Lead Opinion
Opinion
Defendant City of Glendale appeals a judgment in fa: vor of plaintiff Cary Lee Bunker in an action for personal injuries and property damage.
At 10 p.m. on August 5, 1972, Bunker was riding his motorcycle up a steep hill on Adams Street in Glendale. As Bunker was approaching the top of the hill, Lillie Minor was backing her vehicle out of a driveway on the far side of the hill 55 feet below the crest. Because of the steepness of the hill of the grade, Bunker was unable to see Minor’s vehicle until he reached the top of the hill, at which time he was traveling 25 to 30 miles per hour. At that speed he was unable to stop in sufficient time to avoid a collision with Minor’s vehicle. The posted speed limit on Adams Street was 25 miles per hour. However, approximately 500 feet before the crest of the hill there was a sign which advised motorists to “Slow To 15 Miles an Hour.”
Bunker later commenced this action against the City of Glendale and Lillie Minor. Minor settled with Bunker prior to trial. City’s motion for summary judgment on the ground it was immune from liability was denied. (Gov. Code, §§ 830.4, 830.8.) In a special verdict the jury found that city knew and failed to warn of a dangerous condition, and it as-[Oct.
1. Generally, a public entity is liable for injury caused by the dangerous condition of its property if the entity had notice of the danger and failed to take appropriate measures to warn of or remedy the condition. (Gov. Code, § 835; Slapin v. Los Angeles International Airport (1976)
Government Code section 830.4 states that the absence of traffic control signals or signs does not in itself make a condition a dangerous one. However, when a dangerous condition exists which would not be reasonably apparent to, or anticipated by, a person exercising due care, and a sign is necessary to warn of the condition, the public entity’s failure to provide such a sign may provide a basis for imposition of liability against the public entity. (Gov. Code, § 830.8; Cameron v. State of California (1972)
2. City asserts that its motion for a mistrial based on juror misconduct was erroneously denied. During jury deliberations 9 of the 12 jurors agreed that city and Bunker were liable for the accident. In apportioning liability, the nine jurors added up the figures each had arrived at individually and then divided the total by nine. City contends this procedure produced an improper quotient verdict. (See Bardessono v. Michels (1970)
City’s final contention about jury irregularities during deliberations is without merit.
The judgment is affirmed.
Roth, P. J., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent.
A public entity is not liable for injury to persons except as provided by statute. (Gov. Code, § 815.)
There was no substantial evidence that there was a dangerous condition or that the city failed to warn of such condition and that such failure was the proximate cause of the accident here. The city was entitled to a directed verdict in its favor.
Admittedly, disputed issues regarding dangerous conditions (including the degree of risk and exposure of harm to those using care) usually present questions of fact and therefore are for the jury to decide. (Cameron v. State of California (1972)
An ordinary, natural topographical condition is not a dangerous condition of property within the meaning of the Governmental Tort Liability Law. It is such and requires a warning sign only when it constitutes a deceptive condition or trap for even those who use the property with due care. (§ 830.8 and com. of Law Revision Commission to § 830.8, 32 West’s Ann. Code (1980 ed.) p. 289.) Admittedly, the dangerous condition need not be artificial,. manmade or unnatural. Certain natural conditions, when allowed to remain, can create legally recognized dangerous conditions. Examples thereof are permitting trees and shrubs to obscure stop signs or warning signs which indicate the end of a road or unseen ditch or hazardous intersection, or allowing mud to slide and remain in an unexpected location in the road. (See e.g., De la Rosa v. City of San Bernardino (1971)
The intent of the statute is to impose liability only when there is a substantial danger which is not apparent to those using the property in a reasonably foreseeable manner with due care. Moreover, the particular defect must be the proximate cause of the accident. (§ 835; Hayes v. State of California (1974)
Cases holding public entities liable for failure to warn of dangerous conditions, including those relied upon in the majority opinion, are based on the presence of an actual dangerous physical defect or an otherwise dangerous condition which was not apparent to persons using the property with due care. Slapin v. Los Angeles International Airport (1976)
The accident in the case before us was not caused by any dangerous condition. The proximate and sole legal cause of this accident was plaintiff’s own conduct. Plaintiff had traveled over this same street at this location approximately 180 times over the past 5 years. On this night he had been drinking, ignored the sign to slow to 15 miles per hour, ignored the obvious need to use due care by slowing as he approached the crest beyond which he could not see and continued to travel between 25 and 30 miles per hour, a speed which was unsafe.
The issue of the existence and placement of the warning sign in this case is irrelevant. It is a red herring. In the first place, it does not constitute an admission or legal recognition by the city of the existence of a dangerous condition. Judicial notice can be taken of the hundreds of unfounded tort claims against public entities based on nothing more than the fact that the accident occurred on a public street. The city is entitled to reduce the risk of litigation by placing warning signs even though not legally obligated to do so. This extra caution needed only by foolish and reckless drivers (and ignored by most) should not be used to impose liability upon the city.
The second aspect of the irrelevancy of the sign is that all of the so-called expert testimony regarding “sight distance” (meaning you cannot see through a solid object) and regarding the need for lights at the top of the hill and where therefore to place the warning sign was all irrelevant in this case. Even though the testimony as to the location of the warning sign might have been relevant with reference to a motorist traveling the street for the first time, the warning sign had no effect on plaintiff’s conduct in this case whatever. It did not “fail” to warn him; it did not confuse him; his conduct was taken totally without regard to the sign. Plaintiff knew that he was traveling up a hill beyond whose crest he could not see. He had traveled this route many times. He knew of
Section 830, subdivision (a) states; ‘“Dangerous condition’ means a condition of property that creates a substantial (as distinguished from a minor, trivial or insignificant) risk of injury when such property or adjacent property is used with due care in a manner in which it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used.” The judicial adoption of the doctrine of comparative negligence in Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975)
But there is a difference. Li and Levine refer to comparative negligence. That concept presupposes that there is independent negligence on both sides and which is to be compared one to the other.
Under the facts at bench and under the definition of section 830, there was no negligence on the part of the city. It neither caused the accident nor created the hill nor did it fail to warn plaintiff of some inherently dangerous condition. Nothing that the city did or failed to do was in any way the proximate cause of the accident. The physical properties of the road became dangerous only when misused. Thus, the situation is not one which involved comparative negligence but involved the negligence of the plaintiff as the sole and proximate cause of the accident and which alone created the dangerous situation. This is not a case of negligence, which allowed a dangerous condition of property, being
To permit this judgment to stand is; (1) to impose strict liability on the city as an insurer of the safety of its streets; (2) to wrongfully permit a jury to decide a legal question of proximate cause, to define “dangerous condition,” to second-guess the exclusive statutory legislative authority of the city regarding the need for and placement of traffic regulation or warning signs (whether relevant to the case or not); and (3) to permit an injustice to taxpayers of Glendale who must pay for the injuries of plaintiff brought on solely by his reckless disregard for his own safety. I would reverse the judgment.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 19, 1980. Beach, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted. Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 17, 1980. Clark, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
All references hereafter to code sections are references to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
