ORDER RE: DEFENDANT GLOCK, INC.’S MOTION TO DISMISS FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT
This сase arises from two highly-publicized shooting incidents in the Los Angeles area in the summer of 1999. Plaintiffs, the victims and their family members, have brought suit against the manufacturers of the firearms the assailant, Buford 0. Furrow, Jr., used and had in his possession at the time. The Motion to Dismiss of Glock, Inc. came on regularly for hearing before this Court on March 25, 2002. Upon consideration of the submissions of the parties, the case file, and the argument of counsel, the Court hereby GRANTS the Motion.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs Lilian Santos Ileto, sole surviving parent of the deceased, Joseph Santos Ileto; Joshua Stepakoff, a minor through his parents, Loren Lieb and Alan B. Ste-pakoff; Mindy Finkelstein, a minor, by her parents, David and Donna Finkelstein; Benjamin Kadish, a minor through his parents, Eleanor and Charles Kadish; and *1044 Nathan Powers, a minor through his parents, Gail and John Michael Powers, filed a Complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court on August 9, 2000, against Defendants Glock, Inc.; Glock GmbH; China North Industries Corp. (“China North” or “Nor-inco”); Davis Industries; Republic Arms, Inc.; Jimmy L. Davis; Maadi; Bushmaster Firearms; Imbel; The Loaner Pawnshop Too; David McGee; and 150 Doe Defendants. The Complaint alleged seven causes of action. The first two claims were brought by Ms. Ileto against all Defendants, for survival and wrongful death. The remaining claims were brought by all Plaintiffs against all Defendants: for public nuisance, negligence, negligent entrustment, and unfair business practices. The Complaint sought certification of a class, damages, and injunctive relief.
Defendants Loaner Pawnshop and David McGee successfully moved for dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction. See Joint Status Report filed December 21, 2001 (“Status Report”) at 3:7-8. Defendants Republic Arms, Inc. and Jimmy L. Davis answered. Id. at 3:8-9. The Superior Court, the Hon. Anthony Mohr, granted the demurrers of Defendants Glock, Inc. and Bushmaster Firearms, Inc., and dismissed all claims with leave to amend. Id. at 3:9-11.
Plaintiffs filed a First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) on May 23, 2001. 1 The FAC retained Ms. Ileto’s survival and wrongful death claims and all Plaintiffs’ negligence and public nuisance claims and the prayer for damages. Plaintiffs did not reassert their remaining claims, including the class claims and the claim for injunc-tive relief. All Defendants who had been served joined in renewed demurrers. Status Report at 3:15.
On October 17, 2001, China North was first served with the initial Complaint. See Notice of Removal ¶ 1, 11. 16-17. On November 14, 2001, China North removed the action to this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1330 and 28 U.S.C. § 1603, on the ground that it is an instrumentality of a foreign state and, therefore, this Court has original jurisdiction. Id. at ¶ 5. On December 6, 2001, the Court determined that removal was proper and the Court has jurisdiction over the action. See Civil Minutes — General dated Dec. 6, 2001.
At a status conference on January 7, 2002, the Court declined to hear the demurrers filed in the Superior Court and ordered Defendants to file any motions to dismiss under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure within 30 days. See Civil Minutes — General dated January 7, 2002. On February 5, 2002, Defendants Republic Arms, Inc., Jimmy L. Davis, and Davis Industries filed a Motion to Dismiss. On February 6, 2002, Defendants Quality Parts Company and Bushmaster Firearms filed a Motion to Dismiss. On February 7, 2002, Defendants China North and Glock, Inc., each filed a Motion to Dismiss. 2 The Court continued the hearing on all four motions to March 25, 2002, and set a briefing schedule. See Civil Minutes — General dated Feb. 11, 2002; Civil Minutes — General dated Feb. 13, 2002.
In this Order, the Court addresses the Motion to Dismiss of Glock, Inc. 3 Plaintiffs *1045 filed an Opposition on March 4, 2002. Glock filed a Reply on March 11, 2002.
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
A Rule 12(b)(6) motion tests the legal sufficiency of the claims asserted in the complaint.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Rule 12(b)(6) must be read in conjunction with Rule 8(a) which requires a “short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” 5A Charles A. Wright
&
Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1356 (1990). “The Rule 8 standard contains ‘a powerful presumption against rejecting pleadings for failure to state a claim.’ ”
Gilligan v. Jamco Dev. Corp.,
The Court must accept as true all material allegations in the complaint, as well as reasonable inferences to be drawn from them.
