Valero v. Spread Your Wings CA6 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 1/11/23 Valero v. Spread Your Wings CA6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
    certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been
    certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    LYNDA VALERO,                                                 H049119
    (Santa Clara County Super. Ct.
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                           No. 18CV338394)
    v.
    SPREAD YOUR WINGS, LLC et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Plaintiff and appellant Lynda Valero appeals from a judgment of
    dismissal after the trial court sustained a demurrer to her first amended
    complaint in favor of defendants and respondents Sabrina Dellard, Spread Your
    Wings, LLC, and Spread Your Wings, Inc.1 The pleading, in a single cause of
    action for malicious prosecution, alleged that Dellard was a care custodian,
    employed by Spread Your Wings, and that she provided in-home services to a
    dependent adult, Michael Barton. Valero also provided such services to Barton,
    and the two caregivers worked different shifts in his home. Valero alleged that
    Dellard, a mandatory reporter under the elder-abuse laws, made a knowingly
    For ease, and except where context dictates otherwise, we refer to these
    1
    two entities collectively as Spread Your Wings.
    false report to law enforcement that she had seen Valero try to kill Barton by
    smothering him with a pillow. Dellard is further alleged to have later coerced
    Barton to confirm the false report about Valero having tried to smother him.
    Valero was arrested and charged with attempted murder, and spent some
    28 days in custody, unable to post bail. Ultimately, as alleged, evidence surfaced
    that revealed the reports about Valero having tried to kill Barton to be untrue,
    and the criminal charges against her were dismissed.
    Valero sued Dellard and Spread Your Wings, as Dellard’s alleged
    employer, for malicious prosecution. The cause of action was factually based on
    both Dellard’s allegedly false report of Valero’s abuse of Barton as a dependent
    adult, and Dellard’s later alleged coercion of Barton to corroborate the false
    report. These defendants ultimately demurred to the first amended complaint,
    asserting statutory immunity under Welfare and Institutions Code
    section 15634, subdivision (a) (section 15634(a)), which provides absolute
    immunity from civil and criminal liability to mandatory reporters under the
    Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (the Act; Welf. & Inst.
    Code, § 15600 et seq.).2
    Rejecting Valero’s attempts to exclude intentionally false reports from the
    absolute immunity afforded to mandatory reporters under section 15643(a), the
    trial court sustained respondents’ demurrer without leave to amend. Judgment
    of dismissal for respondents followed.
    On appeal, Valero reprises her claim that a mandatory reporter of elder
    or dependent-adult abuse does not enjoy immunity from civil liability for a
    fabricated and knowingly false report of abuse. She contends that absolute
    immunity under section 15634(a) protects only reports by mandatory reporters
    2 Further unspecified statutory references are to the Welfare and
    Institutions Code.
    2
    that the reporter has observed, or of which the reporter has knowledge, or
    which have been communicated to the reporter by the elder or dependent adult
    (§ 15630, subd. (b)(1) [duties of mandatory reporters]), and that these
    descriptors limit the absolute immunity of mandated reporters to “known or
    suspected” incidents of abuse (§ 15634(a)) and exclude knowingly false reports
    from protection.
    We conclude that the clear legislative aim of absolute immunity in
    section 15634(a) for mandated reporters was to serve and facilitate the policy
    goals of the Act—by increasing the reporting of elder abuse and minimizing the
    chilling disincentives to that reporting, including the fear of getting sued. We
    further conclude that the carve-out to immunity for a knowingly false report by
    a mandated reporter as urged by Valero is not dictated by the statutory
    language of the Act as a whole and is counter to these legislative policy goals,
    which are not ours to undo or undermine. Finally, we reject Valero’s effort to
    couch Dellard’s alleged post-reporting coercion of Barton as later conduct
    outside the broad contours of immunity for acts of reporting. We accordingly
    affirm the judgment of dismissal.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    I.    Valero’s First Amended Complaint3
    The first amended complaint alleged a single cause of action for malicious
    prosecution. As relevant to our inquiry, it alleges that Valero “worked for the
    Stanislaus County Department of In-Home Supportive Services . . . and was
    selected by Defendant Michael Barton to provide in-home care for him.
    3 Dellard and Spread Your Wings moved for judgment on the pleadings
    with respect to the original complaint on the same basis of statutory immunity.
    Their motion was granted with leave to amend, resulting in the first amended
    complaint, which added more factual detail and legal conclusions but consisted
    of the same essential cause of action.
    3
    Mr. Barton needed care due to physical disabilities and limited mental
    capacity.” Defendants Spread Your Wings, LLC and Spread Your Wings, Inc.
    are alleged to be California entities owned and operated by defendant Andrew
    Serry Dumbuya, and there is alleged a unity of interest between him and these
    companies for purposes of alter ego liability.4 In October 2017, Spread Your
    Wings was “hired to provide additional in-home care for . . . Barton. Spread
    Your Wings’ employee, Defendant Sabrina Dellard, provided this care, staying
    with Mr. Barton in his home overnight, while [Valero] would provide care for
    Mr. Barton mornings, afternoons[,] and evenings, except for Thursdays, when
    [Valero] would finish her shift at 2:00 p.m.”
    According to the pleading, “During the time period [in which Valero] and
    Dellard both provided care for Mr. Barton, their personal and professional
    relationship deteriorated and became contentious. [Valero] is informed and
    believes … that Dellard developed a strong dislike for [Valero].”
    On “January 11, 2018, shortly after 2:00 p.m., [Valero] finished her shift
    at Mr. Barton’s residence. After [Valero] had left the premises, . . . Dellard
    arrived late for her shift, which was supposed to start at 2:00 p.m. Ms. Dellard,
    4
    Defendant Andrew Serry Dumbuya did not join the demurrer to the first
    amended complaint filed by Spread Your Wings and Dellard. And the trial
    court’s order sustaining the demurrer did not make a ruling in his favor. Yet,
    the judgment of dismissal (signed by a different judicial officer than the order
    sustaining the demurrer of Spread Your Wings and Dellard) refers to him as
    having successfully demurred and therefore being entitled, like Spread Your
    Wings and Dellard, to a judgment of dismissal. The judgment was approved as
    to form by Valero’s counsel. No party addresses this issue in their appellate
    briefing. Thus, as it stands, judgment appears to have been entered in favor of
    defendant Dumbuya based on a successful demurrer that he never filed. Of
    course, because Dumbuya’s liability is derived only from agency or alter ego
    allegations as against Spread Your Wings, his entitlement to a judgment is
    necessarily established by our affirmance of the judgment in favor of Spread
    Your Wings.
    4
    without any information, evidence or suspicion that Mr. Barton had been the
    victim of abuse, called law enforcement and falsely reported that she [had]
    witnessed [Valero] attempting to smother Mr. Barton to death with a pillow
    when she arrived at Mr. Barton’s residence to start her shift. Ms. Dellard’s
    statements to the police were untrue. Indeed, Ms. Dellard never observed any
    interaction between [Valero] and Barton that day because when she arrived at
    Barton’s residence, [Valero] was no longer there. Ms. Dellard’s report to law
    enforcement was not a report of any instance of actual, known, communicated, or
    suspected abuse, but a fabrication from whole cloth of a scenario created in
    Ms. Dellard’s imagination, maliciously, and with the sole purpose of having
    [Valero] arrested and prosecuted for a serious felony. Therefore, Ms. Dellard’s
    report is not subject to any immunity conferred on mandated reporters. (. . .
