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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Arlene Tripp and Jack Tripp v. City and Borough of Juneau, Derek Bos, and Juneau Police Department (1/17/2025) sp-7739

Arlene Tripp and Jack Tripp v. City and Borough of Juneau, Derek Bos, and Juneau Police Department (1/17/2025) sp-7739

          Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

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          303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

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                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  



  



  ARLENE DIANE TRIPP and JACK                                )     

  TRIPP,                                                     )   Supreme Court No. S-18786  

                                                             )     

                              Appellants,                    )   Superior Court No. 1JU-21-00725 CI  

                                                             )     

           v.                                                )   O P I N I O N  

                                                             )     

  CITY AND BOROUGH OF JUNEAU,                                )   No. 7739 - January 17, 2025  

  DEREK BOS, and JUNEAU POLICE                               )  

  DEPARTMENT,                                                )  

                                                             )  

                              Appellees.                     )  

                                                             )  

                                                                                                

                   Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First  

                   Judicial District, Juneau, Marianna C. Carpeneti, Judge.  

  

                   Appearances:  James F. Clark, Law Office of James F. Clark,  

                   Juneau,  for  Appellants.    Adam  Gottschalk,  Gregory  S.  

                   Fisher, Littler Mendelson, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellees.  

  

                   Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                   Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                     

                   BORGHESAN, Justice.  

  



          INTRODUCTION  



                   Does a public employer have a duty to train employees against excessive  



alcohol consumption outside of work hours, so that the employer may be liable for  



negligent training if an off-duty employee drives drunk in a personal vehicle and injures  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

another person?  We conclude there is no such duty, and therefore no such liability for  



the employer.  



                 In this case people injured by an off-duty police officer driving under the  



influence  in his personal vehicle sued the police department and city.  The plaintiffs  



alleged that the police department failed to adequately train the officer against excessive  



alcohol consumption.  The superior court held that the police department did not owe a  



duty of care to protect members of the public from harm caused by officers' off-duty  



alcohol consumption.  Therefore, the court reasoned, the department could not be held  



liable for the officer's conduct.  The court dismissed the lawsuit.    



                 We affirm the superior court's decision.  Neither statutes nor precedent  



impose a duty of care on the police department to protect the public from harms caused  



by officers' off-duty alcohol consumption.  And public policy does not favor imposing  



such  a  duty.    It  is  not  foreseeable  that  training  officers  to  avoid  excess  alcohol  



consumption will reduce the likelihood that they drive under the influence  while off  



duty.    Police  officers  are  already  well  aware  that  doing  so  is  illegal  and  has  grave  



consequences for both themselves and others.  Because the department did not have the  



duty of care the plaintiffs claim, it could not be held liable for injuries caused by its  



officer.  Therefore it was not error to dismiss the lawsuit.     



        FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.       Facts  



                 In July 2019 Brent Bartlett was a police officer with the Juneau Police  

Department (JPD).1  He lived with and was in a relationship with another JPD officer,  



                                                                                                             

        1        The case involves an appeal from a grant of a motion to dismiss for failure  

to state a claim under Alaska Civil Rule 12(b)(6).  We therefore accept the allegations  

in the complaint as true and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving  

party.  Est. of Mickelsen ex rel. Mickelsen v. N.- Wend Foods, Inc., 274 P.3d 1193, 1197  

(Alaska 2012).  



                                                   - 2 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

Hannah Malone, at the time.  Bartlett struggled with alcohol abuse and post-traumatic  



stress disorder (PTSD) due to past military service.    



                 In July 2019 Bartlett was driving his personal vehicle on North Douglas  



Highway when he rear-ended Arlene Tripp's vehicle, injuring her.  Bartlett was off duty  



at the time.   He took a breath test after the accident, which indicated that his blood  



alcohol content was 0.239, roughly three times the legal limit for driving.   The State  



charged Bartlett with driving under the influence and assault.  Bartlett pled guilty.  



                Malone  was  aware  that  Bartlett  struggled  with  PTSD  and  alcohol  use  



disorder and that Bartlett regularly drove his vehicle after drinking heavily.  But Malone  



did not report Bartlett's conduct to JPD.  JPD was not aware of Bartlett's mental health  



difficulties or behavior involving alcohol before the accident.   



                 JPD requires its officers to abide by rules of conduct.  Rule of Conduct  114  



prohibits off-duty officers from becoming intoxicated "to the point of obnoxious or  



offensive behavior which discredits them or the Department, or renders the members  



unfit to report for their next regular tour of duty."   The City and Borough of Juneau  



(CBJ) also has a "Drug-Free Workplace" policy, which provides that "[t]he City and  



Borough shall train its employees and supervisors in alcohol and drug abuse problems  



and the effects of drug use in the work environment."  The policy makes clear that "use  



of alcohol or controlled substances in the workplace or reporting for work under the  



influence of alcohol or controlled substances will not be tolerated."   



        B.       Proceedings  

                 In July 2021 Tripp and her husband2 filed suit against CBJ, JPD, and the  



chief of JPD, seeking a declaratory judgment and damages for injuries resulting from  



                                                                                                             

        2       Arlene's  husband's  involvement  in  the  lawsuit  is  based  on  loss  of  

consortium due to Arlene's injuries.   



                                                   - 3 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

JPD's  "negligent  hiring,  training,  and  supervision  of"  Bartlett.3    The  Tripps  later  



amended their complaint to exclude the negligent hiring claim.   



                 The Tripps' amended complaint alleged that JPD had a duty to provide  



Bartlett professional counseling and to train Bartlett to manage his alcohol use disorder.   



They argued that JPD failed to fulfill this duty and that, but for this failure, the Tripps  



would not have been injured.    They further alleged that JPD sought "to control the  



volume  of  intoxicating  beverages  that  Bartlett  could  consume  while  off  duty  as  a  



condition of his employment" by instituting Conduct Rule 114.  By doing so, the Tripps  



maintained, JPD assumed "a duty to reasonably supervise Bartlett's activities to prevent  



his alcohol use disorder from posing a danger of harm to the Juneau driving public,  



including Plaintiff Arlene Tripp."  Lastly, the Tripps alleged that JPD had a duty to train  



Malone that she was required to report a fellow officer's violation of the conduct rules.   



                 In December 2021 JPD moved to dismiss the case on the basis that none  



of the defendants were legally responsible for the Tripps' injuries.  JPD argued it had  



no  duty  to  provide  Bartlett  with  counseling,  train  him  not  to  drink  and  drive,  or  



supervise him while he was off duty.   



