Opinion
May a convenience store, with a parking lot design typical of the vast majority of such businesses, be held liable when a third party negligently drives his car over a concrete wheelstop and curb, onto the storefront sidewalk injuring a pedestrian? When there is nothing requiring customers to stand in a fixed location adjacent to the parking area, and when there have been no prior such accidents, the answer is, “No.”
The basic facts are undisputed. In front of the Qwik Korner Market in Orange is a sidewalk, six feet wide, with a raised curb exceeding six inches. Marked spaces allow parking perpendicular to the sidewalk. At the end of each space is a concrete wheelstop, three feet wide, six inches high, and eight inches front-to-back. To the side of the storefront are benches and tables.
In the early afternoon on October 8,1988, Julius Jefferson, a minor, made a purchase and was standing outside the store. As Paul D’Arca, 84, pulled into a parking space, his foot slipped. Instead of applying the brake, he hit the accelerator. The car jumped both the parking blocks and the curb, injuring Julius.
Julius’s guardián1'ad litem, Michelle McGhee, brought suit on his behalf against Qwik- Korner for general negligence and premises liability. The suit alleged the accident was foreseeable. It contended metal posts at the ends of the parking spaces would have prevented the car from reaching the sidewalk and failure to install such posts constituted negligence.
In October of 1990, Qwik Korner moved for summary judgment, or in the alternative, for summary adjudication, asserting it had no duty to protect Julius from D’Arca’s unforeseeable negligence. The motion was denied.
In February 1993, Qwik Korner renewed its motion for summary judgment. Additional supporting documents included a declaration by an architect, Raymond Ziegler, stating the design and construction of the parking lot met or exceeded all city codes and regulations. In another declaration, James Herlong, vice-president of the convenience store chain, said there had been no previous incidents of vehicles striking pedestrians at the market. This time the trial court found Qwik Korner owed no duty to provide “an impregnable barrier” around the market sidewalk and granted the motion.
II
Julius’s counsel contend the court erred in granting summary judgment because there is a triable issue of material fact regarding whether Qwik Korner owed him a duty of protection.
All persons have a duty to use ordinary care to prevent injury to others from their conduct. (Civ. Code, § 1714, subd. (a).) “This general rule requires a property owner to exercise ordinary care in the management of his
However, a duty to take steps to prevent the wrongful acts of a
third party
“will be imposed only where such conduct can be reasonably anticipated.”
(Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center
(1993)
There is very little California case law regarding cars negligently coming onto the sidewalks of businesses. Courts in other states, however, have considered similar scenarios. The majority have concluded there is no liability because such accidents are insufficiently likely as a matter of law. (See, e.g.,
Fawley
v.
Martin’s Supermarkets, Inc.
(Ind.App. 1993)
In a minority of the curb-jumping cases, courts have held that liability is a question of fact for the jury. These cases, however, fall into one of three categories, none of which encompasses the facts in the instant case. In the first category are cases where the business provided no protection
whatever
from encroaching vehicles. (See, e.g.,
Martin
v.
Watson’s Grocery
(La.App. 1993)
In the second category, the defendants had knowledge of prior similar incidents, and therefore the accidents were deemed foreseeable even when there was some type of barrier. (See, e.g.,
Grissett
v.
Circle K Corporation of Texas
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1992)
The third category consists of cases where the building design required customers to await service by standing adjacent to a parking lot or driveway. In effect, if a car jumped the curb, there was a high likelihood that a pedestrian would be at the location. (See, e.g.,
Chatmon
v.
Church’s Fried Chicken
(1974)
There is one anomaly,
McAllen Kentucky Fried Chicken No. 1
v.
Leal
(Tex.App. 1981)
With the arguable exception of
McAllen,
no case of which we are aware has imposed liability on the set of facts found here, where the business
An act must be
sufficiently likely
before it may be foreseeable in the legal sense. That does not mean simply imaginable or conceivable. Given enough imagination,
everything
is foreseeable. To paraphrase Justice Eagle-son, with apologies to Bernard Witkin, on a clear judicial day, you can foresee forever.
(Thing
v.
La Chusa
(1989)
Imposing a duty on a convenience store to protect a customer from every imaginable incident is an unreasonable burden: a motorcycle can pass between metal posts and a large truck can break through a cement wall. Only an impregnable barrier would suffice, in essence holding the store owner as the insurer of its customers’ safety. The law does not impose such a burden. (See
Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center, supra,
Plaintiff relies on
Barker
v.
Wah Low, supra,
Summary judgment is proper if the defendant can “conclusively negate a necessary element of the plaintiff’s case.”
(Molko
v.
Holy Spirit Assn.
(1988)
Wallin, J., and Sonenshine, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 25, 1994, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 15, 1994.
Notes
The jury was aware the plaintiff had already settled with the driver and would get no money if the driver were found to be at fault. (McAllen Kentucky Fried Chicken No. 1 v. Leal, supra, 627 S.W.2d at pp. 483-484.)
The court’s discussion of foreseeability consists of the following: “It is true that the fact as to whether other accidents have or have not occurred could be probative as to whether or not such an event was foreseeable .... [Citation.] In [one case] the Court stated: [¶] ‘Appellant showed that for the fourteen years it had operated the lot no one had ever fallen into the creek or had attempted to take a short-cut to the theatre. . . . We cannot say, as a matter of law, that appellant could not reasonably anticipate that someone would fall into the creek if it was obscured, and suffer some type of injury. . . . We overrule appellant’s point that the accident was not foreseeable as a matter of law.’ [¶] The foreseeability element of proximate cause does not require the particular act to have been foreseen, but that the injury be of such general
Julius’s counsel argues that the placement of a table and benches to the side of the store front make the facts of this case more like Barker because the table and benches were an invitation to remain in a fixed location. This attempt fails because the incident at issue involves a person on the sidewalk, not seated at the benches.
We express no opinion as to whether an injury that took place while a customer was using a telephone placed in front of a convenience store would be more like Barker or the instant case.
It is also contended the court erred in allowing the renewed summary judgment motion. We dispense with the contention in this footnote. Qwik Korner had previously requested summary judgment or, in the alternative, summary adjudication, and both motions were denied. To renew the summary judgment motion following denial of a motion for summary adjudication, a party must allege new facts, circumstances, or law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (f)(2).) Regardless of whether we style the previous motion as one for summary judgment or summary adjudication, the second motion alleged facts that had not been asserted previously. The Ziegler and Herlong declarations showed the design of the parking lot met the city’s standards and there had been no previous similar incident. Thus, allowing the renewal was not error.
