurring opinion asserts that, before the case was submitted
to the jury, the City should have placed on the record its objections to an
instruction that was based on White v. Superior Court, supra, 166 Cal.App.3d
566. This contention ignores the realities of trial practice. Experienced
litigators know that many trial courts conduct unreported instruction conferences
and permit counsel to "make their record" by recording their
objections after the jury has retired to deliberate. This practice promotes judicial efficiency, because it allows
matters to be placed on the record at a time when the jury will not be kept waiting. We see no reason to condemn the procedure
used by the trial court in this case.
n5 As
the City has made no arguments regarding the precise wording of the
instruction, we express no views on its appropriateness.
n6
Because this is the City's contention, the facts at the outset of this opinion
have been stated in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
n7 We
note that the San Francisco Police Department has recently adopted this
internal rule: "Whenever a male officer transports a female in a Department
vehicle, for whatever reason, he shall notify Dispatch of: [para.] The
vehicle's starting mileage. [para.] The
location from which he is leaving.
[para.] His destination. [para.]
Upon arriving at his destination the officer should notify Dispatch that he has
arrived and broadcast the vehicle's ending mileage. Dispatch confirms each of
the officer's broadcasts." (S.F. Police Dept. Information Bull. No. 90-96,
eff. Nov. 21, 1990.) We do not suggest that this policy is essential to deter
officers from engaging in sexual misconduct; it merely illustrates the type of
measure that a law enforcement agency can take to reduce the incidence of
sexual assaults by police officers on duty.
n8
Justice Baxter's concurring opinion objects to the majority opinion for
"fail[ing] to explain what additional measures the City could or should
practically have taken to prevent [Sergeant Schroyer's] intentional sexual
misconduct." (Conc. opn. by Baxter, J., post, p. 237.) The concurring
opinion also complains that "no matter what the City does, it may be held
liable for a police officer's criminal conduct including offenses such as this
rape." (Conc. opn. by Baxter, J., post, p. 237.) These objections are
misplaced, as they are directed at the doctrine of respondeat superior itself,
rather than its application to the facts of this case.
Under the doctrine of respondeat superior,
the employer is held vicariously liable for tortious conduct of its employees
that is within the scope of employment. The employer's liability is unaffected
by the steps it has taken to prevent such conduct. How best to prevent similar conduct in the future is a matter
left to the employer; the doctrine provides an incentive for the employer to
determine the appropriate measures to implement.
The
Legislature has determined that the doctrine of respondeat superior should
apply to employing governmental entities, as it does to all other
employers. It is not the function of
this court to question the propriety of the Legislature's decision.
n9
Although it has extended immunity to governmental entities in a variety of
other circumstances, the Legislature has not granted them immunity from
liability for assaults by police officers, sexual or otherwise.
n10 It
was established at the trial that the Los Angeles Police Department has a
policy, similar to that of the San Francisco Police Department (see fn. 7,
ante), which requires officers on duty who transport persons of the opposite
sex to report the time and the mileage on the vehicle's odometer before and
after the trip. The existence of such a
policy suggests that the department considers it neither startling nor
unexpected that its officers might engage in, or be accused of, sexually
assaultive conduct.
n11 We
stress that our conclusion in this case flows from the unique authority vested
in police officers. Employees who do not have this authority and who commit
sexual assaults may be acting outside the scope of their employment as a matter
of law. (See, e.g., Rita M. v. Roman Catholic Archbishop, supra, 187 Cal.App.3d
1453 [priests who allegedly seduced teenage parishioner acted outside the scope
of employment].)
n12 The
trial court permitted plaintiff, as a part of her showing of damages flowing
from the rape, to present evidence of trauma she suffered as a result of the
investigation and criminal prosecution of Sergeant Schroyer after the sexual
assault. On appeal, the City argued that it was immune from liability for
damages relating to the criminal prosecution.
(See §§ 821.6, 815.2, subd. (b).) The Court of Appeal, however, did not
reach the issue because of its conclusion that the City could not be held
vicariously liable for any of the injuries suffered by plaintiff. We express no view as to the proper
disposition of this issue, which must be addressed by the Court of Appeal upon
remand by this court.
ARABIAN, J., Concurring.
I join in the majority opinion but write separately to reflect
on the incremental advance today's holding represents in the effort to redress
the historical imbalance between victim and accused in sexual assault
prosecutions. By its very nature, rape displays a "total contempt for the
personal integrity and autonomy" of the victim; "[s]hort of homicide,
[it is] the 'ultimate violation of
self.'" ( Coker v. Georgia (1977) 433 U.S. 584, 597, 603 [53 L.Ed.2d 982,
996, 97 S.Ct. 2861] (plur. opn. of White, J.; conc. and dis. opn. of Powell,
J.).) Along with other forms of sexual assault, it belongs to that class of
indignities against the person that cannot ever be fully righted, and that
diminishes all humanity.
Some 16 years ago, in People v. Rincon-Pineda (1975) 14 Cal.3d
864 [123 Cal.Rptr. 119, 538 P.2d 247, 92 A.L.R.3d 845], this court eliminated
from our law one of the more egregious evidentiary biases against rape victims
by disapproving the use of Lord Hale's dictum n1 -- embodied in then-CALJIC No. 10.22 (3d ed. 1970 bound vol.) --
that rape is a charge easily made and difficult to defend, and that the
victim's testimony should be viewed "with caution." (See Arabian, The
Cautionary Instruction in Sex Cases: A Lingering Insult (1978) 10 Sw.U.L.Rev.
585.)
Our decision in that case helped inaugurate a wave of reform in
the law of rape and other forms of sexual assault. Acknowledging the reality
that rape victims were often victimized a second time by the criminal justice
system, the Legislature enacted one of the nation's first "rape
shield" laws, limiting the admissibility of evidence of a complainant's
sexual history except under narrowly defined conditions and prohibiting an
instruction that an "unchaste woman" is more likely to have consented
to sexual intercourse. (Stats. 1974,
ch. 569, pp. 1388-1389; Stats. 1974, ch. 1093, pp. 2320-2321; Evid. Code, §§
782 , 1103; Pen. Code, § 1127d; see People v. Blackburn (1976) 56 Cal.App.3d
685 [128 Cal.Rptr. 864]; cf. Michigan
v. Lucas (1991) 500 U.S. [114 L.Ed.2d
205, 111 S.Ct. 1743].)
In 1978, California saw the birth of Penal Code section 289
(Stats. 1978, ch. 1313, p. 4300), criminalizing sexual assaults with foreign
objects and imposing substantial penalties for their commission. This was followed in 1979 by the extension
of California's substantive rape statute to encompass rape by a spouse and the
adoption of a gender neutral definition of the offense. (Stats. 1979, ch. 994, pp. 3383-3385; Pen.
Code, §§ 261- 264, 1127d.) In 1980, the Legislature eliminated the requirement
of resistance as an element of rape (Stats. 1980, ch. 587, pp. 1595-1600; Pen.
Code, §§ 261- 262, 667.5, 1203.06 et seq.) and overruled our decision in
Ballard v. Superior Court (1966) 64 Cal.2d 159 [49 Cal.Rptr. 302, 410 P.2d 838,
18 A.L.R.3d 1416], by prohibiting trial courts from ordering a psychiatric
examination of a witness or victim for the purpose of addressing credibility in
a sexual assault prosecution. (Stats.
