Opinion
Leticia Contreras appeals from a summary judgment by which the Alameda Superior Court dismissed her premises liability complaint against respondents Mark Anderson and Jennifer Boehler. She alleged respondents were liable for injuries suffered from a fall on a brick walkway contained in a city-owned planting strip in front of their property. The trial court granted respondents’ motion for summary judgment pursuant to
Williams
v.
Foster
(1989)
Contreras contends that
Williams, supra,
On January 3, 1995, Leticia Contreras filed a complaint against respondents under a theory of premises liability. Contreras claimed that on January 6, 1994, she “slipped and fell on [a] brick pathway between the curb and sidewalk in front of the premises located at 416 Kentucky Ave., City of Berkeley.” 1 She further alleged respondents “negligently owned, maintained, managed and operated” the brick walkway where she fell and that respondents’ acts were “the legal (proximate) cause of [her] injuries.” In her deposition, Contreras stated that on the day of the alleged fall she parked her car next to the curb in front of respondents’ property and got out of her car, taking one step onto the brick walkway and then slipping forward. 2 She also claimed it was dark and that there were fallen leaves on the brick walkway.
On April 6, 1995, respondents filed an answer denying liability. After nonbinding arbitration, Contreras requested a trial de novo on January 22, 1996. On April 9, 1996, respondents filed a motion for summary judgment or, in the alternative, for summary adjudication of issues. Respondents asserted Contreras fell on property “neither owned, modified, or controlled” by them, and, as such, they “owe[d] no duty to . . . Contreras for any injuries alleged to have resulted from her claimed fall.”
Undisputed evidence established that, at the time of Contreras’s alleged fall, the premises at 416 Kentucky Avenue were owned by respondents, but the planting strip was owned by the City of Berkeley (City). 3 Respondents submitted a declaration from Andreas Deak, a licensed land surveyor, stating that a 13-foot-wide strip of land owned by the City extended from the curb of Kentucky Avenue to respondents’ property line. This strip of land encompassed a seven-and-one-half-foot-wide planting strip, within which the brick path was located, and a five-foot-wide sidewalk adjacent to respondents’ property line. A wooden fence runs along the property line between respondents’ front yard and the city-owned sidewalk. The brick path led from the curb—but separated by the sidewalk—to the front gate in the fence in front of respondents’ property. The planting strip also contained ivy and a deciduous tree that shed leaves on the brick path.
At the time of the incident, Anderson had lived at 416 Kentucky Avenue for over 10 years and Boehler about 8. They claimed they had not altered or
Despite denying they “maintained” the tree, respondents admitted that, prior to and at the time of the alleged accident, they trimmed the tree about twice a year and swept fallen leaves off the brick path on a regular basis. Respondents’ housekeeper, Edith Lara, also swept the brick path a couple of times a week. Contreras submitted a declaration by respondents’ neighbor, Stephen Bedrick, who saw residents on Kentucky Avenue “watering, tree trimming, plant pruning, planting and removing flowers and bushes, general gardening, sweeping, removal of trash and debris.” He claimed he saw Boehler “gardening” in the planting strip in front of respondents’ house.
Contreras asserted that respondents “exercised dominion and control" over the planting strip, an allegation which respondents denied. In addition to respondents’ regular trimming and sweeping, she quoted Boehler as having referred to the tree as “our tree” and the brick path as “our brick path” during her deposition in this case. Moreover, Contreras alleged the planting strip was by custom maintained by property owners on the 400 block of Kentucky Avenue. Her evidence included Bedrick’s deposition, in which he claimed he had never seen City workers maintaining the planting strip, and photographs depicting other property owners’ treatment of the planting strip along the 400 block of Kentucky Avenue.
Respondents claimed that prior to the time of the alleged accident, they did not have knowledge and had not received any complaints, including from the City, that the brick path was defective or otherwise in a dangerous condition in need of repair. Although Anderson was aware the brick path sloped from the curb to the sidewalk, he maintained the angle of the slope had remained the same since he first moved in. In her deposition, respondents’ housekeeper said she had never slipped herself and did not know of anyone ever slipping on the brick path before Contreras’s alleged fall. Bedrick also testified he did not know of anyone who had slipped on the brick path before the incident.
