Opinion
This appeal involves the tragic murder of plaintiffs’ mother by Joseph Larroque, a parolee of the state prison system, and arises out of plaintiffs’ attempts to fix financial responsibility for that death on the State of California (State)—for failing to properly monitor Larroque’s parole— and the City of Oceanside (City)—for employing Larroque and failing to warn the victim, also a city employee, of Larroque’s dangerous propensities. The trial court concluded neither defendant owed a legal duty to the victim and accordingly sustained respective demurrers without leave to amend. As to the State, the court independently concluded that the immunity provisions of Government Code section 845.8 applied to bar plaintiffs’ claim.
After stating the facts as alleged in the complaint, we will address the issue of each defendant’s liability separately.
*669 Factual and Procedural Background 1
Laverne Duffy, the victim, was employed by the City in its engineering department. In August 1978 the City hired Joseph Larroque and also assigned him to the engineering department. 2 Larroque was on parole following three years in a state mental hospital and an additional four years in state prison after convictions for kidnapping, rape and sexual assault. The conditions of parole included that Larroque regularly report to a parole officer and take prescribed medication.
In September 1978 Duffy reported to her superiors that Larroque had sexually harassed her during working hours by touching parts of her body in a suggestive fashion without her permission. Despite these reports Duffy was never warned about Larroque’s background. Circumstances changed, however. Beginning in January 1979 Duffy and Larroque developed a friendly work and social relationship which continued for some four and one-half years. The City knew of the development of this relationship but nonetheless failed to warn Duffy about Larroque.
On May 19, 1983, Larroque placed an inter-office call to Duffy regarding work-related matters. During the conversation, Larroque asked for Duffy’s help in remedying a problem he had earlier in the morning with his car. Duffy agreed and apparently left the office with Larroque on her lunch break. Thereafter, Larroque kidnapped Duffy, taking her to his home where he stripped, bound and gagged her. After tying a self-tightening noose around her neck, Larroque left her to go back to work, intending to return later. While he was gone, Duffy strangled herself attempting to escape.
The defendants’ demurrers to plaintiffs’ first complaint were heard separately. Both were sustained—the City’s with leave and the State’s without leave to amend. The City’s demurrer to plaintiffs’ amended complaint was later sustained without leave and a judgment of dismissal entered on November 13, 1984.
Discussion
The trial court resolved each of the demurrers by concluding that the defendant at issue owed no “duty” to the plaintiffs. We have previously expressed our concern that the “duty” concept is often more of a substitute
*670
for rather than an aid to reasoned analysis.
(Marois
v.
Royal Investigation & Patrol, Inc.
(1984)
Our inquiry into the circumstances under which a defendant may be liable for its failure to control or take precautions against the acts of third persons is guided by two significant Supreme Court decisions. In
Tarasoffv. Regents of University of California, supra,
Relying on a similar special relationship between the defendant and a third person murderer, the plaintiffs in
Thompson
v.
County of Alameda
(1980)
Liability of the State of California
Plaintiffs in the present case respond to the Tarasoff-Thompson analysis by emphasizing that their complaint against the State does not rely on any failure to warn anyone. Rather, this is a simple allegation of the State’s failure to control Larroque in the sense of failing to properly supervise his parole. Plaintiffs thus claim that Thompson’s requirement of an identifiable victim has no application to a failure-to-control case.
Plaintiffs’ position exhibits a certain logic. Where a special relationship between the defendant and a third person gives rise to a duty on defendant’s part to control the third person (Rest.2d Torts, § 315, subd. (a)), a warning to foreseeable victims is only one of many ways the defendant can discharge that duty. Depending on the circumstances, it may be reasonable for the defendant to restrain or otherwise directly control or influence the third person. (See
Tarasoff, supra,
Nonetheless several California appellate court cases have arguably attempted to extend the
Thompson
reasoning to duty-to-control cases. In
McDowell
v.
County of Alameda
(1979)
McDowell
was followed in
Hooks
v.
Southern Cal. Permanente Medical Group
(1980)
Despite our concerns with the reasoning of McDowell and Hooks, we are fortunately not required to decide whether to directly disagree with those decisions because the trial court in the present case articulated an unassailable independent ground for its decision to sustain the demurrer. 5 Government Code section 845.8 provides: “Neither a public entity nor a public employee is liable for: (a) Any injury resulting from determining whether to parole or release a prisoner or from determining the terms and conditions of his parole or release or from determining whether to revoke *673 his parole or release.” The trial court concluded that this provision in the Tort Claims Act immunized the State for any liability arising from its negligent failure to supervise Larroque’s parole.
Relying on
Johnson
v.