1980, ch. 16, p. 63; Pen. Code, § 1112; see People v. Barnes (1986) 42 Cal.3d
284 [228 Cal.Rptr. 228, 721 P.2d 110]; People v. Haskett (1982) 30 Cal.3d 841,
859, fn. 8 [180 Cal.Rptr. 640, 640 P.2d 776].) Also in 1980, California became
the first state to recognize the value of protecting from disclosure
confidential communications between sexual assault victims and therapists by enacting the sexual assault
victim-counselor evidentiary privilege.
(Stats. 1980, ch. 917, pp. 2915-2921; Evid. Code, § 1035 et seq.) n2
Several other states have since enacted a similar privilege. n3
California, of course, was not alone in these efforts. Notably, the Legislatures of Michigan and
New York and the drafters of the Model Penal Code developed reform-driven,
gender neutral sexual offense legislation; other jurisdictions followed suit
and the subject became "a key item on the feminist agenda across the
United States throughout the 1970's." n4
However, this mosaic of change and the national consciousness it
reflects should not erase our concern.
Over the past generation, the incidence of forcible rape nationwide has
climbed at a disturbing rate. According
to one authoritative source, the frequency of the offense in the United States
has doubled over the past twenty years. n5
Society's response has been severe; mandatory prison sentences
for sexual assault offenders and consecutive term enhancements for rape
recidivists ( Pen. Code, §§ 667.5, 1203.065) have halted many potential repeat
offenders. But strengthened criminal
sanctions are only part of an adequate response. Our holding today
advances the cause of reform by providing a meaningful civil remedy to
the victims of those who exploit unique institutional prerogatives to
facilitate a sexual assault.
"All rape is an exercise in power, but some rapists have an
edge that is more than physical." n6
A police officer is sworn to protect and to serve. In the pantheon of protection, we look to
law enforcement officials as our first and last hope. When the police officer's special edge -- the shield, gun and
baton, the aura of command and the irresistible power of arrest -- is employed
to further a rape, the betrayal suffered by the victim is an especially bitter
one.
"The bite of the law," Justice Frankfurter wrote,
"is in its enforcement." n7 That maxim was never better served than
here. Given the proper factual showing
of misuse of official authority in the commission of a rape by a police
officer, it is fair and consistent with time-honored principles of respondeat
superior to impose liability vicariously on the public entity on whose account
the officer occupied a position of authority and trust, and for the folly of
its hire.
FOOTNOTES:
n1 1
Hale, The History of the Pleas of the Crown 634 (1st Am. ed. 1847).
n2 See
Arabian, The Sexual Assault Counselor-Victim Privilege: Protection of a
Confidential Communication, Los Angeles Daily Journal (Nov. 7, 1980) page 4.
n3 See,
e.g., General Statutes of Connecticut, section 52-146k (1990); Florida
Statutes, section 90.5035 (1990); Kentucky Revised Statutes Annotated, Official
Edition, section 421.2151 (Michie 1991); Maine Revised Statutes Annotated,
title 16, section 53-A (1989); and Annotated Laws of Massachusetts, chapter
233, section 20J (Law. Co-op. 1991).
n4
Estrich, Real Rape (1987) page 80 and following.
n5
Figures released by the federal Bureau of the Census show that the rate of
reported forcible rapes per 100,000 increased nationally from 18.7 in 1970 to
37.6 in 1988. (U.S. Bureau of the
Census, Statistical Abstract of the U.S.: 1990 (1990) p. 173.)
n6
Brownmiller, Against Our Will: Men, Women and Rape (1975) page 256.
n7
Fisher v. United States (1946) 328 U.S. 463, 484 [90 L.Ed. 1382, 1394-1395, 66
S.Ct. 1318, 166 A.L.R. 1176] (dis. opn.).
BAXTER, J., Concurring.
I concur in the judgment.
The City of Los Angeles (the City) requested a jury instruction that
virtually guaranteed it would be held liable for the rape by Officer Schroyer. The City should not now be heard to complain
that the jury's verdict was erroneous.
I respectfully disagree, however, with the majority's reasoning
and conclusion on the substantive question of vicarious liability. The majority
presents at length its policy views on why governments should be strictly
liable for the crimes of their police officers. However, these observations are
largely irrelevant. The Legislature has
prohibited such liability without fault except where a public employee was
acting "within the scope of . . . employment." ( Gov. Code, § 815.2, subd. (a).) The narrow
issue in this case is whether an officer who deviates from duty and commits
criminal acts entirely unrelated to his law enforcement responsibilities can
ever be deemed "in the scope of . . . employment." For reasons I will
explain, the answer to that question is "no."
Invited Error
I. The rule of invited error should bar the City's attack on the
jury's verdict.
Special instruction No. 3, requested by the City, stated:
"An employer is liable for the wrongful acts of a police officer who, as a
result of the exercise of his authority, legally causes injury even though the
wrongful acts occurred without the employer's knowledge, were not related to
the duties he was hired to perform, were not for the benefit of employee, and
were done in violations [sic] of the employer's rules or grant of
authority." A reasonable jury faced with this instruction would be hard
pressed not to find vicarious liability. The components of the instruction bear
emphasis. The jury was told the City
was vicariously liable for the rape by Officer Schroyer even if:
a. It occurred without the
City's knowledge;
b. It was not related to Officer Schroyer's duties;
c. It was not for the City's benefit;
d. It was solely for the personal benefit of Officer Schroyer;
and
e. It violated the City's rules.
Under the City's jury instruction, almost any imaginable form of
police misconduct would support a finding of vicarious liability. If, for
example, Officer Schroyer had "exercise[d] . . . his authority" by
robbing a bank while on duty, his misconduct would equally have met the
criteria for vicarious liability set forth in the City's instruction.
The City acknowledges the well-established rule of invited
error. "Under the doctrine of 'invited error' a party cannot successfully
take advantage of error committed by the court at his request." ( Jentick
v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. (1941) 18 Cal.2d 117, 121 [114 P.2d 343].) The
rule precludes a party from challenging a jury instruction if he proposed it or
a similar instruction. (Ibid.; Weirum v. RKO General, Inc. (1975) 15 Cal.3d 40,
50 [123 Cal.Rptr. 468, 539 P.2d 36].) The City does not dispute that special
instruction No. 3 was highly unfavorable to the City's own position at trial.
The City, however, contends it should not be held accountable
for special instruction No. 3 because the City was merely trying to "make
the best of a bad situation." According to the City, the trial court had
informed counsel for both parties that it would instruct the jury on the
vicarious liability issue pursuant to the decision in White v. County of Orange
(1985) 166 Cal.App.3d 566 [212 Cal.Rptr. 493] (White), in which the Court of
Appeal held that a female motorist had
stated a valid cause of action for vicarious liability against a county based
on an alleged sexual assault by a deputy sheriff. The City asserts it objected on two grounds to an instruction
proposed by plaintiff under White: (1) White should not be followed; and (2)
the instruction proposed by plaintiff did not accurately reflect the holding in
White. The City claims the trial court
made clear its intention to give plaintiff's instruction unless the City
submitted its own instruction under White.
The City contends it should therefore be excused from having submitted
the instruction that virtually assured an unfavorable verdict.
