Shirley BRENNER, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
CITY OF EL CAJON, Defendant and Respondent.
Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division One
*318 Salim Khawaja, San Diego, CA, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Daley & Heft, Robert W. Brockman Jr., and Scott E. Patterson, Solana Beach, CA, for Defendant-Respondent.
*317 McDONALD, J.
Appellant Shirley Brenner was injured when struck by a car as she was walking across Chase Avenue in the City of El Cajon (City). Brenner sued City and, after demurrers were sustained to her original and first amended complaints, filed a second amended complaint alleging City was liable for a dangerous condition on public property. City's demurrer to Brenner's second amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend. Brenner asserts her second amended complaint adequately pleads facts showing a dangerous condition of public property; alternatively, she asserts it was an abuse of discretion to refuse her the opportunity to again amend her complaint.
I
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On August 21, 2000, Brenner was walking across Chase Avenue near its intersection with Estes Street in City. While crossing the street, she was struck by a car and suffered significant injuries.
A. The Prior Iterations of the Complaint
Brenner's original complaint as against City pleaded a single claim for negligence. She alleged that City negligently "designed, maintained, serviced, controlled, managed, monitored, created and operated" its streets; and City knew or should have known of the dangerous conditions on Chase Avenue, but failed to take steps to make the condition safe because it negligently did not "install safety devices to control the automobile traffic on Chase Avenue" or "take steps to prevent harm and injury to the public." City demurred to the complaint, arguing a general negligence *319 claim does not lie against a public entity. City also argued that, to the extent Brenner's complaint was construed as attempting to state a statutory claim under Government Code section 835[1] for a dangerous condition of public property based on City's not installing safety devices to control the automobile traffic on Chase Avenue, she failed to state facts sufficient to show a dangerous condition under section 830.4. The court sustained City's demurrer but granted Brenner leave to amend her complaint, cautioning that she should evaluate whether she could allege a viable claim under section 835.
Brenner then amended her complaint. Although she retitled her claim against City as "Dangerous Condition," her reformulated claim essentially realleged the allegations contained in her original negligence claim, adding only that City had "actual knowledge ... of the dangerous condition, or changed conditions [that] made the road [a] dangerous condition, and that created a substantial risk or unreasonable risk" on Chase Avenue, and City had been in possession of that knowledge for "several years." City again demurred, arguing the complaint's only alleged dangerous condition of public property was the City's failure to install safety control devices for the street, which under section 830.4 is deemed not to be a dangerous condition.
Brenner opposed the demurrer, asserting the Chase/Estes intersection constituted a dangerous condition. Brenner noted there was a bus stop, a park and a convenience store at the intersection that resulted in high pedestrian traffic across the intersection; notwithstanding these facts, City did not install safety devices at the intersection. The court's tentative ruling was to sustain the demurrer and deny Brenner leave to amend because the only allegation of a dangerous condition was City's failure to install safety devices to control traffic at the intersection. After oral argument, the court sustained the demurrer but again gave Brenner leave to amend her complaint.
B. Second Amended Complaint
Brenner's second amended complaint reasserted the set of allegations contained in her first amended complaint, but added City knew or should have known that, because of the attraction created by two bus stops, a park, a convenience store and a middle school at or near the Chase/Estes intersection, many pedestrians would be attracted to the area and would use the intersection to cross Chase Avenue. Brenner alleged that City was aware of the high number of pedestrians using the street and intersection, as well as the increased volume and speed of cars traveling on Chase Avenue and physical changes made to Chase Avenue[2] that posed risks to pedestrians; however, City did not take steps to make the intersection safe for pedestrians because it "failed to install traffic [regulatory] devices, traffic safety devices, traffic control devices, signs or traffic signs, or take any steps to manage, control, or reduce the automobile traffic flow or speed on Chase Avenue and/or ... failed to take steps to prevent increased risk of harm and injury to the pedestrians...."
*320 City again demurred, noting Brenner still had not alleged any aspect or condition of the roadway itself that was dangerous and instead merely reiterated her claims that it was the absence of traffic safety or control devices that was the dangerous condition for which City was liable. City pointed out that under sections 830.4 and 830.8, as well as controlling case law (Chowdhury v. City of Los Angeles (1995)
The court sustained City's demurrer without leave to amend, and this appeal followed.