    § 15630, subd. (b).)” (Italics added.)
    “After making the fabricated report to law enforcement, Ms. Dellard took
    advantage of Barton’s limited mental capacity and physical disabilities by
    influencing, intimidating, and coercing him into falsely confirming to law
    enforcement the fabricated report that Dellard had made, namely that [Valero]
    [had] attempted to smother Mr. Barton with a pillow. Mr. Barton would not
    have made this false report in the absence of the coercion and influence of
    Ms. Dellard. Ms. Dellard’s actions in influencing and coercing Mr. Barton to
    falsely identify [Valero] as the perpetrator of an attempted murder were not done
    as part of any reporting obligations, but instead as a ‘private citizen[] [who
    became] deeply enmeshed in investigatory or prosecutorial activities and [took]
    on functions of the police.’ (James W. v. Superior Court (1993) 
    17 Cal.App.4th 246
    , 257 [(James W.)].) As such, Ms. Dellard’s coercion of Mr. Barton following
    Dellard’s report to law enforcement [is] not subject to any immunities conferred
    on mandated reporters.” (Italics added.)
    5
    “Based on the false report by Dellard and the coerced false report of
    Barton, the police arrested [Valero], and the Stanislaus County District
    Attorney’s Office charged and prosecuted [her for] attempted murder. The
    report of either Dellard or Barton, standing alone, would have been sufficient to
    move the authorities to arrest and prosecute [Valero]. [Valero] was incarcerated
    for approximately 28 days, during which time [she] did not have the means to
    post bail. Evidence proving [Valero]’s innocence came to light, resulting in her
    release from jail and the dismissal of all charges against her. This evidence also
    conclusively establishes that the statements made by Dellard and Barton in
    order to have [Valero] arrested and criminally charged were unequivocally
    false.”
    “[Valero] suffered, and will likely continue to suffer for the rest of her life,
    tremendous physical, mental, emotional, and economic injuries and damages
    due to the prolonged incarceration for a very serious crime that Dellard and
    Barton falsely accused her of committing. [¶] . . . [¶] In doing the things here
    alleged, Dellard and Barton were actively involved in causing [Valero] to be
    arrested, charged, and prosecuted with the crime of attempted murder. [¶] The
    charges were all dropped as soon as evidence surfaced showing that [Valero]
    was innocent of all charges and that Dellard and Barton [had] made
    deliberately false allegations to the police and/or prosecuting authorities.
    [¶] Dellard and Barton made the false report with malice and for the sole
    purpose of having [Valero] arrested and prosecuted for a crime she did not
    commit. [¶] The actions of Dellard and Barton were malicious in that they
    intended to cause harm to [Valero], or were done in a despicable manner and
    with willful and reckless disregard for [Valero]’s rights and safety. [Valero] is
    6
    therefore entitled to an award of exemplary damages against Dellard and
    Barton, in an amount to punish and deter this behavior.”5
    The pleading goes on to allege that Spread Your Wings “and/or Dumbuya
    knew of the unfitness of . . . Dellard and the risk she posed to [Valero] prior to
    Ms. Dellard’s false allegations against [Valero]. Nonetheless, despite knowledge
    of the potential harm Dellard posed to [Valero], these defendants failed to take
    any action to avoid harm to [Valero], by, among other things, training,
    supervising, reprimanding, and/or terminating Dellard. As such, these
    defendants are liable for compensatory damages, as well as exemplary damages
    pursuant to Civil Code section 3294, subdivision (b), in an amount sufficient to
    punish and deter these defendants.” It further alleged that Dellard was an
    employee of Spread Your Wings and was acting in the course and scope of her
    employment, and that Spread Your Wings ratified her acts by failing to
    “reprimand, demote, or terminate her, nor did they do anything else to evidence
    disapproval of Dellard’s conduct.”
    II.   Respondents’ Demurrer
    Dellard and Spread Your Wings generally demurred to Valero’s first
    amended complaint on the ground that it failed to state facts sufficient to
    constitute a cause of action against them. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.10, subd. (e).)
    In support of this ground, they argued that they enjoyed absolute immunity to
    civil liability under section 15634(a) as Dellard was a “care custodian” providing
    services to a “ ‘[d]ependent adult’ ” under sections 15610.17 and 15610.23,
    respectively, and she was therefore a “mandated reporter” under section 15630.
    5Barton did not demur with respondents to the first amended complaint
    and Valero’s claim against him was not disposed of by the judgment on appeal.
    Barton is therefore not a party to this appeal, and we do not here address
    Valero’s claim against him.
    7
    As Dellard enjoyed this absolute immunity, even if her report about Valero had
    been knowingly false, so did her alleged employer, Spread Your Wings.
    Valero’s opposition to the demurrer attempted to avoid respondents’ claim
    to statutory immunity by contending that because Dellard’s reporting of
    dependent-adult abuse by Valero had been knowingly false, it was not based on
    “ ‘an incident that reasonably appears to be physical abuse’ ” or one that could
    give rise to Dellard having “ ‘reasonably suspect[ed] that abuse’ ” (citing
    § 15630, subd. (b)), thus triggering the mandatory reporting obligation. As the
    subject of Dellard’s reporting was not “a known or suspected instance of abuse”
    that compelled mandatory reporting within the meaning of section 15634(a),
    according to Valero, the absolute immunity afforded by this subdivision to
    mandatory reporters did not extend to Dellard or Spread Your Wings,
    notwithstanding their status as mandatory reporters.
    In other words, according to Valero, there is no immunity extended to a
    mandatory reporter who “fabricates an instance of abuse” because the
    protection of section 15634(a) afforded to mandatory reporters reaches only
    reports of “known or suspected” instances of abuse and a complete fabrication is
    not such an incident. Valero further sought to separate Dellard’s act of
    reporting Valero’s alleged abuse of Barton from her post-reporting coercion of
    Barton to falsely corroborate Dellard’s accusation. Valero contended that this
    later conduct by Dellard exceeded any statutory immunity Dellard enjoyed as a
    mandated reporter for reports of abuse in any event.