The City's argument on this point is flawed in two key
respects. First, even if we accept as
true the City's recollection of the facts, the City failed to object on the
record to any proposed instruction on the vicarious liability issue until after
the jury was instructed. A party must
not be allowed to submit a crucial jury instruction and then, after the jury
has been instructed and retired to deliberate, attempt for the first time on
the record to make excuses for its own proposed instruction. Put simply, a party should not be allowed to
create an after-the-fact objection under the guise of "clarifying" the
record. It is hornbook law that an
appellant must affirmatively show error by an adequate record. (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985)
Appeal, § 418, pp. 415-416.)
Faced with a dispute over jury instructions, the City should
have provided for a contemporaneous record of the discussions between counsel
and the trial court. Alternatively, the
City could have moved under rule 36(b) of the California Rules of Court for a
settled statement in place of a
transcript of the alleged chambers conference regarding jury instructions. ( Lipka v. Lipka (1963) 60 Cal.2d 472,
480-481 [35 Cal.Rptr. 71, 386 P.2d 671] [allowing augmentation of record to
include unreported chambers conference].) The City did neither. Accordingly, the record does not show that the
City made a timely objection to the proposed instruction on vicarious
liability.
Second and equally important, the majority fails to grasp the
fact that the fatal instruction was drafted by the City. When the City first raised its belated
objection to an instruction based on White, supra, 166 Cal.App.3d 566, the
trial court correctly observed that, "Now, however, on this instruction
that you prepared, and which you felt was the law in accordance to [sic] White,
the language was entirely your own and the court had no input nor did
plaintiff's counsel." Faced with an instruction it did not like, the City
had two choices: (1) object to the instruction and stand on its objection
without submitting a different instruction; or (2) object to plaintiff's instruction
and submit an alternative one that the
City believed to be a correct statement of the law. A party may not submit its own instruction and then challenge it
as being incorrect. That is the essence
of the invited-error rule. ( Jentick v.
Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., supra, 18 Cal.2d 117, 121.)
The City cites no authority for its novel proposition that the
City may challenge its own instruction as an attempt "to make the best of
a bad situation." The rule is to the contrary. In Jentick v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., supra, 18 Cal.2d 117,
the court rejected the vicariously liable defendant's argument that its request
for an erroneous instruction was not willful. "Defendant may not avoid the
application of the doctrine by asserting that the error was not deliberately or
willfully induced. The good faith of
the defendant is immaterial. It is
incumbent upon counsel to propose instructions
that do not mislead a jury into bringing in an improper verdict. Whether deliberate or not, defendant's
action was responsible for the erroneous instruction and verdict. Defendant must therefore accept them as
correct." ( Id ., at p. 122.) Either the same result should obtain in this
case, or the majority should forthrightly overrule Jentick.
II. Reaching the merits of the vicarious liability issue serves
little purpose and will create confusion.
Plaintiff has only one interest in this court: obtaining an
affirmance of the monetary judgment in her favor. We can, and should, grant her that relief on the basis of the
City's invited error on the jury instruction.
Any discussion of whether vicarious liability should arise in future
cases serves no purpose for plaintiff.
Yet the majority insists on a broad and potentially mischievous holding
that local governments may be liable without fault if a police officer commits
a crime that is somehow related to the authority wielded by virtue of peace
officer status.
One must keep in mind the precise disposition of this case. The verdict against the City was returned
pursuant to an instruction that the City was vicariously liable for the rape by
Officer Schroyer because it was a "result of the exercise of his
authority," even if it occurred without the City's knowledge, was not related to Officer Schroyer's duties, was
not for the City's benefit, was solely for the personal benefit of Officer
Schroyer, and violated the City's rules.
There is no claim that the City was negligent in hiring Schroyer or had
reason to know that he might take advantage of his position of authority to
commit rape. The sole basis on which the City's liability is predicated is that
he acted within the scope of his employment while committing a rape.
Despite the majority's effort to suggest some limitations on its
holding, the practical result is clear: no matter how attenuated the
relationship between police misconduct
and an officer's employment, if he takes advantage of the authority he acquires
as an officer in order to commit the crime, he may be found to be acting within
the scope of his employment, and the City will be liable for any damages he
causes. This is an unprecedented
expansion of liability which is unauthorized by the controlling governmental
immunity statutes.
For the foregoing reasons, I would decide this case in plaintiff's
favor solely on the ground of the City's invited error. Because the majority,
however, decides the broader scope of employment issue, I address that too.
Vicarious Liability
I respectfully disagree with the majority's reasoning and
conclusion that the City may be held vicariously liable for the injury caused
by Officer Schroyer's criminal conduct.
The majority imposes on the taxpayers of the City the financial
responsibility for a rape committed by a police officer for his own
gratification. No act can be more
unrelated to the duties of a police officer than his rape of a member of the
public he is sworn and paid to protect.
The majority admits, as does the plaintiff, that the City was
blameless. The proposed rule is
therefore sweeping. Taxpayers may be
strictly liable for almost any abuse of position by a police officer no matter
how unrelated it is to his or her
proper duties. I share the urge to make plaintiff whole -- assuming that money
can ever erase her pain. No
compassionate person can escape outrage at the harm caused by this errant
officer. This court's proper function,
however, is not to search for deep financial pockets regardless of the law or
practical consequences.
III. The City's liability is governed by statute.
The stated cornerstone of
the majority opinion is its view that,
"The cost resulting from misuse of that [police] power should be borne by
the community . . . ." (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 217.) The question of the
City's liability is not a matter of judicial preference. The Legislature has enacted a comprehensive
statutory system regulating the liability of public entities. ( Gov. Code, §
810 et seq.) Under this scheme, "[a] public entity is liable for injury proximately
caused by [the actionable misconduct] of an employee . . . within the scope of
. . . employment . . . ." (Id., § 815.2, subd. (a), italics added.)
"Except as otherwise provided by statute[,] . . . [para.] [a] public
entity is not liable for an injury . . . ." (Id., § 815, subd. (a).)
"Government[al] tort liability in California is governed completely by
statute." ( Swaner v. City of Santa Monica (1984) 150 Cal.App.3d 789, 797
[198 Cal.Rptr. 208].) "[T]he practical effect of [Government Code section
815] is to eliminate any common law governmental liability for damages arising
out of torts." (Sen. legis. committee com., 32 West's Ann. Gov. Code (1980
ed.) § 815, p. 168 [Deering's Ann. Gov.
Code (1982 ed.) § 815, p. 134], italics added.)
The Legislature's intent to circumscribe liability is
clear. In Muskopf v. Corning Hospital
Dist. (1961) 55 Cal.2d 211 [11 Cal.Rptr. 89, 359 P.2d 457], this court
attempted to abrogate the entrenched doctrine of governmental tort immunity. The Legislature promptly responded by
enacting the Moratorium Act of 1961 (former Civ. Code, § 22.3), which suspended
the effect of Muskopf and reinstated the immunity. (Stats. 1961, ch. 1404, pp. 3209-3210.) At the Legislature's
request, the California Law Revision Commission submitted a comprehensive
report in 1963, which gave rise to the statutory system that now governs the
field of public entity tort liability. (Although not officially titled, the
legislation is commonly referred to as the Tort Claims Act.) This history makes
clear that the Legislature was unwilling to accept the judicial expansion of
tort liability attempted by the Muskopf court.