                 The  superior  court  requested  supplemental  briefing.    It  observed  that  



whether JPD owed a duty of care to the Tripps was a key question, but neither party  



had applied the proper framework for determining whether a duty exists under a given  

set of circumstances.4  The court also observed that the Tripps had not claimed that JPD  



was vicariously liable for Bartlett's tortious conduct.  Instead they asserted JPD's direct  



                                                                                                               

        3        JPD  is  an  agency  of  CBJ.  See  City  and  Borough  of  Juneau  Code  

3.10.010 (1970).  We refer to the appellees collectively as JPD.  We refer to CBJ when  

addressing issues pertaining to it specifically, such as the Drug-Free Workplace policy.  

        4        See  Mickelsen,  274  P.3d  at   1199  (explaining  three-step  process  for  

determining  if  duty  of  care  exists:    (1)  determining  if  statute  imposes  duty,  (2)  

determining  if  existing  precedent  imposes  duty,  and  (3)  weighing  public  policy  

considerations).  



                                                    - 4 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

liability for negligent training and supervision.   The court noted that the focus of the  



parties' briefing - whether Bartlett had been acting within the scope of his employment  



at the time of the accident - may not be the crux of the Tripps' direct liability claims.   



To clarify these issues, the court requested briefing from the parties regarding whether  



JPD owed the Tripps a duty of care and how the scope-of-employment inquiry related  



to JPD's potential liability.   



                 JPD reiterated its position that it did not owe the Tripps a duty of care and  



argued that the scope-of-employment inquiry was critical to the question of liability.   



JPD argued that because Bartlett was not driving a police vehicle and was not on police  



premises when he struck Arlene, JPD could not be liable for Bartlett's tortious conduct  



unless  he  had  been  acting  within  the  scope  of  his  employment  when  the  accident  



occurred.   The Tripps maintained that JPD did owe them a duty of care, that Bartlett  



could have been acting within the scope of his employment at the time of the crash, and  



that JPD was improperly litigating the case as a question of vicarious liability, rather  



than direct liability.   



                 The superior court granted JPD's motion to dismiss.  The court determined  



that JPD did not owe a duty of care to the Tripps under the circumstances, so the Tripps  



                                                                                                            5 

could not prove a set of facts in support of their claim that would entitle them to relief.    



                 The  superior  court  first  ruled  that  JPD  owed  no  statutory  duty  to  the  



Tripps.   The Tripps had argued that AS 18.65.130, a policy provision related to the  



Alaska Police Standards Council, imposed a statutory duty on JPD to provide Bartlett  



with adequate training on alcohol use.  This duty, the Tripps argued, was reinforced by  



the Drug-Free Workplace policy's "mandatory training requirement" and Conduct Rule  



                                                                                                               

         5       See  Vanek v. State, Bd. of Fisheries, 193 P.3d 283, 286-87 (Alaska 2008)  

("[A] complaint can be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6)  only where it appears beyond  

doubt that the plaintiffs can prove no set of facts in support of their claim that would  

entitle them to relief.").  



                                                    - 5 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

114.6   The superior court noted that, although "AS  18.65.130  includes broad policy  



language that emphasizes the importance of police training, it does not direct . . . police  



departments to take any particular action."   The court concluded that the Drug-Free  



Workplace  policy  and  Conduct  Rule  114  did  not  "create  an  actionable  tort  duty  to  



members  of  the  public  driving  on  public  roads,  especially  where  the  officer  whose  



underlying conduct forms the basis for [JPD's] liability was off duty and  driving his  



personal vehicle."   



                 The  superior  court  next  concluded  that  the  case  was  not  controlled  by  



precedent.  The Tripps had argued that JPD, by requiring training concerning substance  



abuse problems and adopting  Conduct Rule 114, had "assumed a duty of care to the  



public to train and supervise its officers in a non-negligent manner."    But the court  



determined   that   the   cases   the   Tripps   cited   to   support           their    argument   were  



distinguishable.  The court reasoned that those cases involved political subdivisions that  



had voluntarily rendered services to the plaintiffs, whereas JPD's adoption of personnel  



rules did not amount to rendering a "service" to members of the general public like the  



         7 

Tripps.    



                 Finally, the superior court looked to the factors described in D.S. W. v.  



Fairbanks  North  Star  Borough  School  District  to  determine  whether  public  policy  

favors  recognizing  a  duty  of  care  under  the  circumstances.8    The  superior  court  



concluded that these factors weighed against recognizing the duty the Tripps advocated  



for.  The court noted that future harm from negligent training and supervision might be  



                                                                                                               

         6       The  Drug-Free  Workplace  policy  was  not  included  in  the  Tripps'  

pleadings, but the  superior court took judicial notice of the policy's existence in its  

order.  Neither party challenged this exercise of judicial notice.  

         7       See  Williams  v.  Mun.  of  Anchorage, 633 P.2d 248,  251  (Alaska  1981)  

(reasoning  that  facts  could  permit  finding  that  municipality  undertook  to  render  a  

service); State, Dep't of Transp. v. Miller, 145 P.3d 521, 533 (Alaska 2006).  

         8       628 P.2d 554, 555-56 (Alaska 1981).  



                                                    - 6 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

reduced somewhat if a duty were imposed.  But because of "the lack of foreseeability  



and the distant connection between [JPD's] conduct and the harm caused, the effect of  



imposing a duty would likely be limited."   



                 The Tripps appeal the superior court's order dismissing their lawsuit.   



        STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 We review a dismissal under Civil Rule 12(b)(6) de novo, "presuming all  



factual allegations of the complaint to be true and making all reasonable inferences in  

favor of the non-moving party."9   To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint need  



only "set forth allegations of fact consistent with and appropriate to some enforceable  

cause of action."10  "We will affirm dismissal only if the plaintiff can prove no set of  



                                                                               11 

facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief."                  



                 "The existence and extent of a duty of care are questions of law which we  



decide de novo, using our independent judgment to adopt the rule of law that is most  



                                                                  12 

persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy."                  



        DISCUSSION  



                 This case requires us to determine whether JPD had a duty to train its  



officers against excessive off-duty alcohol consumption, and if so, to whom it owed  



that duty.  "[B]efore a defendant can be held liable for negligence, it must be established  

that the defendant owed a duty of care to the plaintiff."13  "The existence of a duty turns  



                                                                                                              

        9        Mickelsen , 274 P.3d at  1197.  



        10       Id.  (quoting  J  &  S  Servs.,  Inc.  v.  Tomter ,  139  P.3d  544,  547  (Alaska  

2006)).  

