This case arises out of a sexual assault on a student by an employee of the District of Columbia public schools during the school day and in a school building. The primary question on appeal is whether, as a matter of law, the employee’s tortious conduct was outside the scope of his employment. We hold that it was and affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the District of Columbia.
The underlying facts are essentially undisputed. Valerie Boykin was a 12-year-old student in a special program at Jackson Elementary School. Due to birth defects, Valerie was deaf, blind and mute. Maurice Boyd, himself blind, was Field Coordinator of the Deaf/Blind Program in which Valerie was enrolled. He was responsible for coordinating all services in the District related to the identification, assessment, and medical and educational programming for deaf/blind children. Boyd’s duties also included training blind students to avoid walking into obstacles and helping to calm down students who were misbehaving in class.
Valerie was one of the students whom Boyd on occasion had taken for such walks. He did so on February 1, 1977, after the lunch period. At that time, a school custodian observed Boyd sexually assaulting Valerie in the school cafeteria. As a result of that incident, Boyd resigned from the school system and pleaded guilty to a criminal charge of assault.
A civil suit was filed on Valerie’s behalf against Boyd and the District of Columbia. On March 3, 1980, a default was entered against Boyd, subject to ex parte proof. Valerie subsequently died, but the action against the District was maintained by her mother, Vernadine Boykin, as Valerie’s legal representative. Boykin contended that the District was liable for damages either vicariously, based on the theory of respon-deat superior, or directly, for negligence in hiring or supervising Boyd. The trial court, concluding that there was no genuine issue of material fact, granted the District of Columbia’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed. 1
Under the doctrine of
respondeat superior,
an employer may be held liable for the acts of his employees committed within the scope of their employment.
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. Red-
*562
dick,
In
Penn Central Transportation Co., supra,
The violent and unprovoked nature of [the employee’s] attack indeed suggests a personal as distinguished from business-related motive. Further, the altercation between [the taxi driver] and [the employee] was neither a direct out- ' growth of the employee’s instructions or job assignment, nor an integral part of the employer’s business activity, interests or objectives. There is nothing in the business of running a railroad that makes it likely that an assault will occur between a railroad brakeman and a taxicab driver over the celerity with which the latter will provide a taxicab ride to the former.
Id.
The employee’s assault was in no degree committed to serve the railroad’s interests, the court held. Rather, it was done “solely for the accomplishment of the independent malicious or mischievous purposes of the servant.”
Id.
(quoting
Great A & P Tea Co. v. Aveilhe,
We think the reasoning of Penn Central v. Reddick is applicable to this case. The sexual attack by Boyd on Valerie was unprovoked. It certainly was not a direct outgrowth of Boyd’s instructions or job assignment, nor was it an integral part of the school’s activities, interests or objectives. Boyd’s assault was in no degree committed to serve the school’s interest, but rather appears to have been done solely for the accomplishment of Boyd’s independent, malicious, mischievous and selfish purposes.
Appellant Boykin would have us hold that the assault was a direct outgrowth of Boyd’s assignment because that assignment necessarily included some physical contact with Valerie. She notes that a deaf, blind and mute child can be taught only through the sense of touch. The fact that physical touching was necessarily a part of the teacher-student relationship made it foreseeable that sexual assaults could occur, she argues. We reject this connection as too attenuated. We do not believe that a sexual assault may be deemed a direct outgrowth of a school official’s authorization to take a student by the hand or arm in guiding her past obstacles in the building.
In that regard, we conclude that this case is distinguishable from
Johnson v. Weinberg, supra,
We think that
Johnson v. Weinberg
approaches the outer limits of the liability that may be imposed under
respondeat superior. See
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY § 245 comment f (1958) (“the fact that the servant acts in an outrageous manner or inflicts a punishment out of all proportion to the necessities of his master’s business is evidence indicating that the servant has departed from the scope of employment in performing the act”). We decline to extend its reach to cover the facts of this case. The sexual assault here arose out of Boyd’s assignment only in the sense that Boyd’s walks with the student afforded him the
opportunity
to pursue his personal adventure. This is insufficient to make the District vicariously liable for Boyd’s act.
See Bozarth v. Harper Creek Board of Education,
Lyon v. Carey, supra,
The Circuit Court in
Lyon v. Carey
distinguished that case from
Grimes v. B.F. Saul Co.,
There is no suggestion here, as there was in
Lyon v. Carey,
that the employee’s conduct was the outgrowth of any action undertaken in the employer’s behalf. We think this case more closely resembles
Grimes, supra.
