Opinion
Petitioner Phyllis P. seeks a writ of mandate directing the respondent court to reinstate her causes of action for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress, arising out оf the sexual assault and rape of her daughter by a fellow student at the Sycamore School in Claremont. 1 We hold that the respondent court erred in sustaining real parties’ (hereinafter defendants) demurrer without leave to amend, and accordingly direct the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandate.
Petitioner theorizes that had she been informed of the earlier sexual assaults she could have taken precautionary meаsures to prevent the rape which ultimately occurred. As a result of defendants’ failure to notify her of these assaults, she has suffered severe emotional distress, both because of the rape and because she has had to observe the “physiological and psychological deterioration of her daughter from a happy, well adjusted, above average student, to a morose, sullen, despondent and withdrawn, near failing student over a period of thirteen weeks.”
Defendants, as persons standing in loco pаrentis to Ciera, are alleged to have breached a number of duties owed to petitioner, including the duty to properly supervise Dario both on the school grounds and еn route to and from school, the duty to notify petitioner of the repeated sexual assaults, the duty to report such assaults to a child protective agency (which prеsumably would have notified petitioner), and the duty to obtain petitioner’s written consent before placing Ciera “in a program of psychological treatment dealing with mаtters of a sensitive sexual nature.” These various duties are alleged to have arisen under numerous provisions of the Education Code, the Penal Code, and case law
Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California
(1976)
These same duties have been alleged in the causes of action on behalf of Ciera, and defendants have not demurred to that portion of the second amended complaint. The issue here is the viability of petitioner’s own causes of action for intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
In
Johnson
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1983)
The court reversed an order sustaining plaintiffs’ demurrer without leave to amend, holding that the defendants stood in a “special relationship” to plaintiffs, who were the “real and fоreseeable” victims of the predictable tragedy caused by defendants’ negligent conduct in failing to warn plaintiffs before releasing the decedent.
We hold that such a special relationship exists here between defendants and petitioner, and defendants had a duty to notify petitioner upon learning of the first series of sexual assaults upоn Ciera.
While Ciera attended school, her care was entrusted to defendants. Defendants stood in loco parentis and owed a duty of care not only to Ciera, but under the circumstances of this case, to Ciera’s mother as well. When defendants first learned of the sexual assaults upon Ciera, they took it upon themselves to withhold that information frоm petitioner, then dealt with the perpetrator of the assaults with what amounted to a slap on the wrist. Petitioner alleges that had she been informed of these assaults, she would have taken precautionary measures to insure Ciera’s safety from future attacks. Defendants did not properly supervise Dario and did not take the necessary steps to insure Ciera’s safety, nor did they notify petitioner who could have taken such steps herself. When the later attack occurred, petitioner was taken completеly by surprise when she was not only informed that her eight-year-old daughter had been raped but that she had been the victim of previous assaults about which defendants had not seen fit to infоrm petitioner. In
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals
(1980)
Defendants incorrectly charаcterize petitioner’s situation as one analogous to
Dillon
v.
Legg
(1968)
In the present case, defendants point to the fact that petitioner did not witness any of the assaults or thе rape of Ciera and contend that under the guidelines set forth in Dillon petitioner’s injury was not foreseeable.
The difference between this case and Dillon is that petitioner is asserting a cause of action as a direct victim of defendants’ negligent act, or failurе to act, and not for injuries based upon her direct observation of the injury to her daughter.
In
Molien
v.
Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, supra,
While petitioner’s second amended complаint is defective in that it fails to allege the existence of a special relationship, petitioner should be permitted to cure the defect by filing a third amended comрlaint.
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the respondent court to vacate that portion of its order of December 9, 1985, sustaining without leave to amend the demurrer of defendants to the fifth and sixth causes of
Feinerman, P. J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
Petitioner also asserts four causes of action as guardian ad litem on behalf of her daughter. Those causes of action are not in issue here.