        11       Id.  



        12       Id.  



        13       Id. at 1198.  



                                                    - 7 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

not on the particularized facts of a given case, but rather on the  'basic nature of the  



                                                                        14 

relationship between the parties to the cause of action.' "                   

                 We use a three-step process to determine whether a duty exists.15  First,  



we determine whether a duty is imposed by statute.16  If not, we consider whether "the  



current case falls in the class of cases controlled by existing precedent."17  Third, "[i]f  



no  closely  related  case  law  exists,  we  weigh  the  public  policy  considerations  



                                                                                            18 

enumerated in D.S.W. v. Fairbanks North Star Borough School District ."                          



        A.       No Statute Imposes A Duty Of Care On JPD To Train Employees  

                 Against  Excessive  Off-Duty  Alcohol  Consumption  Or  To  Report  

                 Colleagues Who Engage In Such Conduct.  



                 We first consider whether statutes imposed a duty of care on JPD to train  



police officers not to consume excessive amounts of alcohol while off duty.  The Tripps  



point to three sources for this duty:  (1) AS 18.65.130, a provision setting out general  



policies for the Police Standards Council; (2) CBJ's Drug-Free Workplace policy; and  



(3) JPD Rule of Conduct 114.  The Tripps argue that a "holistic" reading of the statute  



and  rules  they  cite  establishes  this  duty.    We  disagree.    None  of  these  provisions,  



                                                                                                               

         14      Id. at 1199 (quoting P.G. v. State, Dep't of Health & Hum. Servs., Div. of  

Fam.  &  Youth  Servs.,  4  P.3d  326,  331  (Alaska  2000));  see  also  RESTATEMENT  

(SECOND)  OF  TORTS  § 315 (AM.  L.  INST .  1965)  ("There is no duty so to control the  

conduct of a third person as to prevent him from causing physical harm to another unless  

(a) a special relation exists between the actor and the third person which imposes a duty  

upon  the  actor  to  control  the  third person's  conduct,  or  (b)  a  special  relation  exists  

between the actor and the other which gives to the other a right to protection.").  

         15      Mickelsen , 274 P.3d at 1199.  



         16      Id.  



         17      Id.  



         18      Id. (citing 628 P.2d 554, 555 (Alaska 1981)).  



                                                    - 8 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

whether  read  individually  or  together,  evince  an  intent  to  impose  a  duty  on  JPD  to  



                                                                                                           19 

protect the public by training officers not to consume alcohol to excess while off duty.                         



                 1.      Alaska Statute 18.65.130 does not impose on JPD an actionable  

                         tort duty to the public.  



                 The  superior  court  rejected  the  Tripps'  argument  that  AS  18.65.130,  

which establishes the policy of the Police Standards Council,20 imposed a duty of care  



on JPD to train officers against excessive off-duty alcohol consumption.   The Tripps  



acknowledge  that  AS 18.65.130  does  not explicitly direct  JPD  to take any particular  



action,   but   argue   that   all   police   officers   are   subject   to   its   statutory   training  



"requirement[s]."  They  argue that it is  therefore  reasonable to conclude that  CBJ's  



Drug-Free  Workplace  policy  and  Conduct  Rule  114  "implement  the  public  policy  



                                                                                                               

         19      We question whether the Drug-Free Workplace policy or the conduct rules  

count as "statutes" for purposes of the Mickelsen analysis.  These policies are internal  

personnel rules, not enacted legislation.  But we need not decide this question because  

these sources do not impose the duty the Tripps claim.    

        20       AS 18.65.130 provides:  



                 The  administration  of  criminal  justice  affects  the  health,  

                 safety, and welfare of the people of this state and requires  

                 education  and  training  of  a  professional  quality.    It  is  a  

                 primary   public   interest   that   applicants   meet   minimum  

                 standards for employment as police officers, probation and  

                 parole officers, and correctional officers, and that criminal  

                 justice education and training be made available to police  

                 officers,  probation  and  parole  officers,  and  correctional  

                 officers   serving   in   a   probationary   capacity   and   police  

                 officers,  probation  and  parole  officers,  and  correctional  

                 officers already in regular service.  It is of secondary public  

                 interest   to   encourage   the   establishment   of   preliminary  

                 training  programs  for  persons  seeking  to  become  police  

                 officers,  probation  and  parole  officers,  and  correctional  

                 officers.    Application  of  standards  for  employment  and  

                 making   education   and   training   available   for   municipal  

                 correctional officers is also in the public interest.  



                                                    - 9 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

directive  of  AS  18.65.130  to  educate  and  train  officers  for  'the  health,  safety,  and  



welfare  of  the  people  of  this  state.' "    Reading  AS  18.65.130  together  with  the  



workplace policy and conduct rule, the Tripps argue that the statute imposes a duty on  



JPD  to  provide  police  officers  with  specific  types  of  training  to  protect  the  public,  



including training to avoid consuming alcohol to excess while off duty.  We do not find  



this argument persuasive.    



                 The  Police  Standards  Council  exists  within  the  State's  Department  of  



                                                                                                           21 

Public Safety and is made up of law enforcement officials and members of the public.                            



Its  mission  includes  setting  employment  standards  for  peace  officers,  establishing  



training programs for them, and revoking the certificates of peace officers who violate  



                                                                                                     22 

the Council's standards (which precludes their further employment in the field).                         



                 Nothing in the text of the statutes governing the Council imposes a duty  



on JPD to train officers against excessive off-duty alcohol consumption.  The provision  



the Tripps rely on, AS 18.65.130, is the Council's general statement of policy, which  



states that "[i]t is a primary public interest that applicants meet minimum standards for  



employment as" peace officers and that "[t]he administration of criminal justice affects  



the health, safety, and welfare of the people of this state and requires education and  



training of a professional quality."  Other statutes governing the  Council, which the  



Tripps  do  not  discuss,  set  forth  in  more  detail  the  Council's  role  in  training  police  



                                                                                                               

        21       AS 18.65.140  (creating council); AS 18.65.150  (providing for council's  

composition).    

        22       See  AS  18.65.150  (detailing  composition  of  council);  AS  18.65.220  

(detailing  powers  of  council);  AS  18.65.230(a)  (requiring  council  to  establish  and  

maintain police training programs); AS  18.65.240(c) (giving council power to revoke  

police officer's certificate for not meeting standards).  



                                                   - 10 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

officers.23  None of these statutes impose duties on any entities besides  the Council.   



Nor do they impose a duty to train peace officers on the specific topic with which the  



Tripps are concerned.  The only specific topics of training mentioned in these statutes  

have  to  do  with  interacting  with  persons  with  disabilities,24  domestic  violence,  and  



                  25 

sexual assault.         



                 We have previously rejected the argument that broad policy language like  



that in AS 18.65.130  establishes a duty of care to protect the public in specific ways.   



