Opinion
This case is part of the legal aftermath of the tragic 1984 massacre at a McDonald’s restaurant in San Ysidro, California. The plaintiffs, some of the victims and survivors of the massacre, appeal from the judgment entered after defendants’ demurrer to plaintiffs’ second amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend. Defendants are the City of San Diego, former San Diego Mayor Roger Hedgecock and San Diego Police Chief William Kolender (the police defendants). We affirm.
I
Plaintiffs’ theory of liability is that the police defendants were negligent in failing to exercise reasonable care in responding to and handling the crisis created when James Huberty walked into McDonald’s and started his random shooting. Before he was fatally wounded Huberty killed 21 persons and injured several more. Styled as five separate causes of action, the complaint in reality merely alleges five sets of factual circumstances, each of which plaintiffs claim establish defendants’ negligence. Specifically, plaintiffs argue that the police defendants are liable because the police officers were inadequately hired, improperly trained and/or negligently supervised which resulted in their ineffectual and untimely efforts to rescue the persons under siege proximately causing the alleged injuries and deaths.
*681
Relying on
Harris
v.
Smith (1984)
II
Where the gravamen of the complaint is a police failure to act reasonably in protecting members of the public from the harm caused by a third person (i.e., nonfeasance), a series of recent Supreme Court cases make clear that the liability of the governmental entity is narrowly circumscribed. (See
Williams
v.
State of California
(1983)
III
Based on the foregoing principles, plaintiffs’ complaint fails to set forth facts sufficient to establish the potential liability of the police defen *682 dants. The essence of plaintiffs’ negligence allegations is that, having arrived on the scene within four minutes after Huberty started shooting, the police delayed over an hour before commencing an operation to “neutralize” Huberty and rescue the victims. Whether this delay was due to negligence, or prudent caution arising from the uncertainty of the situation is immaterial. The police can in no way be charged with lulling Huberty’s victims into a false sense of security, nor can the alleged inaction by police reasonably be said to have increased the risk of harm to which the victims were subject. In fact, in view of the sheer horror of the ordeal, it is difficult to imagine anything the police could have done or failed to do which would have made the risk any greater than that to which the victims were exposed before the police arrived.
Although not factually identical, past cases support this conclusion. In
Von Batsch
v.
American Dist. Telegraph Co.
(1985)
In
Rose
v.
County of Plumas
(1984)
*683
Finally, in
Antique Arts Corp.
v.
City of Torrance
(1974)
In our view, the results in these cases—where the allegations of police negligence are much clearer than those of the present one—demonstrate that liability will not be imposed in the absence of a direct connection between police conduct and an increased risk of harm. Such a connection is manifestly absent in the present case.
IV
At oral argument, plaintiffs’ counsel pursued his contention that the police defendants affirmatively increased the peril to which the victims were exposed (i.e., a misfeasance theory) because response by the San Diego police units precluded response by the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department. They suggest that had the sheriffs department responded, it would have performed the rescue operation in a non-negligent manner, presumably resulting in fewer deaths and injuries.
To support this theory plaintiffs allege no facts as to why the sheriffs department would respond to a report of a criminal incident within the city limits of San Diego other than to assist San Diego police. In addition, the complaint does not allege that it was unreasonable for the San Diego police to respond at all and it is purportedly this response which precluded action by the sheriffs department. Lacking such factual allegations the pleadings are inadequate to show that the San Diego officers prevented other assistance. (See
Clemente
v.
State of California
(1985)
We also reject plaintiffs’ contention that the court abused its discretion by not giving them a further opportunity to amend their complaints. Plaintiffs have failed in each of their pleading efforts to present sufficient facts to the trial court and have presented no additional facts here which could possibly serve as the basis for liability against the police defendants. *684 The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying plaintiffs further leave to amend.
Disposition
Judgment affirmed. Plaintiffs to bear all costs for this appeal.
Kremer, P. J., and Todd, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 15, 1987, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 27, 1987.