Professor Arno Van Alstyne was the California Law Revision
Commission's chief consultant and much of his work gave rise to the present
statutory system. He has explained
that, "These provisions were intended to ensure that applicable immunity
provisions of the California Tort Claims Act will generally prevail over its
liability provisions." (Van Alstyne, Cal. Government Tort Liability
Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1980) § 2.26, p. 67.) We have also noted the restrictive
nature of the act. "[T]he intent
of the act is not to expand the rights of plaintiffs in suits against
governmental entities, but to confine potential governmental liability to
rigidly delineated circumstances: immunity is waived only if the various
requirements of the act are satisfied." ( Williams v. Horvath (1976) 16
Cal.3d 834, 838 [129 Cal.Rptr. 453, 548 P.2d 1125] (opn. by Mosk, J.).)
The plain language of the act supports a restrictive view. Government Code section 815 provides an
immunity except as "provided by statute." (Ibid., italics added.) The
Legislature did not provide for exceptions as provided by "law," which would have included
court decisions. ( Gov. Code, § 811.)
This limitation also reflects the Legislature's awareness that questions of
public entity liability are policy and fiscal questions better left to the
Legislature than to the courts. The
Legislature's intent to restrain judicial expansion of liability is made even
clearer by its observation that, "The use of the word 'tort' had been
avoided, however, to prevent the imposition of liability by the courts by
reclassifying the act causing the injury." (Sen. legis. committee com., 32
West's Ann. Gov. Code, supra, § 815, p. 168 [Deering's Ann. Gov. Code, supra, §
815, p. 134], italics added.) The California Law Revision Commission further
explained the problem of undue judicial interference: "Experience in states which have left the limits of
liability to be determined by the courts has shown that liability insurance to
protect the financial integrity of small public entities is at times
prohibitively expensive or impossible to obtain when there is no defined limit
to the potential extent of liability." (Recommendations Relating to Sovereign
Immunity, No. 1, Tort Liability of Public Entities and Public Employees (Jan.
1963) 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (1963) pp. 808-809 (hereafter Law Revision
Commission Recommendations).)
The majority asserts that the statutory phrase "scope of employment"
imports "general standards" of respondeat superior law into the Tort
Claims Act and has been construed as broadly as the similar test used in
private tort litigation. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 209-210.) Yet the majority
applies to financially pressed local governments a startling and unwarranted
expansion of the traditional respondeat superior doctrine.
It is ancient law that "[a] master is not liable for a
crime or wilful injury, such as an assault, committed by the servant without
his command or encouragement, though it may be in the course of, or in relation
to, the service." (2 Stephen, New Commentaries on the Laws of England
(1843) p. 278, italics added.) Moreover, under general tort law, an employee's
injurious conduct arises in the "scope of employment" for purposes of
vicarious liability where the conduct was "typical,"
"usual," "broadly incidental," or "inherent" in
the employer's enterprise, but not where the conduct was so "unusual or
startling," or constituted such a "[substantial deviation] from [the
employee's] duties for personal purposes," that "'it would seem
unfair to include the [resulting] loss . . . among other costs of the
employer's business. . . .'" ( Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc.
(1986) 41 Cal.3d 962, 968 [227 Cal.Rptr. 106, 719 P.2d 676]; see Hinman v.
Westinghouse Elec. Co. (1970) 2 Cal.3d 956, 960 [88 Cal.Rptr. 188, 471 P.2d
988].)
Aside from his original detention of the intoxicated victim,
Officer Schroyer's criminal attack had no relation whatever to the performance
of his law enforcement duties. Rather, he deviated completely from his work
assignment, in a manner all must concede was both "startling" and
"unusual," to commit a sexual assault for personal gratification. Absent supportive legislation, such an
outrageous sexual attack cannot be deemed an "inherent" or
"broadly incidental" risk of law enforcement which the taxpayers
should absorb as a cost of government.
I cannot square the majority's radical departure from traditional
respondeat superior law with the purposes of the Tort Claims Act.
IV. The majority's extensive reliance on public policy is
misplaced and unsupported.
The majority considers at some length various "policy
factors." This reliance on public policy is both unsupported by evidence
and legally misplaced. The governing
statutory scheme precludes us from imposing vicarious liability on a public
employer as a matter of
"policy." Liability may be imposed only for an employee's actionable
misconduct "in the scope of . . . employment." The only issue
presented is when, if ever, a police officer's intentional criminality can
fairly be deemed "in the scope" of the officer's employment. Intentional criminal conduct entirely beyond
the scope of an officer's law enforcement duties cannot meet that test.
A. Statutory nature of
question
As noted above, we are restricted to deciding this case in light
of the comprehensive statutory scheme that governs public entity
liability. In appropriate cases,
consideration of public policy may assist the court in construing a
statute. However, because the clear
legislative intent was to restrict government's liability, this court should
not impose liability absent a clear indication the Legislature intended such
result. The majority does not undertake
such an analysis and refers only tangentially to the statutes. Its opinion offers no reasoned basis to
conclude that the Legislature intended to bring all criminal misuse of an
officer's status, power, or authority, however flagrantly unrelated to duty,
within the "scope of [the officer's] employment."
Even assuming we were free to resolve the policy question, I am
troubled by the majority's incomplete discussion of the competing public
policies. Whether plaintiff should
recover for her injuries is only one side of the equation. The other side is whether the taxpayers of
the City should be forced to pay for those injuries. The public fisc is not infinite.
To the contrary, in this era of limited public resources, every
expenditure for one purpose requires a withdrawal of funds for another
purpose. Compensating the plaintiff is
a worthy and sympathetic goal. Whether
it is more worthy than other public purposes is a question beyond our right or
ability to answer. Professor Van
Alstyne has testified that, "[T]he costs and the funding problems are one
of the most difficult problems in the whole field of tort liability . . . in
the area of government torts particularly . . . ." (Hearings on Government
Liability Before the Joint Com. on Tort Liability (Oct. 31, 1977) p. 33.)
The inescapable truth is that in the modern era, payments from
the public purse involve hard choices of priorities. For example, in 1986 the voters enacted Civil Code section 1431.1
to restrict liability for noneconomic damages.
The voters' findings and declaration of purpose stated, "Local
governments have been forced to curtail some essential police, fire, and other
protections because of the soaring costs of lawsuits and insurance
premiums." ( Civ. Code, § 1431.1, subd. (c).) The effect of tort judgments
on public resources is significant. A
court should not ignore fiscal reality when expanding the frontier of tort
liability. If a court wishes to sit as a "super-Legislature," the
court should wrestle with the same vexing problems that arise in the
legislative arena and should be subject to the same electoral pressures faced
by legislators.
Of course, the Legislature (or the electorate itself) is best
equipped to consider empirical evidence, e.g., the frequency of police rape,
and to make the hard choices as to where public money will be spent. ( Brown v. Kelly Broadcasting Co. (1989) 48 Cal.3d 711, 740 [257 Cal.Rptr. 708,
771 P.2d 406] [leaving consideration of empirical data to the Legislature]; J.
C. Penney Casualty Ins. Co. v. M. K. (1991) 52 Cal.3d 1009, 1028 [278 Cal.Rptr.
64, 804 P.2d 689] [noting importance of Legislature's consideration of
empirical data].) We would do well to pay heed to the observation of an English
jurist that public policy "is a very unruly horse, and when once you get
astride it you never know where it will carry you." ( Richardson v.
Mellish (1824 Bing.) 103 Eng. Rep. 294, 303.) Courts should be extremely
reluctant to decide for the public how its money should be spent. ( Sands v. Morongo Unified School Dist.