In  Wongittilin v. State, the personal representative  of a child killed by a drunk driver  



argued that troopers were negligent in failing to arrest the driver on an outstanding  

warrant.26  To support the argument that the troopers had a duty to execute the arrest  



warrant, the plaintiff relied on AS  18.65.090, which provides that the "Department of  



Public  Safety  shall  assist  other  departments  of  the  state,  municipal,  and  federal  



governments in the enforcement of criminal laws and regulations pertaining to those  

departments."27  We rejected this argument.  We observed that a different statute gave  



troopers discretion whether to execute a warrant.28  As for AS 18.65.090, we reasoned  



that it "impose[d] a duty on the police to assist other governmental departments but not  



                                                                                                               

        23       See,  e.g.,  AS  18.65.220(3)   (giving  the  Council  power  to  establish  

"minimum  criminal  justice  curriculum  requirements"  for  training  peace  officers);  

AS  18.65.230(a) (requiring the Council to establish and maintain peace officer training  

programs "through those agencies and institutions the council considers appropriate");  

AS  18.65.240(a)  (requiring peace officer to complete program of basic training that  

includes instruction on domestic violence and sexual assault).   

        24       AS 18.65.220(3).   



        25       AS 18.65.240(a).    



        26       36 P.3d 678, 680p (Alaska 2001).  



        27       Id. at  681 n.11 (citing AS 18.65.090).  



        28       Id. at 681-82.  



                                                   - 11 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

a general duty to protect the public," and therefore no duty to arrest on an outstanding  



          29 

warrant.       



                 In the same vein, AS  18.65.130's general policy for the Council to ensure  



peace officers have sufficient training does not impose on individual law enforcement  



agencies a "general duty to protect the public" by training officers on particular topics,  



such as off-duty alcohol consumption.  Even if an actionable duty of care to provide  



training could be discerned in these statutes, it would apply only to the Council.    



                 We therefore conclude that  AS  18.65.130, by itself, does not impose a  



statutory duty of care to the public on JPD.  



                 2.      Neither CBJ's Drug-Free Workplace policy nor JPD Conduct  

                         Rule 114 impose on JPD a duty of care to protect the public.  



                 The  Tripps  argue  that  CBJ's  Drug-Free  Workplace  policy  and  JPD  



Conduct Rule 114, taken together, manifest a duty of care to the public that implements  



AS  18.65.130's broad policy directive.  To the extent the Drug-Free Workplace policy  



and Conduct Rule 114 impose actionable duties on JPD at all, they are limited duties  



that do not extend to the general public in the way the Tripps suggest.   



                 CBJ's  Drug-Free  Workplace  policy  prohibits  certain  conduct  by  city  



employees and provides that the "City and Borough is strongly committed to assisting  



employees in finding resources for drug and alcohol abuse treatment, counseling and  



rehabilitation."  The policy includes the following provision:  



                 The   City   and   Borough   shall   train   its   employees   and  

                 supervisors  in  alcohol  and  drug  abuse  problems  and  the  

                 effects of drug use in the work environment.  However, the  

                 use of alcohol or controlled substances in the workplace or  

                 reporting   for   work   under   the   influence   of   alcohol   or  

                 controlled substances will not be tolerated.   



                 JPD Conduct Rule 114 requires officers to refrain from consuming alcohol  



while off duty "to the extent that it results in intoxication to the point of obnoxious or  



                                                                                                              

        29       Id.  



                                                   - 12 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

offensive behavior which discredits them or the Department or renders the members  



unfit to report for their next regular tour of duty."   The Tripps argued to the superior  



court that Conduct Rule 114 expands the scope of the Drug-Free Workplace policy to  



apply  to  off-duty  conduct.    They  maintain  that  the  "work  environment"  extends  to  



officers' off-duty encounters with the public, so Bartlett was not "off duty" when the  



accident occurred, but merely "off shift."    



                 The "work environment" referred to in the Drug-Free Workplace policy  



cannot be reasonably interpreted to include an off-duty police officer driving on a public  



road in his personal vehicle, even when read in light of Conduct Rule 114.  Although  



the Tripps do not explicitly frame this as a scope of employment question on appeal,  



their argument is  in essence that whenever Bartlett was out in public, he was acting  



                                                               30 

within the scope of his employment.  We disagree.                    



                 When determining whether an employee's tortious conduct falls within  



                                                                                                         31 

the scope of his or her employment, we sometimes refer to the Restatement of Agency.                          



Section 228 of the Restatement (Second) of Agency provides:  



                 (1) Conduct of a servant is within the scope of employment  

                     if, but only if:  

                         (a) it is of the kind he is employed to perform;  

                         (b) it occurs substantially within the authorized time  

                             and space limits;  



                                                                                                             

        30       Whether Bartlett was acting within the scope of his employment when he  

injured Arlene Tripp is not dispositive because the Tripps seek to hold JPD directly  

liable  -  rather  than  vicariously  liable  -  for  negligently  training  and  supervising  

Bartlett.  See Lane v. City & Borough of Juneau, 421 P.3d 83, 93-94 (Alaska 2018)  

(analyzing   negligent   supervision   and   vicarious   liability   claims   separately   and  

explaining that employer is vicariously liable for employee's tort only when employee  

is acting within scope of employment).  But analyzing the issue through this lens is  

useful  for  resolving  whether  Conduct  Rule  114  modified  the  Drug-Free  Workplace  

policy in the manner the Tripps propose.  

        31       See  Williams v. Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co., 650 P.2d 343, 349  (Alaska  

1982).  



                                                  - 13 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

                         (c) it is actuated, at least in part, by a purpose to serve  

                             the master; and  

                         (d) if force is intentionally used by the servant against  

                             another, the use of force is not unexpectable by the  

                             master.  

                 (2) Conduct   of   a   servant   is   not   within   the   scope   of  

                     employment if it is different in kind from that authorized,  

                     far  beyond  the  authorized  time  or  space  limits,  or  too  

                                                                                [32] 

                     little actuated by a purpose to serve the master.                



Bartlett's conduct did not fall within the scope of his employment.  Police officers move  

about in public as part of their employment.33  But they are not always working, and  



when not working they are outside the "time limits" of their employment.  And an off- 



duty police officer driving his own vehicle is generally not doing so for the benefit of  



his or her employer.  Accordingly, the "work environment" described in the Drug-Free  



Workplace policy does not extend to off-shift, off-premises activity.  



                 When  the  extent  of  a  police  officer's  "work  environment"  is  properly  



defined, the purpose of the Drug-Free Workplace policy can be discerned.  The purpose  



of the policy is to protect other employees and members of the public interacting with  



officers in their professional capacity.  It is not to protect members of the general public  



who may encounter off-duty officers living their private lives.    



