Opinion
In this case we consider whether an employee subject to false imprisonment at the hands of her employer may sue that employer in a civil action, or whether such a suit is barred by the exclusivity provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Lab. Code, §§ 3600, 3602). We conclude that her suit would not be barred, because an employer that falsely imprisons its employee has stepped outside its proper role, and an injury resulting therefrom is beyond the scope of what we have termed the “compensation bargain.”
I. Statement of Facts
Because this case comes to us after the sustaining of a demurrer, all well-pleaded allegations of the complaint will be taken as true.
(Livitsanos
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
The facts, as stated in plaintiff’s second amended complaint, are as follows. Plaintiff Fermino was employed as a salesclerk in defendant’s department store, working in the jewelry department. The store’s personnel manager summoned her to a windowless room, and proceeded to interrogate her concerning her alleged theft of the proceeds of a $4.95 sale to a customer. The personnel manager was joined by the store’s loss prevention *707 manager and by two security agents. One of the security agents stated that a customer and an employee, who were waiting in the next room, had witnessed the theft. He then demanded that Fermino confess. He told her that the interrogation could be handled in two ways: the “Fedco way” or the “system way.” The “Fedco way” was to award points each time she denied her guilt. When 14 points were reached, she would be handled the “system” way, i.e., handed over to the police. After each of plaintiff’s repeated and vehement denials, the security agent said “one point.” The loss prevention manager “hurled profanities” and demanded that Fermino confess.
Fermino’s repeated requests to leave the room and to call her mother were denied. She was physically compelled to remain in the room for more than one horn:. At one point Fermino rose out of her chair and walked toward the door of the interrogation room in an attempt to leave; however, as soon as she made a move toward the door, one of the security guards slid in front of the door, threw up a hand and gestured her to stop.
Finally, Fermino became hysterical, and broke down in tears. At this point her interrogators departed from the room. Upon returning, they admitted no employee or customer was waiting to testify against her. They further stated they believed her, and that she could leave.
As the result of this incident, Fermino sustained unspecified physical injury and “shock and injury to her nervous system and person,” as well as “mental anguish and emotional distress.” Fermino sued for false imprisonment, as well as intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. She claimed that the false imprisonment resulted from a method of interrogation that was approved company policy.
Defendant Fedco demurred on the grounds that Fermino’s claim was barred by the Workers’ Compensation Act (hereafter the Act), and in particular the exclusivity provisions of Labor Code sections 3600 and 3602, (hereafter the exclusivity rule). The trial court sustained the demurrer. A divided Court of Appeal upheld the trial court, relying on the statute, and on our decisions in
Shoemaker
v.
Myers
(1990)
*708 II. Discussion
Labor Code section 3600, subdivision (a),
1
provides that, subject to certain particular exceptions and conditions, workers’ compensation liability, “in lieu of any other liability whatsoever” will exist “against an employer for any injury sustained by his or her employees arising out of and in the course of the employment.” As we have recognized, the basis for the exclusivity rule in workers’ compensation law is the “presumed ‘compensation bargain,’ pursuant to which the employer assumes liability for industrial personal injury or death without regard to fault in exchange for limitations on the amount of that liability. The employee is afforded relatively swift and certain payment of benefits to cure or relieve the effects of industrial injury without having to prove fault but, in exchange, gives up the wider range of damages potentially available in tort.”
(Shoemaker, supra,
We recognized in
Shoemaker
and elsewhere, however, that certain types of injurious employer misconduct remain outside this bargain. There are some instances in which, although the injury arose in the course of employment, the employer engaging in that conduct “ ‘stepped out of [its] proper role[ ]’ ” or engaged in conduct of “ ‘questionable relationship to the employment.’ ”
(Shoemaker, supra,
Fermino took the position below that her false imprisonment was in fact an instance of an employer acting outside of its proper role.
2
The Court of Appeal disagreed. It regarded Fedco’s action as merely a form of employee interrogation, as normal as “demotions, promotions, criticism of work practices, and frictions in negotiations as to grievances . . . .”
(Cole, supra,
We agree that a proper understanding of Cole, and the related line of cases preceding and succeeding it regarding the relationship between intentional torts and worker’s compensation, is important for deciding the case before us. We find however, that the Court of Appeal has misapplied the doctrine *709 that has emerged from these cases. A brief review of that doctrine is appropriate.