See Pareto v. F.D.I.C.,
Moreover, in ruling on a 12(b)(6) motion, a court generally cannot consider material outside of the complaint
{e.g.,
those facts presented in briefs, affidavits, or discovery materials).
See Branch v. Tunnell,
Plaintiffs’ negligence and public nuisance claims present questions of California state law. There are no supreme court or appellate court decisions in California that have decided these particular issues. Therefore, the Court “must consider ‘all available data’ to anticipate how the California Supreme Court might decide the issue.”
DeSoto v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc.,
III. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS 4
On August 10, 1999, Buford Furrow approached the North Valley Jewish Com *1046 munity Center (“JCC”) in Granada Hills, California. Furrow had in his possession a number of firearms: Glock’s model 26, a 9mm handgun; Norinco’s model 320, a 9mm rifle with an illegally shortened barrel; Maadi’s model RML, a 7.62 caliber automatic rifle; Bushmaster’s model XM15-E25, a .223 caliber rifle; two of Imbel’s model L1A1, a .308 caliber rifle; and Davis Industries’ model D-22, a .22 caliber handgun. FAC ¶ 23.
Furrow entered the JCC and shot and injured three children, one teenager, and one adult. Two of the children were Plan-tiffs Joshua Stepakoff and Benjamin Radish, who were attending summer camp at the JCC. Six-year-old Joshua was shot twice in the left lower leg and left hip, fracturing or breaking a bone. Five-year-old Benjamin was shot twice in the buttocks and left leg, fracturing his left femur, severing an artery, and causing major internal injuries. Plaintiff Mandy Finkel-stein, then 16 years old and a camp counselor, was shot twice in the right leg. FAC ¶ 24. Four-year-old Nathan Powers, also a camper, witnessed the events at the JCC, which has caused him great mental suffering, anguish, and anxiety. FAC ¶ 25.
After fleeing the JCC, with the same firearms in his possession, Furrow shot and killed Joseph Ileto, an employee of the U.S. Postal Service and the son of Plaintiff Lilian Ileto, while Ileto was delivering his mail route. FAC ¶ 26. 5
Among the evidence recovered at both crime scenes were 9mm casings. Three of the firearms in Furrow’s possession used 9mm ammunition: the Norinco, the Glock, and the Davis. FAC ¶ 27.
At the time of the 1999 shootings, Furrow was prohibited under federal law from possessing, purchasing, or using any firearm, having been committed to a psychiatric hospital in 1998, placed under felony indictment in 1998, and convicted of assаult in the second degree on May 21, 1999, in Washington State. FAC ¶ 28.
Defendants, who are sued individually and jointly and severally, are the manufacturers, importers, marketers, distributors, and dealers of firearms found illegally and used in the commission of crimes in Los Angeles. FAC ¶ 6. Plaintiffs have alleged that Defendants produce, market, distribute and sell substantially more firearms than they reasonably expect to be bought by law-abiding purchasers, and they knowingly participate in and facilitate the secondary market where persons who are illegal purchasers and have injurious intent obtain their firearms. FAC ¶ 31. Furthermore, Defendants select and develop distribution channels that they know regularly provide guns to criminals. FAC ¶ 32.
Defendants derive significant revenues, amounting to a substantial portion of their total firearm revenues from the crime market. They utilize the fear generated by criminal uses of their products to promote more sales to law-abiding citizens for self-protection. FAC ¶ 36.
Defendants market their guns to get into the secondary market, a market that provides a high percentage of crime guns. FAC ¶¶ 39-40. Defendants use a two-tier distribution system, selling their firearms to distributors who then sell thеm through dealers. FAC ¶41. Defendants set the terms and conditions, including distribution policies and practices, of this distribution system. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants have the power “to modify the *1047 policies and practices of their distributors, to seek alternative distribution channels, or to establish their own.” Defendant distributors, acting as agents of manufacturers, have similar control over their relationship with dealers. FAC ¶ 42.
Crime guns are sold by “kitchen table” dealers, who may be licensed but have no store; pawn shop dealers; licensed dealers; and at gun shows. FAC ¶¶ 53-55. The National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association to which Glock belongs, actively promotes gun shows and has requested that its members promote them as a viable distribution channel. FAC ¶ 56.