                 Conduct Rule 114 is not for the purpose of protecting the general public  



either, contrary to what the Tripps argue.  The rule identifies the harms that result from  



officers drinking to excess while off duty:  discrediting officers "or the Department, or  



render[ing]  the  [officers]  unfit  to  report  for  their  next  regular  tour  of  duty."    This  



description of consequences the rule is designed to prevent shows who and what the  



rule is meant to protect - JPD's reputation within the community, and those who rely  



                                                                                                               

        32       RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF AGENCY § 228 (AM. L. INST .  1958).  



        33       See,  e.g.,  JPD  REGULATIONS  OPERATIONS  MANUAL  ch.  4.000  (2018),  

https://public.powerdms.com/JUNEAUAK/tree/documents/751524                             (detailing     patrol  

functions of JPD officers).  



                                                   - 14 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

on the work that police officers do.  The conduct rule does not reflect an intent to create  



a general duty to protect members of the public from harms that off-duty officers might  



cause due to intoxication.  As our decision in Wongittilin shows, a limited statutory duty  



                                                                                                          34 

to a specific class of people does not establish a generalized duty to protect the public.                    



                 For these reasons we conclude that the Drug-Free Workplace policy and  



Conduct Rule 114, whether considered individually or together, impose no duty on JPD  



to protect the general public from harms resulting from officers' excessive consumption  



of alcohol while off duty.  



                 3.      JPD  did not have a statutory duty to train Officer Malone to  

                         report Bartlett's conduct.  



                 The Tripps argue that JPD had a duty to train Bartlett's romantic partner  



at  the  time  of  the  accident,  fellow  JPD  officer  Hannah  Malone,  to  report  Bartlett's  



conduct.    But  the  Tripps  do  not  identify  a  specific  statute,  conduct  rule,  or  policy  



requiring officers to report their colleagues' excessive off-duty consumption of alcohol.   



And given our conclusion that no statute imposes a duty on JPD to train officers against  



excessive off-duty alcohol consumption, we see no statutory basis for imposing a duty  



on JPD to train other officers to report their colleagues for violating personnel rules  



related to alcohol consumption.    



        B.       Precedent Does Not Establish A Duty Of Care To The Public Under  

                 These Circumstances.  



                 If no statute imposes a duty of care, we then determine "if the current case  

falls in the class of cases controlled by existing precedent."35  The Tripps argue that a  



class of cases involving voluntary assumption of a duty controls their case.    



                                                                                                              

        34       See  Wongittilin v. State, 36 P.3d 678, 682 n.16 (Alaska 2001).  



        35       Est. of Mickelsen ex rel. Mickelsen v. N.- Wend Foods, Inc., 274 P.3d 1193,  

1199 (Alaska 2012).  



                                                   - 15 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

                 "It  is  ancient  learning  that  one  who  assumes  to  act,  even  though  

gratuitously, may thereby become subject to the duty of acting carefully  . . . ."36   In  



Williams v. Municipality of Anchorage, an employee of the Port of Anchorage lent a  

tug boat crew a ladder in order to access the dock.37  The ladder collapsed the next day,  



causing a crewmember to fall and sustain serious injury.38  The crewmember sued the  



Municipality on strict liability and negligence theories.39  On appeal we concluded that  



the Municipality was not obligated to provide the crewmember with the ladder, but  



"having undertaken to provide a ladder, it was under a duty to exercise some degree of  

care  for  the  safety  of  those  using  the  same."40    Similarly,  in  State,  Department  of  



Transportation v. Miller, we concluded that the State owed a pilot a duty of care when  



it voluntarily installed windsocks at an airstrip but failed to warn pilots when they fell  

into disrepair.41  No law obligated the State to install the windsocks.42  But by doing so  



voluntarily "and inducing pilots to rely on them for safety, the State undertook a duty  



                                                                                    43 

to maintain the windsocks, or warn if they were malfunctioning."                        



                 The Tripps analogize JPD's implementation of Conduct Rule 114 to the  



ladder in  Williams and windsocks in Miller .  They argue that by "gratuitously making  



Rule 114 a condition of employment," JPD assumed a duty to ensure that officers did  



not drink to excess while off duty.    



                                                                                                                 

        36       Williams  v.  Mun.  of  Anchorage,  633  P.2d  248,  251  (Alaska  1981)  

(alterations in original) (quoting Adams v. State , 555 P.2d 235, 240 (Alaska 1976)).  

        37       Id. at 249-50.  



        38       Id. at 250.  



        39       Id.  



        40       Id. at 251.  



        41       145 P.3d 521, 523-24, 533 (Alaska 2006).  



         42      Id. at 533.  



        43       Id.  



                                                    - 16 -                                                 7739  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

                 But this case is different.  Unlike the political subdivisions in  Williams  



and Miller , JPD did not "under[take] to render a 'service' " to the Tripps or the general  

public when it adopted conduct rules for its police officers.44  Implementing a personnel  



policy is not the same as providing a necessary tool or safety device to a third party.   



JPD's implementation of the Drug-Free Workplace policy and Conduct Rule 114  did  



not induce members of the general public like the Tripps to rely on JPD to protect them  



from intoxicated off-duty police officers driving on public roads.  In both  Williams and  



Miller we emphasized that a duty of care to the plaintiffs arose only after the defendants  



provided  them  with  some  sort  of  aid,  thereby  inducing  them  "to  rely  on  them  for  

safety."45  In contrast, it is not plausible that the Tripps relied on JPD's enforcement of  



its personnel rules to keep them safe while driving. These rules are internal policies of  



which the general public would have no reason to be aware.  

                 The Tripps cite to  City  of Seward v. Afognak Logging46  in arguing that  



even if the defendant's action or inaction is not a "service" to the plaintiff, it still must  



be performed without negligence.  In that case a logging company had contracted with  

the city to provide heavy equipment services.47  It  sued the city in tort after one of its  



                                                                                                           48 

bulldozers was damaged by floodwaters while under the direction of city personnel.                              



The city employee had been at the scene of the flood for some time "and specifically  



requested  [the  contractor]  to  operate  his  bulldozer  in  the  area . . .,  where  [the  city  

employee] knew or should have known the pavement had been washed away."49  We  



affirmed the superior court's ruling that the city had a duty to warn the contractor that  



                                                                                                               

         44      Williams, 633 P.3d at 251.  



         45      Miller , 145 P.3d at 533; see  Williams, 633 P.3d at 251.  



         46      31 P.3d 780 (Alaska 2001).  



         47      See id. at 782.  



         48      See id. at 781-82.   



         49      Id. at 784.  



                                                   - 17 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

road conditions were hazardous, emphasizing that we have "long recognized that a duty  



of reasonable care generally arises when a person undertakes an action," even if the  



                                                                     50 

person was under no obligation to act in the first place.                