    Relying principally on Easton v. Sutter Coast Hospital (2000) 
    80 Cal.App.4th 485
     (Easton) and Santos v. Kisco Senior Living, LLC (2016) 
    1 Cal.App.5th 862
     (Santos), the trial court in a written order sustained
    respondents’ demurrer to the first amended complaint without leave to amend,
    concluding that Dellard and Spread Your Wings as mandated reporters enjoyed
    8
    absolute and broad immunity under section 15634(a), even if Dellard’s reporting
    about Valero had been knowingly false; that Dellard’s alleged later conduct of
    coercing Barton to corroborate her false report was readily distinguishable from
    the facts of James W. and was thus also immune from suit; and that the
    deficiencies in the first amended complaint could not be cured by further
    amendment.6
    Entry of judgment of dismissal as to Spread Your Wings, Dellard, and
    defendant Andrew Serry Dumbuya followed, from which Valero timely
    appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.    Standard of Review
    We begin with the standard of review on appeal from an order sustaining
    a demurrer, appealable here from the ensuing judgment of dismissal. “On
    appeal from a judgment dismissing an action after sustaining a demurrer
    without leave to amend, the standard of review is well[-]settled. We give the
    complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and its parts in
    their context. [Citation.] Further, we treat the demurrer as admitting all
    material facts properly pleaded, but do not assume the truth of contentions,
    deductions or conclusions of law. [Citations.] When a demurrer is sustained, we
    determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of
    action. [Citation.]” (City of Dinuba v. County of Tulare (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 859
    ,
    865; see also Blank v. Kirwan (1985) 
    39 Cal.3d 311
    , 318.) In reviewing the
    sustaining of a demurrer, we address whether the results, and not the trial
    6Valero does not claim on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion
    by not allowing her leave to amend. And she offers no ways in which the
    pleading could be further amended to become viable. We therefore do not
    address the trial court’s having sustained respondents’ demurrer without, as
    opposed to with, leave to amend.
    9
    court’s reasons, are correct. (Perkin v. San Diego Gas & Electric Co. (2014) 
    225 Cal.App.4th 492
    , 501.)
    II.   The Act and Relevant Law Construing and Applying It
    As noted, the trial court here relied on Easton and Santos as dictating its
    result. The Santos court, quoting liberally from Easton, discussed the Act,
    highlighting its emphasis on the reporting of abuse of elders and dependent
    adults and overcoming perceived obstacles to this reporting as underlying
    legislative purposes. (See, e.g., §§ 15600, subd. (i) [express intent to establish
    framework for reporting and investigation of elder and dependent-care abuse];
    15601 [express purposes of the Act include reporting of abuse and providing
    protection for reporters]; 15630 [duties of mandated reporters and criminal
    consequences for the failure to report]; 15630.1 [civil penalties for failure to
    report financial abuse]; 15634 [immunity from liability of persons authorized to
    report and availability of claims procedure for attorney fees incurred in defense
    of dismissed actions or to a mandatory reporter as prevailing party].) Santos
    further addressed how the Act’s provisions affecting reporting have been
    construed and applied, including by cases analogizing to parallel provisions in
    the Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act, at Penal Code section 11164, et seq.
    Finding Santos’s discussion apt for present purposes, we quote liberally from it.
    “The Act ‘represents the Legislature’s response to the problem of
    unreported elder abuse which came to its attention in the early 1980’s.’ (Easton,
    supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at p. 490.) ‘The focus of the Act has always been to
    encourage the reporting of abuse or neglect.’ (Id. at p. 491.)” (Santos, supra, 1
    Cal.App.5th at p. 870.)
    Under the Act, “[a] person who has assumed full or intermittent
    responsibility for the care or custody of an elder or dependent adult . . . is a
    10
    mandated reporter.”7 (§ 15630, subd. (a).) Mandated reporters are statutorily
    required to report suspected instances of abuse of an elder or dependent adult:
    “A mandated reporter who, in his or her professional capacity, or within the
    scope of his or her employment, has observed or has knowledge of an incident
    that reasonably appears to be physical abuse, as defined in Section
    15610.63, . . . is told by an elder or dependent adult that they have experienced
    behavior . . . constituting physical abuse, as defined in Section 15610.63, . . . or
    reasonably suspects that abuse, shall report the known or suspected instance of
    abuse . . . immediately or as soon as practically possible.” (Id., subd. (b)(1).) The
    failure by a mandated reporter to report abuse of an elder or dependent adult,
    or who impedes or inhibits a report of such abuse by another, in violation of
    section 15630 is a misdemeanor, with heightened punishment if the abuse
    results in death or bodily injury. (Id., subd. (h).) And the intentional
    concealment by a mandated reporter of their failure to report an incident
    known by the reporter to be abuse or severe neglect of an elder or dependent
    adult is a continuing criminal offense. (Ibid.)
    “The Act contemplates that the appropriate authorities will undertake an
    investigation into such reports in order to protect the elderly person [or
    dependent adult]. For example, the Act provides that, ‘it is the intent of the
    Legislature in enacting this chapter to provide that . . . local law enforcement
    agencies shall receive referrals . . . from any mandated reporter submitting
    reports . . . and shall take any actions considered necessary to protect the elder or
    dependent adult and correct the situation and ensure the individual’s safety.
    (§ 15600, subd. (i), italics added; see People v. Davis (2005) 
    126 Cal.App.4th 7
     There is no dispute in this case that Dellard and Spread Your Wings
    qualify as mandated reporters under section 15630, subdivision (a) as they each
    meet the broad definition of a “care custodian” under section 15610.17.
    11
    1416, 1435 (Davis) [‘The enactment of such a comprehensive statutory scheme,
    which not only requires designated professionals to report known or suspected
    abuse but also sets up a system of outside agencies mandated to investigate
    reports of such abuse, amply demonstrates the scope and severity of the
    problem of elder and dependent adult abuse as perceived by the Legislature’];
    Easton, supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at p. 493 [‘The focus of the statutory scheme is to
    encourage prompt reports so as to protect the victim of the suspected abuse’
    (italics added)].)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 871.) The criminal
    provisions of section 15630 for the failure to report “further the statute’s
    purpose of fostering ‘the broadest possible reporting of incidents of known and
    suspected abuse of elder and dependent adults’ and have been construed to
    impose ‘criminal liability for failure to report, without regard to intent or
    negligence.’ (Davis, supra, 126 Cal.App.4th at p. 1437.)” (Santos, supra, 1
    Cal.App.5th at p. 871.)
    “In order to further ensure that mandated reporters comply with their
    reporting obligations, section 15634[(a)] ‘create[s] an absolute privilege in those
    individuals required to make such reports.’ (Easton, supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 489, 494 [‘Immunity from reporting suspected abuse is crucial to ensure
    compliance with the reporting obligation’].) Section 15634’s immunity provision
    provides in relevant part: ‘No care custodian . . . who reports a known or
    suspected instance of abuse of an elder or dependent adult shall be civilly or
    criminally liable for any report required or authorized by this article.’ (Id.,
    subd. (a).)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at pp. 871–872.)
    “In Easton, the court was ‘called upon to construe the breadth of
    immunity from civil liability conferred by . . . section 15634.’ (Easton, supra, 80
    Cal.App.4th at p. 488.) In that case, a physician made a report to sheriff’s
    deputies based on information that the physician had received from a nurse
    12
    who had unsuccessfully attempted to persuade the plaintiff to take his mother
    to the hospital. (Id. at p. 489.) Authorities acted on the report by removing the
    plaintiff’s mother from his home and taking her to the hospital. (Ibid.) The
    Easton court considered whether the physician and the nurse were immune
    from liability for [various torts] premised upon the report and the seizure of the
    elderly woman. (Id. at pp. 489–490.) At the time of the incident, former
    section 15630, subdivision (b) provided that a mandated reporter who ‘ “has
    observed an incident that reasonably appears to be physical abuse” ’ was
    required to report such abuse. (Easton, supra, at p. 491, italics added, quoting
    former § 15630, subd. (b).)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 872.)
