BARBARA CAMERON, a Minor, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Defendant and Respondent; STEVEN TICKES, a Minor, etc., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Defendant and Respondent.
S.F. No. 22866
In Bank
June 7, 1972
7 Cal.3d 318
Morgan, Beauzay & Hammer and W. Robert Morgan for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
OPINION
SULLIVAN, J.—Plaintiffs appeal on a single record from a judgment of nonsuit entered in two actions for damages for personal injuries which were consolidated for trial.
We shall examine the evidence and detail the pertinent facts in accordance with the rules applicable to nonsuits.1 On the morning of April 10, 1968, plaintiffs Steven Tickes and Barbara Cameron were riding in an automobile which was being driven by Daniel Graham in a general southerly direction along Highway 9 in Santa Cruz County. The weather was clear and the pavement was dry. Just south of Waterman‘s Gap, the road took a steep downgrade with a rather sharp “S” curve. Graham, who was driving on the right side of the road at a speed somewhat in excess of 35 miles per hour, proceeded down the grade and entered the above curve. As he did so, the occupants of the vehicle felt a bump. The automobile then suddenly went out of control, left the roadway, rode part way up a berm located on the shoulder, slid a distance of 117 feet, and collided with the side of a hill. Physical evidence showed that before the car moved out of the lane in which it had been traveling, one of its tires left a mark 96 feet long on the pavement. As a result of the collision, plaintiffs sustained personal injuries.
Plaintiffs, by their guardians ad litem and represented by the same counsel, brought separate actions for damages. The complaints which are almost identical in language name as defendants the driver of the automobile, Graham, the State of California, and other persons and corporations sued by fictitious names. Each complaint contains four separately stated causes of action (the first cause being incorporated by reference into each of the remaining three) which for our present purposes may be summarized thusly: The first two causes, directed principally against Graham, assert respectively his negligence and his willful misconduct. The third cause, directed principally against the manufacturer and the seller of the automobile, alleges liability for a defective product.2 The fourth
As previously stated the two actions were consolidated for trial. At the close of all the evidence the court granted the state‘s motion for a nonsuit made on the grounds that there was an insufficiency of proof of a dangerous condition of the highway and that in any event the state was immune from liability under
Plaintiffs make two main contentions before us: First, that the design immunity conferred by
The dangerous condition asserted to exist in the instant case involves the superelevation, otherwise known as “banking,” of the “S” curve on that part of Highway 9 where the accident occurred. Normally, a curve is superelevated or banked to assist a driver in making the curve. A civil engineer, formerly employed by the Design Department of the California Division of Highways, testified that the superelevation on the curve was not consistent across the roadway, but changed abruptly; that this abrupt change would tend to shift the weight of the car so as to lift one wheel off the ground and tend to make the car roll; that a driver entering the curve could not ascertain the existence of this change in superelevation and thereby determine the proper speed to negotiate the curve, until already committed to the curve. At this point the driver would find himself trapped into believing the curve continues to the left, while it actually continues to the right. In such event he may well be unable to successfully negotiate the curve, even though proceeding at a lawful speed with due care. There were no warning signs in the direction plaintiffs’ car was traveling, though there were for cars traveling in the opposite direction. This is sufficient
However, the state argues that although the uneven superelevation constituted a dangerous condition on its property so as to make the state liable under
As we recently had occasion to observe,
We now turn to that portion of the judgment, which, as indicated in footnote 3, ante, is most accurately designated a ruling on a motion for directed verdict to the effect that the state had established as a matter of law all the elements of the defense of design immunity contained in
The state introduced into evidence the design plans for the section of Highway 9 where the accident occurred. Frank Lewis, the present county surveyor stated by declaration that the plans in question had been prepared in the mid-1920‘s by Lloyd Bowman, the then county surveyor, at the direction of the Santa Cruz Board of Supervisors and within the scope of his employment. Copies of the minutes of meetings of the Santa Cruz Board of Supervisors were introduced to show that these plans for the improvement of the then San Lorenzo Valley Road, now Highway 9, were approved by the board. It is conceded by both parties that the Santa Cruz Board of Supervisors was the proper body to exercise the discretionary authority referred to in
From the foregoing summary, it is clear that the state has presented facts sufficient to establish the initial applicability of an immunity under
