Opinion
Plаintiff Trisha Denton sued Greenhouse Apartments and the City of Fullerton alleging she was raped because defendants failed to warn her of another nearby sexual assault that occurred shortly before she was attacked. The city moved for summary judgment arguing it owed plaintiff no legal duty and was immune from suit under Government Code section 845. The lower court granted the motiоn and entered judgment for the city. We affirm.
Facts
In the early evening hours of August 10, 1988, a woman was sexually assaulted in a laundry room of the apartment complex where plaintiff lived. When the victim resisted, the assailant fled, entering the apartment leased to plaintiff and closing the door behind him.
The assault victim contacted the police, and Officers Yettaw and Mitterholzer of the Fullerton Police Department went to the complex to investigate the incident. The officers and victim went to the apartment the assailant had been seen entering. Yettaw knocked on the front door, received no response, and determined the door was locked. He saw nothing unusual about the front door. The officers walked around the apartment checking the windows and doors and observed no signs of forced entry. Yettaw and Mitterholzer decided not to attempt to enter the apartment.
*1055 The officers contacted the apartment complex’s management, and learned plaintiff lived in the apartment. Yettaw dialed a telephone number listed in plaintiff’s rental agreemеnt, but it was out of service. The rental agreement also listed a vehicle belonging to plaintiff’s son. Mitterholzer ran a registration check on the vehicle and unsuccessfully attempted to locate it in the parking lot. The officers took no further action.
Plaintiff arrived home from work around 10 p.m. that night. A short time after she entered her apartment, the front doоr opened and a man entered holding a gun. When plaintiff asked the man how he opened the front door, he sarcastically replied, “Maybe it was unlocked.” At gunpoint, the man led plaintiff to the garage where they entered her car and left. After driving around for 20 to 25 minutes, the man parked the vehicle and raped plaintiff.
Plaintiff’s first amended complaint alleged the police officers investigating the prior assault were informed the assailant had entered plaintiff’s apartment when fleeing and notified of plaintiff’s identity. In addition, the amended complaint alleged the officers knew or should have known plaintiff was not home at the time of the prior assault, was unaware of its occurrence, and that she was dеpendent upon them to warn her about the incident.
The lower court granted defendant city’s motion for summary judgment and entered judgment accordingly.
Discussion
I. Scope of Review
Initially, we consider a procedural issue presented by the manner in which this case reached this court. Generally, motions for summary judgment present the question of whether “ ‘there is any issue of material fact to be triеd ....’”
(Salasguevara
v.
Wyeth Laboratories, Inc.
(1990)
Nonetheless, a motion for summary judgment by a defendant has been held to necessarily include a test of the sufficiency of the complaint and is treated, in effect, as a motion for judgment on the pleadings.
(Centinela Hospital Assn.
v.
City of Inglewood, supra,
II. Failure to Warn
Several cases have considered the circumstances under which a special relationship can arise between the police and individual members of the public. Specifically, the issue is whether the police investigation of the laundry room assault imposed on them an obligation to take reasonable steps to warn plaintiff she might be subject to a рossible sexual assault. Plaintiff contends the answer is yes. We conclude the facts do not support the existence of a duty in this context.
“As a general rule, one owes no duty to control the conduct of another, nor to warn those endangered by such conduct. Such a duty may arise, however, if ‘(a) a special relation exists between the actor аnd the third person which imposes a duty upon the actor to control the third person’s conduct, or (b) a special relation exists between the actor and the other which gives the other a right to protection.’ [Citations.]”
(Davidson
v.
City of Westminster
(1982)
A review of the relevant case law supports the conclusion the police officers’ investigation of the prior sexual assault did not give rise to a duty to warn plaintiff of a potential danger to her. In
Tarasoff
v.
Regents of University of California, supra,
However, the court affirmed the judgment as to the police defendants, concluding “they do not have any such special relationship to either [the victim] or to [the assailant] sufficient to impose upon such defendants a duty to warn respecting [the assailant’s] violent intentions. [Citations.] Plaintiffs suggest no theory and plead no facts that give rise to any duty to warn on the part of the police defendants absent such a special relationship. They have thus failed to demonstrate that the trial court erred in denying leave to amend as to the police defendants. [Citations.]”
(Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California, supra,
In
Thompson
v.
County of Alameda, supra,
Davidson
v.
City of Westminster, supra,
Again, the Supreme Court rejected an assertion that merely because the police were aware of a potential danger to the plaintiff they had a duty to warn her of that peril. “The very facts of this case confirm us in our belief, voiced in Tarasoff [citation], that under such circumstances the recognition of a cause of action against police defendants, based on a duty to warn, would raise difficult problems of causation and public policy, [¶] Imposition of a duty to warn [the plaintiff], premised on the theory that she was a potential victim of a potential assailant, necessarily implies a general duty to warn other potential victims in the vicinity. [Citation.] While under some circumstances the police may conclude that such a course of conduct is prudent and necessary, our past decisions teach that it is inappropriate to impose such a duty—which may paralyze a neighborhood—under pain of tort liability. [Citation.] [¶] In sum, we conclude that no causes of action for negligence are stated by plaintiffs. Although the facts as alleged may establish that [the plaintiff], or indeed any other woman using the laundromat, was a reasonably foreseeable victim as in Tarasoff, that factor alone does not suffice to establish a special relationship with the officers imposing upon them a duty to warn or protect.” (32 Cal.3d at pp. 208-209.)