(1991) 53 Cal.3d 863, 941 [281 Cal.Rptr. 34, 809 P.2d 809] (dis. opn. of
Baxter, J., noting importance of not interfering with community-based
decisions).)
The majority's legislative decision to allocate public funds is
especially bothersome in light of the absence of any factual support for many
of the majority's critical assumptions.
The majority cites no evidence for its sweeping pronouncements that
vicarious employer liability for police sexual misconduct will encourage preventive
measures that do not hinder the vital law enforcement function. Indeed, both common sense and prior
commentary by this court (see discussion, post) suggest the contrary.
B. Source of the majority's
policy factors
The majority relies almost entirely on policy factors set forth
in the lead opinion in John R. v. Oakland Unified School Dist. (1989) 48 Cal.3d
438 [256 Cal.Rptr. 766, 769 P.2d 948] (John R.).) This reliance is flawed, even
puzzling, in several respects.
1. The John R. court, supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, declined to impose
vicarious liability for a sexual assault by a schoolteacher on a pupil. A
decision rejecting vicarious liability provides questionable support for
an expansion of such liability. Even
one of the two dissenters on the liability issue observed that,
"[V]icarious liability for sexual assaults should be recognized as the
exception, not the rule." ( Id., at p. 465 (conc. and dis. opn. by
Kaufman, J.).) Another critic of the John R. decision properly called it "an
extraordinarily broad rule" against vicarious liability. ( Kimberly M. v.
Los Angeles Unified School Dist. (1989) 215 Cal.App.3d 545, 550 [263 Cal.Rptr.
612] (conc. opn. of Johnson, J.).) Moreover, when John R. was decided, we had
already granted review in this case. To
make clear that we were not prejudging this case, the lead opinion in John R.
stressed that we were not deciding whether a prior Court of Appeal decision
imposing vicarious liability for a sexual assault by a police officer ". .
. was properly decided or whether the job-created authority theory has any
validity in evaluating vicarious liability for the torts of police
officers." (48 Cal.3d at p. 452 (lead opn. by Arguelles, J.), italics
added.) The lead opinion could not have made more clear that we were not
deciding the issue now before us. ( Liu
v. Republic of China (9th Cir. 1989) 892 F.2d 1419, 1431 [noting that we
"specifically declined" in John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, to decide
the scope of vicarious liability for police misconduct].)
2. In light of the express disclaimer in John R., supra, 48
Cal.3d 438, 452, that we were not deciding the issue of vicarious liability for
police rape, any observations in the lead opinion were the barest of dictum, if
even that. We have made clear that,
"'[T]he language of an opinion must be construed with reference to the
facts presented by the case, and the positive authority of a decision is coextensive only with such
facts.'" ( Brown v. Kelly Broadcasting Co., supra, 48 Cal.3d 711, 734-735,
quoting River Farms Co. v. Superior Court (1933) 131 Cal.App. 365, 369 [21 P.2d
643].) This is especially so when a court takes pains to stress the narrowness
of its decision. The John R. lead
opinion, supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, raised a red flag to warn against subsequent
reliance on the decision. The present
majority takes that flag and lofts it as a standard for a view the John R.
court never adopted.
3. Most important, the policy discussion in John R., supra, 48
Cal.3d 438, was in an opinion signed by only two justices of this court. (There were four separate opinions.) Even
the other three justices who agreed there should be no vicarious liability
declined to sign the portion of the lead opinion dealing with that issue. Instead, they chose to make clear that they
concurred only "in the majority's holding" of no vicarious liability.
( Id., at p. 455 (conc. and dis. opn. of Eagleson, J.), italics added.) Except
to its precise holding of no liability, the lead opinion stated a minority view
and provides no authority for any proposition in a subsequent case. ( County of San Mateo v. Dell J. (1988) 46
Cal.3d 1236, 1241, fn. 5 [252 Cal.Rptr. 478, 762 P.2d 1202]; Farrell v. Board
of Trustees (1890) 85 Cal. 408, 416 [24
P. 868].) This is hornbook law.
"No opinion has any value as a precedent on points as to which
there is no agreement of a majority of the court." (9 Witkin, Cal.
Procedure, Appeal, supra, § 808, at p. 788.)
4. Even if we were to look to John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, for
the type of general guidance we might seek in a treatise or plurality opinion,
it would not support the majority's expansion of vicarious liability. The
policy factors noted in the lead opinion weigh against vicarious liability in
this case. The majority, however,
applies them erroneously and inconsistently to impose liability.
a. Allocation of the risk
The modern justification for vicarious liability is
"'"a deliberate allocation of a risk."'" ( John R., supra,
48 Cal.3d 438, 450, quoting Hinman v. Westinghouse Elec. Co., supra, 2 Cal.3d
956, 959-960.) The John R. lead opinion acknowledged that society benefits from
the authority placed in teachers and noted that, "[I]t can be argued that
the consequences of an abuse of that authority should be shared on an equally
broad basis." (48 Cal.3d at p. 452.) The lead opinion, however, concluded
this factor weighed against vicarious liability because the connection between
the authority conferred on teachers and the abuse of that authority by engaging
in sexual misconduct is too attenuated to allocate the risk to the
employer. That conclusion equally
weighs against liability in this case.
Rather than relying on the result in John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d
438, or even the lead opinion's application of this factor, the present
majority relies heavily on a statement in the lead opinion that the authority
of a police officer "plainly surpasses that of a teacher over a
student." ( Id., at p. 452.) This statement is unpersuasive: (i) It was a
passing observation in dictum. (ii) It was in an opinion of only two
justices. (iii) The court was fully
aware this case was pending when we decided John R. As explained above, the
lead opinion expressly stated we were not deciding "whether the
job-created authority theory has any validity in evaluating vicarious liability
for the torts of police officers." (Ibid.) In light of these multiple
limitations and disclaimers, it would
be hard to find a more slender reed on which to conclude that John R. supports vicarious
liability in this case.
Moreover, I am not
persuaded by the speculation in the John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, lead opinion
and the present majority opinion that a police officer's authority
"plainly surpasses that of a teacher over a student." ( Id., at p.
452.) The majority's discussion, like the lead opinion in John R., fails to
provide support for this assertion, and common sense suggests to the
contrary. A schoolteacher alone at his
home with an impressionable child has as
much power and opportunity to commit a sexual assault against the child,
especially one of tender years, as a police officer has to commit an assault
against a citizen. Justice Kaufman
pointed out in John R., supra, that the circumstances of the case
"virtually guaranteed that the teacher could act with impunity . . .
." (Id., at p. 465 (conc. and dis. opn. of Kaufman, J.), original
italics.) A teacher may have even greater apparent "authority" than a
police officer. None of the indicia of police power cited by the majority --
the uniform, badge, and gun -- creates any appearance that the officer has the
authority to rape. Plaintiff did not believe Officer Schroyer was authorized to
have sexual intercourse with her. To
the contrary, she struggled to avoid being raped. A young child, however, may
be induced to submit to a teacher's sexual depravity by being led to believe
that the teacher has the authority to commit sex acts.