    “The Easton court first concluded that the immunity provided in
    section 15634 to mandated reporters was absolute, rather than qualified. The
    Easton court reasoned: ‘Based on the purpose of the immunity provision and
    upon the Legislature’s drafting of section 15634, we conclude that the privilege
    created by the section is absolute rather than qualified. The language of section
    15634 distinguishes between mandated reporters of abuse who make required
    or authorized reports and nonmandated reporters. As to those who must report,
    the rule is sweeping in its breadth—no health practitioner who reports shall be
    civilly liable for any report. However, the section goes on to create only a
    qualified privilege for “[a]ny other person reporting.” Such nonmandated
    reporters “shall not incur civil or criminal liability as a result of any report
    authorized by this article, unless it can be proven that a false report was made
    and the person knew that the report was false.” (§ 15634[(a)].) The plain
    meaning of the statutory language is that for mandated reporters the truth or
    falsity of the report is of no moment—the privilege is absolute.’ (Easton, supra,
    80 Cal.App.4th at pp. 491–492.)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 872.)
    13
    “The Easton court then considered whether the physician and the nurse
    were entitled to immunity, notwithstanding that they had failed to ‘comply with
    the reporting method in [former] section 15630’ (Easton, supra, 80 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 492), in that the nurse had not personally called law enforcement, but
    instead had relayed information concerning the abuse to the physician, who
    called law enforcement. The Easton court ‘reject[ed] a strict reading of the
    reporting condition—namely that reports be made by one who “has observed” a
    reportable incident—as inconsistent with either the letter or spirit of the
    statutory scheme.’ (Id. at p. 493.) The Easton court reasoned that while a
    physician’s reliance on a nurse’s report of suspected abuse ‘was not expressly
    envisioned by the statutory scheme in effect as of [the time of the incident] the
    Legislature had in fact already taken action to amend the statute so that such
    reliance would be expressly permitted.’ (Id. at p. 494 [referring to an
    amendment to the statute requiring a mandated reporter who ‘ “has observed or
    who has knowledge of an incident,” ’ quoting § 15639, subd. (b)(1), as amended
    by Stats. 1998, ch. 980, § 1, p. 7525].) The Easton court continued, ‘Clearly, the
    purpose of the statutory scheme of which section 15630 is a part and the precise
    language of the 1998 version of the section, would not be advanced by denying
    immunity to either [the nurse] or [the physician].’ (Easton, supra, at p. 494.)”
    (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.5th at pp. 872–873.)
    Thus, as chronicled in Santos, one feature of Easton is its construction
    and application of the Act’s broad and absolute immunity to mandated
    reporters to recognize and implement the clear and primary legislative purpose
    of removing obstacles that hinder reporting, even when considering the Act’s
    statutory text against plain-meaning arguments that would undermine and
    thwart this overarching purpose. Easton is not alone in this; Santos followed
    suit, and also relied on cases in the parallel child-abuse-reporting context that
    14
    took the same approach to attempts by plaintiffs in that context to narrow the
    absolute immunity afforded to mandated reporters.
    As further discussed in Santos, and as recognized by the parties in this
    case, the mandated-reporter immunity provided in the predecessor child-abuse
    context is relevant here. “In interpreting and applying section 15634, we may
    consider its ‘predecessor statutes, which created reporting requirements and
    immunity for mandated reporters of child abuse.’ (Easton, supra, 80
    Cal.App.4th at p. 492.) Such case law is highly relevant in light of the similarity
    of the two immunity provisions. (Compare . . . § 15634 [‘No care custodian . . .
    who reports a known or suspected instance of abuse of an elder or dependent
    adult shall be civilly or criminally liable for any report required by this article’]
    with Pen. Code, § 11172 [‘No mandated reporter shall be civilly or criminally
    liable for any report required or authorized by this article’].)” (Santos, supra, 1
    Cal.App.5th at p. 873.)
    “Courts have repeatedly recognized the breadth of the immunity provision
    contained in Penal Code section 11172. (See, e.g. B.H. v. County of San
    Bernardino (2015) 
    62 Cal.4th 168
    , 193 [‘The Legislature . . . grant[ed] . . . broad
    immunities for those mandated reporters who report suspected instances of
    child abuse’]; Thomas v. Chadwick (1990) 
    224 Cal.App.3d 813
    , 821 (Thomas)
    [‘To encourage reporting, the Legislature granted reporters broad immunities to
    obviate the chilling effect the spectre of civil lawsuits would have upon a
    reporter’s willingness to become involved’].) ‘In order to promote the purpose of
    the act to protect abused children, [Penal Code] section 11172 provides that
    mandated reporters of child abuse are absolutely immune from liability.’
    (Robbins [v. Hamburger Home for Girls (1995)] 32 Cal.App.4th [671,] 679; see
    also Arce [v. Childrens Hospital Los Angeles (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th [1455,]
    15
    1485 [(Arce)] [‘The immunity extends even to negligent, knowingly false, or
    malicious reports of abuse’].]” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 873.)
    “Further, courts have broadly interpreted the immunity provided at Penal
    Code section 11172 beyond its literal text in order to effectuate this purpose.
    For example, in Storch v. Silverman (1986) 
    186 Cal.App.3d 671
    , 677 (Storch),
    despite the fact that the version of the statute applicable in the case was limited
    to persons ‘ “who report[] a known or suspected instance of child abuse” ’ (id. at
    p. 675, fn. 3, italics added, quoting former Pen. Code, § 11172, subd. (a)), the
    court concluded that the statute covered ‘those mandated reporters who are
    involved in the identification of an instance of child abuse but do not personally
    report it to the authorities.’ (Storch, supra, at p. 681, italics added.) In reaching
    this conclusion, the court reasoned: ‘Team immunity is consistent with the
    purpose and intent of the Legislature in promoting the reporting of child abuse.
    Limitation of immunity to the person making the telephone call to the agency or
    signing the report would defeat that purpose.’ (Ibid.)” (Santos, supra, 1
    Cal.App.5th at pp. 873–874.)
    “In addition, . . . courts have broadly interpreted the child abuse
    mandated[-]reporter[-]immunity provision to apply to certain conduct related to
    a reporting event. For example, in Krikorian v. Barry (1987) 
    196 Cal.App.3d 1211
     (Krikorian), the court considered whether ‘mandatory reporters [are]
    completely immune from liability for professional services rendered in
    connection with the identification or diagnosis of suspected cases of child abuse,
    or just for the act of reporting.’ (Id. at p. 1222.) The Krikorian court rejected the
    argument that mandated reporter immunity extended only to the ‘act of
    reporting’ (ibid.), reasoning in part: ‘[L]imiting immunity to the protection of
    professionals against lawsuits resulting from the act of reporting would defeat
    the Legislature’s goal of promoting increased reporting of child abuse. The
    16
    Legislature has identified the fear of civil liability for allegedly false reports as
    a major deterrent to the reporting of suspected cases of child abuse by
    professionals. Recent revisions to the Child Abuse [and Neglect] Reporting Act
    have been largely directed at reducing or eliminating, to the extent possible,
    professional[s’] fear of litigation resulting from required reports. A law
    conferring “absolute” immunity for the act of reporting suspected child abuse,
    but not for professional activities contributing to its identification, would not
    likely allay the fear of a prospective reporter that an angry parent might
    initiate litigation for damages, following a report which is subsequently proven
    to be mistaken’ (id. at pp. 1222–1223). Ultimately, the Krikorian court held,
    ‘Insofar as liability for damages to a person falsely accused of child abuse is
    concerned, we conclude that absolute immunity to professionals for conduct
    giving rise to the obligation to report, such as the collection of data, or the
    observation, examination, or treatment of the suspected victim or perpetrator of
    child abuse, performed in a professional capacity or within the scope of
    employment, as well as for the act of reporting.’ (Id. at p. 1223.)” (Santos, supra,
    1 Cal.App.5th at p. 874.)
    “In Arce, supra, 
    211 Cal.App.4th 1455
    , the Court of Appeal applied
    Krikorian, among other cases, in concluding that a hospital social worker . . .