We conclude that Boyd’s conduct in this case, like that of the employee in
Grimes,
was “utterly without relation to the service which he was employed to render.”
Id.
at 48,
II
In the complaint, Boykin alleged that the District had been negligent in hiring Boyd and in failing to supervise him properly. The District, in moving for summary judgment, asserted “[t]hat no evidence exists that the District knew or should have known of any proclivity or history of assaults by Maurice Boyd.” In her opposition to the motion for summary judgment, Boykin did not dispute this assertion. Indeed, Boykin there made no reference at all to negligence in hiring Boyd. She did assert that there was a genuine issue of fact with regard to whether the District was negligent in supervising Boyd. However, it appears that her contention was limited to an assertion that it was negligent for the District to allow any teacher to have one-on-one contacts with a student such as Boyd had with Valerie. Accordingly, the trial court was entitled to assume that Boy-kin admitted there was no evidence the District knew or should have known that Boyd posed a danger to students greater than that posed by any other teacher. Super.Ct.Civ.R. 12 — l(k). Similarly, on appeal, Boykin has not asserted that she had *565 shown in the trial court that there was reason to think that Boyd might have been dangerous. ,
Boykin nevertheless asserts that instances of child abuse are sufficiently common that intentional torts of this sort are foreseeable if children are allowed to be left unaccompanied in the presence of school personnel. Thus, she argues, it was negligent of the District to have permitted such one-on-one contacts. We disagree. In a case such as this where the injury was caused by the intervening criminal act of a third party, the District is liable for negligence only if the danger of that act “should have been reasonably anticipated and protected against.”
Lacy v. District of Columbia,
Here, in support of its motion for summary judgment, the District appended an affidavit by Allen Jefferson Garrett, the coordinator of the South Atlantic Regional Center for Deaf-Blind Services, who administers federal deaf-blind services grants for a six-state region that includes the District of Columbia. In that affidavit Garrett stated that one-on-one sessions between deaf/blind students and teachers or administrators are frequently employed in such programs and are not inappropriate. In response, Boykin tendered no contradictory affidavit but merely asserted that the District had a duty to supervise Boyd to ensure that he did not take impermissible advantage of this situation. We conclude that this was insufficient to show that there was a genuine issue as to the District’s negligence. The uncontradicted Garrett affidavit established that one-on-one interaction between teachers and students is not viewed by education experts as posing a risk of intentional harm against the student sufficient to outweigh the benefits of such individualized attention.
In the absence of other than general allegations by Boykin to the contrary, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of the District.
See Sledd v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority,
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the trial court has not yet entered judgment against codefendant Boyd, it did enter the certification under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 54(b) that made the summary judgment final and appealable.
. In
Jordan v. Medley, supra, 228
U.S.App.D.C. at 428,
. Appellant Boykin appears to be suggesting in her brief that the District should be held vicariously liable for Boyd’s assault even if it was committed outside the scope of his employment. She would base this broader liability on the notion that schools have a “protective responsibility” for their students — particularly since children are
obliged
to attend school. This argument was not presented to the trial court in appellant’s opposition to the plaintiff's motion for summary judgment. Boykin stated that there was a genuine dispute (1) whether Boyd was acting within the scope of his employment, and (2) whether the District was negligent in supervising Boyd. Accordingly, we need not address this issue on appeal.
See Gillespie v. Washington,
In any event, Boykin has cited us to no authority that would authorize imposition of vicarious liability on a school for acts of employees beyond the scope of employment. Her sole citation is to a section of Prosser that discusses the broader liability imposed on common carriers, innkeepers and hospitals. W. PROSSER, LAW OF TORTS, § 70, at 465 (4th ed. 1971). We decline to pass upon the issue on this record.
. Comment f of § 302B of the RESTATEMENT states:
It is not possible to state definite rules as to when the actor is required to take precautions against intentional or criminal misconduct. As in other cases of negligence (see §§ 291-293), it is a matter of balancing the magnitude of the risk against the utility of the actor’s conduct. Factors to be considered are the known character, past conduct, and tendencies of the person whose intentional conduct causes the harm, the temptation or opportunity which the situation may afford him for such misconduct, the gravity of the harm which may result, and the possibility that some other person will assume the responsibility for preventing the conduct or the harm, together with the burden of the precautions which the actor would be required to take. Where the risk is relatively slight in comparison with the utility of the actor’s conduct, he may be under no obligation to protect the other against it.