Plaintiffs allege that “the industry as a whole,” including these Defendants is fully aware of the extent of the criminal misuse of firearms. The industry is also aware that the illicit market in firearms is not simply the result of stolen guns but is due to the seepage of guns into the illicit market from thousands of unsupervised but licensed dealers. FAC ¶59. Defendants have actual knowledge and are specifically placed on notice of сrime-prone distribution channels by the ATF. FAC ¶ 62; see also FAC ¶¶ 64-65. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants include incentive provisions in their contracts with dealers and distributors, but do not include provisions that would discourage sales associated with an unreasonably high risk of dispersal to prohibited persons, such as multiple sales, sales to nonstocking dealers, sales to straw purchasers, and sales at guns shows. FAC ¶ 34.
“Multiple sales” are purchases of one or more firearms by a single person at the same time or over a short period of time. A report published by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (“ATF”) states that multiple sales accounted for 22 percent of firearms first sold in 1999 and traced to crime in that same year. None of the Defendants engage in business practices designed to discourage multiple sales; rather, their practices facilitate such sales. FAC ¶ 44.
“Straw purchases” are purchases by one person for another, who may be prohibited from purchasing by state or federal law. Such sales are illegal under federal law. At least one major firearms manufacturer provides educational training to licеnsed dealers of its products to sensitize them to identifying straw purchases. None of the Defendants do so. FAC ¶46. Plaintiffs allege that ‘‘an extraordinary proportion of crime guns bought from ‘high crime’ gun stores were probably straw purchased!)]” FAC ¶ 50.
Defendant manufacturers do not monitor or supervise their distributors or dealers, except in ways that are aimed at maximizing profits. FAC ¶ 71. Some Defendant manufacturers have written distribution agreements that provide for the right of termination, and occasionally they have terminated or warned distributors or dealers. However, a dangerous sales practice — such as one that would make guns easily available for potential criminal use — has not been the basis for termination and is not included in the terms of the agreements. FAC ¶ 72.
Defendant manufacturers purposely avoid any connection to or “vertical integration” with the distributors and dealers that sell their products. They offer high volume monetary incentives and generally refuse to accept returns. They contractually attempt to shift all liability and responsibility for the harm done by their products. FAC ¶ 73.
Defendant manufacturers do not use availablе computerized inventory and sales tracking systems that are commonly and inexpensively used throughout American industry to limit and screen customers. FAC ¶ 74. Other manufacturers of dangerous products place restrictions and limits on the distribution, distributors, and *1048 dealers of their products to avoid known detrimental consequences. Defendant manufacturers have completely failed and refused to adopt any such limits or to engage in even minimal monitoring or supervision of their distributors and dealers. FAC ¶ 75.
Defendant manufacturers do not require that their dealers and retailers be trained or instructed: (a) to detect inappropriate purchasers; (b) to educate purchasers about the safe and proper use and storage of firearms, or to require any training or instruction; (c) to inquire about or investigate purchasers’ level of knowledge or skill or purposes for buying firearms; or (d) to train purchasers who intend to carry a concealed firearm about the appropriate circumstances in which to pull it out and fire it. FAC ¶ 77.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants design, produce, and advertise their products, such as the Glock mоdel 26, with the illicit market as their target. FAC ¶ 35; see also FAC ¶ 81 (“Defendant manufacturers have increased the production of particular firearms that are popular for use by criminals.”); ¶ 82 (“Defendant manufacturers have sometimes designed and advertised particular features of their products that appeal to purchasers with criminal intent.”); ¶ 83 (“Defendant manufacturers design their firearms with features that are ... attractive, useful, and not detrimental for criminal use in a burglary, robbery, street murder, or drive-by shooting”).
Glock targets the police market first as a tactic to entice the civilian market, where firearms associated with use by law enforcement are in great demand and disproportionately traced to crime. FAC ¶¶ 86, 95. For instance, Glock marketed its “pocket rocket” (the models 26 and 27) as a favorite of “professionals,” even though it knew that some police departments found the gun unsatisfactory and the gun should not be used by anyone other than the skilled or trained user. FAC ¶ 87. Glock designs its firearms without safety features for military and police use, then “over markets” them to civilians. FAC ¶ 88.
Glock sells police departments premature and often unnecessary firearms upgrades so that it can obtain the used guns for resale on the civilian market. Plaintiffs allege that 150,000 Glock police guns have been resold in the last five years. FAC ¶ 89. Plaintiffs allege that Glock sends some of the police trade-ins to its distributors. FAC ¶ 90. Plaintiffs allege that other police trade-ins are given back to the police officers or sold back to the officers at steep discounts and that “[a] number of officers [have] then illegally resold the guns, becoming in effect unlicensed dealers.” FAC ¶¶ 93, 94.