                 The Tripps place too much emphasis on the fact that we did not use the  



term "service" to refer to the city's voluntary undertaking in Afognak Logging .  One of  



the sources of the "long[-]recognized" duty in Afognak Logging is section 324A of the  



Restatement  (Second)  of  Torts,  which  provides  that  liability  attaches  when  one  



voluntarily  undertakes  "to  render  services  to  another  which  he  should  recognize  as  

necessary for the protection of a third person ."51  Like  Williams and Miller , Afognak  



Logging demonstrates that when one party acts in a way that induces another to depend  



on the actor for safety, the actor has a duty to act with reasonable care.  But as explained  



above,  a  government  agency's  adoption  of  a  Drug-Free  Workplace  policy  and  an  



employee conduct rule against embarrassing levels of intoxication does not induce the  



                                                              52 

general public to rely on these rules for its safety.              



                                                                                                               

         50      Id. at 784-85.  



         51      RESTATEMENT   (SECOND)             OF   TORTS   §   324A   (AM.   L.   INST .        1965)  

(emphasis added).  In Afognak Logging we cited to Moloso v. State, quoting Hammond  

v. Bechtel Inc., as support for the assertion that we have long recognized the concept of  

voluntary assumption of duty.  Afognak Logging , 31 P.3d at 784 n.11 (quoting Moloso  

v. State, 644 P.2d 205, 212 (Alaska 1982)).  In Hammond we cited section 324A of the  

Restatement (Second) as a source of this duty.  See Hammond v. Bechtel, Inc., 606 P.2d  

1269, 1277 n.15 (Alaska 1980).  

         52      The Tripps also argue that the superior court's reliance on the Restatement  

requires us to reverse its decision because the court must take all allegations in the  

complaint as true and provable for purposes of a motion to dismiss.  But the existence  

and extent of a duty of care are questions of law.  Hurn v. Greenway, 293 P.3d 480, 483  

(Alaska  2013).    The  superior  court  properly  relied  on  the  Restatement  and  cases  

applying its rules.   



                                                   - 18 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

                 We conclude that the superior court correctly determined that precedent  



does not impose a duty of care to train employees against excessive off-duty alcohol  



consumption.  



         C.      Public  Policy  Does  Not  Support  A  Duty  Of  Care  Under  These  

                 Circumstances.  



                 When  there  is  no  statutory  or  common  law  duty  of  care,  we  consider  

whether public policy supports a duty of care in the circumstances.53  To do so we apply  



the factors described in D.S.W. v. Fairbanks North Star Borough School District :  



                 The  foreseeability  of  harm  to  the  plaintiff,  the  degree  of  

                 certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, the closeness of  

                 the  connection  between  the  defendant's  conduct  and  the  

                 injury suffered, the moral blame attached to the defendant's  

                 conduct, the policy of preventing future harm, the extent of  

                 the   burden   to   the   defendant   and   consequences   to   the  

                 community   of   imposing   a   duty   to   exercise   care   with  

                 resulting liability for breach, and the availability, cost and  

                                                                           [54] 

                 prevalence of insurance for the risk involved.                  



                 We  conclude  that  the  foreseeability,  closeness  of  connection,  moral  



blame,  the  policy  of  preventing  future  harm,  and  the  burden-versus-consequences  



factors  weigh  against  recognizing  a  duty.    The  only  factor  that  weighs  in  favor  of  



recognizing a duty of care is the certainty-of-injury factor.  And the parties agree that  



the availability of insurance for the risks at issue is unknown,  so this factor does not  



weigh in favor of or against recognizing a duty.  On balance, the D.S.W. factors do not  

support a duty of care in this instance.55  



                                                                                                                 

         53      Est. of Mickelsen ex rel. Mickelsen v. N- Wend Foods, Inc., 274 P.3d 1193,  

1199 (Alaska 2012).  

         54      628 P.2d 554, 555 (Alaska 1981)  (quoting Peter W. v. S.F.  Unified Sch.  

Dist., 131 Cal. Rptr. 854, 859-60 (Cal. App. 1976)).  

         55      The  Tripps  argue  that  if  AS  18.65.130  is  a  "broad  policy  directive"  

emphasizing the importance of police training, then the superior court erred "by failing  

  



                                                    - 19 -                                                 7739  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                 1.      Foreseeability  



                 The single most important criterion in determining whether to impose a  

duty  of  care  upon  a  particular  defendant  is  foreseeability.56    "The  general  rule  of  



negligence  law  is  that  a  defendant  owes  a  duty  of  care  'to  all  persons  who  are  



foreseeably endangered by his conduct, with respect to all risks which make the conduct  

unreasonably dangerous.' "57  "[T]here can be no duty where the harm is unforeseeable,  



but foreseeability alone is insufficient to establish a duty if the burden of taking care or  

the  effect  on  society  is  too  harsh."58    The  superior  court  reasoned  that  it  was  not  



foreseeable  that  JPD's  failure  to  train  its  officers  against  excessive  consumption  of  



alcohol while off duty would lead a JPD employee to drive drunk.    



                 We agree with the superior court's conclusion.  Training police officers  



on the dangers of excessive alcohol consumption is unlikely to affect whether officers  



drive drunk while off duty.  Officers are well aware that this conduct is illegal and  

carries grave consequences.59   Police officers are trained to enforce the law and are  



                                                                                                             



to analyze and weigh the failure to observe that policy along with the other D.S.W.  

factors in the third of the three-step process set out in Mickelsen."  The general public  

interest in well-trained police officers that is articulated in AS 18.65.130 has no bearing  

on whether public policy favors a duty to train in the specific circumstances of this case.  

        56      Div. of Corr., Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs. v. Neakok , 721 P.2d 1121,  

1125 (Alaska 1986), overruled on other grounds by  State, Dep't of Corr. v. Cowles,  

151 P.3d 353 (Alaska 2006).  

        57      Id. at 1125-26 (quoting Rodriguez v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 525 P.2d 669,  

680 (Cal. 1974)).  

        58      Hurn v. Greenway, 293 P.3d 480, 487 (Alaska 2013) (citing P.G. v. State,  

Dep 't of Health & Hum. Servs., Div. of Fam. & Youth Servs., 4 P.3d 326, 333 (Alaska  

2000); Neakok, 721 P.2d at 1127; State v. Guinn, 555 P.2d 530, 536 (Alaska 1976);  

Kooly v. State, 958 P.2d 1106, 1108 (Alaska 1998); Schumacher v. City & Borough of  

Yakutat, 946 P.2d 1255, 1257 (Alaska 1997); Trapp v. State, Off. of Pub. Advoc., 112  

P.3d 668, 675 (Alaska 2005)).  