II
ANALYSIS
A. Governing Legal Principles
A public entity is not liable for an injury arising out of the alleged act or omission of the entity except as provided by statute. (§ 815.) Section 835 is the sole statutory basis for a claim imposing liability on a public entity based on the condition of public property. (Brown v. Poway Unified School Dist. (1993)
To state a cause of action against a public entity under section 835, a plaintiff must plead: (1) a dangerous condition existed on the public property at the time of the injury; (2) the condition proximately caused the injury; (3) the condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury sustained; and (4) the public entity had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition of the property in sufficient time to have taken measures to protect against it. (§ 835; Vedder v. County of Imperial (1974)
For purposes of this case, it is also important to note the Legislature has expressly provided that "[a] condition is not a dangerous condition within the meaning of this chapter merely because of the failure to provide regulatory traffic control *321 signals, stop signs, yield right-of-way signs, or speed restriction signs, as described by the Vehicle Code, or distinctive roadway markings as described in Section 21460 of the Vehicle Code." (§ 830.4.) Thus, the statutory scheme precludes a plaintiff from imposing liability on a public entity for creating a dangerous condition merely because it did not install the described traffic control devices. (Chowdhury v. City of Los Angeles, supra,
Because this action was dismissed at the pleading stage, we outline the rules for pleading a claim against a governmental entity. The limited and statutory nature of governmental liability mandates that claims against public entities be specifically pleaded. (Susman v. City of Los Angeles (1969)
B. The Trial Court Sustained City's Demurrer to Second Amended Complaint
Brenner's complaint, shorn of its generalized allegations and conclusions, cites three factors to support her claim of the dangerous condition of Chase Avenue. First, she alleges the expansion of Chase Avenue to a four-lane street resulted in an increase in the numbers of cars traveling the road and the speed at which they traveled. Second, she alleges an increased number of pedestrians cross Chase Avenue at or near the Chase/Estes intersection to patronize a park, two bus stops, a convenience store and a school in the area. Third, she alleges City did not install traffic regulation or safety devices to reduce the dangers to pedestrians posed by crossing Chase Avenue.
The first factor that the volume and speed of vehicular traffic on Chase Avenue increased after it was widened would not permit a finding of a dangerous condition, at least in the absence of some additional allegation that the physical characteristics of Chase Avenue created a substantial risk that a driver using due care while traveling along Chase Avenue would be unable *322 to stop for pedestrians who were using due care while crossing at the Chase/Estes intersection. (See Mittenhuber v. City of Redondo Beach, supra,
The second factor that there is a park, a convenience store, a school, and two bus stops at or near the Chase/Estes intersection and an increasing number of pedestrians cross Chase Avenue to patronize those facilities does not make Chase Avenue a dangerous condition (Mittenhuber v. City of Redondo Beach, supra,
In her reply brief on appeal, Brenner cites Bonanno v. Central Contra Costa Transit Authority (2003)
"Our decision here, we emphasize, does not concern the question whether the crosswalk ... was in fact an unsafe pedestrian route for crossing [the road], or even the broader question whether painted crosswalks at uncontrolled intersections are more dangerous than those at signal-controlled intersections. As the County, which controlled the intersection, settled with plaintiff before trial, our decision does not in any respect address the liability of a city or county for maintenance of an unsafe crosswalk. To be sure, plaintiff introduced evidence which the jury apparently found persuasive showing the DeNormandie crossing was more dangerous than that at Morello, in order to establish that CCCTA should have moved its bus stop to Morello. But the sufficiency of that evidence is not before this court. Our order limiting review, quoted earlier in this opinion, assumes the existence of a dangerous crosswalk, posing only the question whether a bus stop may be deemed dangerous because bus users, to reach the stop, must cross at that dangerous crosswalk." (Id. at pp. 146-147,132 Cal.Rptr.2d 341 ,65 P.3d 807 first, second and fourth italics added; third italics in original.)