A. The Place of Intentional Torts in the Workers’ Compensation System.
In a majority of jurisdictions, all or virtually all intentionally tortious acts committed by an employer against an employee in the course of employment are excluded from the workers’ compensation system. (See 2A Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law (1993) § 68.11, pp. 13-1 to 13-7 and fns. 1-2.) These jurisdictions typically have statutes that provide, or are construed as providing, that only “accidental” workplace injuries are to be covered by workers’ compensation (ibid.; see, e.g., Miss. Code Ann. § 71-3-3(b) (1993); NJ. Stat. Ann. § 34:15-1 (1993); Utah Code Ann. § 35-1-45 (1993)) or have statutes that explicitly exclude intentional torts (Mich. Comp. Laws § 418.131 (1994); Wash. Rev. Code Ann. § 51.24.020 (1994)). Courts also rely on general public policy considerations to exclude intentional torts from the compensation systems. As the Utah Supreme Court declared, “[i]t would serve no social purpose to allow an employee to intentionally injure another employee engaged in the same employment, then use an otherwise socially beneficial, remedial, statute as a shield for such wrongdoing.”
(Bryan
v.
Utah International
(Utah 1975)
In California, the place of intentional torts in the workers’ compensation system has been somewhat more complicated, for at least two reasons. First, the workers’ compensation exclusivity statute (§ 3600), which declares that “any injury . . . arising out of and in the course of . . . employment” is covered by the Act, is unqualified by any reference to accident or intentional tort. Second, section 4553 provides that employees shall have their workers’ compensation awards “increased [by] one-half’ if the employee’s injury results from the employer’s “serious and willful misconduct.” The Legislature, it would seem, has thereby evinced its intent to include at least some portion of what are classified as “intentional torts” within the workers’ compensation system.
It is equally true, however, that the Legislature has not expressed clearly its intent to categorically exclude from the courts all intentional torts committed by employers against employees. Section 3600, which declares the exclusivity of the workers’ compensation remedy, provides that workers’ compensation liability will exist “in lieu of any other liability whatsoever
*710
. . . without regard to negligence . . . .” (§ 3600, subd. (a), italics added.) In
Mathews
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd.
(1972)
This legislative ambiguity is compounded by case law construing section 4553, which suggests that the concept of “serious and willful misconduct” is not completely congruent with that of intentional common law tort. Rather, “serious and willful misconduct” has been viewed, as one court expressed it, as an intermediate form of wrongdoing falling somewhere “between ordinary negligence and an intentional act.”
(Magliulo
v.
Superior Court
(1975)
Prior to 1980, this lack of legislative clarity, as well as the preponderance of authority from other jurisdictions and the reluctance to permit intentionally tortious conduct to go lightly punished, led most California courts to conclude that civil actions based on at least some such conduct were not barred by the exclusivity rule. In particular, most courts held that intentional assaultive acts by an employer were outside the scope of the compensation bargain. The conclusion of
Conway
v.
Globin
(1951)
The cases also inferred an exception to the exclusivity rule when an employer engages in certain types of fraud. In
Unruh
v.
Truck Insurance Exchange
(1972)
We attempted greater clarification of the place of intentional torts in the workers’ compensation system in
Johns-Manville Products Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1980)
We rejected the first of plaintiff’s claims. Reviewing cases in which section 4553 had been applied, we observed that they often involve instances in which an employer “put his mind” to the existence of workplace danger but failed to take corrective action, and the extra compensation provisions of that section were designed to specially sanction such deliberate employer wrongdoing. We noted that to allow a civil action in these instances “would undermine the underlying premise upon which the workers’ compensation system is based” because the “focus of the inquiry in a case involving work-related injury would often be not whether the injury arose out of and in the course of employment, but the state of knowledge of the employer and the employee regarding the dangerous condition which caused the injury.”
(Johns-Manville, supra,
Nonetheless, we concluded that plaintiffs second claim of injury was not barred. We recognized that “where the employer is charged with intentional
*712
misconduct which goes beyond his failure to assure that the tools or substances used by the employee or the physical environment of a workplace are safe, some cases have held that the employer may be subject to common law liability.”
(Johns-Manville, supra,
This court returned to the subject of intentional torts and workers’ compensation in
Cole, supra,
We held, nonetheless, that his claim was barred by workers’ compensation. We reasoned that a supervisor’s conduct was “inherently ‘intentional.’ In order to properly manage its business, every employer must on occasion review, criticize, demote, transfer and discipline employees. Employers are necessarily aware that their employees . . . may consider any such adverse action to be improper and outrageous.”