Contreras presented evidence that the brick path posed a hazard to the public in the form of a declaration by Dr. Robert G. Liptai, a safety engineer,
On May 22, 1996, the superior court granted respondents’ motion for summary judgment on the ground that “[a]s a matter of law, a property owner is not liable to [the] public merely for failing to maintain [a] public sidewalk,
[Williams
v.
Foster
(1989)
Discussion
I. Standard of Review
We review a summary judgment de novo.
(Environmental Protection Information Center
v.
Department of Forestry & Fire Protection
(1996)
In a summary judgment motion, the moving party has the burden to establish that the claims of the opposing party are entirely without merit on any legal theory.
(Mann
v.
Cracchiolo
(1985)
II. Duty to Maintain Public Sidewalks
Respondents contend that a duty imposed by a Berkeley City ordinance to maintain abutting public sidewalks does not extend to a member of the public. As we have noted, the trial court agreed and granted summary judgment under the authority of
Williams, supra,
The
Williams
court, relying on an earlier opinion in
Schaefer
v.
Lenahan
(1944)
III. “Control” Under Alcaraz
Ordinarily, “A defendant cannot be held liable for the defective or dangerous condition of property which it [does] not own, possess, or control.”
(Isaacs
v.
Huntington Memorial Hospital
(1985)
In
Alcaraz, supra,
The
Alcaraz
court concluded that such evidence was “sufficient to raise a triable issue of fact as to whether defendants exercised control over the strip of land containing the meter box and thus owed a duty of care to protect or warn plaintiff of the allegedly dangerous condition of the property.” (
Nevertheless, it is clear from
Alcaraz
that simple maintenance of an adjoining strip of land owned by another does not constitute an exercise of control over that property. Although evidence of maintenance is considered “relevant on the issue of control,” the court limited its holding by stating that “the simple act of mowing a lawn on adjacent property (or otherwise performing minimal, neighborly maintenance of property owned by another) generally will [not], standing alone, constitute an exercise of control over
The
Alcaraz
court’s discussion of two “analogous” federal circuit court cases also makes clear that evidence beyond “neighborly maintenance” is required to support a finding of control. In
Husovsky
v.
United States
(D.C. Cir. 1978)
In
Orthmann
v.
Apple River Campground, Inc.
(7th Cir. 1985)
In the present case, there is no such “dramatic assertion of a right normally associated with ownership or . . . possession” of the land on which Contreras was allegedly injured. Although respondents denied “maintaining” the tree in the city-owned planting strip, they admitted their regular trimming of the tree and sweeping of fallen leaves on the brick path. There was also undisputed evidence that respondent Boehler did some “gardening” in the planting strip. But this evidence by itself suggests nothing more than “neighborly maintenance” of the city-owned planting strip. (Alcaraz, supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 1167, 1170.) Standing alone, such evidence cannot support a finding of control over that property. (Ibid.)
Contreras places great emphasis on additional evidence that, during her deposition, respondent Boehler referred to the tree and the brick path in the planting strip as “our” tree and “our” brick path, suggesting that this evidence shows respondents “exercised dominion and control” over the planting strip.
13
Contreras also cites Bedrick’s declaration, in which he claimed he had never seen City workers maintaining the planting strip, thereby suggesting the planting strip was by custom maintained by residents on Kentucky Avenue. This evidence does not undermine our conclusion. What
Alcaraz, Husovsky,
and
Orthmann
share, and what the instant case lacks, is evidence that the defendant took affirmative action to preclude or limit the adjoining landowner’s control of, or ability to control, its own property such that it is fair and reasonable to hold the defendant (whether solely or jointly with the neighbor) responsible for injuries that may occur on the adjacent property. The conduct of the defendant landowners in each of those cases was also a “notorious and open public display of control” over adjacent property, such that members of the general public might reasonably rely on the
apparent
owner to warn or protect them from known hazards thereon.
(Husovsky, supra,
In this case, by contrast, the brick walkway on which Contreras was allegedly injured was located in a parking strip that was separated from respondents’ property both by the fence that enclosed their front yard and the public sidewalk. In addition, there is no evidence the respondents knew of the hazard allegedly posed by the brick walkway. Most fundamentally, however, there was no showing of any assertive, controlling conduct equivalent to the fencing of the city-owned property in
Alcaraz,
or the cutting down of the tree in
Orthmann,
or the agreement allowing the defendant to post signs and dictate the “park-like” vegetation of adjoining land in
Husovsky.
