ANTONIO CORDOVA et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES, Defendant and Respondent.
No. S208130
Supreme Court of California
Aug. 13, 2015.
61 Cal. 4th 1099
KRUGER, J.
COUNSEL
Law Offices of Martin N. Buchanan, Martin N. Buchanan; Girardi|Keese and John A. Girardi for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Carmen A. Trutanich and Michael N. Feuer, City Attorneys, Amy Jo Field, Blithe Smith Bock and Sara Ugaz, Deputy City Attorneys, for Defendant and Respondent.
Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Timothy T. Coates and Kent J. Bullard for League of California Cities and California State Association of Counties as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Respondent.
Cole Pedroza, Curtis A. Cole, Kenneth R. Pedroza and Matthew S. Levinson for California Medical Association, California Dental Association and California Hospital Association as Amici Curiae.
OPINION
KRUGER, J.—Under
In this case, the negligent driving of a third party motorist caused another car to strike a tree planted on a center median owned and maintained by the City of Los Angeles. The collision with the tree killed or injured all of the car‘s occupants. Plaintiffs Antonio and Janis Cordova sued the city under
I.
This case arises from a fatal traffic accident in Eagle Rock, a neighborhood in the City of Los Angeles.2 Cristyn Cordova was driving her 2006 Nissan Maxima westbound in the inside lane of Colorado Boulevard, with four passengers in the car: Cristyn‘s sister Toni, her brother Andrew, her friend Jason Gomez, and her boyfriend, Carlos Campos. As they approached Highland View Avenue, a vehicle driven by Rostislav Shnayder veered into the side of Cristyn‘s car. Although the speed of the two cars at the time of the collision is in dispute, it is undisputed that both cars were traveling well above the posted speed limit of 35 miles per hour.
The impact from the collision forced the Nissan Maxima over the curb and onto the grassy center median of Colorado Boulevard. Out of control and spinning counterclockwise, the car struck one of several large magnolia trees planted in the median, approximately seven feet from the inside lane of the roadway. Although the car‘s occupants were wearing seat belts, Cristyn, Toni, Andrew, and Jason Gomez were killed, and Carlos Campos was badly hurt. Shnayder was arrested at the scene. A jury later convicted him of four counts of vehicular manslaughter without gross negligence. (
Plaintiffs Antonio and Janis Cordova—the parents of Cristyn, Toni, and Andrew—filed a wrongful death action against the City of Los Angeles (the City) among other defendants. As to the City, plaintiffs alleged that Colorado Boulevard was in a dangerous condition because the magnolia trees on the grassy median were too close to the travel portion of the roadway, posing an unreasonable risk to motorists who might lose control of their vehicles. Plaintiffs claimed that this dangerous condition proximately caused their decedents’ fatal injuries.
The City moved for summary judgment, asserting that the undisputed facts showed that the street and median were not dangerous and that the accident was caused by third party conduct, not by any feature of public property. In response, plaintiffs submitted declarations from a number of experts who opined that the proximity of the magnolia trees to the travel portion of the roadway presented a significant and foreseeable danger to the public. Plaintiffs also submitted summaries of 142 traffic accidents on Colorado Boulevard between January 1998 and April 2009, as well as two publications by the
The City objected on numerous grounds to the declarations from plaintiffs’ experts, the accident summaries, and the AASHTO publications. The City further argued that it was entitled to summary judgment because its liability hinged “on whether an aspect of public property somehow caused, facilitated, or encouraged the third party conduct” of motorist Shnayder. Because there was “no evidence that . . . Shnayder or any other motorists were influenced to engage in criminally negligent driving . . . because of the presence of tree(s) in the center median island(s),” the City argued that plaintiffs had raised no triable issue under
The Court of Appeal affirmed. It declined to address plaintiffs’ objections to the trial court‘s evidentiary rulings, concluding that the City was entitled to summary judgment in any event because “the magnolia tree . . . did not constitute a dangerous condition of public property as a matter of law.” The court reasoned that, “even assuming plaintiffs’ evidence was wrongly excluded, they cannot show that the magnolia tree contributed to Shnayder‘s criminally negligent driving.” The court also explained that the configuration of the roadway was not a dangerous condition because “[it]here is nothing about Colorado Boulevard that would cause a person driving at or near the speed limit to suddenly veer into the magnolia trees. Plaintiffs do not contend the view of the median was in any way obscured such that the tree was a surprise obstacle in the roadway, or that the median and trees caused cars to travel at unsafe speed . . . such that persons using the roadway with due care would be hit by such vehicles.”
We granted plaintiffs’ petition for review, limited to the following question: “May a government entity be liable where it is alleged that a dangerous condition of public property existed and caused the injury plaintiffs suffered in an accident, but did not cause the third party conduct that led to the accident?” We now reverse.
II.
The Government Claims Act (
The Act defines a “‘[d]angerous condition‘” as “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.” (
A public entity is not, without more, liable under
III.
The Court of Appeal in this case held that the magnolia tree planted in the center median is not a dangerous condition as a matter of law because it neither caused Shnayder‘s negligent driving in this particular case nor tended to cause motorists to drive negligently in general. We note at the outset that this reasoning conflates distinct elements of the
The Court of Appeal‘s decision rests, at bottom, on a particular view of the kind of causation necessary to establish
We disagree.