Plaintiffs allege that the Glock pistol used by Furrow to kill Joseph Ileto was a former police gun. The gun was initially shipped to the Cosmopolis (Washington) Police Department on January 15, 1996. A week later, not satisfied with the gun, the Department decided to exchange it for another Glock model. The Department contacted a former reserve officer, Don Dineen, who maintained a gun store in Cosmopolis to perform the trade. Dineen, in turn, contacted a Glock distributor, RSR Wholesale Guns Seattle, Inc., requesting a different model. RSR Seattle shipped the new gun to Dineen, agreeing that payment did not have to be made until the original gun was sold. FAC ¶ 148. Dineen exchanged the new gun for the original gun. FAC ¶ 149.
Dineen sold the original gun to a gun collector, David Wright, at a significant discount. Wright sold the gun to another collector, Andrew Palmer. Neither Wright nor Palmer had a federal firearms license, so they did not have to run back *1049 ground checks on the purchasers of their guns. Dineen knew that both Wright and Palmer frequently sold and traded guns at gun shows in Spokane, Washington, a city near the home base of the Aryan Nations and the neo-nazi group to which Furrow belonged. Palmer sold the gun that had initially been sold to the Cosmopolis Police Department to Furrow at a Spokane gun show in 1998. FAC ¶ 150.
IY. DISCUSSION
In a number of cases across the country, both city governments and individual victims of gun violence, like Plaintiffs here, have brought negligent distribution and nuisance claims against gun manufacturers and distributors. The Court’s review of the resulting decisions reveals that most courts have declined to impose liability on the firearm manufacturers.
See Camden County Bd. of Chosen Freeholders v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp.,
Glock has moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint on three grounds: first, Plaintiffs cannot maintain a negligence action; second, Plaintiffs cannot maintain a public nuisance action; and third, that the Court, in light of the Commerce Clause and Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution, should decline to exercise jurisdiction over the action. Glock’s Motion does not specifically address the first two causes of action in the FAC — Ms. Ileto’s claims for survival and wrongful death — but does seek dismissal of the FAC in its entirety. Neither Plaintiffs nor Glock address whether any of the individual Plaintiffs might be differently situated with respect to the Motion than the others (e.g., Plaintiff Nathan Powers was not shot).
This Court has a duty to avoid the adjudication of constitutional questions.
See, e.g., Spector Motor Service v. McLaughlin,
A. Whether Plaintiffs Have Stated a Claim for Negligence
Plaintiffs allege that Glock was negligent in adopting marketing strategies that caused their firearms to be distributed and obtained by Furrow, resulting in injury and death to Plaintiffs. FAC ¶¶ 141-158. Specifically, they allege that:
*1050 the particular firearms used by Furrow in these incidents ... were marketed, distributed, imported, promoted, or sold [by Glock] in the high-risk, crime-facilitating manner and circumstances described herein, including gun shows, ‘kitchen table’ dealers, pawn shops, multiple sales, straw purchases, faux ‘collectors,’ and distributors, dealers and purchasers whose ATF crime-trace records or other information defendants knew or should have known identify them as high-risk.
FAC ¶ 156. To prevail on their negligence claim, Plaintiffs must show that Glock owed them a legal duty, that it breached that duty, and that the breach was a proximate or legal cause of their injuries.
Merrill v. Navegar, Inc.,
1. Duty
“Fundamentally, a defendant owes a legal duty of care to persons who are foreseeably endangered by the defendant’s conduct, but a defendant has no duty to control the conduct of another or to warn others endangered by another’s conduct.”
Jacoves v. United Merchandising Corp.,
Glock first contends that the negligence claim is barred by California Civil Code § 1714.4, which provides:
(a) In a products liability action, no firearm or ammunition shall be deemed defective in design on the basis that the benefits of the product do not outweigh the risk of injury posed by its potential to cause serious injury, damage, or death when discharged.
(b) For purposes of this section:
(1) The potential of a firearm or ammunition to cause serious injury, damage, or death when discharged does not make the product defective in design.
(2) Injuries or damages resulting from the discharge of a firearm or аmmunition are not proximately caused by its potential to cause serious injury, damage, or death, but are proximately caused by the actual discharge of the product.
Cal. Civil Code § 1714.4 (subsections c and d omitted) (“section 1714.4”). Glock relies on the decisions in
Merrill v. Navegar, Inc.,
The plaintiff in
Casillas
alleged that the defendant had been negligent “in manufacturing a weapon that is disproportionately associated with criminal activity and that has no legitimate sporting or self-defense purpose[.]”