Instead, the evidence in this case suggests nothing more than “minimal, neighborly maintenance” of the city-owned parking strip adjacent to respondents’ property.
(Alcaraz, supra,
IV. Contreras’s Other Theories of Liability
Contreras also claims that respondents are liable for her injuries because the planting strip contains a hazardous alteration that benefits their property, relying on the line of cases following
Sexton
v.
Brooks, supra,
“[A]n abutting owner is liable for the condition of portions of the public sidewalk which he has altered or constructed for the benefit of his property
and which serve a use independent of and apart from the ordinary and accustomed use for which sidewalks are designed.
[Citations.] The duty to maintain such portions of the street runs with the land [citation], and a property owner cannot avoid liability on the ground that the condition was created by his predecessors in title. [Citations.]”
(Sexton
v.
Brooks, supra,
In
Seaber,
after leaving the defendant’s premises, the plaintiff’s husband was killed on a public crosswalk located on public property adjacent to the defendant’s property. (1 Cal.App.4th at pp. 484-485.) The crosswalk was installed at the request of the defendant.
(Id.
at p. 485.) The court also found that the defendant specially benefited from the crosswalk, which provided a convenient crossing for its employees and patrons.
(Id.
at p. 490.) Nevertheless, the court concluded that, since the crosswalk was also available for use by the public, any special benefit to the defendant was not exclusive.
(Id.
at p. 491.) The court explained, “The significance of the degree of exclusivity is that proportionately, the greater the exclusivity of use, the more an improvement benefits solely the adjoining property and the more reasonable it is to impose upon the landowner a duty to maintain the improvement in a reasonably safe condition.”
(Ibid.)
Moreover, the court found that the crosswalk did not serve a use independent of and apart from its ordinary and accustomed use as a public walkway.
(Ibid.)
Thus, the court concluded that “It would be unfair to impose upon the [defendant] a duty to maintain the
In this case, the alleged hazard is not any kind of trap; it is the condition of the brick walkway itself, namely, it was allegedly too slippery. More importantly, although it would be possible for a reasonable trier of fact to conclude that the brick walkway confers a benefit upon respondents by providing access from the curb to respondents’ property, this benefit is not exclusive. The general public, including Contreras, had access to it as well. Furthermore, the brick path did not serve a use independent of and apart from the ordinary and accustomed use for which it was designed, namely, as a public walkway between the curb and the sidewalk. Thus, without evidence of an exclusive and uncommon use of the brick path by respondents, Contreras has failed to raise any triable issue of fact whether respondents owed her a duty under
Sexton
v.
Brooks, supra,
Relying on
Low
v.
City of Sacramento, supra,
Finally, Contreras contends that respondents owed her a duty under the “Good Samaritan Rule.” She relies on
Williams, supra,
Conclusion
For all of the forgoing reasons, the summary judgment is affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs.
Parrilli, J., and Walker, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 25, 1998.
Notes
The “brick pathway” is variously referred to as “brick walk,” “brick walkway,” “pathway,” “walkway,” and “brick path.”
According to the appellant’s opening brief, Contreras was on her way to visit Edith Lara, respondents’ housekeeper, but Contreras stated in deposition that neither Lara nor respondents knew she was coming.
The “planting strip” is also referred to as the “parkway.” We refer to it as the “planting strip” in this opinion.
We note that since
Alcaraz, supra,
An appeal lies only from the final judgment in the case, and not from interlocutory orders or rulings. (Code Civ. Proc., § 904.1.) The record does not reflect whether final judgment was ever entered. However, we may and, in this case, do “amend the order granting summary judgment to make it an appealable judgment and construe the notice of appeal as applying to the judgment. [Citations.]”
(Dover
v.
Sadowinski
(1983)
The
Schaefer
holding gave rise to the “Sidewalk Accident Decisions Doctrine.” (See generally,
Jones
v.
Deeter, supra,
Berkeley City Ordinance section 16.04.010 provides in full: “It is unlawful for any person, firm or corporation owning or having in charge or control, any building, lot or premises in the city fronting on any portion of an improved street or way, where a sidewalk is laid, either as owner, lessee, tenant or otherwise, to allow any portion of such sidewalk in front of such building, lot or premises to be out of repair, and such person, firm or corporation must at all times keep such sidewalk in such condition that it will not endanger persons or property passing thereon and will not interfere with public convenience in the use thereof.”