Thus, Bonanno assumed the crossing was a dangerous condition; the precise question here is whether the Chase Avenue crossing was a dangerous condition. Indeed, the issue decided in Bonanno is the obverse of the issue raised by Brenner: Bonanno addressed whether a bus stop was dangerous because of the routes necessarily traveled by its patrons, and in contrast Brenner's complaint addresses whether the route traveled by patrons was dangerous because of the bus stop. Because Bonanno did not address the issue raised by Brenner, and instead assumed the existence of a dangerous crosswalk, Bonanno does not illuminate the issues in this case.
Brenner's third factor for asserting Chase Avenue was a dangerous condition that City did not install traffic regulation or safety devices to reduce the dangers to pedestrians posed by crossing Chase Avenue has been legislatively excluded as a basis for finding a dangerous condition. (§ 830.4.) Brenner apparently seeks to avoid the impact of section 830.4 by citing Ducey v. Argo Sales Co. (1979)
Constantinescu is also distinguishable. There, a school affirmatively created "traffic congestion that was particularly dangerous" by designating a small lot, originally designed for a different purpose, as a "pick up" area for school children where numerous automobiles converged at the same time to create "chaotic traffic conditions." (Constantinescu v. Conejo Valley Unified School Dist., supra, 16 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1473-1474,
We conclude the facts alleged by Brenner's second amended complaint do not support the finding of the existence of a dangerous condition within the meaning of the statutory scheme, and therefore the court properly sustained City's demurrer to the second amended complaint. (Mittenhuber v. City of Redondo Beach, supra, 142 Cal.App.3d at pp. 5-12,
C. Denial of Leave to File a Third Amended Complaint
Brenner bears the burden of demonstrating that sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend was an abuse of discretion. (Governing Board v. Haar (1994)
We note Brenner did not provide a proposed amendment to cure the faults of her second amended complaint and that omission alone supports the trial court's order denying leave to amend. (Tiffany v. Sierra Sands Unified School Dist. (1980)
Because there exists no proposed pleading nor any identifiable allegation showing a reasonable possibility that an amended complaint will cure the defect (Baum v. Duckor, Spradling & Metzger (1999)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
WE CONCUR: HUFFMAN, Acting P.J., and AARON, J.
NOTES
Notes
[1] All statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise specified.
[2] Although the second amended complaint does not identify the nature of the physical or structural changes made to Chase Avenue that allegedly created the dangerous condition, it appears Brenner was referring to the fact Chase Avenue had been expanded several years earlier from a two-lane to a four-lane street.
[3] Brenner argued, in the alternative, that she should be given leave to amend her complaint because the court had recently ordered City to provide her with "as built" drawings of Chase Avenue showing the design of Chase Avenue after City expanded it from a two-lane to a four-lane road. However, there is no suggestion Brenner lacked the ability to examine Chase Avenue in its current four-lane configuration to assess whether it constituted a dangerous condition (because of impaired sightlines or some other construction or other flaw), and Brenner did not explain how receipt of these "as built" drawings would provide information not currently available to her.
[4] Brenner argues that under Quelvog v. City of Long Beach (1970)
[5] In Ducey, the issue was whether the state could be liable for not erecting a median barrier on a heavily traveled highway to prevent cross-median head-on accidents. However, Ducey examined at length the evidence supporting the conclusion that there was a substantial risk of injury from cross-median accidents even in the absence of negligent conduct by a motorist, and thus a dangerous condition within the meaning of section 835 was present in Ducey. (Ducey v. Argo Sales Co., supra, 25 Cal.3d at pp. 718-721,
[6] Specifically, a semi-circular two-lane driveway, originally designed as a school bus loading area, was later designated as an area for parents to drive through and park to pick up waiting elementary school children. There was only enough room for six or seven cars at a time, and traffic would often be backed up onto the street. Hurried parents, jockeying for position, would often be forced to park at positions angled toward children who were waiting or walking along the sidewalk, and cars would be moving backwards and forwards on the inclined driveway trying to negotiate the loading zone while watching for running children and other cars. One parent described the conditions as "`a zoo,'" and two experts opined it was" `an accident waiting to happen.'" (Constantinescu v. Conejo Valley Unified School Dist., supra, 16 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1469-1470,
