The appeal is from judgment for respondent based on an order sustaining demurrer to appellant’s third amended complaint. The action is grounded upon the alleged violation of the California Tort Claims Act. The
On July 11, 1964, plaintiff Novelita Callahan, a minor, was a passenger in an automobile which was traveling on Brotherhood Way towards Lake Merced Boulevard, highways owned and maintained by the city. The area was frequently covered with fog, and there was fog on this day. Brotherhood Way was designed with the appearance of a freeway, but it ended abruptly at Lake Merced Boulevard. Ahead, there were logs and trees and a declivity into the lake. The street and intersection were so negligently maintained that it was reasonably likely that a careful driver, in foggy conditions, might continue over the end of the road into the logs, trees or lake. No adequate warning signs or devices were provided by the city. 1 As a proximate result of the negligence of the city so described, the driver of the car in which plaintiff was riding was unaware of the hazards, was caused to believe that he was on a high speed thoroughfare or freeway, and ran into the lake. It was reasonably foreseeable that as a consequence of the dangerous condition such an accident would occur.
There are also alleged the creation of the condition by the city, knowledge by the city of the condition, timely filing of a claim, and extremely serious injuries, including paralysis, to plaintiff.
The city demurred on the ground that the complaint states no cause of action.
Effect of Earlier Pleading
The assault upon the third amended complaint, however, was not directed particularly at this pleading alone. The city called upon the court to consider also plaintiff’s earlier pleadings. The order sustaining the demurrer is “upon the ground that, in the opinion of the Court, said complaint, considered in the light of the original verified complaint, does not state, and cannot be amended to state, facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ’ ’
In the original complaint, which was verified by appellant’s guardian ad litem, respondent city was not made a party, but the driver of the vehicle in which appellant was riding, James A. Day, Jr., was made a defendant and was charged with
The initial complaint against the city was appellant’s first amended complaint. Day was not a defendant therein. There was no allegation about racing of vehicles or wilful misconduct, and this holds true of the third amended complaint, the one to which demurrer was sustained without leave to amend.
The city contends that appellant cannot escape the allegation made in the original complaint about the racing by the driver, Day, and about his wiful misconduct, simply by dropping these from later pleadings. It is the rule that allegations of fact, once made under oath, may not ordinarily be dropped without adequate explanation merely for the purpose of avoiding their harmful effect to the pleader. (2 Chadbourn, Grossman & Van Alstyne, California Pleading, § 1111, pp. 360-361 ; 2 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (1954) §592, pp. 1603-1604.) The verified allegations may be considered by the court at a hearing of the demurrer to a later pleading.
(Gressley
v.
Williams,
But the rule must be taken together with its purpose, which is to prevent amended pleading which is only a sham, when it is apparent that no cause of action can be stated truthfully.
(Avalon Painting Co.
v.
Alert Lumber Co.,
The allegation of reckless disregard for the possible result has to do with something mental or subjective on the part of the driver.
(Goncalves
v.
Los Banos Mining Co.,
But what of the allegation of the specific act on Day’s part, of racing in the fog ? Let it be noted at once that this conduct is not in itself chargeable to plaintiff, the occupant of the vehicle. Negligence of the driver is not to be imputed to the passenger.
(Campagna
v.
Market Street Ry. Go.,
The allegation of racing comes close to being equivalent to an allegation of negligence, because speed contests are forbidden by law (Veh. Code, § 23109), and violation of such a statute ordinarily constitutes negligence per se, in the absence of excuse or justification, which is unlikely in the case of racing. But the term “wilful misconduct” does not have relevance to the case now that the driver, Day, is no longer a party. It has been held that even racing does not, per se, constitute wilful misconduct.
(McLeod
v.
Dutton,
The question, therefore, is, assuming that Day was negligent because of his actions as charged by plaintiff in her original complaint, and assuming, as we must, that the allegations against the city are true: Does this exonerate the city as a matter of law from liability? Of course, the negligence of the third party may become a superseding cause, thereby striking out as a causative factor the public entity’s negligence. But it is established that although a third person may have been concurrently negligent with a public entity, the latter is not neeessarrily relieved from liability.
(Chavez
v.