        59       See AS 28.35.030; AS 11.41.220(a)(1)(B).  



                                                  - 20 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

therefore expected to know what the law is.60  It is not foreseeable that a lack of training  



on excessive alcohol consumption will make officers more likely to drive drunk.    



                 The Tripps challenge this conclusion, but we  are not persuaded.  First,  



they  maintain  that  the  court  should  have  considered  that  JPD  failed  to  conduct  a  



background  check  on  Bartlett  before  hiring  him,  which  prevented  it  from  knowing  



whether Bartlett could comply with Conduct Rule 114.  But whether JPD conducted a  



background check on Bartlett is irrelevant because the Tripps abandoned the negligent  



hiring claim.    



                 Second, they argue that if it were not foreseeable that an off-duty officer  



might drive while under the influence, then Conduct Rule 114 would serve no purpose.   



But the conduct rule can serve the purpose of being a basis for discipline even if JPD  



never trains officers on how to comply with its straightforward mandate.    



                 Third, the Tripps assert that the court should have considered that JPD  



failed to train Malone on a duty to report Bartlett's conduct.  The superior court did not  



address whether failure to train Malone to report Bartlett made it more foreseeable that  



Bartlett  would  drive  drunk.    But  Malone,  a  police  officer  like  Bartlett,  would  have  



known that Bartlett's conduct was against the law.  Officers may fail to report their  



colleagues' conduct for a variety of reasons, including the desire to protect each other  



from consequences.  This interpersonal dynamic makes it doubtful that training would  



compel such an officer to report the fellow officer's improper conduct.   



                 In sum, the lack of training about excessive alcohol consumption did not  



make it foreseeable that Bartlett would injure Tripp while driving under the influence.   



                                                                                                             

        60       See  City of Nome v. Ailak, 570 P.2d 162, 172  (Alaska 1977)  ("The law  

does not expect police officers to be  sophisticated constitutional or criminal lawyers,  

but  because  they  are  charged  with  the  responsibility  of  enforcing  the  law,  it  is  not  

unreasonable to expect them to have some knowledge of it." (quoting  Glasson v. City  

of Louisville, 518 F.2d 899, 910 (6th Cir. 1975), overruled on other grounds by Bible  

Believers v. Wayne Cnty., Mich., 805 F.3d 228, 252 (6th Cir. 2015))).  



                                                   - 21 -                                              7739  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

This   factor   therefore   weighs   against   recognizing   a   duty   of   care   under   these  



circumstances.  



                 2.      Certainty of injury  



                 The parties do not dispute that the superior court correctly determined the  



Tripps' injuries are presumed certain for the sake of JPD's motion to dismiss.  We agree  



and conclude that this factor weighs in favor of recognizing a duty.    



                 We adopted the D.S.W. factors from a California case in which a plaintiff  



with a reading disability alleged that he could not read or write as a result of a school  

district's negligent treatment of his disability.61  The California court determined that  



there was "no reasonable 'degree of certainty that . . . plaintiff suffered injury' within  



the meaning of the law of negligence, and no such perceptible 'connection between the  



defendant's conduct and the injury suffered,' as alleged, which would establish a causal  

link between them within the same meaning."62  The court reasoned that, "[u]nlike the  



activity of the highway or the marketplace, classroom methodology affords no readily  



acceptable standards of care, or cause, or injury," noting that a child's failure to achieve  



literacy could be attributable to any number of factors, including those unrelated to "the  

formal  teaching  process."63    The  court's  reasoning  suggests  that  the  inquiry  into  



certainty of injury turns on whether the injury alleged is one that can be reasonably  



                                                                                                        64 

ascertained and attributed to the allegedly tortious conduct using objective criteria.                      



                 The Tripps' injuries meet this standard, unlike the plaintiff's injuries in  



the  California  case.    The  Tripps  alleged  that  Arlene  suffered  physical  and  mental  



                                                                                                               

        61       See D.S.W. v. Fairbanks N. Star Borough Sch. Dist., 628 P.2d 554, 555  

(Alaska 1981) (discussing Peter W. v. S. F.  Unified Sch. Dist., 131 Cal. Rptr. 854, 859- 

61 (Cal. App. 1976)).  

        62       Peter W., 131 Cal. Rptr. at 861  (citation omitted)  (quoting Rowland v.  

Christian, 443 P.2d 561, 564 (Cal. 1968)).  

        63       Id. at 860-61.  



        64       See id.  



                                                   - 22 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

injuries as a result of the crash and that her husband suffered loss of consortium and  



society, among other similar injuries, "all to the detriment of their marital relationship."   



Unlike the plaintiff's injuries in the California case, which could have been "influenced  

by a host of factors which affect the pupil subjectively,"65 the Tripps' injuries can be  



defined, measured, and linked to Bartlett's unlawful conduct using objective criteria.  



                 We conclude that this factor weighs in favor of recognizing a duty of care  



under  these  circumstances.    But  because  of  the  remote  connection  between  JPD's  



training and Bartlett's intoxicated driving, the persuasive force of this factor is limited.  



                 3.       Closeness   of   connection   between   JPD's   conduct   and   the  

                          Tripps' injuries  



                 The superior court determined that the connection between JPD's alleged  



failure to train and supervise Bartlett and the Tripps' injuries was too remote to impose  



a duty of care.  The court found the connection "distant because the chain of causation  



involves  multiple  steps,  including  [JPD]'s  failure  to  train  and  supervise,  Officer  



Malone's failure to report Mr. Bartlett, [JPD]'s failure to exercise diligence in learning  



about Mr.  Bartlett's  conditions, Mr.  Bartlett's  own  decision  to drink  to  excess  then  



operate a vehicle, and the collision itself."   The Tripps argue that the superior court  



erred because correcting any of these failures could have prevented their injuries.  We  



agree with the superior court that the causal connection between JPD's training and the  



Tripps' injuries is too remote to support a duty of care.  



                 Under  the  "closeness  of  connection"  factor  we  consider  whether  the  



allegedly tortious conduct at issue is sufficiently related to the injury alleged to support  

imposing a duty on the defendant.66  In Hawks v. State, Department of Public Safety,  



                                                                                                                 

         65      Id. at 861.  



         66      See, e.g., Bolieu v. Sisters of Providence in Wash., 953 P.2d 1233, 1233,  

1237  (Alaska  1998)  (examining  whether  manner  in  which  plaintiffs  -  who  were  

spouses of nursing assistants at defendant health care facility - became  infected with  

  



                                                    - 23 -                                                 7739  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

we weighed the D.S.W.  factors to determine whether the State owed  the mother of a  

murder  victim  a  duty  of  care  to  more  quickly  identify  the  victim's  remains.67    We  



concluded  that  public  policy  weighed  against  imposing  a  duty,  in  part  because  the  

connection between the State's conduct and the mother's injury was too remote.68  We  



determined that the mother's injury was "most closely connected" to the conduct of the  



                                                                                 69 

daughter's killer, "not the State's handling of the investigation."                   