Finally, in
Von Batsch
v.
American Dist. Telegraph Co., supra,
The Court of Appeal affirmed. “The mere fact that officers responded to a burglar alarm at a business premises and proceeded to investigate did not *1059 create a special relationship. [Citation.] Nor did the undertaking here of an investigation by officers create a special relationship giving rise to a duty to include specified actions—such as inspection of the roof—within its scope or to protect from future harm any particular individuals who might later arrive at the premises hours after the officers had left the scene. [¶] Under the Good Samaritan doctrine, law enforcement officers may voluntarily assume a protective duty towards a certain member of the public and undertake action on behalf of that person, thereby inducing reliance. Such a duty may arise ‘when an express promise to warn of a danger has induced reliancе, or when the actions of the [officer] place a person in peril or increase the risk of harm.’ [Citations.] [¶] One cannot recover for ‘injuries caused by the failure of police personnel to respond to requests for assistance, the failure to investigate properly, or the failure to investigate at all, where the police had not induced reliance on a promise, express or implied, that they would provide protection. . . .’ [Citations.] [¶] A special relationship may also be predicated on detrimental reliance upon ‘the conduct of a police officer, in a situation of dependency, resulting] in detrimental reliance on him for protection.’ [Citation.] But, there must be an affirmative act which created the peril, сontributed to, increased, or changed the risk or prevented other assistance. [Citations.]” (175 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1122-1123.)
Here, no basis exists for imposing liability on the city because its police officers failed to inform plaintiff about the prior sexual assault. The police have no general duty to warn citizens of potentially dangerous persons even when they are informed by another person or entity that such an individual presents a danger to others.
(Tarasoff
v.
Regents of University of California, supra,
Plaintiff was completely unaware of the prior incident and the police investigation of it. Thus, it cannot be argued she depended upon the police to properly warn her of any potential danger. The mere fаct the police were aware of plaintiff’s identity and that she might be subject to harm is not, alone, sufficient to impose liability on them. Nothing the police did changed the risk that would have existed even if they had not investigated the earlier assault.
(Davidson
v.
City of Westminster, supra,
*1060
Neither
Mann
v.
State of California
(1977)
In Carpenter, plaintiff testified against a defendant in a criminal prosecution. Later, he was shot, allegedly in retaliation for his testimony. Plaintiff sued the city claiming its police department had received reliable information the defendant in the criminal case had threatened his life, but failed to warn him of the danger. The Court of Appeal found the city owed plaintiff a duty of care, noting the police had requested his assistance in the criminal prosecution and one officer induced in plaintiff a false sense of security by telling him the criminal defendant was just a “street punk” and he had nothing to worry about. (Carpenter v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 230 Cal.App.3d at pp. 932-933.)
Here, the police did nothing to increase the risk of harm to plaintiff. Furthermore, no basis existed for plaintiff to rely on the police to warn her of the prior assault and the potential danger to herself.
Plaintiff also argues the police had a duty to obtain assurances from the apartment complex managеment that it would either inspect plaintiff’s apartment or warn her of the potential danger, and that the record supported an inference the police “lulled” the management into not taking action. This argument is without merit for several reasons.
First, the complaint does not allege facts supporting an imposition of liability on this basis. It alleges only that рlaintiff was dependent on the police because they investigated the prior assault, learned the assailant had fled into plaintiff’s unit, identified plaintiff as the occupier of the unit, and knew or should have known she might be in danger of being sexually assaulted herself. Second, since the police had no independent duty to warn plaintiff of the potential dangеr, they consequently had no obligation to make *1061 sure the apartment manager would do so. Finally, plaintiff’s assertion that the record supports an inference the investigating officers “lulled” the apartment manager into inaction is simply not correct. Except to review the rental agreement for plaintiff’s identity and attempting to call a telephоne number listed on the agreement, there apparently was no further interaction between the police and management. These facts alone do not support an inference the apartment complex’s management felt it had no duty to take further action.
In her opening brief, plaintiff suggests the lower court should have continued the hearing on the summary judgment motion to permit her to depose the apartment complex’s manager on this point. But it is clear from the record plaintiff is aware of no facts to support a claim the police did or said anything which dissuaded the apartment complex’s management from warning her of the potential danger. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (h).) Thus, it was not neсessary for the lower court to continue the hearing or grant plaintiff leave to amend her complaint to attempt to state a cause of action on this theory.
We conclude the lower court did not err by granting the city’s motion and entering judgment in its favor. 1
Disposition
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed. Defendant shall recover its reasonable costs of suit.
Crosby, Acting P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Notes
In light of our conclusion on the issue of “duty,” we need not discuss whether the city would be immune from suit under Government Code section 845.