The allocation of risk, or loss spreading as it is sometimes
called, should be reasonable and informed as well as deliberate. The decision whether to impose liability
requires a delicate balancing of competing interests, particularly when the
defendant at law is a public entity and the defendants in fact are the
taxpayers. The determination is best left
to the Legislature. Neither of the decisions on which the John R. lead opinion
relied for the notion of risk allocation involved governmental entities. ( Hinman v. Westinghouse Elec. Co., supra, 2
Cal.3d 956; Perez v. Van Groningen & Sons, Inc., supra, 41 Cal.3d 962.)
In its comprehensive study that gave rise to the Tort Claims
Act, the California Law Revision Commission explained, "The problems
involved in drawing standards for governmental liability and governmental
immunity are of immense difficulty.
Government cannot merely be made liable as private persons are, for
public entities are fundamentally different from private persons. . . . Private persons do not prosecute and
incarcerate violators of the law . . . .
Unlike many private persons, a public entity often cannot reduce its risk
of potential liability by refusing to engage in a particular activity, for
government must continue to govern and is required to furnish services that
cannot be adequately provided by any other agency." (Law Revision Com.
Recommendations, supra, at p. 810.) The California Law Revision Commission and
the Legislature required enormous amounts of empirical data and many months of
collective consideration to reach difficult decisions. The majority acknowledges no difficulty
whatsoever and gives no consideration to the potential effects of imposing
strict liability on the City.
The notion of risk allocation merits special mention in another
regard. We have long emphasized that
one factor to be considered in determining whether to impose a particular type
of tort liability is "the
availability, cost, and prevalence of [liability] insurance for the risk
involved." ( Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d 108, 113 [70 Cal.Rptr.
97, 443 P.2d 561, 32 A.L.R.3d 496].)
The lead opinion in John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, reiterated this concern:
"The imposition of vicarious liability on school districts for the sexual
torts of their employees would tend to make insurance, already a scarce
resource, even harder to obtain and could lead to the diversion of needed funds
from the classroom to cover claims." ( Id., at p. 451.) The high cost and
widespread unavailability of municipal liability insurance have been widely
reported and studied. (See, e.g.,
Hearings on Municipal Liability Insurance (Dec. 1975) Before the Joint Assem.
Coms. on Finance, Insurance, and Commerce and Local Government; Hearings on
Liability Insurance: Threat to the California Dream (Aug. 1986) Before the Sen.
Com. on Insurance, Claims, and Corporations; California Citizens' Commission on Tort Reform, Staff Background
Paper: Government Liability (1977) pp. 24-25.) The unavailability of public
liability insurance reached such crisis proportions that in 1986 it became one
of the key arguments in favor of Proposition 51, which the voters enacted to restrict
the liability of defendants (including public entities) for noneconomic
injuries. (See Ballot Pamp., argument in favor of Prop. 51 as presented to the
voters, Primary Elec. (June 3, 1986) p. 34.) The majority, however, gives no
consideration to this traditionally recognized factor.
Our proper function is not to usurp the Legislature's budgetary
function of allocating risk for public entity torts. Even if the question were ours to answer, we do not have before
us sufficient empirical data on which to make the difficult choice between
competing fiscal priorities.
b. Imposing liability on the employer to prevent recurrence of
the tortious conduct
The John R. lead opinion remarked that vicarious liability can
be "a spur toward accident prevention." (48 Cal.3d at p. 451.) On the
other hand, John R. recognized that a public entity must not be presented with
such an onerous, impossible, or impractical prevention burden that its proper
functions are threatened. (Ibid.) This
latter principle was a cornerstone of the Tort Claims Act. The California Law Revision Commission
emphasized that, "The basic problem is to determine how far it is
desirable to permit the loss distributing function of tort law to apply to
public entities without unduly frustrating or interfering with the desirable
purposes for which such entities exist." (Law Revision Com.
Recommendations, supra, at p. 810, italics added.)
Rape, of course, is no accident. It results from an individual's conscious decision to commit the
outrageous act despite all moral and legal sanctions. Hence, it cannot be
prevented in the way a city might train its officers in safe driving. Rape is a serious crime punishable by
imprisonment ( Pen. Code, §§ 261, 264), and a compensable civil wrong as well. We assume such considerations informed the
John R. lead opinion's observation that prevention and deterrence "[play]
little role in the allocation of responsibility for the sexual misconduct of
employees generally . . . ." (48 Cal.3d at p. 451.)
Here there is no suggestion that the City negligently failed to
screen Officer Schroyer's background and character, or that it failed to
exercise due care in training and supervising him. The majority fails to explain what additional measures the City
could or should practically have taken to prevent his intentional sexual
misconduct. Nor have we any evidence about the costs or benefits of any such
measures. Indeed, as the John R. lead
opinion observed, excessive restrictions on contacts between public employees
and citizens are likely to undermine
the employees' public function. (48
Cal.3d at p. 451.) Common sense suggests that what was true for education in
John R. has equal or greater validity in the context of law enforcement.
The premise that the City should adopt further regulations for
police training and conduct also runs afoul of Government Code section
818.2. Section 818.2 provides that
"[a] public entity is not liable for an injury caused by adopting or
failing to adopt an enactment or by failing to enforce any law." The term
"enactment" includes ordinances and regulations. ( Gov. Code, § 810.6.)
The majority's inability
to suggest how vicarious liability might deter sexual misconduct by public
employees demonstrates that we are ill equipped to dictate such matters. As the California Law Revision Commission
explained, "in many cases decisions made by the legislative and executive
branches should not be subject to review in tort suits for damages, for this
would take the ultimate decision-making authority from those who are
responsible politically for making the decisions." (Law Revision Com.
Recommendations, supra, at p. 810.) "The remedy for officials who make bad
law, who do not adequately enforce existing law, or who do not provide the
people with services they desire is to replace them with other officials."
(Id., at p. 817.)
Of course, the paradoxical result of the majority's holding is
that no matter what the City does, it may be held responsible for a police
officer's criminal conduct including offenses such as this rape. The City's
police department already has a policy that imposes several reporting
requirements on officers who transport members of the opposite sex. (See maj. opn., ante, at p. 218, fn. 10.)
The City's assistant chief of police in charge
of personnel and training testified that department policy requires a
male officer transporting a female
arrestee to record the time and mileage of his police vehicle so that the
arrestee's whereabouts could be monitored and verified. Department policy also prohibited Officer
Schroyer from transporting plaintiff to her residence. Obviously, these
policies did not prevent the rape in this case.
Under the majority's reasoning, one purpose of vicarious
liability in this case would be to encourage the City to adopt further,
undefined measures. By adopting the
rules then in effect, the City, however, may have done all that it could
reasonably do without imposing an undue burden on the police's resources and
mission -- the same concern expressed in John R. Indeed, if the City did not
act reasonably, it could have been found negligent. Plaintiff, however, dismissed her cause of action for negligence,
thereby indicating that the City had done all it could reasonably be expected
to do. Plaintiff fails to propose any
regulation that would be effective without being unreasonably restrictive on
effective law enforcement.
The majority's treatment of the regulations adopted by the City
is self-contradictory. At one point,
the majority approvingly notes a rule adopted by the San Francisco Police
Department relating to the transport of females by male officers. The majority asserts this rule
"illustrates the type of measure that a law enforcement agency can take to
reduce the incidence of sexual assaults by police officers on duty." (Maj.
opn., ante, at p. 215, fn. 7.) Only a few paragraphs later, the majority notes
that the City has a similar regulation.