Unlike
Casillas, Merrill
did involve allegations of negligence in marketing and selling, as well as manufacturing, firearms.
The
Merrill
court found that section 1714.4 applied to the plaintiffs’ claims because they alleged that the defendant had “ ‘designed ... a weapon uniquely suited for mass killing and lacking legitimate civilian uses.’ ”
In contrast to Merrill, Plaintiffs here do not allege that Glock is negligent in distributing its firearms to the general public. Rather, they contend that Glock’s distribution scheme specifically targets criminal users. See FAC ¶ 32 (“Defendant manufacturers and distributors select and develop distribution channels that they know regularly provide guns to criminals and underage users.”); ¶ 156 (“Defendants’ practices knowingly facilitate easy access to their deadly products by people like Furrow.”). 6 Accordingly, the Court finds that the Merrill court’s “general public” analysis does not apply to this action.
Despite the fact that
Merrill
and
Casil-la s
and section 1714.4 are distinguishable from this action, the rest of the analysis in
Merrill
is persuasive. Similarly; the Court must give weight to section 1714.4 as .an expression of the policy concerns of the California legislature.
See Casillas,
Although the thrust of Plaintiffs’ сomplaint is that Glock has been negligent in structuring and maintaining its distribution scheme, the FAC does contain specific allegations about the design of certain Glock guns. See FAC ¶35 (“Defendant manufacturers design ... their products with the illicit market as their target”) (emphasis added); id. ¶ 81 (“Defendant manufacturers have increased the production of particular firearms that are popular for use by criminals.”); id. ¶ 82 (“Defendant manufacturers have sometimes designed and advertised particular features of their products that appeal to purchasers with criminal intent.”) (emphasis added); id. ¶ 83 (“Defendant manufacturers design their firearms with features that are unnecessary or detrimental for use by a law-abiding person seeking self-protection in his or her home but are attractive, useful, and not detrimental for criminal use”) (emphasis added); id. ¶ 84 (“firearms nicknamed by the industry as ‘pocket rockets,’ concealable and powerful handguns, all features that are attractive to those with criminal intent”); id. at ¶ 88 (“Glock designs its firearms without vital safety features”); id. ¶ 98 (“Glock’s pocket rocket has two attributes most attractive to criminals”). To the extent that Plaintiffs rely on thеse allegations, the negligence claim must fail under the reasoning of Merrill and Casillas and the policies expressed by section 1714.4.
The remainder of the allegations more resemble a negligent entrustment claim than a negligent manufacture claim.
See, e.g.,
FAC ¶ 61 (“Defendant manufacturers repeatedly and continually use marketing strategies and distribute their firearms through distribution channels, including specific distributors and dealers, gun shows, telemarketers, and ‘kitchen table’ and ‘car trunk’ dealers, that they know or should know regularly yield inordinate numbers and proportions of criminal end users.”). The
Merrill
court suggested that negligent entrustment claims are not barred by section 1714.4,
See
California courts consider the following factors in determining if the defendant owes the plaintiff a legal duty: (1) the foreseeability of the harm to the plaintiff; (2) the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered an injury; (3) the closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the plaintiffs injury; (4) the moral blame attached to the defendant’s conduct; (5) the policy of preventing future
*1053
harm; (6) the burden on the defendant and the consequences to the community of imposing a duty with resulting liability for breach; and (7) the availability, cost, and prevalence of insurance for the risk involved.
Merrill,
The Court finds that the first and third factors are dispositive in this case. “The injured party must show that a defendant owed not merely a general duty to society but a specific duty to him or hef[.]”
Hamilton v. Beretta U.S.A. Corp.,
Even taking the allegations in the FAC as true, the connection between Glock’s conduct and Plaintiffs’ injury is extremely attenuated. Don Dineen, David Wright, and Andrew Palmer, the individuals who channeled the gun from Glock and its first level buyers (the Cosmopolis Police Department and RSR Seattle) to Furrow appear, from the allegations in the FAC, to have acted completely independently from Glock.
See
FAC ¶ 150. “Foreseeability cannot be based on speculation upon future actions of individual purchasers of firearms from legally licensed dealers not employed by the defendants herein.”
City of Philadelphia v. Beretta U.S.A., Corp.,
With regard to the moral blame factor, the Court observes that the neither the federal nor state legislature has imposed the duty Plaintiffs seek to impose here. This suggests a legislative judgment that Glock and the other gun manufacturers are not morally blameworthy in maintaining their current distribution systems.