    and the hospital for which she worked were immune from [tort liability for acts
    of the social worker beyond the mere reporting]. (Id. at pp. 1491–1492.) . . . The
    plaintiffs claimed that the trial court had erred in concluding that the
    defendants were immune from claims premised on such conduct, arguing, ‘[the
    nurse’s] conduct did not involve the act of reporting child abuse within the
    meaning of Penal Code section 11172 and therefore was not protected under the
    statute.’ (Ibid.) The Arce court rejected this argument noting, ‘Cases analyzing
    Penal Code section 11172 have concluded that the statute provides immunity to
    17
    claims predicated on false and malicious reports of abuse as well as conduct
    committed in furtherance of diagnosing whether abuse occurred.’ (Ibid.) Thus,
    even though the plaintiffs argued that [the nurse]’s conduct was ‘ “harassing,
    antagonizing, and threatening” ’ (id. at p. 1496), the Arce court concluded that
    the trial court had properly determined that ‘[t]he conduct alleged against [the
    nurse] falls within [Penal Code] section 11172’ (ibid., italics omitted).” (Santos,
    supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at pp. 874–875.)
    “Courts have also concluded that immunity under Penal Code
    section 11172 may ‘cloak[] the mandated reporter with immunity for activity
    [occurring] after the report of suspected child abuse . . . is made.’ (Ferraro v.
    Chadwick (1990) 
    221 Cal.App.3d 86
    , 92 (Ferraro).) In Ferraro, the court noted
    that Penal Code section 11172 extends immunity ‘not only to “required” or
    mandated reporting but to another distinct category of reporting[,] that which is
    “authorized” by the [Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting] Act.’ (Ferraro, supra,
    at p. 93, quoting Pen. Code, § 11172, subd. (a); see also § 15634 providing
    immunity ‘for any report required or authorized by this article’ (italics added).)
    The Ferraro court concluded that ‘communications by a mandated reporter
    to . . . law enforcement agencies that are statutorily entitled to receive and
    investigate reports of child abuse are “authorized” communications or reports
    under the [Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act], and, therefore, [a]re
    protected by the immunity of [Penal Code] section 11172, subdivision (a).’
    (Ferraro, at p. 95, italics added; see Thomas, supra, 224 Cal.App.3d at p. 822 [‘It
    would be anomalous to conclude that the reporter’s “required” report of
    suspected child abuse is privileged, but that the legislatively contemplated
    subsequent communications concerning the incident would expose the reporter
    to potential civil liability’].) The Ferraro court reasoned in part: ‘Certainly, it is
    reasonable to infer the Legislature (1) anticipated that in the course of an
    18
    investigation into suspected child abuse, the reporter . . . is going to be
    contacted and interviewed by the agency conducting the investigation and
    (2) sanctioned such communication between the reporter and the investigating
    agency. It is also reasonable to infer the Legislature foresaw the possibility of
    the reporter being contacted by the district attorney with respect to criminal
    investigations.’ (Ferraro, at pp. 94–95.)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at pp.
    875–876.)
    The Santos court itself went on to apply the broad and absolute immunity
    afforded to mandated reporters by section 15634(a) by determining that the
    mandated reporters there were not only immune from civil liability for an
    actual report but also immune from the plaintiff’s false-arrest claim that was
    premised on conduct “integrally related to a report of suspected elder abuse and
    thus constituted ‘authorized’ activity within the meaning of section 15634[(a)].”
    (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 876.)
    This targeted conduct in Santos was by a mandated reporter in
    connection with police investigation in response to the actual report of
    suspected elder abuse. The mandated reporter had signed a form to effectuate a
    citizen’s arrest but the court concluded there was no evidence that the reporter
    had interrogated or prosecuted the plaintiff, as had been alleged.8 (Santos,
    supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at pp. 876–877.) The court, analogizing to the parallel
    child-abuse context, rejected the claim that the immunity afforded to mandated
    reporters in the elder-abuse context under section 15634(a) did not extend to
    conduct in addition to the act of reporting. “[C]ourts have concluded that
    mandated reporters in the child abuse context may not be held liable for
    ‘conduct committed in furtherance of diagnosing whether abuse occurred.’ (Arce,
    8 The Santos case was on appeal after a jury trial, not, as here, after a
    facial attack on the pleadings.
    19
    supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 1492, italics added.) We see no reason why this
    same principle should not apply when interpreting the nearly identical
    immunity provision in the Act. For the same reason, we conclude that case law
    in the child abuse context providing that mandated reporters are immune for
    communications with law enforcement that occur after an initial report of abuse
    [but] that are related to abuse (see Ferraro, supra, 221 Cal.App.3d at pp. 92,
    95), should apply with equal force in interpreting section 15634.” (Santos,
    supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 877, fn. omitted.) The mandated reporter’s “act in
    signing a citizen’s arrest form constituted activity that was so integrally related
    to a report of elder abuse that it constituted conduct that falls within the
    ‘sweeping . . . breadth’ of the immunity afforded in section 15634. (Easton,
    supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at p. 491.)” (Id. at pp. 877–878.)
    After all, according to the Santos court, the act of signing a form to
    effectuate a citizen’s arrest “was far more similar to an act of ‘reporting’ than
    other conduct to which courts have determined immunity extends. (See Arce,
    supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1491–1492 [making harassing phone calls];
    McMartin v. Children’s Institute International (1989) 
    212 Cal.App.3d 1393
    ,
    1401 (McMartin) [interviewing children]; Krikorian, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 1213, 1222–1223 [providing psychotherapeutic services]; Storch, supra, 186
    Cal.App.3d at p. 674 & fn. 2 [conducting medical examinations and a pathology
    analysis].)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 878.)
    Finally, the Santos court distinguished the facts there from those in
    James W., supra, 
    17 Cal.App.4th 246
    , relied on by Valero here. In James W.,
    which emanated from the same court as Santos, the court “concluded that
    mandated[-]reporter immunity did not apply to the conduct of a family
    counselor and foster parent who, for two and one-half years after a report of
    sexual abuse, allegedly coerced a child into falsely naming her father as the
    20
    perpetrator of the abuse. (Id. at pp. 258–259.) The James W. court concluded
    that the defendants, who had ‘[not] identified or reported child abuse,’ were not
    entitled to immunity because they ‘voluntarily assumed roles of those who,
    having received the report and determined the identity of the perpetrator,
    search[ed] for corroboration and/or attempt[ed] to pressure a witness to get a
    conviction.’ (James W., at p. 256.)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 879, fns.
    omitted.) Distinct from this, the Santos defendant, who had effectuated a
    citizen’s arrest in close connection and time proximity to a mandated report,
    unlike the defendants in James W., had not “ ‘usurped the function of the
    authorities (Robbins, supra, 32 Cal.App.4th at p. 680, discussing James W.)
    such that he would not be entitled to mandated reporter immunity under James
    W. [Citation].)” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 879.)
    Having provided this legal framework and background, we now address
    Valero’s specific claims.