Thus, the effect of the majority's holding is that the City is liable
despite its adoption of measures vicarious liability is designed to encourage.
n1
The proper question is whether vicarious liability would deter
future misconduct without undue adverse consequences for the police
function. If we impose liability, the
City has two choices: (1) It can conclude it has already done all that it can
reasonably do and accept the fact that errant officers might on occasion rape
citizens, thereby subjecting the City to vicarious liability. If this is the
result, vicarious liability has no deterrent effect. (2) Alternatively, the
City can take measures beyond those already adopted. It requires little common sense to imagine that such measures
might lead to the same result disapproved in John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438 --
undue interference with the City's ability to perform its mission of providing
police protection. In rejecting vicarious liability for a teacher's sexual
molestation of a child, the John R. lead opinion explained that, "Although
it is unquestionably important to encourage both the careful selection of these
employees and the close monitoring of
their conduct, such concerns are, we think, better addressed by holding school
districts to the exercise of due care in such matters and subjecting them to
liability only for their own direct negligence in that regard. Applying the doctrine of respondeat superior
to impose, in effect, strict liability
in this context would be far too likely . . . to induce districts to impose
such rigorous controls on activities of this nature that the educational
process would be negatively affected." ( Id., at p. 451.) The same
reasoning applies with equal force in this case.
Whether vicarious liability will have a deterrent effect without
undue impediment to a public function depends on what measures a public entity
has already taken, what additional measures it can take, and what the effects
of those measures will likely be. The
majority's holding will allow liability in future cases regardless of whether
it will help attain the goal of deterrence or whether it will unduly restrict
an essential public function. At a
minimum, the question whether vicarious liability is appropriate should depend
on the particular facts of each case.
In John R., even Justice Kaufman, who vigorously dissented in favor of
vicarious liability, explained that, "Respondeat superior is a
fact-specific determination; a holding adverse to the district would
necessarily be limited to the uniquely compelling facts of this case." (48 Cal.3d at p. 465 (conc. and dis. opn. of
Kaufman, J.), italics added.) By contrast, the majority result here is absolute
and not tethered to any factual basis.
c. Assurance of compensation to accident victims
The John R. lead opinion, supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, concluded that
the general goal of compensating accident victims weighed against imposing
vicarious liability for a sexual
assault. "The [sexual] acts here differ from the normal range of risks for
which costs can be spread and insurance sought. [Citation.] The imposition of vicarious liability on school
districts for the sexual torts of their employees would tend to make insurance,
already a scarce resource, even harder to obtain, and could lead to the
diversion of needed funds from the classroom to cover claims." ( Id., at
p. 451.) The same reasoning applies equally to the present case. Imposing vicarious liability on cities for
employee-committed rapes indisputably will increase the cost of insurance and
will also decrease its availability. n2
Perhaps to avoid this difficulty, the majority makes an
elliptical argument as to legislative intent, stating that, by not enacting
governmental immunity for violent police misconduct, the Legislature has
demonstrated that vicarious liability is an appropriate method for ensuring victim
compensation. However, the
Legislature's failure to expressly preclude liability is not a valid indicator
that the legislative purpose was to allow such liability.
The Legislature has provided that vicarious liability may be
imposed only for a public employee's actionable misconduct "in the scope .
. . of employment." Where, as here, the employee's intentional criminal
conduct was a spontaneous personal deviation from duty and bore no relationship
to his work performance, the Legislature's standard for vicarious liability has
not been met.
I am not persuaded that ensuring compensation for victims is a
dispositive concern in any event. It is
a truism to state that ensuring compensation weighs in favor of vicarious
liability. The deeper the defendant's pocket, the easier the plaintiff is
compensated. If ensuring compensation
were the only goal, vicarious liability should apply against all employers in
all cases. However, as the result in
John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, demonstrates, the sympathetic desire to
compensate the injured is not a sufficient basis on which to impose vicarious
liability.
Our decisions in other areas reinforce this principle. For example, prescription drugs occasionally
have grievous, even fatal, side effects upon innocent victims. We recently held, however, that a
manufacturer of a defectively designed drug cannot be held strictly
liable. ( Brown v. Superior Court
(1988) 44 Cal.3d 1049, 1061 [245 Cal.Rptr. 412, 751 P.2d 470].) Writing for a
unanimous court in Brown, Justice Mosk explained that despite occasional
"unfortunate consequences" to sympathetic victims, the public
interest in the development and availability of prescription drugs weighed
against liability without fault. ( Id.,
at pp. 1061-1065.) Similarly, in Belair v. Riverside County Flood Control Dist.
(1988) 47 Cal.3d 550, 564-565 [253 Cal.Rptr. 693, 764 P.2d 1070], we held that
strict liability was not appropriate in an inverse condemnation action for
property damaged by public flood control projects. We found, in effect, that the desire to compensate individual
injuries was outweighed by important public need for such projects.
The public has equally compelling interests in adequate law
enforcement and preservation of public funds.
A ruling that the public must bear the cost of all police misconduct
merely because the public benefits from law enforcement is inconsistent with
the spirit of Brown and Belair.
V. The majority opinion will have adverse practical effects.
The theoretical and practical ramifications of the majority's
holding are sweeping. At a minimum, the
majority opinion will permit imposition of vicarious liability whenever an
on-duty police officer commits rape or some other sexual assault against a
citizen the officer has detained by invoking his official authority. (Maj.
opn., ante, at p. 221.) It is difficult to see how a jury could find,
consistent with the majority opinion, that a uniformed officer who detains and
sexually assaults a motorist was not acting in the course and scope of his
employment.
The majority purports to limit its holding to cases in which an
officer "exercises" or "misuses" his authority. Indeed, the opinion stresses that vicarious
liability is appropriate here because Office Schroyer committed his criminal
act while "on duty" and "in uniform." But the majority's
underlying logic extends far beyond these limited circumstances. Once the majority's fundamental premise is
accepted, its efforts to limit its ruling are largely illusory.
The majority's conclusions rest on the principle that a police
officer's special power and authority allow him to impose his will on
citizens. But this power and authority
are limited neither to uniformed officers, nor to on-duty hours. Officers have law enforcement responsibility
even when off duty, and their jurisdiction in certain situations is
statewide. (See, e.g., Pen. Code, §
830.1, subd. (a)(3).) Moreover, an officer's special power to intimidate, if
any, does not depend on whether he is actually on duty or in full uniform. If the officer acts in uniform, or displays
his badge, or brandishes a regulation firearm, or even mentions his or her
status, the officer implicitly uses state-conferred power and ability to subjugate the victim. Under the majority's reasoning, a jury would
be hard pressed to find that misconduct committed under such circumstances was
outside "the scope of . . . employment." (See, e.g., Silver, Police
Civil Liability (1991) § 6.07, p. 6-12 ["[T]he issue of 'off' vs. 'on'
duty is usually not critical where, for instance, the officer identifies
himself or uses a weapon."].)
Rather than consider or even acknowledge this consequence of its
holding, the majority contends that cases in which courts have refused to
impose vicarious liability for sexual misconduct are
"distinguishable" because the officers were off duty. However,
examination of these decisions discloses no such dispositive distinction. In Gambling v. Cornish (N.D.Ill. 1977) 426
F.Supp. 1153, the court did not decide whether the raping officers were on
or off duty. Rather, the court stated
that, even assuming they were on duty, there was no vicarious liability. ( Id.,
at p. 1155.) Similarly, in Bates v. Doria (1986) 150 Ill.App.3d 1025 [502
N.E.2d 454], the court rejected liability,
not because the officer was off duty, but because the rape was
outrageous and therefore beyond the scope of his employment.