Cf. City of Philadelphia,
The cases upon which Plaintiffs rely do not support the conclusion that Glock owed Plaintiffs a duty. In
Stevens v. Parke, Davis & Co.,
One who supplies a product directly or through a third person ‘for another to use is subject to liability to those whom the supplier should expect to use the [product] with the consent of the other ... for physical harm caused by the use of the [product] in the manner for which and by a person for whose use it is supplied, if the supplier ... has no reason to believe that those for whose use the [product] is supplied will realize its dangerous condition .... ’
Similarly, in
Ratcliff v. San Diego Baseball Club,
In
Reida v. Lund,
Because of the lack of foreseeability of the injury to Plaintiffs and the attenuated connection between Glock’s actions and Plaintiffs’ injuries, the Court finds that Glock owed no legal duty to Plaintiffs to alter its distribution scheme.
Cf. Holmes v. J.C. Penney Co.,
2. Proximate Cause
Glock also argues that even if it owed a duty to Plaintiffs, its actions were not the proximate cause of Plaintiffs’ injuries. “ ‘[T]he issue of proximate cause ordinarily presents a question of fact. However, it becomes a question of law when the facts of the case permit only one reasonable conclusion.’ ”
Martinez v. Pacific Bell,
Again, the Court must keep in mind the policy expressed by section 1714.4. That section provides that, in a product liability action, “[ijnjuries or damages resulting from the discharge of a firearm or ammunition are not proximately caused by its potential to cause serious injury, damage, or death, but are proximately caused by the actual discharge of the product.” Cal. Civil Code § 1714.4(b)(2). Obviously, this is not a products liability action and Plaintiffs have not alleged that their injuries were caused by the firearms’ dangerous properties. Nevertheless, section 1714.4 evidences an intent to hold shooters, not manufacturers, liable for gun violence.
It is true that “an intervening act [by a third party] does not amount to a ‘superseding cause’ relieving the negligent defendant of liability[.]”
Landeros v. Flood,
In
City of Philadelphia,
the court rejected a negligent distribution claim for lack of proximate cause. The Court finds the analysis in that case persuasive. “According to the plaintiffs’ complaint, the route a gun takes from the manufacturer’s control to the streets ... is long and tortuous, passing through several hands en route .... Only a distant and infirm causal relationship exists between the gun industry’s distribution practices and the plaintiffs’ injuries.”
City of Philadelphia,
Because Plaintiffs have not alleged facts that would support a finding that dock owed them a duty or that dock’s actions were the proximate сause of their injuries, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for negligence. The negligence claim must be dismissed.
B. Whether Plaintiffs Have Stated a Claim for Public Nuisance
Plaintiffs secondly allege that dock’s distribution scheme creates a public nuisance by unreasonably interfering with public safety and health and undermining California’s gun laws. See FAC ¶¶ 124-125. In California, a nuisance is:
[a]nything which is injurious to health, including but not limited to, the illegal sale of controlled substances, or is indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property, or unlawfully obstructs the free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any navigable lake, or river, bay, stream, canal, or basin, or any public park, square, street, or highway....
Cal. Civil Code § 3479. In determining whether Plaintiffs have alleged facts that would support a finding that dock’s actions have created a public nuisance, the Court may consider:
(a) Whether the conduct involves a significant interference with the public health, the public safety, the public peace, the public comfort or the public convenienсe, or
(b) whether the conduct is proscribed by statute, ordinance or administrative regulation, or
(c) whether the conduct is of a continuing nature or has produced a permanent or long-lasting effect, and, as the actor *1057 knows or has reason to know, has a significant effect upon the public right.
Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 821B(2) (1977),
adopted by People ex rel. Gallo v. Acuna,
1. Standing
“In order to recover damages in an individual action for a public nuisance, one must have suffered harm of a kind different from that suffered by other members of the public exercising the right common to the general public that was the subject of interference.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 821C(1) (1977). Glock contends that Plaintiffs do not have standing to bring this public nuisance action because they have not suffered a harm different in kind from other members of the public.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts advises, however, that “[w]hen the public nuisance causes personal injury to the plaintiff ... the harm is normally different in kind from that suffered by other members of the public and the tort action may be maintained.” Id. cmt. d. Plaintiff Lilian Ileto alleges that she and her son were injured when he was shot and killed by Furrow. FAC ¶ 2. Plaintiffs Joshua Ste-pakoff, Mindy Finkelstein, and Benjamin Kadish allege that they were injured when they were shot by Furrow. FAC ¶¶ 3-4. The Court finds that this physical harm to these Plaintiffs meets the requirement that they suffer harm different in kind, rather than degree, from the general public.