Our decision in Ducey confirms that
Consistent with the text of
Similarly, in Cole v. Town of Los Gatos (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 749 [140 Cal.Rptr.3d 722], the plaintiff was standing next to her car, which was parked on a gravel strip at the side of the road, when she was hit by an intoxicated driver who had veered onto the gravel strip to bypass stalled traffic on the street. She sued the Town of Los Gatos, arguing that the configuration of the street and the adjacent gravel strip was a dangerous condition because it induced motorists both to park on the gravel strip and to drive on the gravel strip to bypass traffic. The trial court granted Los Gatos‘s motion for summary judgment, ruling that the plaintiff had not presented evidence demonstrating that any physical defect on the property “‘caused or contributed to the third party conduct that injured’ the plaintiff. (Id. at p. 756.) The Court of Appeal reversed, rejecting the notion “that in every case of
In reaching a contrary conclusion in this case, the Court of Appeal relied primarily on our decision in Zelig v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 27 Cal.4th 1112 [119 Cal.Rptr.2d 709, 45 P.3d 1171] (Zelig). In Zelig, a woman was fatally shot by her former husband inside a Los Angeles courthouse. The guardians of her children sued Los Angeles County, asserting, as relevant here, that the county maintained the courthouse in a dangerous condition by failing to install a variety of safety devices to prevent such shootings. This court concluded that the claim was properly dismissed. The court explained that although a public entity may be held liable for injury caused by the criminal activity of third parties if it has maintained its property in a manner that creates a foreseeable risk of criminal conduct, “the defect in the physical condition of the property must have some causal relationship to the third party conduct that actually injures the plaintiff.” (Zelig, supra, 27 Cal.4th at p. 1136.) The Court of Appeal below relied on that statement in concluding that here, too, plaintiffs must show that the physical condition of the property had some causal relationship to the third party conduct that precipitated the car accident.
The Court of Appeal‘s reliance on Zelig was misplaced. Zelig did not purport to establish a new rule that requires a plaintiff in all
The Court of Appeal in this case also relied for its rule on City of San Diego v. Superior Court (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 21 [40 Cal.Rptr.3d 26] (City
The Court of Appeal issued a writ of mandate directing the trial court to grant the summary judgment motion, concluding that Imperial Avenue was not dangerous and that the plaintiffs had presented “no evidence connecting the absence of lighting to the third party conduct.” (City of San Diego, supra, 137 Cal.App.4th at p. 31.) The Court of Appeal questioned whether the absence of lighting was a “defective physical condition” of the property, noting that the plaintiffs had made no “showing of previous accidents caused by poor lighting.” (Ibid.) The court also explained that “it is not possible to say how much, if any, lighting is necessary to protect all drivers from speeding vehicles,” and that the court was unable to “discern how much lighting of the roadway at dusk would have improved [the] ability [of the driver turning left] to see the oncoming racers.” (Ibid.) Finally, the Court of Appeal briefly noted the lack of evidence that “the racers were influenced by the absence of street lights.” (Ibid.) But City of San Diego contains no suggestion that, to recover in an action against a public entity under
The City argues that two other Court of Appeal decisions—Sun v. City of Oakland (2008) 166 Cal.App.4th 1177 [83 Cal.Rptr.3d 372] and Constance B. v. State of California (1986) 178 Cal.App.3d 200 [223 Cal.Rptr. 645]—support its argument that “there must be something dangerous about the public property that caused the third party conduct to occur.” In both cases, however, as in Zelig, the plaintiffs asserted that a dangerous condition of property caused or facilitated the third party conduct that injured the plaintiff. In Sun, the Court of Appeal rejected the plaintiff‘s contention because it found no credible evidence that the condition in question was dangerous (Sun, supra, at pp. 1187–1192); in Constance B., the Court of Appeal held that the allegedly dangerous condition did not proximately cause the plaintiff‘s injury (Constance B., supra, at pp. 210–212). Neither Sun nor Constance B. holds that, to recover from a public entity under
IV.
The City, joined by amici curiae League of California Cities and California State Association of Counties, argues in the alternative that plaintiffs’
The commentary the City cites, however, does not speak to the causation question presented in this case. It instead seeks to clarify the meaning of the statutory definition of “‘[d]angerous condition‘” under
V.
We thus conclude that the Court of Appeal erred in this case when it upheld the grant of summary judgment in favor of the City on the ground that the magnolia tree was not a dangerous condition because the tree did not cause the negligent driving of a third party. Our conclusion does not mean, as the City fears, that a public entity may be held liable whenever a plaintiff is injured after a third party‘s conduct causes the plaintiff‘s vehicle to strike a hard, fixed object on public property close to a road, such as a light post, a telephone pole, a traffic light, a stop sign, or a bridge abutment. “A public entity is not liable under subdivision (a) of
Nor does our conclusion bring this particular case to an end. On remand, the Court of Appeal must decide whether plaintiffs presented sufficient evidence to create a triable issue as to whether the configuration of the roadway was in fact a dangerous condition. That is, the court must determine whether, based on the evidence presented, a jury could reasonably conclude that the configuration of the roadway created a substantial risk of injury when the roadway was used with due care in a manner in which it was reasonably foreseeable that it would be used. (
DISPOSITION
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Cantil-Sakauye, C. J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., Corrigan, J., Liu, J., and Cuéllar, J., concurred.