(Cole, supra,
We concluded that “when the misconduct attributed to the employer is actions which are a normal part of the employment relationship, such as demotions, promotions, criticism of work practices, and frictions in negotiations as to grievances, an employee suffering emotional distress causing disability may not avoid the exclusive remedy provisions of the Labor Code by characterizing the employer’s decisions as manifestly unfair, outrageous, harassment, or intended to cause emotional disturbance resulting in disability.”
(Cole, supra,
*713
Thus in
Cole
this court faced a question similar to the issue recognized in
Johns-Manville:
whether employer conduct that appeared on its face to be a normal part of the employment relationship could be brought outside the exclusivity rule merely because the mental state of the employer rendered the conduct intentionally or knowingly tortious. We recognized in
Cole,
as we did in
Johns-Manville,
that to permit a plaintiff’s civil claims in these cases would be to “undermine the underlying premise upon which the workers’ compensation system is based”
(Johns-Manville, supra,
Our holding in
Cole
can also be seen in some sense as dictated by the apparent amorphous nature of the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress, and the particular potential that tort had for subverting the exclusivity of workers’ compensation remedies. We had previously held that a defendant’s actions could be characterized as “outrageous” for purposes of tort liability for intentional infliction of emotional distress, if he “ ‘(1) abuses a relation or position which gives him power to damage the plaintiff’s interest; (2) knows the plaintiff is susceptible to injuries through mental distress; or (3) acts intentionally or unreasonably with the recognition that the acts are likely to result in illness through mental distress.’ ”
(Agarwal
v.
Johnson
(1979)
Nevertheless in
Cole,
as in
Johns-Manville,
we continued to recognize that “[t]he cases . . . have permitted recovery in tort for intentional misconduct causing disability . . . involving] conduct of an employer having a questionable relationship to the employment, an injury which did not occur while the employee was performing service incidental to the employment and which would be viewed as a risk of the employment, or conduct where the employer or insurer
stepped out of their proper roles.
[Citations.]”
(Cole, supra,
Thus Cole and Johns-Manville contemplated a tripartite system for classifying injuries arising in the course of employment. First, there are *714 injuries caused by employer negligence or without employer fault that are compensated at the normal rate under the workers’ compensation system. Second, there are injuries caused by ordinary employer conduct that intentionally, knowingly or recklessly harms an employee, for which the employee may be entitled to extra compensation under section 4553. Third, there are certain types of intentional employer conduct which bring the employer beyond the boundaries of the compensation bargain, for which a civil action may be brought.
Cases decided after
Cole
have elaborated on this third category. In
Hart
v.
National Mortgage & Land Co.
(1987)
The
Hart
court therefore distinguished its case from
Cole
by looking to the employer’s conduct, rather than its state of mind. The employer, in engaging in this campaign of harassment, used behavior that could not be considered a normal risk of employment.
(Hart, supra,
In
Gantt
v.
Sentry Insurance
(1992)
Gantt thus further defines the doctrine formulated in Johns-Mansville and Cole. The case makes clear that any inquiry into an employer’s motivation is undertaken not to determine whether the employer intentionally or *715 knowingly injured the employee, but rather to ascertain whether the employer’s conduct violated public policy and therefore fell outside the compensation bargain. Such a narrow inquiry poses none of the dangers recognized in Johns-Manville and Cole that the normal conduct of an employer could be excepted from the exclusivity rule merely because it was characterized as deliberately harmful to the employee. 4
Our judgment that a discharge in violation of public policy was not a “ ‘normal part of the employment relationship’ ” did not constitute a factual statement about the frequency of such public policy discharges, but rather a declaration grounded in public policy itself that such discharges should not be a part of the workplace, however common they may be.
(Gantt, supra,
With these considerations in mind, we now turn to the question whether Fedco’s alleged false imprisonment of Fermino falls within the scope of the compensation bargain.
B. False Imprisonment and Workers’ Compensation.
The crime of false imprisonment is defined by Penal Code section 236 as the “unlawful violation of the personal liberty of another.” The tort is identically defined.
(Molko
v.
Holy Spirit Assn.
(1988)
*716
The only mental state required to be shown to prove false imprisonment is the intent to confine, or to create a similar intrusion. (Prosser & Keeton, Torts (5th ed. 1984) § 11, pp. 52-53; cf.
Weaver
v.
Bank of America
(1963)
Merchants who detain individuals whom they have probable cause to believe are about to injure their property are privileged against a false imprisonment action.
(Collyer
v.
S.H. Kress & Co.
(1936)
A case factually similar to the matter at hand illustrates the limits of the merchant’s privilege. In
Moffat
v.