It is a closer question whether Plaintiff Nathan Powers, who was not shot, but has suffered “shock to his nervous system,” FAC ¶ 5, has alleged h harm different in kind from the general public. Plaintiffs assert that “[t]he general public experiences danger, fear, inconvenience and interference with the use and enjoyment of public places that affect the tenor and quality of everyday life” because of the distribution of firearms to criminal users. Opp’n at 23:11-13. Plaintiffs have not alleged that Nathan Powers suffered any harm distinct from those suffered by the general public. His harm was more severe because he suffered the harm from actually witnessing a shooting. That seems to be harm different in degree, rather than kind.
See Venuto v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.,
*1058 2. Nuisance law does not apply to the lawful manufacture and sale of non-defective products
Glock next contends that a nuisance claim requires interference with property or an underlying tort. The Court addresses each of these arguments separately. First, ‘the manufacture and sale of a non-defective product cannot give rise to a public nuisance claim. “Public nuisance is a matter of state law, and the role of a federal court ... is to follow the precedents of the state’s highest court and predict how that court would decide the issue presented. It is not the role of a federal court to expand or narrow state law in ways not foreshadowed by state precedent.”
Camden County Bd. of Chosen Freeholders v. Beretta, U.S.A. Corp.,
In
City of San Diego v. U.S. Gypsum Co.,
“[N]uisanee cases ‘universally’ concern the use or condition of property, not products.”
Detroit Bd. of Educ. v. Celotex Corp.,
3. Failure to allege an underlying tort
Glock next contends that Plaintiffs’ nuisance claim fails because its actions that allegedly created the nuisance do not constitute an independent tort or violate a statute. The Court disagrees because no California court has ever imposed such a requirement. In fact, the opposite is true.
See, e.g., People ex rel. Gallo v. Acuna,
“[WJhether the conduct is proscribed by statute” is just one factor the Court may consider in determining whether the defendant’s actions have given rise to a public nuisance. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 821B(2)(b). Plaintiffs have alleged that the other relevant faсtors apply here: “[w]hether the conduct involves a significant interference with the public heath, the public safety, the public peace, [or] the public comfort” and “whether the conduct is of a continuing nature or has produced a permanent or long-lasting effect, and, as the actor knows or has reason to know, has a significant effect upon the public right.” Id. at § 821B(2)(a), (c). See, e.g., FAC ¶¶ 126,129,130.
It is true that, in
People v. Lim,
Jf. Failure to allege that Glock had control over the firearm when it was discharged
Next, Glоck argues that Plaintiffs have failed to allege that Glock had control over the gun when Plaintiffs were injured, a necessary element of a nuisance claim. The
City of Philadelphia
court rejected the plaintiffs’ nuisance claim on this ground.
See
In
Martinez,
the court observed that “personal injuries suffered in a robbery[ ] are totally inconsistent with [the] historical parameters of liability and damage in a nuisance claim.”
Plaintiffs assert that Glock may be held liable under a nuisance theory that “ ‘[i]f the defendant voluntarily raised the storm as charged in the indictment, it is no excuse for him that he could not afterwards quell it.’”
People v. Montoya,
For these reasons, as well as those discussed with respect to Plaintiffs’ failure to allege facts supporting a finding of proximate cause, see supra § IV.A.2, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have failed to allege facts that would support a finding that Glock had control ovеr the nuisance at the time Plaintiffs were injured.
5. Glock’s actions were lawful
Lastly, Glock argues that a nuisance claim is barred because its activities are governed by extensive federal and state regulations. This argument is not supported by California law. “ ‘[A]lthough an activity authorized by statute cannot be a nuisance, the manner in which the activity is performed may constitute a nuisance.’ ”
Greater Westchester Homeowners Assoc. v. City of Los Angeles,
However, because California law does not support a nuisance claim for the distribution of a non-defective product and because Plaintiffs have failed to allege facts that would support a finding that Glock was in control of the nuisance at the time Plaintiffs were injured, the Court finds that Plaintiffs’ public nuisance claim must be dismissed.
V. CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs have already had an opportunity to amend their Cоmplaint. They have not sought leave to amend again. At oral argument, counsel for Glock argued that the first two claims, for wrongful death and survival, are dependent upon the negligence and public nuisance claims. Plaintiffs have not separately opposed dismissal of these two claims. For the foregoing reasons, Glock’s Motion is GRANTED. The FAC is hereby DISMISSED as to Glock in its entirety.