Here the state has presented no evidence that the superelevation which was actually constructed on the curve in question in this matter was the result of or conformed to a design approved by the public entity vested with discretionary authority. Thus, there would be no reexamination of a discretionary decision in contravention of the design immunity policy because there has been no such decision proved. The state merely showed that the Santa Cruz Board of Supervisors approved a design showing the course of the right of way and the elevation above sea level of the white center stripe for the road. The design plan contained no mention of the superelevation intended or recommended. Therefore such superelevation as was constructed did not result from the design or plan introduced into evidence and there was no basis for concluding that any liability for injuries caused by this uneven superelevation was immunized by
For the guidance of the trial court upon remand, we consider plaintiffs’
Plaintiffs contend that this negligent failure to warn is a concurrent cause of their injuries, that it was not the result of any design or plan which would confer immunity under
Upon appeal the court in Flournoy stated that although the plaintiff-heirs could be denied recovery for the state‘s active negligence (building the bridge) in creating a danger, they might still recover for the state‘s passive negligence in failing to warn of that danger. The court explained: “There may be two concurring, proximate causes of an accident. [Citations.] Although usually set in operation by different actors, these separate, concurring causes may be produced by a single defendant, who is guilty of an affirmatively negligent act and of a passively negligent omission. . . . [Par.] Here . . . the complaint alleged active and passive negligence of a single defendant (the creation of a dangerous condition and the failure to post a warning of it) as separate, concurring causes. Regardless of the availability of the active negligence theory, plaintiffs were entitled to go before a jury on the passive negligence theory, i.e., an accident caused by the state‘s failure to warn the public against icy danger known to it but not apparent to a reasonably careful highway user. [Citations.] [Par.] The defense argues that the plan or design immunity of
In the case at bench, as in Flournoy, there is active negligence alleged (the creation of the dangerous condition, namely uneven superelevation) and passive negligence (failure to warn of the dangerous condition) of a single defendant, the state. Here, as in Flournoy, the passive negligence alleged is independent of the negligent design. Agreeing with the reasoning and conclusions of Flournoy, we conclude that plaintiffs are
The state urges that we reached a contrary and inconsistent result, by way of dictum, in Becker v. Johnston (1967) 67 Cal.2d 163 [60 Cal. Rptr. 485, 430 P.2d 43], pointing to the following language at page 173: “Although Mrs. Johnston argues that the original plans upon which the county relies do not mention lighting or signs warning of the Y intersection, such items, which she now complains should have been provided at some point in time prior to her accident, admittedly would serve only to lessen the hazard which she contends was created by the manner in which the intersection was designed, and for which
The state has entirely misconceived the thrust of that language in Becker. In that case, unlike the instant one, this court did not consider the issue of concurrent negligence in failing to warn of a dangerous condition, but solely concerned itself with active negligence in implementing a faulty design, to wit, construction of the intersection. In observing that warning signs, at best, would have only lessened the hazard, the court was indicating that the failure to warn was not an independent, concurrent negligent cause of the accident. In the instant case, if there had been proper warning of a dangerous curve and posting of the safe speed, the dangerous condition of the highway would have been effectually neutralized. The state‘s failure to so warn was an independent, separate concurring cause of the accident.
To recapitulate, we conclude that where the state is immune from liability for injuries caused by a dangerous condition of its property because the dangerous condition was created as a result of a plan or design which conferred immunity under
In view of our foregoing conclusions, we need not consider plaintiffs’ remaining contention that the trial judge did not properly consider the motion for nonsuit because of an alleged animosity towards plaintiffs’ case.
The judgment is reversed.
Wright, C. J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., and Mosk, J., concurred.
BURKE, J.—I concur with the majority to the extent they hold that the state‘s liability could be based upon its alleged concurrent negligence in
The evidence showed that the Santa Cruz Board of Supervisors approved design plans which disclosed the course of the proposed road and the elevation of the white center stripe of the road. Although the plans, drafted in the 1920‘s, did not contain actual superelevation figures, that omission should not deprive the state of its design immunity under
Indeed, the evidence in this case was that the road was superelevated in a normal and reasonable fashion, in accordance with then-existing standards. I find nothing in
McComb, J., concurred.
Respondent‘s petition for a rehearing was denied July 5, 1972. McComb, J., and Burke, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