Buffums’ Inc., supra,
The defendant also claimed that no false imprisonment had taken place because the employee had received her usual compensation for the time
*717
during which she was held in interrogation, and she was therefore merely performing an employment-related service during that time. The court rejected that contention, responding that the statutory and implied contractual provisions that require an employee to follow an employer’s directions (Lab. Code, § 2856 [Civ. Code, former § 1981] et seq.) “do not authorize the employer to forcibly detain the person of an employee for the purpose of compelling a confession of a theft of the employer’s property at some prior time.”
(Moffat
v.
Buffums’ Inc., supra,
21 Cal.App.2d at pp. 374-375; accord,
Parrott
v.
Bank of America
(1950)
In contrast, Fedco argues that its own actions were a normal part of employment. It correctly claims for itself the right to “monitor the security at its workplace,” and, indeed, to “insist on its right to investigate employee theft even if the suspected employee wishes not to be questioned.” Therefore, it concludes that “[t]he right to question a salesperson employee regarding a possible theft” means that its interrogation of Fermino is to be considered within the scope of the compensation bargain.
We agree that all reasonable attempts to investigate employee theft, including employee interrogation, are a normal part of the employment relationship. It is also true that all such reasonable interrogation or voluntary confinement cannot be regarded as false imprisonment and is not actionable. (Pen. Code, § 490.5, subd. (f)(1); Collyer v. S.H. Kress & Co., supra, 5 Cal.2d at pp. 180-181.) The question we must decide is whether an employer’s actions that go beyond the bounds of reasonable interrogation and detention, and constitute false imprisonment, are entitled to the same protections of the exclusivity rule as would a reasonable detention.
We have held, as discussed above, that normal employer actions causing injury would not fall outside the scope of the exclusivity rule merely by attributing to the employer a sinister intention.
(Cole, supra,
*718 What matters, then, is not the label that might be affixed to the employer conduct, but whether the conduct itself, concretely, is of the kind that is within the compensation bargain. In this case, Fermino does not contend, as the plaintiff did in Cole, that seemingly ordinary employer disciplinary actions become tortious when seen in light of the employer’s malicious state of mind. Rather, Fermino here claims that the acts themselves were prima facie outside the employer’s “proper role,” irrespective of Fedco’s intent to harm, because they criminally deprived her of her liberty and therefore were beyond the scope of the compensation bargain. Cole therefore does not dispose of the present case. What we must decide is whether false imprisonment is the sort of employer conduct that can ever be viewed as a normal aspect of the employment relationship.
As noted above, the earliest California cases to adjudicate false imprisonment claims in the workplace context did not even consider the question whether the exclusivity rule might bar a civil claim; they assumed that it did not.
(Parrot
v.
Bank of America, supra,
In
Iverson
v.
Atlas Pacific Engineering, supra,
Although the basis for Meyer's and Iverson's holdings appears to be overbroad, implying that all intentional torts are categorically excepted from the exclusivity rule, we find the results of these cases to be unassailable. Both cases concerned employer acts of assault, as well as false imprisonment. The case law in this state holding that an employer’s assault is not *719 protected by the exclusivity rule has been ratified by the Legislature in its 1982 amendment of section 3602, subdivision (b)(1), which explicitly permits civil actions based on “willful physical assault by the employer.” But these cases and the 1982 amendments do not address explicitly the question before us: whether an employee action against an employer for false imprisonment alone, unalloyed with any allegations of assault, will be permitted under sections 3600 and 3602.
Amicus curiae Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Association contends that the 1982 amendments to section 3602, 5 far from aiding Fermino’s case, express the legislative intent to bar an employee’s civil claim against an employer for false imprisonment. They contend the exceptions to the rule enumerated in the statute, including that for “willful physical assault by the employer,” are the only exceptions legislatively permitted. Since false imprisonment is not among those exceptions, an action at law based on that conduct must be prohibited by the exclusivity rule. We disagree.
Section 3602, as amended in 1982, did not invent the exclusivity rule, which had existed since 1917 in section 6 of the original act (Stats. 1917, ch. 586, § 6, p. 834) and which was later codified in section 3600. Rather, the amended section 3602 responded to specific judicial developments that had expandéd the exceptions to that rule, ratifying some of those exceptions and disapproving of others. The reiteration of the exclusivity rule in section
*720
3602, subdivision (a), “[w]here the conditions ... set forth in section 3600 concur” is made in the context of repealing much of the “dual capacity doctrine.” That much-criticized doctrine had significantly eroded the exclusivity rule, expanding employers’ at-law liability toward their employees in areas such as product liability by characterizing the employer as acting in the role of “manufacturer” rather than “employer” when it provided its employee with defective products causing injury. (See, e.g.,
Bell
v.