State of California
(1968)
Even more decisive is this court’s decision in
Martinez
v.
State of California
(1978)
Liability of the City of Oceanside
Plaintiffs’ allegations against the City present significantly different questions. Here, plaintiffs rely on subdivision (b) of Restatement Second of Torts section 315 for the proposition that the employment relationship between Láveme Dufly and the City gave rise to a duty on the part of the City to take reasonable steps to protect its employee. 6 (See ante, p. 670.)
*674
Were the substance of plaintiffs’ complaint simply that the City was obliged to warn all female employees who might come in contact with Larroque of his prior criminal conduct, we would be unpersuaded. While others might phrase this conclusion in terms of the lack of a duty to warn, we prefer to say that such a complaint, without more, would fail to state facts from which a reasonable jury could conclude the City acted negligently. The mere fact that Larroque had been convicted of assaults on two women at least seven years earlier—for which he had served time in prison and been treated in a mental hospital—gives rise to an insufficiently strong inference that he would repeat similar criminal behavior. Balanced against this are the negative effects of a warning to fellow employees. Not only would such a warning have caused perhaps unnecessary anxiety for those warned but, more importantly, knowledge of Larroque’s past by his coworkers might have prejudiced any chance he had to lead a normal life. Even if such a warning did not cause his fellow employees to ostracize Larroque, he would have been “different” and treated accordingly. There is a serious danger that a warning will become a self-fulfilling prophecy, stigmatizing the parolee and causing him to be reminded he is not normal. (See
Thompson
v.
County of Alameda, supra,
Plaintiffs’ allegation in the present case, however, is not based simply on the failure to warn all employees at the time the City hired Larroque. They additionally allege that Duffy reported to her supervisors that she had been sexually harassed by Larroque shortly after he was hired. (See ante, p. 669.) If known to the City, these facts strengthen the inference that Larroque might repeat his earlier criminal conduct and suggest Duffy as a possible victim. Under such circumstances we believe it becomes a question of fact as to whether the City acted reasonably in failing to respond to Duffy’s report of harassment by alerting her in some manner to Larroque’s past conduct.
Plaintiffs have specifically alleged that had Duffy been warned, she would never have developed any relationship with Larroque. While we admit that serious questions of causation are presented where the killing takes place some four and one-half years after the warning allegedly should have been given, they are questions which cannot be resolved on demurrer but must
*675
await inquiry into the nature of the relationship between Duffy and Larroque. Plaintiffs have alleged facts from which a jury could conclude that the City should have warned Duffy following her reports of harassment by Larroque and that the failure to warn was a substantial factor in causing her death. (See
Myers
v.
Quesenberry, supra,
The City responds by citing
Thompson
v.
County of Alameda, supra,
Disposition
In case number D002552, the judgment is reversed to the extent it is based on the sustaining of the City’s demurrer to the first cause of action. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed. Plaintiffs shall recover costs. In case number D001527, the judgment is affirmed. The State shall recover costs.
Staniforth, Acting P. J., and Work, J., concurred.
Notes
We accept as trae the facts as alleged in the complaint for the purposes of testing a demurrer.
(Serrano
v.
Priest
(1971)
The complaint alleges the City received compensation for hiring Larroque through the state and federal parolee employment incentive program.
We opined in Marois that duty analysis can be both confusing and confused because courts also employ a duty rubric to analyze questions involving the reasonableness of the defendant’s conduct. (Id., at p. 198.) Whether a duty has been breached, however, is a decidedly different question from whether a duty exists. A determination that the defendant acted reasonably necessarily assumes he was under a “duty” to do so.
The holding in
Tarasoff
is subject to some confusion due to the citation of subdivision (b) of section 315. It is nonetheless clear that defendants’ duty to Tatiana did not arise from a subdivision (b) relationship but rather by virtue of its subdivision (a) relationship with the psychiatric patient.
(Id.,
We have discussed the foregoing “duty” issues not only because the trial court relied on that theory but also to heed the Supreme Court’s admonition to keep the “duty horse” in front of the “immunity cart.”
(Williams
v.
State of California
(1983)
In a second cause of action, plaintiffs allege that the City is vicariously liable for Larroque’s actions by virtue of the doctrine of respondeat superior. We reject their argument because there is no reasonable argument here that Larroque’s actions were within the scope of his employment.
(Alma W.
v.
Oakland Unified School Dist.
(1981)
The court rephrases its conclusion as follows: “In those instances in which the released offender poses a predictable threat of harm to a named or readily identifiable victim or group of victims who can be effectively warned of the danger, a releasing agent may well be liable for failure to warn such persons.” (