Notes
. After their dismissal, the Loaner Pawnshop Too and David McGee were not named as defendants in the FAC. See FAC ¶¶ 6-22. RSR Management Corporation and RSR Wholesale Guns Seattle, Inc. were named in place of two Doe defendants. See id. ¶¶ 15, 16.
. Defendants Maadi, an Egyptian business, and Imbel, a Brazilian business, have not appeared in this Court.
.It is not clear to the Court whether Defendant Glock, Inc. is affiliated with Defendant Glock GmbH. Glock GmbH has not appeared in this Court. It is also not clear whether Glock's Motion is also made on behalf of RSR Management Corporation and RSR Wholesale Guns Seattle, Inc., which are represented by Glock's counsel.
. As required for a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court accepts as true all material allegations in the FAC, as well as any reasonable inferences to be drawn from them.
See Pareto v. F.D.I.C.,
. Criminal charges for the murder of Ileto and the interference with the civil rights of several of the victims were brought against Furrow in this Court on August 11, 1999, in case number CR 99-1865 NM. Furrow pled guilty to multiple counts on January 24, 2001. The Hon. Nora M. Manella sentenced Furrow to multiple life terms in prison on March 26, 2001.
. Many of the allegations in Plaintiffs’ FAC, such as that Defendants have engaged in a "concerted effort to promote handguns to women and youth,” see FAC ¶ 99, see also id. ¶¶ 100-101, are irrelevant to the claim that Defendants are negligently distributing firearms to criminal users. In viewing the FAC in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the Court disregards these irrelevant allegations.
. The same policy is reflected in the Ninth Circuit's decision in
Moore v. R.G. Industries, Inc.,
. Even if Plaintiffs had alleged that Glock was negligent in entrusting the Glock to the Cos-mopolis Police Department, the claim would likely fail. See Prosser & Keeton on Torts at 201, § 33 (5th ed. 1984) ("Under all ordinary and normal circumstances, in the absence of any reason to expect the contrary, the actor may reasonably proceed upon the assumption that others will obey the criminal law.”). That is, Glock would probably be entitled to assume that the police department and the other gun dealers involved would not unlawfully sell the weapon to Furrow.
. A special relationship may exist when one supplies " 'a chattel for the use of another whom the supplier knows or has reason to know to be likely because of his youth, inexperience, or otherwise, to use it in a manner involving unreasonable risk of physical harm to himself and others whom the supplier should expect to share in or be endangered by its use
Jacoves,
. Similarly, in
Cantwell v. Peppermill, Inc.,
. The Court notes that it was the City of Philadelphia, rather than the victims of gun violence, who sued the gun manufacturers in that case. The district court observed that victims would have more of an interest in pursuing a claim against the manufacturers than the city did.
. Plaintiffs’ reliance on
People v. Arcadia Machine & Tool, Inc.,
Judiciаl Council Coord. Proceeding No. 4095 (Cal.Super. Ct. San Diego County Sept. 19, 2000) (order overruling defendants' demurrers), is unavailing. The court's entire discussion of Plaintiffs' public nuisance claim is contained in a single sentence: "Plaintiffs have sufficiently pled conduct which could be found to be 'injurious to health, or ... indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property . ...' Civ. Code § 3479.”
Id.,
slip op. at 1:13-16. This Court cannot rely on such a summary conclusion in an unpublished opinion as precedent because it does not know what allegations were asserted in the plaintiffs’ complaint, what arguments were made by the parties in their briefing, and what analysis was undertaken by the court.
See, e.g., United States v. Hiatt,
. The
Camden County
court applied New Jersey law in rejecting a public nuisance claim against firearm manufacturers.
See
. Plaintiffs cite
Selma Pressure Treating Co., Inc. v. Osmose Wood Preserving, Inc.,
The Court also observes that although the plaintiffs in Selma sought to hold the defendant liable for a defective product, an unsafe waste disposal system, the nuisance that the defendant allegedly created was land-based, contamination of the water supply.
. The Court recognizes that in
Young v. Bryco Arms,
. The Court notes that while Snow supports Plaintiffs' position that an underlying tort is not required to prevail in a nuisance claim, it also suggests that some injury to property is required, as discussed by the Court in the prior section.
. The Court notes that, more recently, a California appellate court found that a county defendant could not be liable in nuisance for maintaining a sidewalk in disrepair because a statute required the county to furnish all services, including street maintenance, for one year after an unincorporated area became a city.
See Longfellow,