Industrial Vangas, Inc.
(1980)
Thus, the 1982 amendments were not intended to provide an exhaustive list of exceptions to the exclusivity rule. They did not, for example, foreclose the recognition of an exception for injuries stemming from wrongful discharges that violated public policy
(Gantt, supra,
Therefore it strains credulity to suppose that the Legislature intended, with the 1982 amendments, to bar actions at law for false imprisonment. Although the Legislature “is deemed to be aware of existing laws and judicial decisions construing the same statute in effect at the time legislation is enacted, and to have enacted and amended statutes in the light of such decisions as have a direct bearing upon them”
(Viking Pools, Inc.
v.
Maloney
(1989)
Although we conclude the Legislature did not specifically intend to exclude employment-related false imprisonment from the courts, we are left with the question whether false imprisonment falls within the compensation bargain. It appears evident that at least
some
false imprisonments fall outside the Act. For example, the
Meyer
and
Iverson
cases discussed above, even without the elements of assault, would seem to be outside the compensation bargain because they were nothing more than personal attacks on the employee, unmotivated by any legitimate employer concerns. (See
Hart, supra,
On the other hand, Fedco argues that its alleged false imprisonment was motivated by legitimate employer objectives and was carried out in a manner reasonably related to those objectives. What is implicit in Fedco’s position, then, is that there are certain “reasonable” false imprisonments, that may be considered a normal part of the employment relationship, distinguished from “unreasonable” false imprisonments that are either motivated by illegitimate ends or that employ disproportionate means. But a “reasonable” false imprisonment is oxymoronic. False imprisonment is, by definition, an unreasonable and indeed criminal confinement. (Collyer v. S.H. Kress & Co., supra, 5 Cal.2d at pp. 180-181.) It is the close cousin of assault, which was, as discussed above, considered beyond the compensation bargain by most California courts even before its exceptional status was legislatively recognized in section 3602, subdivision (b)(1). (See 1 Harper et al., Law of Torts (2d ed. 1986) § 3.9, p. 296 [the law of false imprisonment protects “interests in personality closely akin to those protected by the law of assault and battery”].) When an employer forcibly and criminally deprives an employee of her liberty, even as a means to otherwise legitimate ends, it steps outside *722 its “proper role,” whether it uses assault and battery to enforce that false imprisonment, or employs some other coercive stratagem. 6
Unlike the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress considered in Cole, the tort of false imprisonment involves criminal conduct against the employee’s person, not permissible conduct that only becomes intentionally tortious in light of the employer’s supposed malicious state of mind. Thus, permitting an employee’s civil action for false imprisonment presents none of the dangers recognized in Cole and Johns-Manville that allowance of such exceptions would undermine the exclusivity provisions of the workers’ compensation system. Rather, in order to plead false imprisonment in a civil action, a plaintiff/employee would have to allege *723 rather specific, and fairly uncommon, acts of involuntary and criminal confinement. 7
It is true that whether a false imprisonment did indeed take place in this case is a closer question than that posed in the
Meyer, Iverson,
or
Moffat
cases cited above. The justification here for the confinement was arguably more substantial than in the former two cases, and the duration of the confinement was considerably shorter than in the third. We do not deny the right of an employer to reasonably detain an employee suspected of theft, and indeed to discharge an employee—consistent with the employee’s contractual or other employment rights—if he or she refuses to cooperate with a reasonable investigation. But the question whether Fedco’s actions were reasonable, justifiable, or privileged goes to the factual question
whether
its actions constituted false imprisonment—a question we cannot and do not resolve on the pleadings.
8
Once it is determined, however, that a false imprisonment has indeed taken place, then such action cannot be said to be a normal aspect of the employment relationship, however legitimate its initial justification, any more than an assault on an employee can be brought within the scope of the exclusivity rule by claiming it was motivated by the need for employee discipline. (See
Miller
v.
Reed
(1986) 27 Ohio.App.3d 70 [
*724
Turning to the present case, we conclude that plaintiff has stated a cause of action for false imprisonment. Like the plaintiff in
Parrott
v.
Bank of America, supra,
III. Disposition
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed.
Lucas, C. J., Kennard, J., Arabian, J., Baxter, J., George, J., and Klein, J., * concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Labor Code, unless otherwise indicated.