    III.   Absolute Immunity for Mandated Reporters Under Section 15634(a)
    Extends to Knowingly False Reports
    Valero contends that despite the established law we have discussed
    above, the plain meaning of the precise statutory language affording absolute
    and broad immunity to mandated reporters under section 15634(a) does not
    extend to knowingly false reports.9 This argument is premised on several
    isolated bits of statutory text from the Act that, according to Valero, qualify the
    requirement of a mandatory reporter to report an incident of abuse (apart from
    having been told by the victim that they have experienced physical abuse) and
    9 Valero concedes that section 15634(a) provides absolute and broad
    immunity to mandated reporters, including for reports that turn out to be
    untrue. But she separates such reports from those that are knowingly
    fabricated or “concocted” at the outset by the reporter, attempting to avoid
    immunity only for the latter.
    21
    limit it to only those instances where the reporter has an objective and
    reasonable basis for suspecting the abuse. Valero urges that this qualification
    coextensively cabins the absolute immunity afforded to mandatory reporters
    under section 15634(a) to reports factually rooted in that objective and
    reasonable basis.
    First, Valero points out that section 15630, subdivision (b)(1) requires
    that a “mandated reporter who . . . has observed or has knowledge of an incident
    that reasonably appears to be physical abuse . . . or is told by an elder or
    dependent adult that they have experienced behavior . . . constituting physical
    abuse, . . . or reasonably suspects that abuse” must report “the known or
    suspected instance of abuse.” (Italics added.) Thus, she argues, apart from being
    told by an elder or dependent adult that they have experienced abuse, a
    mandated reporter is bound only to report abuse that they have observed or
    know about, or reasonably suspect.
    Second, Valero observes that the provision for immunity from liability for
    mandated reporters in section 15634(a) says in relevant part: “No . . . mandated
    reporter . . . who reports a known or suspected instance of abuse of an elder or
    dependent adult shall be civilly or criminally liable for any report required or
    authorized by this article.” (Italics added.) This immunity, she contends, is
    coextensive with the requirement to report, which, per her argument, is limited
    to instances of known or suspected abuse, or abuse told to the mandatory
    reporter by the elder or dependent adult. This conclusion, according to Valero,
    is mandated by the pure statutory text quoted above and excludes from
    immunity any reports of abuse that are fabricated and knowingly false, as such
    reports cannot be grounded in actual observation, knowledge, or reasonable
    suspicion and are therefore not required to be made under the Act.
    22
    Valero further cites the Act’s express purposes listed at section 15601,
    which include the provision of “protection under the law for all those persons
    who report suspected cases of abuse, provided that the report is not made with
    malicious intent.” (§ 15601, subd. (c), italics added.) As Valero has alleged
    Dellard’s intent in making a knowingly falsified report of abuse to be malicious,
    she argues that these allegations and the plain meaning of sections 15630,
    subdivision (b)(1) and 15634(a) quoted above, taken together, remove Dellard’s
    report (and later conduct) from the Act’s immunity protection.
    In essence, based on these pieces of text from the Act, Valero urges us to
    read the qualified immunity in section 15634(a) that is extended to
    nonmandated reporters, which is expressly and distinctly limited to “any report
    authorized by this article, unless it can be proven that a false report was made
    and the person knew that the report was false” (italics added), to be
    indistinguishable from the absolute immunity there afforded to mandated
    reporters, with the protection extended to them likewise containing this same
    limitation excluding knowingly false reports. While we understand the
    argument, this reading ignores the marked difference in text between the two
    types of immunity. It also ignores the primary legislative purposes of the Act as
    a whole to increase the reporting of elder and dependent adult abuse and to
    remove the chilling disincentives, such as fear of suit, to that reporting,
    especially for mandated reporters who are uniquely in positions in the course of
    their work or employment to become privy to instances of abuse. And it ignores
    that as a practical matter, true immunity from suit would be utterly illusory if
    all a plaintiff had to allege in any case against a mandated reporter is that the
    report of abuse was not just false, but knowingly false. This would thwart the
    clear twin legislative goals of the Act to increase the reporting of incidents of
    23
    elder and dependent-care abuse and to reduce the forces that chill such
    reporting, such as the fear of suit, meritorious or not.
    “When interpreting a statute, ‘our core task . . . is to determine and give
    effect to the Legislature’s underlying purpose in enacting the statutes at issue.’
    (McHugh v. Protective Life Ins. Co. (2021) 
    12 Cal.5th 213
    , 227 (McHugh);
    accord, Jarman v. HCR ManorCare, Inc. (2020) 
    10 Cal.5th 375
    , 81 (Jarman).)
    ‘We first consider the words of the statutes, as statutory language is generally
    the most reliable indicator of legislation’s intended purpose. [Citation.] We
    consider the ordinary meaning of the relevant terms, related provisions, terms
    used in other parts of the statute, and the structure of the statutory scheme.’
    (McHugh, at p. 227; accord, Jarman, at p. 381 [‘ “We do not examine that
    language in isolation, but in the context of the statutory framework as a whole
    in order to determine its scope and purpose and to harmonize the various parts
    of the enactment.” ’].) ‘It is a basic canon of statutory construction that statutes
    in pari materia should be construed together so that all parts of the statutory
    scheme are given effect.’ (Lexin v. Superior Court (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 1050
    , 1090–
    1091; accord, Law Finance Group, LLC v. Key (2021) 
    67 Cal.App.5th 307
    , 317,
    review granted Nov. 10, 2021 (S270798).)” (Hirschfield v. Cohen (2022) 
    82 Cal.App.5th 648
    , 660 (Hirschfield).)
    “ ‘We have long recognized the principle that even though a statute may
    appear to be unambiguous on its face, when it is considered in light of closely
    related statutes[,] a legislative purpose may emerge that is inconsistent with,
    and controlling over, the language read without reference to the entire scheme
    of the law.’ (Droeger v. Friedman, Sloan & Ross (1991) 
    54 Cal.3d 26
    , 50.) ‘ “If
    two seemingly inconsistent statutes conflict, the court’s role is to harmonize the
    law. [Citations.] We presume that the Legislature, when enacting a statute, was
    24
    aware of existing related laws and intended to maintain a consistent body of
    rules.” ’ [Citations.]” (Hirschfield, supra, 82 Cal.App.5th at pp. 660–661.)
    “ ‘ “If the language is clear, courts must generally follow its plain meaning
    unless a literal interpretation would result in absurd consequences the
    Legislature did not intend.” ’ (Jarman, supra, 10 Cal.5th at p. 381.) However,
    ‘[i]f the relevant statutory language is ambiguous, we look to appropriate
    extrinsic sources, including the legislative history, for further insights.’
