Opinion
In this case we hold there is no false arrest governmental immunity for a public employee who maliciously arrests and imprisons another by personally serving an arrest warrant issued solely on information deliberately falsified by the arresting officer himself. We reverse judgments on the pleadings alleging false imprisonment in favor of the public employee and employer, County of San Diego (County), and as to punitive damages for such false imprisonment against the employee individually.
We deem all material facts alleged in the amended complaint admitted for the purpose of our review (Hospital
Council of Northern Cal.
v.
Superior Court
(1973)
The pleadings allege Richard Cole, an investigator for the District Attorney of San Diego County, acting in the course and scope of his employment, agreed with Paul Roberts to fabricate a false document to submit to the court, along with other information Cole knew to be false, solely to permit Cole to arrest Gary McKay and Stanley Kaufman on false charges.
Cole presented this false information to the court, obtained an arrest warrant, and personally arrested McKay and Kaufman.
The dismissed counts were entitled “false imprisonment,” however, the superior court found the facts would also support a cause of action *254 for malicious prosecution and wrongly declared the action barred because of blanket immunity given public employees and employers under Government Code section 821.6. 1
While we are cited to no case where the actual arrest
and
the initiation of a malicious prosecution were performed by the same individual, there are numerous cases which distinguish the tort of malicious prosecution from the separate tort of false arrest and imprisonment. (Generally, see
Sullivan
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1974)
Sullivan, supra,
Civil Code section 43.5(a) provides only conditional immunity. A failure of any condition prevents immunity from attaching to a peace officer making the arrest. The condition which Cole and County cannot satisfy requires the peace officer making the arrest
act without malice. (Allison
v.
County of Ventura
(1977)
*255 Malice may be determined by taking into account all circumstances surrounding the arrest allegedly known to the arresting officer. The Orwellian scenario described in the pleadings establish malice “in spades.” Cole and County do not contend otherwise, they merely contend Civil Code section 43.5(a) does not apply.
Cole and County posit the following: where a public employee acts under a process of court he personally obtained without probable cause, with malice, with deliberately falsified facts, an action may be stated only for malicious prosecution even though he personally arrests/ imprisons the victim of his plot.
In support of this position, Cole and County quote from
Singleton
v.
Perry
(1955)
The foregoing “partial” quotation from
Singleton
was in turn extracted from
Collins
v.
City and County of San Francisco
(1975)
Furthermore, the above quotation from
Collins
has been lifted from
Bulkley
v.
Klein
(1962)
“‘Where the two causes are joined, the defendant cannot be held liable for both the false imprisonment and the malicious prosecution. The two are inconsistent; the plaintiff may be required to elect on which count to go to the jury.’”
*256 Bulkley does not stand for the proposition urged by County; it does not hold false imprisonment will not lie where the same facts also support a cause of action for malicious prosecution.
Government Code section 821.6 codifies the common law set forth in decisions such as
White
v.
Towers
(1951)
Sullivan, supra, 12
Cal.3d 710 at page 719, explains Government Code section 821.6 was not intended to protect public employees from false imprisonment and refers to language in the Senate Committee comment to this section. The cases cited therein involve malicious prosecution actions where either (1) no imprisonment was involved (Hardy v.
Vial
(1957)
The public policy for Government Code section 821.6 immunity is expressed in
White
v.
Towers, supra,
Neither Watts nor White addressed the issue of immunity for false imprisonment.
No equivalent public policy justifies immunizing public officers for false imprisonment in light of the clear legislative mandate denying such to public employees (Gov. Code, § 820.4) and to peace officers *257 who maliciously serve warrants even though regular on their face (Civ. Code, § 43.5(a)).
It would be absurd indeed to hold Cole, and vicariously County, liable for false arrest and imprisonment had Cole acted with malice in serving the warrant without participating in the acts leading up to the issuance of the warrant, but grant immunity when, in addition to the foregoing, he also devised and carried out the scheme outlined.
The judgment is reversed, the matter remanded and the superior court ordered to reinstate the dismissed counts.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Cologne, J., concurred.
Notes
"A public employee is not liable for injury caused by his instituting or prosecuting any judicial or administrative proceeding within the scope of his employment, even if he acts maliciously and without probable cause.”
Government Code section 820.4 states: “A public employee is not liable for his act or omission, exercising due care, in the execution or enforcement of any law. Nothing in this section exonerates a public employee from liability for false arrest or false imprisonment.”
Civil Code section 43.5(a) states: “There shall be no liability on the part of and no cause of action shall arise against any peace officer who makes an arrest pursuant to a warrant of arrest regular upon its face if such peace officer in making the arrest acts without malice and in the reasonable belief that the person arrested is the one referred to in the warrant.”
Collins sued one Officer Brady for false arrest after he caused a misdemeanor warrant to issue. The warrant remained unserved for one year before it came to the attention of a third party who routinely served it without any knowledge or instigation on the part of Brady.
Dawson
specifically stressed the fact defendant himself did not personally make the arrest. Inferentially the holding would have been different had he done so.
(Dawson
v.
Martin
(1957)