Streets and Highways Code section 5610 provides in full: “The owners of lots or portions of lots fronting on any portion of a public street or place when that street or place is improved or if and when the area between the property line of the adjacent property and the street line is maintained as a park or parking strip, shall maintain any sidewalk in such condition that the sidewalk will not endanger persons or property and maintain it in a condition which will not interfere with the public convenience in the use of those works or areas save and except as to those conditions created or maintained in, upon, along, or in connection with such sidewalk by any person other than the owner, under and by virtue of any permit or right granted to him by law or by the city authorities in charge thereof, and such persons shall be under a like duty in relation thereto.”
Contreras argues for the first time on appeal that whether the planting strip is part of the “sidewalk” is a triable issue of fact. However, California Streets and Highways Code section 5600 defines “sidewalk” as including “a park or parking strip maintained in the area between the property line and the street line . . . .” By analogy, we agree with the trial court’s implicit determination that for purposes the Berkeley Ciiy Ordinance, “sidewalk” includes the planting strip in this case.
Although it did not analyze the issue in detail, the
Alcaraz
court repeatedly mentioned and appeared to rely on evidence of “actual notice” of the existence of a hazard as a factor in determining the issues of the defendant’s “control” of the adjoining property and concomitant “duty” to warn or protect third parties. (See 14 Cal.4th at pp. 1156-1157 [“possessor of land who knows of the hazard” on adjacent property has duty to erect barrier or warn of danger]; at p. 1157 [defendant with “actual notice” of hazard on adjoining property has duty to warn or protect third parties]; at p. 1161 [defendant may be held liable where plaintiff is injured in portion of defendant’s fenced backyard which is owned by another and contains a “latent dangerous condition known to the defendant”]; at p. 1170 [simple mowing of neighbors’ property is insufficient to establish control so as to give rise to duty to warn or protect members of the public from “known dangers” on that property];
id.
at p. 1172 (con. opn. of Mosk, J.) [question of fact re “control” is established, inter alia, by fact that complaints about broken meter box on adjoining land had been communicated to defendant].) The
Alcaraz
court also discussed
Hamilton
v.
Gage Bowl, Inc.
(1992)
In a concurring opinion, Justice Mosk .likewise concluded that because the plaintiff had “produced evidence that [the] defendants hired someone to mow the lawn [and] put up a picket fence after the accident,” he had “offered enough evidence of defendants’ control of the premises to raise a triable factual question regarding their liability for his injury.” (Alcaraz, supra, 14 Cal.4th at pp. 1171-1172 (con. opn. of Mosk, J.).)
The
Alcaraz
court’s application of the reasoning in
Husovsky
and
Orthmann
to a hypothetical further illustrates the point: “[W]here a plaintiff is injured in a defendant’s fenced backyard by a latent dangerous condition known to the defendant^]... the defendant could not escape liability merely by establishing that the fence was not located on the property line and that a neighbor, rather than the defendant, actually held title to the land containing the dangerous condition."
(Alcaraz, supra,
Contreras neither provides nor cites to any evidence that Boehler’s subjective beliefs about the adjoining property were ever communicated to her, or to any other member of the general public, prior to the commencement of this litigation.
At oral argument, appellant emphasized that Alcaraz treated the issue of “control” as a question of fact and argued, in effect, that the trial court can never determine the issue of “duty” as a matter of law so long as there is some evidence relevant to the issue of “control.” As we have noted, we do not read Alcaraz as precluding summary judgment where the evidence of “control" is nothing more than evidence of “neighborly maintenance” of the adjoining land by the defendant(s). This is true, a fortiori, where the summary judgment is entered on what amounts to a set of stipulated facts.
As we have noted above, she argued otherwise during the hearing on the respondents’ summary judgment motion, and raises the same argument on appeal.
The
Seaber
court also ruled that “because the [defendant] lacked effective
control
over the crosswalk, it cannot be shackled with a duty to warn pedestrians of the dangerous risk the crosswalk posed.” (
The Supreme Court specifically explained Low’s reasoning in light of the principles set forth in
Alcaraz. (Alcaraz, supra,