    (McHugh, supra, 12 Cal.5th at p. 227; accord, Mendoza v. Fonseca McElroy
    Grinding Co., Inc. (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 1118
    , 1125 [‘ “If the statutory language
    permits more than one reasonable interpretation, courts may consider other
    aids, such as the statute’s purpose, legislative history, and public policy.” ’].)”
    (Hirschfield, supra, 82 Cal.App.5th at p. 661.)
    Applying these rules of statutory construction, we reject Valero’s
    argument that the plain meaning of sections 15630, subdivision (b)(1) and
    15634(a) together compel the conclusion that the immunity extended to
    mandated reporters under the Act does not extend to knowingly false reports.
    The text of section 15634(a) on its face cannot be read to apply or extend the
    express limitation for knowingly false reports on immunity for nonmandated
    reporters to mandated reporters, for whom this express qualification on
    immunity is absent. This textual distinction alone defeats Valero’s plain-
    meaning argument that we should treat the protections afforded to mandated
    and nonmandated reporters alike. (People v. Hillhouse (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 1612
    , 1618 [court must presume that the Legislature’s failure to restrict the
    definition of a term in certain statutory provisions when it did so in other
    provisions of the same statutes was intentional].) Had the Legislature intended
    to similarly limit the immunity afforded to mandated reporters under the Act to
    exclude knowingly false reports, as it did with nonmandated reporters, it knew
    25
    how to do so. (Ibid.; see also Ajaxo, Inc. v. E*Trade Financial Corp. (2020) 
    48 Cal.App.5th 129
    , 198 [when construing the words of a statute, primary goal is
    to determine and give effect to the underlying purpose of the law; in doing so, a
    court looks to the words of the statute, giving them a plain and commonsense
    meaning, and according significance, if possible, to every word, phrase and
    sentence in pursuance of the legislative purpose].) We thus cannot treat the
    express limitation on immunity for false reports applicable to nonmandated
    reporters that is omitted with respect to mandated reporters as if the omission
    did not exist.
    Even crediting for the sake of argument that the language Valero cites
    from sections 15630, subdivision (b)(1) and 15634(a) suggests a requirement of
    knowledge of abuse—or at least an objective and reasonable basis for
    suspicion—as a basis for a mandated report and therefore as a threshold for
    absolute immunity, we would land on the existence of a statutory ambiguity.
    This ambiguity lies again in the obvious distinction in the Legislature’s
    treatment of immunity for mandated versus nonmandated reporters in
    section 15634(a), with knowingly false reports carved out only for the latter.
    Valero’s argumentative focus is to qualify the immunity for mandated reporters
    to instances of abuse that are either known or reasonably suspected, but the
    effect of her argument is to obliterate the express distinction between the two
    types of immunity for the different types of reporters, the dividing line for
    which is reports that are knowingly false. Applying the traditional rules of
    statutory construction as outlined above would get us to consideration of
    legislative intent and purposes in resolving that ambiguity. Those purposes
    here require no speculation. They are to increase the reporting of elder and
    dependent-adult abuse and remove disincentives to that reporting. For all the
    reasons extensively discussed in Easton and Santos, as well as in Arce and
    26
    Storch in applying the parallel provisions of Penal Code section 11172, these
    purposes readily compel the conclusion that the absolute immunity afforded to
    mandated reporters by the Legislature in section 15634(a)—“sweeping in its
    breadth” (Easton, supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at p. 491)—extends to knowingly false
    or fabricated reports.
    Among these reasons are that the Legislature enacted section 15634(a) in
    1985 some five years after the parallel Penal Code section 11172 had been so
    interpreted by courts and amended to delete the requirement that a mandated
    reporter’s immunity for a false report turned on knowledge of the falsity.
    (Easton, supra, 80 Cal.App.4th at p. 492 [Legislature’s 1980 deletion of
    requirement in Pen. Code, § 11172 that a mandated reporter’s immunity from
    liability for a false report of child abuse turn on knowledge of falsity changed
    such immunity from qualified to absolute]; Storch, supra, 186 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 671, 679–681 [same]; Arce, supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 1492; see p. 1493
    [absolute immunity afforded to mandated reporters of child abuse extends to
    “ ‘false and malicious’ ” reports].) The Legislature is presumed to have been
    aware of this interpretation and amendment in the parallel statutory scheme
    and to have intended the same result when it enacted section 15634(a),
    mirroring the same language. (People v. May (2020) 
    47 Cal.App.5th 1001
    , 1008–
    1009 [Legislature presumed to know the law when enacting new legislation or
    not acting in the face of judicial construction of statutes, and its intentions may
    be inferred from this action or inaction].)
    Consideration of the Act’s preamble, which includes among its express
    purposes at section 15601, subdivision (c) the “protection under the law for all
    those persons who report suspected cases of abuse, provided that the report is
    not made with malicious intent” (italics added) does not alter our conclusion.
    While “statements of [express] purpose or intent of legislation in a preamble”
    27
    may “ ‘properly be utilized as an aid in construing a statute,’ ” they are “not
    conclusive” or controlling and “ ‘do not confer power, determine rights, or
    enlarge the scope of a measure.’ ” (Jackpot Harvesting Co., Inc. v. Superior
    Court (2018) 
    26 Cal.App.5th 125
    , 153 (Jackpot); see also Carter v. Dept. of
    Veteran’s Affairs (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 914
    , 925 [same].) Such statements can be
    “ ‘illuminating if a statute is ambiguous’ ” and “ ‘may aid in the construction of
    doubtful clauses,’ ” but they “ ‘may not overturn a statute’s language’ ” or
    “ ‘control [its] substantive provisions.’ ” (Jackpot, at p. 153.)
    Further, the Act’s general preamble at section 15601 with the clause
    limiting its purpose of protection for reporters of abuse to those not acting
    maliciously was enacted in 1982 (Stats. 1982, ch. 1184, § 3). Section 15634(a)
    was enacted later, in 1985 (Stats. 1985, ch. 1164, § 11), and is specific to
    immunity from liability under the Act. As discussed, it provides absolute
    immunity for mandated reporters as distinct from qualified immunity for
    nonmandated reporters. “ ‘ “If conflicting sections cannot be reconciled, later
    enactments supersede earlier ones [citation], and more specific provisions take
    precedence over more general ones.” [Citation.]’ [Citations.]” (People v. Superior
    Court (Ortiz) (2022) 
    81 Cal.App.5th 851
    , 854.) As section 15634(a) was later
    enacted and is more specific to the topic of immunity, to the extent the Act’s
    earlier and more general preamble excludes protection for reporters of abuse
    who act “with malicious intent” (§ 15601, subd. (c)), this preamble cannot
    override or negate the more generous immunity afforded to mandated reporters
    at section 15634(a).
    In sum, we see no reason to part with Easton and Santos, including their
    reliance on Storch and Arce’s construction of Penal Code section 11172’s parallel
    immunity provisions for mandated reporters of child abuse, in applying the
    absolute the immunity provision of section 15634(a) to mandated reporters of
    28
    elder and dependent-adult abuse. We accordingly reject Valero’s arguments
    urging that we apply the Act so as to exclude from the absolute immunity
    afforded to mandated reporters those reports that are fabricated or knowingly
    false.
