This appeal involves the propriety of an order sustaining a demurrer to plaintiffs’ amended complaint without leave to amend. It is alleged therein that pla.int.iffRappellants were minors; that their mother and father were killed on January 7, 1957, as the result of the negligence of defendants-respondents; that defendant Pierce was a police officer of Porterville and defendant Kendrick was its chief of police; that about 7 p.m. on said day, Pierce was on duty as such officer; that he did then observe, accost and interrogate one Gfeller who was then intoxicated and incapable of safely driving his automobile on a public highway and knew he was about to do so; that he negligently failed to arrest and detain him at that time and allowed him to remain at large in violation of his duty; that about 7:30 p.m., while plaintiffs’ father was driving his car on Highway 65 in said county, Gfeller, in *114 a drunken condition, drove his car on said highway and collided with plaintiffs’ father’s car causing the death of plaintiffs’ parents; that the defendant chief of police had the power to discipline or suspend said defendant Pierce for unfitness, known to him, but violated his duty in failing to do so.
Judgment for the alleged damages is sought by plaintiffs. It is also alleged that a proper verified claim was filed in accordance with the law and denied. A demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend. Judgment for defendants followed.
It is plaintiffs’ contention on appeal that when the officer accosted and interrogated the intoxicated individual who expressed an intent to operate a motor vehicle, the defendant police officer owed a plain and certain duty to that segment of the public then using the highways, and his failure to complete the prompt performance of that duty constituted actionable negligence; that his negligence was the proximate cause of the collision and wrongful death in that it was clearly foreseeable by him that the person released upon the highways in an intoxicated condition might cause injuries or death to some member of the traveling public and that under the doctrine announced in
Fernelius
v.
Pierce,
It will be noted that plaintiffs’ amended complaint merely alleges that defendant Pierce ‘ ‘ did observe, accost and interrogate” Gfeller at some undisclosed place one-half hour before the accident. The pleading did not indicate that at that time he was driving a car, nor did it indicate what law, if any, he was at the time violating. The allegation is that the officer was “informed and knew that said Vernon Gfeller intended to drive and operate an automobile upon the public highways” without reference to time or place, and that he then negligently failed to arrest and detain him and permitted him to “remain at large” in his intoxicated condition.
Bearing on the question of the claimed duty of the police officer to arrest Gfeller and take him into custody at the time *115 and place, it is alleged he observed, accosted and interrogated him. It is to be noted that the court, in the first instance, sustained a special and a general demurrer to the original complaint with leave to amend. No further amendment, in this respect, was made in the amended complaint and the trial court then sustained it without leave to amend, apparently believing that no further amendment could be made with respect to these particular allegations. Plaintiffs intimate in their closing brief, for the first time, that when uncertainties or ambiguities appear in the complaint, it should be open to correction by amendment. In the opening brief, plaintiffs concede that the question presented to the trial court was whether plaintiffs’ complaint, as amended, stated a cause of action and also stated this was the ultimate question for this court to determine. We will therefore consider the allegations as therein set forth:
The elementary rule is set forth in
Routh
v.
Quinn,
“. . . that an indispensable factor to liability founded upon negligence is the existence of a duty of care owed by the alleged wrongdoer to the person injured, or to a class of which he is a member.”
In
Stang
v.
City of Mill Valley,
Our attention has not been called to any statute in this state that attaches liability upon a police officer for failure to make an arrest for claimed intoxication alone and to retain the person in custody even though, as in the Montana case, the statute did provide that among his duties was the duty to preserve the peace and arrest and take before the nearest magistrate all persons who attempt to commit or have committed a public offense. There is a vast difference between the cases cited by plaintiffs, involving the relationship between a law-enforcement officer and a person actually arrested and in custody, and the case at bar. Once in custody and in prison, and subject to the control of the law-enforcement officer, the interests of such person are protected against further harm of assault and battery by officers, and the negligence of such officers which cause harm to such person while in custody. The power of a police officer to arrest or not to arrest is a power in which discretion is vested in the officer. Section 836, Penal Code, describing the circumstances permitting an arrest, provides that a peace officer “may” arrest under such circumstances. If he “may” arrest, he may “not” arrest. In
Doeg
v.
Cook, supra,
page 216, cited by plaintiffs, it is said, quoting from Shearman and Eedfield on Negligence, third edition, section 156, “The liability of a public officer to an individual for his negligent acts or omissions in the discharge of an official duty depends altogether upon the nature of the duty to which the neglect is alleged. Where his duty is absolute, certain, and imperative, involving merely the execution of a set task—in other words, is simply ministerial—he is liable in damages to anyone specially injured, either by his omitting to perform the task, or by performing it negligently or unskillfully. On the other hand, where his powers are discretionary, to be exerted or
*117
withheld according to his own judgment as to what is necessary and proper, he is not liable to any private person for a neglect to exercise those powers, nor for the consequences of a lawful exercise of them where no corruption or malice can be imputed, and he keeps within the scope of his authority.” To the same effect is
People
v.
Standard Acc. Ins. Co.,
The complaint lacks sufficient allegations to show a legal duty on the part of the defendant police officer to arrest and detain Gfeller, at the time and place indicated and under the circumstances related. This court had before it a similar question in
Rubinow
v.
County of San Bernardino,
The trial court, in a memorandum opinion, also rejected plaintiffs’ contention of proximate cause of negligence on the part of the officer, and relied upon the holding in
Fleckner
v.
*118
Dionne,
We conclude that the trial court’s order sustaining the demurrer to the amended complaint on the grounds indicated was proper.
Judgment affirmed.
Shepard, J., and Coughlin, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 13, 1960.