                 The same logic applies here.  Bartlett's decision to knowingly break the  



law was a substantial intervening factor causing the Tripps' injuries.  Bartlett not only  



knew that operating his vehicle after drinking excessively was unlawful; he knew that  



doing so could have great repercussions.  Yet he decided to drive with a blood alcohol  



content three times the legal limit.   As in Hawks, the injuries in this case  are  "most  



closely connected" to  an individual's criminal conduct.  The superior court correctly  



observed that the causal connection between JPD's conduct and the Tripps' injuries is  



too attenuated to impose a duty of care on JPD in this instance.  



                 4.      Moral blame  



                 The superior court ruled that although "the failure to train and supervise  



employees as it relates to alcohol use is less blameworthy than criminal conduct such  



as Mr. Bartlett's driving while intoxicated, . . . some moral blameworthiness certainly  



attaches to an employe[r]'s failure to train and supervise."  The Tripps argue that the  



court erred by concluding that this factor counseled "slightly against imposing a duty"  



in  light  of  its  reasoning.    We  agree  with  the  superior  court  that  the  relative  moral  



blameworthiness in this case disfavors recognizing a duty.  



                                                                                                               



staph  infection  was  closely  connected  enough  to  defendant's  conduct  to  support  

imposing duty of care).  

        67       908 P.2d 1013, 1014-1016 (Alaska 1995).  



        68       Id. at 1016-17.  



        69       Id. at 1016.  



                                                   - 24 -                                                7739  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

                 JPD's  blameworthiness  in  this  case  is  slight.  Our  cases  involving  



voluntary assumption of duty provide a helpful analogy.  Those cases show that when  



an actor induces others to rely on the actor for safety, the actor has a legal duty to act  

carefully.70    This  rule  reflects  a  moral  judgement  that  a  person  has  a  responsibility  



toward those induced to trust the person with their safety.  But members of the public  



do not rely for their safety while driving on employers training employees not to drink  



and drive.  Instead, society relies on civil and criminal penalties to discourage others  



                                                 71 

from driving while under the influence.              



                 The moral blame in this case lies squarely with Bartlett.   Therefore this  



factor weighs against recognizing a duty of care on JPD's part.  



                 5.      Policy of preventing future harm  



                 The superior court determined that "[f]uture harm from negligent training  



and supervision would likely be curbed, at least to some extent, if a duty were imposed  



here," but given "the lack of foreseeability and the distant connection between [JPD]'s  



conduct and the harm caused," the effects of imposing such a duty would be limited.   



                 The policy of preventing future harm weighs against a duty of care in these  



circumstances.  The marginal public safety benefit of training officers not to consume  



alcohol to excess is likely to be scant because officers already know the dangers and  



consequences  of  driving  while  under  the  influence.    More  training  is  unlikely  to  



meaningfully  influence  police  officers'  decision  whether  to  drink  and  drive.    We  



conclude that this factor does not support imposing a duty of care on JPD.  



                                                                                                              

         70      See  Williams v. Mun.  of Anchorage, 633 P.2d 248, 251  (Alaska 1981);  

State, Dep't of Transp. v. Miller ,  145 P.3d 521, 533 (Alaska 2006); City of Seward v.  

Afognak Logging , 31 P.3d 780, 784 (Alaska 2001).  

         71      See, e.g., AS 28.35.030; AS 11.41.220(a)(1)(B).  



                                                   - 25 -                                               7739  


----------------------- Page 26-----------------------

               6.     Burden on JPD and consequences for the community  



               The   superior   court   determined   that   imposing   a   duty   under   these  



circumstances would be a significant burden on JPD because it would likely lead to  



substantial increases in litigation costs.  The court reasoned that the class of parties to  



whom the duty would be owed is large "[b]ecause potential plaintiffs include anyone  



driving  on  a  public  road  (or  related  to  someone  doing  so)."    And  because  it  was  



uncertain that imposing a duty would lead to "better supervised and trained employees  



who are less likely to violate policies," the court concluded that this factor weighed  



against doing so.    



               The Tripps argue that the benefits of imposing a duty of care could justify  



the inconvenience.  They assert that imposing a financial burden on JPD would likely  



lead to more intensive background checks and more personnel training on the conduct  



rules, which might afford the community "significant" protection.  They also argue that  



the court erred because it cannot be true that the burden would be significant while the  



effects of the burden would be limited.    



               The Tripps' arguments are not persuasive.  First, whether imposing a duty  



of care on employers to train against off-duty alcohol consumption would incentivize  



employers  to  perform  more  thorough  background  checks  and  therefore  hire  safer  



employees is entirely speculative.  And even if this effect materialized, those people not  



hired  by  JPD  or  other  employers  would  still  be  able  to  drink  and  drive  while  not  



working.  It is not clear how imposing this duty would make the roads safer.  



               Finally,  imposing on JPD  the duty  the  Tripps  advocate for  could have  



unfavorable consequences for other employers and public policy more generally.  There  



is  no  obvious  reason  why  such  a  duty  would  be  limited  to  police  departments  or  



municipalities.  And the burden would not be limited to litigation costs.  Imposing the  



duty  the  Tripps  advocate  for  would  incentivize  employers  to  adopt  intrusive  and  



potentially draconian practices toward their employees.  We decline to push employers  



down that road.   



                                             - 26 -                                         7739  


----------------------- Page 27-----------------------

                This factor weighs against recognizing the duty the Tripps advocate for.  



                7.      Availability of insurance 



                The parties do not dispute that availability of insurance for the risks in 



question  is  unknown.    Because  we  conclude  that  the  other  factors  weigh  against  



recognizing  a  duty  in  this  case,  we  need  not  inquire  further  into  the  availability  of  



insurance.  



        D.      The Superior Court Properly Dismissed The Tripps' Lawsuit. 



                Because the superior court correctly ruled that JPD did not owe the Tripps 



                                                                  72 

a duty of care, it did not err by dismissing their lawsuit.           



        CONCLUSION  



                For  the  foregoing  reasons,  we  AFFIRM  the  judgement  of  the  superior  



court. 



        72      See Est. of Mickelsen ex rel. Mickelsen v. N.- Wend Foods, Inc., 274 P.3d  

1193, 1197 (Alaska 2012).  



                                                - 27 -                                             7739  

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