    IV.   Dellard is Also Immune From Suit For Allegations of Her Post-
    Reporting Coercion of Barton to Corroborate the Report
    Valero contends that even if we conclude Dellard is immune from liability
    for her alleged knowingly false report to law enforcement about Valero’s abuse
    of Barton, Dellard’s later conduct of “influencing, intimidating, and coercing”
    Barton to corroborate her false report is still actionable. While acknowledging
    factual differences, Valero relies on James W., supra, 
    17 Cal.App.4th 246
    , which
    applied Penal Code section 11172, for support. She argues that like in James
    W., Dellard’s later coercion of Barton was conduct apart from any of her duties
    as a mandated reporter and was instead as a “—‘private citizen[] [who became]
    deeply enmeshed in investigatory or prosecutorial activities and [took] on
    functions of the police.’ ” Her conduct, Valero argues, therefore exceeds the
    scope of reporting immunity under section 15634(a). We reject this contention.
    As noted above, the Santos court rebuffed efforts by the plaintiff in that
    case to bring the facts within the holding of James W., finding the case before it
    “in sharp contrast.” (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 878.) In James W., the
    court concluded that the immunity afforded under Penal Code section 11172 did
    not extend to conduct by foster parents and a family counselor, who, for over
    two and one-half years after the child victim had initially reported to hospital
    staff that a man had come through her bedroom window and hurt her, engaged
    in a “campaign to convict the father and have [the child] adopted.” (James, W.,
    supra, 17 Cal.App.4th at p. 249.) The defendants were alleged to have, “after
    [the] child abuse had been positively identified and reported” (id. at p. 256), and
    29
    for years, pressured the child and other family members to falsely accuse the
    father while simultaneously concealing evidence suggesting that a third party
    had committed the abuse and “inducing confessions and accusations by fraud,
    coercion, and perjury” (id. at p. 249).
    The James W. court held that Penal Code section 11172 did not apply to
    provide immunity under these facts because the conduct at issue was not done
    to identify whether child abuse had occurred, but rather to identify the
    perpetrator of the abuse—an investigatory function. The court noted a
    “dichotomy” under the law between persons required to report instances of child
    abuse and officials who are responsible for investigating and prosecuting
    allegations of abuse. (James, W., supra, 17 Cal.App.4th at p. 257.) Under this
    framework, Penal Code section 11172 was intended to protect individuals
    required to report child abuse while other statutes exist to protect government
    officials, who, having received a report of abuse, are responsible for
    investigating and prosecuting the perpetrator. The James W. defendants were
    outside the protections of Penal Code section 11172 because they had “[come]
    onto the scene after the . . . child abuse had been positively identified and
    reported [and then] voluntarily assumed roles of those who, having the report
    and determined the identity of the perpetrator, search for corroboration and/or
    attempt to pressure a witness to get a conviction.” (James W., supra, at p. 256.)
    The James W. court further distinguished Krikorian and McMartin, where
    expert witnesses against whom claims were made had been retained to evaluate
    whether any child abuse had occurred and were granted immunity, as opposed
    to the defendants in James W., who were not dealing with “a suspected victim
    preliminary to a determination of child abuse.” (Id. at p. 257.) “Whatever
    justifications exist for extending the immunity of the reporting act to forensic
    30
    teams investigating whether a child has actually been abused, they [were]
    clearly not present” in James W. (Id. at p. 258.)
    In Santos, the court likewise distinguished the defendant’s conduct—
    signing a form to effectuate a citizen’s arrest—from that in James W., as action
    undertaken by a mandated reporter in close connection with an official
    investigation of elder abuse. (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 878.) The
    conduct occurred “while law enforcement officers were physically at the scene
    conducting an investigation, and in close temporal proximity to the initial
    report of abuse.” (Id. at p. 879, fn. omitted.) The Santos court also pointed to
    Ferraro, supra, 221 Cal.App.3d at page 92, and Thomas, supra, 224 Cal.App.3d
    at pages 816–817, as instances in which post-reporting conduct that was held
    immune was much more distant in time from the actual reporting as existed in
    Santos. (Santos, supra, 1 Cal.App.5th at p. 879, fn. 19 [more than two years and
    more than one month, respectively].) Further, there was no evidence the
    defendant in Santos had “ ‘usurped the function’ of the authorities [citation]
    such that he would not be entitled to mandated[-]reporter immunity under
    James W. [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 879.) Santos also looked to Krikorian, supra, 196
    Cal.App.3d at pages 1222–1223, as authority for the notion that the
    Legislature’s goal of promoting the increased reporting of abuse precluded
    limiting immunity to acts of reporting only, and that the legislative goal
    required extending that protection also to other conduct related to reporting.
    Arce, too, distinguished James W., rejecting the plaintiff’s argument there
    that the defendant had effectively engaged in investigative rather than
    reporting activities, precluding immunity. (Arce, supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1497.) The Arce court found the timing of the pre-reporting conduct there, the
    lack of usurpation by the defendants of official investigatory functions, and the
    short duration of the defendants’ conduct all in contrast to the facts of James
    31
    W., which had merely held that Penal Code section 11172 “does not apply to
    activities that continue more than two years after the initial report of abuse by
    parties who are not acting as reporters.” (James W., supra, 17 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 253.) Arce therefore extended statutory immunity beyond actual reports of
    child abuse to even allegedly tortious conduct committed in furtherance of
    diagnosing whether the abuse had occurred. (Arce, supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 1491–1492, 1496.)
    We conclude that Dellard’s alleged post-reporting conduct in coercing
    Barton to corroborate her false report of abuse is, like in Santos and Arce,
    distinct from the circumstances of James W. For one thing, as respondents point
    out, Dellard was herself a mandated reporter of abuse, not a receiver of a report
    who, after the fact and upon the report’s receipt, attempted to investigate,
    prosecute, or respond to it in an unauthorized manner, and in doing so, usurped
    or attempted to usurp these official functions. And unlike in James W., Dellard,
    a mandated reporter, is not alleged to have done anything by which she could
    be said to have become so “deeply enmeshed in investigatory or prosecutorial
    activities.” (James W., supra, 17 Cal.App.4th at p. 257.)
    Second, like in Santos, Dellard’s alleged coercion of Barton occurred close
    in time, was a follow-up to her own report of Valero’s abuse, and concerned the
    same alleged incident of Valero having tried to smother Barton. (See also Arce,
    supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1491–1492; Krikorian, supra, 196 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 1213, 1222–1223.) In other words, Dellard’s alleged post-reporting conduct
    involved getting Barton’s—the victim’s—confirmation of the same report. This
    conduct, by a mandated reporter, is closely connected both in time and in
    content to Dellard’s own report, for which we have already concluded she has
    absolute immunity, and it therefore falls within the same immunity protection
    of section 15634(a).
    32
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of dismissal is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their
    costs on appeal.
    33
    ____________________________
    WILLIAMS, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________
    GREENWOOD, P.J.
    _____________________________
    LIE, J.
    Valero v. Spread Your Wings, LLC et al.
    H049119
    
    Judge of the Santa Clara County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H049119

Filed Date: 1/11/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/11/2023