On petition for review and briefing in this court, Fermino adopted another theory for challenging the workers’ compensation bar as applied to false imprisonment: that false imprisonment is not an “injury” within the meaning of section 3600. This was the position taken by the dissent in the Court of Appeal, and by various other jurisdictions. (See fn. 6, post.) We express no opinion as to that theory.
In 1982, the Legislature essentially ratified the holdings in
Conway
v.
Globin, supra,
The substance and effect of these 1982 amendments to the Act are further discussed in part II.B., post, of this opinion.
We recognize that the plaintiff in
Cole
alleged his demotion was the result of union activity, and as such his demotion might have been characterized as a public policy discharge within the meaning of
Gantt
and
Tameny
v.
Atlantic Richfield Co.
(1980)
Section 3602 now reads in full: “(a) Where the conditions of compensation set forth in Section 3600 concur, the right to recover such compensation is, except as specifically provided in this section and Sections 3706 and 4558, the sole and exclusive remedy of the employee or his or her dependents against the employer, and the fact that either the employee or the employer also occupied another or dual capacity prior to, or at the time of, the employee’s industrial injury shall not permit the employee or his or her dependents to bring an action at law for damages against the employer.
“(b) An employee, or his or her dependents in the event of his or her death, may bring an action at law for damages against the employer, as if this division did not apply, in the following instances:
“(1) Where the employee’s injury or death is proximately caused by a willful physical assault by the employer.
“(2) Where the employee’s injury is aggravated by the employer’s fraudulent concealment of the existence of the injury and its connection with the employment, in which case the employer’s liability shall be limited to those damages proximately caused by the aggravation. The burden of proof respecting apportionment of damages between the injury and any subsequent aggravation thereof is upon the employer.
“(3) Where the employee’s injury or death is proximately caused by a defective product manufactured by the employer and sold, leased, or otherwise transferred for valuable consideration to an independent third person, and that product is thereafter provided for the employee’s use by a third person.
“(c) In all cases where the conditions of compensation set forth in Section 3600 do not concur, the liability of the employer shall be the same as if this division had not been enacted.”
It is noteworthy that a large majority of jurisdictions that have considered the matter have concluded that false imprisonment is not barred by workers’ compensation, for various reasons. Some cases conclude that false imprisonment, like slander, is not an industrial “injury” within the meaning of that state’s workers’ compensation act. As one court has stated: “The Act has been interpreted to encompass physical and mental injuries which arise out of and in the course of one’s employment. However, the gist of an action for false imprisonment is unlawful detention irrespective of any physical or mental harm. [Citations.] We do not feel, therefore, that the plaintiff has suffered the type of personal injury covered under the Act.”
(Moore
v.
Federal Department Stores, Inc.
(1971)
Other courts have relied more on the wording of their statute that workers’ compensation covers only “accidental injury,” in reaching the conclusion that false imprisonment is categorically barred from workers’ compensation.
(Miller
v.
McRae’s, Inc.
(Miss. 1984)
Of all the jurisdictions to consider the matter, only the United States has considered false imprisonment to be barred by workers’ compensation. (See
Dunn
v.
United States
(E.D.Pa. 1981)
As discussed above, California law does not universally exclude intentional torts from the workers’ compensation system, and this state’s act contains no language that the injuries compensated under the act must be “accidental.” Moreover, although it may be the case that false imprisonment is not an “injury” cognizable under the act, we have held that the mere fact that an injury is noncompensable under the act does not mean that the injury is remedial by civil action.
(Livitsanos
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In stating that false imprisonment is outside the scope of the compensation bargain because it constitutes a crime against the person of the employee, we do not mean to suggest that regulatory crimes such as violations of health and safety standards or special orders are actions outside the normal course of employment. On the contrary, the Act includes such regulatory crimes within its scope. (See §§ 6423, 4553.1; see also Johns-Manville, supra, 27 Cal.3d at pp. 474-475 [workers’ compensation the only remedy for injuries resulting from willful failure to comply with government regulations regarding dust levels].) It is an expected part of the compensation bargain that industrial injury will result from an employer’s violation of health and safety, environmental and similar regulations. What we hold today, rather, is that those classes of intentional employer crimes against the employee’s person by means of violence and coercion, such as those crimes numerated in part 1, title 8 of the Penal Code, violate the employee’s reasonable expectations and transgress the limits of the compensation bargain.
We note that the merchant’s privilege is a defense to a false imprisonment action (see
Collyer
v.
S.H. Kress & Co., supra,
Presiding Justice, Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Three, assigned by the Acting Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