The logical consequence of the majority's holding is
demonstrated by one of the out-of-state cases on which it relies. In Applewhite v. City of Baton Rouge
(La.Ct.App. 1979) 380 So.2d 119, the court upheld vicarious liability for a
rape committed by an on-duty police officer. The significance for our case is
that, in support of its conclusion, the court relied on prior Louisiana
decisions that imposed vicarious liability for torts committed by off-duty
officers. ( Id., at pp. 121-122, citing
Cheatham v. Lee (La.Ct.App. 1973) 277 So.2d 513; Borque v. Lohr (La.Ct.App.
1971) 248 So.2d 901.) The majority's reliance on Applewhite, supra, is curious
because the case refutes the majority's attempted distinction between on-duty
and off-duty misconduct.
The majority's logic will also extend beyond police officers.
Part 2, title 2, chapter 4.5 of the Penal Code grants peace officer status to a
wide variety of law enforcement officers.
They include sheriffs, marshals, constables, and inspectors for district
attorneys. Under appropriate circumstances,
peace officer status is conferred on dental examiners, voluntary fire wardens,
horse racing board investigators, and many other persons. ( Pen. Code, § 830.3.) Like police, some of
these officers are authorized to carry firearms. (Ibid.) If one of these types of officers uses his weapon or
asserts his authority in order to facilitate a rape, it is difficult to see how
vicarious liability could be denied under the majority opinion.
The majority opinion is also unlimited in terms of the types of
misconduct that will give rise to liability.
Rape, robbery, and murder serve no public or police function. Yet the majority's holding seems to permit
imposition of vicarious liability for all these crimes if the perpetrator made
any use of official trappings or weapons or if the victim had knowledge of the
attacker's connection to law enforcement and submitted accordingly. The implications of that conclusion are
daunting.
In sum, the principles espoused by the majority have the
potential to convert blameless public agencies into liability insurers for
much, if not all, of the intentional misconduct committed by peace officers in
their employ. Unlike commercial
insurers, the innocent agencies can neither define the limits of their coverage
nor collect premiums to finance it.
Moreover, as we have seen, they may be both legally and practically
barred from transferring their exposure to a commercial insurer. The majority fails to persuade me that law
or public policy warrants such a result.
VI. Prior court decisions weigh against vicarious liability.
As the court of last resort on this question of state
statutory construction, we are not bound by the decisions of our sister states'
courts. They do, however, provide
guidance in determining whether our decision will be consistent with mainstream
thinking on this issue. ( Delaney v.
Superior Court (1990) 50 Cal.3d 785, 799, fn. 9 [268 Cal.Rptr. 753, 789 P.2d
934].) Those decisions weigh against imposing liability. (The thrust of the majority on this point is
defensive, i.e, trying to distinguish cases that decline liability.)
In Bates v. United States (8th Cir. 1983) 701 F.2d 737, the
court affirmed a summary judgment in favor of the federal government in an
action arising from rapes and murders committed by a military policeman. The majority attempts to downplay the decision's
significance by emphasizing that the federal court was applying state law. The attempted distinction is misplaced. The majority does not dispute that the
decision was a correct application of Missouri law. The decision is therefore entitled to the same consideration that
the majority gives to the Louisiana and Wisconsin state court decisions on
which the majority relies.
Bates v. United States, supra, 701 F.2d 737, does not stand
alone. In City of Green Cove Springs v.
Donaldson (5th Cir. 1965) 348 F.2d 197, the court held as a matter of law that
an on-duty police officer was not within the scope of his employment when he
arrested and raped a female motorist. (
Id., at p. 202.) In Gambling v. Cornish, supra, 426 F.Supp. 1153, the court held
that two policemen who raped and committed other sexual acts on a citizen were
not within the scope of their employment, regardless of whether they were on or
off duty. ( Id., at p. 1155.) The court explained that, "[W]hile the
doctrine of respondeat superior should be broadly applied when a police officer
is involved, the line must be drawn somewhere." (Ibid.) In Bates v. Doria,
supra, 502 N.E.2d 454, the court affirmed a summary judgment in favor of a
county in an action arising from a rape committed by an off-duty deputy
sheriff. The majority attempts to
distinguish the case on the ground that the officer was off duty. This fact
played no part in the court's decision.
The rationale of the decision was that the rape was outrageous and was
committed solely for the officer's benefit.
(Id ., at p. 457.) Those facts would remain true regardless of whether
the officer was on duty or off duty.
The two cases on which the majority relies are not
persuasive. In Desotelle v. Continental
Cas. Co. (1986) 136 Wis.2d 13 [400 N.W.2d 524], the court affirmed a judgment
of no vicarious liability on the ground that the jury's verdict was supported
by the evidence. This fact-specific
holding provides little guidance one way or the other for our case. That the facts of the case supported the
jury's verdict does not mean the facts in our case support this jury's
verdict. In Applewhite v. City of Baton
Rouge, supra, 380 So.2d 119, the court affirmed a judgment against a city for
rapes committed by two on-duty officers.
Although the result supports the majority's conclusion, the Louisiana
Court of Appeal's discussion of the issue was brief -- less than a page -- and
did not consider the significant issues raised by imposing liability. More important, neither case ( Desotelle,
supra, 400 N.W.2d 524; Applewhite, supra, 380 So.2d 119) was decided under a
comprehensive statutory scheme like California's that governs public entity
liability.
VII. Conclusion
I
concur in the judgment reversing the Court of Appeal decision. I do so
on the narrow basis of the City's invited error as to the jury
instruction on the vicarious liability issue.
I respectfully decline, however, to join the majority's unnecessary
holding that a police officer may act "in the scope of . . . employment,"
thus exposing his blameless public employer to strict tort liability, when the
officer rapes a citizen. In the absence
of contrary legislation, I conclude, an officer may never be deemed within the "scope
of employment" when he or she deviates from work duties to commit a crime
unrelated to the performance of law enforcement responsibilities. Whether the taxpayers must absorb the cost
of such individual misconduct is a subject within the exclusive purview of the
Legislature, which cannot have anticipated this result.
FOOTNOTES:
n1 The
majority actually penalizes the City for adopting its regulations by observing
that their adoption shows sexual misconduct by officers is not unexpected. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 218, fn. 10.)
n2 The
concern over lack of insurance may apply even more strongly in this case. After
John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, we held that Insurance Code section 533 excludes
coverage for sexual molestation of a child as a matter of law. ( J. C. Penney
Casualty Ins. Co. v. M. K., supra, 52 Cal.3d 1009.) The logical corollary is
that coverage for rape is also excluded.
Like child molestation, rape "is always intentional, it is always
wrongful, and it is always harmful." ( Id., at p. 1025, original italics.)
In John R., supra, 48 Cal.3d 438, the lead opinion was concerned with scarce
insurance. In this case, we might be
faced with a legally mandated unavailability of insurance because Insurance
Code section 533 arguably precludes coverage for a defendant held vicariously
liable, despite contrary dictum in an old opinion ( Arenson v. Nat. Automobile
& Cas. Ins. Co. (1955) 45 Cal.2d 81, 84 [286 P.2d 816]).