County of Merced,
We conclude that if plaintiff has otherwise stated a cause of action against the city under the Tort Claims Act, a subject to which we shall proceed, the allegations of her earlier pleading are not destructive of her cause.
The Present Pleading
We must now measure the allegations of the third amended complaint with the provisions of the Tort Claims Act. 3
But whether or not a public entity must anticipate and guard against negligence of anyone who uses or comes in contact with public property, it is to be observed that in this particular ease it is plaintiff’s pleading that the highway resembles a freeway and under certain circumstances constitutes a trap for a motorist
whether careful or not.
Plaintiff does not say, and is not required to say, that the driver with whom she was riding was exercising due care. Professor Van Alstyne says: ‘ ‘ Foreseeable use with due care is an element of liability only as defined in ‘ dangerous condition. ’ . . . The plaintiff is required merely to establish that the condition created a substantial risk of harm to
persons, generally,
who would use the property or adjacent property with due care in a foreseeable
There is logic, as well as the quoted commentaries, in favor of appellant’s position that section 830, subdivision (a) defines dangerous condition with relation to the general public and not to a particular driver or user or person coming into contact with public property. It is this: (1) If in eases involving streets and highways the liability of the city were confined to cases wherein a particular driver was using due care, the public entity would gain, in practical effect, an imputation of negligence to the occupants of any vehicle, the driver of which was not at the time exercising due care. Although the condition were dangerous to the public in general, the city would be exonerated from liability to innocent parties by reason of the negligence of another, even if the other’s negligence did not break the chain of causation. Such a holding would bar liability of the governmental unit in many cases affecting wholly blameless parties; for example, all of the passengers of a bus would be denied relief if their driver’s negligence concurred with negligence of a governmental unit in maintaining a
generally
dangerous condition. (2) It is not to be thought that the Legislature intended to diminish the responsibility of governmental units to this extent when the Legislature did not say so clearly. (3) The words of section 830, subdivision (a) are principally descriptive of the condition of the property rather than of the person using it. Unless they mean that the responsibility of the governmental unit is to the public at large, as distinguished from a particular per
Respondent places much reliance on
Rodkey
v.
City of Escondido,
Government Code section 830.8.
Respondent calls attention to this section, in which public entities are declared immune from liability for injuries caused by failure to provide “traffic or warning signals, signs, marking or devices described in the Vehicle Code” except where the warning device “was necessary to warn of a dangerous condition which endangered the safe movement of traffic and which would not be reasonably apparent to, and would not have been anticipated by, a person exercising due care. ’ ’ The immunity, however, is inapplicable when a warning sign is necessary to warn of a concealed trap. (Van Alstyne, California Government Tort Liability (Cont. Ed. Bar. 1964) § 6.33, p. 221; Gov. Code, § 830.8, Law Revision Commission comment; see
Schauf
v.
Southern Cal. Edison Co.,
Government Code section 831.
This section exempts public entities from liability caused by the effect on the use of streets and highways of weather conditions as such, but does not exonerate a public entity from liability for injury proximately caused by such effect if it would not be reasonably apparent to, and would not be anticipated by, a person exercising due care. The allegations of the complaint relate not only
Here, again, the pleading does not resolve the ease against the plaintiff. There is a factual issue to be determined. During the argument before the superior court, counsel for appellant stated that, in fact, the cars were not in fog until about the last block of their travel. Of course, we cannot tell whether this statement, or any of the allegations of the complaint, will be sustained by proof. There will be ample opportunity to test this later, even perhaps on motion for summary judgment if the facts at that point show that the action has no merit. (See
Dahlquist
v.
State of California,
Judgment reversed, with direction to the court to overrule the demurrer to the third amended complaint.
Rattigan, J., and Christian, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 21, 1967, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 17, 1967.
Notes
From oral argument in the superior court, it appears that changes have been made since the accident. This is noted not to suggest that evidence thereof would be admissible at trial, but merely as an informatory statement, because the area is well known.
Respondent suggests that the driver’s conduct in face of protest from the guest demonstrates wilful misconduct. It is not necessarily so.
(Katz
v.
Kuppin, 44
Cal.App.2d 406, 408 [
There is no issue, however, at the present pleading stage, of the effect of section 830.6 of the Government Code, which has to do with
