DE VILLERS v. County of San Diego

67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 253, 156 Cal. App. 4th 238
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 2007
DocketD048974
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 253 (DE VILLERS v. County of San Diego) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DE VILLERS v. County of San Diego, 67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 253, 156 Cal. App. 4th 238 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*243 Opinion

McDonald, Acting P. J.

Rossum (Rossum) took toxic materials from her employer, the County of San Diego (County), and used them to murder her husband, Greg de Villers (de Villers). The trial court ruled County could be liable in wrongful death damages for de Villers’s death. The jury awarded damages against County. We reverse.

I

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. The Relationship Between Rossum and de Villers

Rossum became addicted to methamphetamine during high school. She continued to use methamphetamine periodically during college. In December 1994, while in college, Rossum left school without telling her parents, and went to San Diego to hide a relapse into methamphetamine use. At that time, she met de Villers, they became lovers, and Rossum moved into de Villers’s apartment.

De Villers helped Rossum quit using methamphetamine, and in the fall of 1995 she reenrolled in college, majoring in chemistry. She avoided drug use and graduated with honors in May 2000. Rossum married de Villers in June 1999.

B. Rossum’s Employment at the Office of the Medical Examiner

In 1997, while still in college, Rossum was employed as a student worker at County’s office of the medical examiner (OME). At that time, she had not used drugs for approximately two years. In 1997, OME had no policy requiring applicants to pass a drug or alcohol test, and Rossum’s employment application did not inquire about prior drug or alcohol use or criminal history.

In March 2000, OME promoted Rossum from a student worker to a permanent position as a Toxicologist I. A toxicologist analyzes body fluids for the purpose of determining whether drugs are present. At the time OME promoted Rossum, OME was unaware of her earlier drug history or juvenile record. 1 OME did not conduct a drug test or a background check on Rossum, *244 although County’s policy at that time required all OME applicants to pass a drug and alcohol test and the job description for toxicologist specified the applicant was required to undergo a law enforcement background investigation. Janet Enright, the administrative services manager for OME, thought Rossum should have been drug tested but was told by County’s human resources department that Rossum was not required to be tested because she already worked at OME. Although Rossum signed a waiver agreeing to be tested, OME never arranged for the tests. However, there was no evidence suggesting Rossum had relapsed into drug use at the time she applied for and received the promotion, and neither her physical appearance nor her job performance suggested she had resumed using methamphetamine. Instead, the evidence suggested she did not resume her drug use until late September 2000.

Enright also thought all employees were required to undergo a background check, and asked Mr. Ambom (OME’s operations administrator) whether Rossum should undergo a background check. Ambom told Enright it would be unnecessary. Although Ambom decided in June 2000 to have the sheriff’s department conduct background checks on all employees hired in 2000, and Enright secured a waiver from Rossum permitting a background check, Ambom elected not to conduct a background check on Rossum. However, after de Villers was murdered, Ambom conducted a background check on Rossum and it disclosed no offenses.

C. The Robertson/Rossum Affair

Michael Robertson (Robertson) began working at OME in the spring of 2000. Robertson was Rossum’s supervisor. By May 2000 coworkers suspected he and Rossum were involved in an affair and complained to Enright, who relayed the complaints to Ambom. However, when Ambom questioned some coworkers, they denied seeing the two hugging or kissing. Ambom also asked Robertson (on two occasions) whether he was involved with Rossum, and Robertson denied it. Ambom did not ask Rossum about the rumors or examine the e-mails between Rossum and Robertson.

By October 2000, Rossum had relapsed into methamphetamine use. 2 Robertson became aware of her renewed usage but, contrary to County’s policy requiring supervisors to report any workplace drag use, did not report Rossum’s renewed usage of drags.

*245 D. de Villers’s Death

On Thursday November 2, 2000, de Villers confronted Rossum. He told her he suspected she was using drugs and having an affair with Robertson, and demanded she quit her job at OME. He threatened to reveal her drug use and her affair with Robertson to OME if she refused to quit her job. However, when Rossum and de Villers visited with her parents the following night, the parents did not notice anything to suggest Rossum had relapsed into drug use.

On Monday, November 6, at 9:22 p.m., Rossum called 911 and told the operator de Villers had not been feeling well and that he had suddenly stopped breathing. Paramedics arrived minutes later and found de Villers’s body on the floor next to his bed. Fresh-looking red rose petals were strewn around his body. The paramedics transported de Villers to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 10:19 p.m. {People v. Rossum (June 13, 2005, D041343) [nonpub. opn.].)

E. The Investigation

San Diego County Medical Examiner, Dr. Brian Blackboume, performed an autopsy on de Villers’s body the day after his death. He concluded de Villers had been dead for at “least an hour or so” by the time paramedics arrived, and that de Villers had been “stuporous or semi-conscious or comatose” for a minimum of six to 12 hours prior to his death. Blackboume also found needle marks on de Villers’s body. {People v. Rossum, supra, D041343.) However, neither the autopsy nor the initial toxicology tests 3 showed the cause of his death.

Based on subsequent toxicology results of de Villers’s body fluids, Blackboume determined de Villers had died of acute fentanyl intoxication. The toxicology results also showed de Villers had oxycodone and clonazepam in his system at the time of his death.

Shortly thereafter, an audit was conducted at OME for the purpose of determining whether any fentanyl was missing from its supply. Fifteen fentanyl patches impounded in three different cases and the contents of a vial *246 of the fentanyl standard 4 were missing from OME. Rossum had been involved in all three cases in question and had logged in the fentanyl standard. Robertson also had authorized access to all drugs stored at OME. Robertson and Rossum, who both knew OME did not routinely test for fentanyl, had traveled together in October 2000 to attend a conference of forensic toxicologists at which they received a copy of a journal that included a paper discussing 25 deaths caused by fentanyl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Cal. Rptr. 3d 253, 156 Cal. App. 4th 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-villers-v-county-of-san-diego-calctapp-2007.