Opinion
Appellant Martin Mora appeals from the entry of summary judgment in favor of respondent Baker Commodities, Inc. 1 We reverse with directions.
Statement of Case
The underlying suit arose after appellant was seriously injured when a vessel containing ammonia gas exploded. The vessel was part of a refrigeration system located on the roof of property owned by respondent and leased
Appellant’s complaint asserted nine causes of action and named numerous defendants, including the manufacturer, component part manufacturer, installer, supplier of the vessel, appellant’s employer (Stockton Corporation), and respondent as the owner and lessor of the property. Respondent brought a summary judgment motion alleging it was not liable for appellant’s injuries. The basis of the motion was the assertion that as a commercial lessor respondent was not liable for injuries sustained by third persons while on premises leased to respondent’s commercial tenant. The trial court granted the motion and entered summary judgment in favor of respondent. On appeal the only issues raised relate to strict liability and negligence. We find that appellant has no cause of action in strict liability but there are triable issues of fact on the negligence cause of action.
Facts
Star Packing Company, Inc. (Star) owned real property located at 4100 East Bandini Blvd., Los Angeles, California. On December 31, 1975, Star leased the property and equipment thereon for five years to Serv-U Meat Packing Co. (Serv-U) for the purposes of killing animals and processing meat products.
In June 1980, respondent purchased the industrial property from Star and was assigned all interest in the lease with Serv-U.
On December 30, 1980, respondent and Serv-U negotiated and executed a 26-page, 60-month lease. The lease designated as the “premises” of the lease the real property located at 4100 East Bandini Boulevard and items listed as “personal property,” including the vessel which exploded. The vessel, which was insulated, was described by one expert as four feet by six feet and by another as “a cylindrical vat with ‘dish’ type ends, approximately three feet in diameter and four feet tall.” The evidence is contradictory as to whether the vessel was secured to the roof by bolts, stood on angle-iron legs, or if its legs, not secured by bolts, stood on stabilizing plates. However, there was no disagreement that the vessel, made in the 1920’s or 1930’s, was part of a large refrigerator system specifically designed for the building. The system was located on the roof and included vats, pumps, evaporators, accumulators, blowers and seven vessels which held ammonia gas, including the one which exploded. One blower had an estimated capacity of 10 tons, the steel and concrete cradle was 36 feet by 18 feet and one evaporator had a 40-ton capacity. All parts of the system were connected through the building and through the roof by pipes and wiring.
The tenant (Serv-U) subsequently subleased the premises to a subtenant, who on May 14, 1984, subleased the property to appellant’s employer, Stockton. Respondent agreed to the sublease with Stockton which obligated Stockton to perform all obligations of the December 30, 1980, lease. All subtenants utilized the property as a meat packing plant.
Besides leasing the property, respondent also operated a meat rendering business. A meat Tenderer collects the inedible meat by-products and processes them for fertilizer and dog food. Respondent’s employees entered the premises several times a day to retrieve the inedible meat portions collected in a large receptacle.
On July 14, 1984, appellant was on the roof of the building when the vessel exploded releasing approximately 1,800 gallons of ammonia gas into the air and causing severe injuries to appellant. 2 To inspect the vessels after the accident they were x-rayed. 3 The inspection revealed that the vessel exploded when a weld gave way. There was no evidence that at any time prior to the accident respondent inspected the real property or the vessel.
This matter comes to us after respondent’s summary judgment motion was granted and judgment was entered in favor of respondent. In reviewing the summary judgment our responsibility is to determine if “all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c);
Burton
v.
Security Pacific Nat. Bank
(1988)
Strict Liability
Appellant first contends respondent is strictly liable for appellant’s injuries because respondent owned the real property upon which appellant was injured. We disagree.
In
Becker
v.
IRM Corp.
(1985)
Appellant suggests strict liability is an appropriate cause of action because the vessel which exploded was “personal” rather than real property. 4 We need not draw the distinction suggested by appellant. For purposes of discussion, we assume the vessel which exploded was not affixed nor intended to be annexed to the roof and was technically “personal property.” This, however, does not control the issue as to whether respondent, as the owner and lessor of the vessel, can be held strictly liable.
In
Price
v.
Shell Oil Co.
(1970)
Negligence
Appellant contends summary judgment was inappropriate as to the negligence cause of action because respondent did not demonstrate that judgment was required as a matter of law. We agree.
At common law the duties of landowners and occupiers were based upon artificially classifying the plaintiff as either a trespasser, licensee, or invitee. The lease was seen as transferring the rights and all obligations based upon ownership of the property to the tenant for the length of the leasehold.
(Becker
v.
IRM Corp., supra,
Respondent contends that once its property was leased to its commercial tenant respondent could not be held responsible for any injuries incurred thereon. This contention oversimplifies a commercial landowner’s responsibilities.
Respondent’s contention is based on the assertion that as a matter of law respondent owed no duty to appellant. Duty is an obligation to take ordinary care under all the circumstances.
(Rowland
v.
Christian, supra, 69
Cal.2d at p. 112.) Duty is primarily a question of law in which the foreseeability of risk to another is an important consideration.
(Weirum
v.
RKO General, Inc.
(1975)
In determining if there is a basis for tortious liability for conditions on land, California courts modemly “have placed major importance on the existence of possession and control”
(Preston
v.
Goldman
(1986)
In discussing the duties of residential landlords courts consider such factors as the importance of complying with habitability requirements, the scarcity of housing leaving tenants in an unequal bargaining position, the impracticability of requiring tenants to make repairs and the burden to them, the foreseeability of harm, the burden to landlords in avoiding risks, and the fact that residential landlords have the primary responsibility to maintain properties.
(Becker
v.
IRM Corp., supra,
Here, the subject premises were leased to a commercial tenant for an industrial purpose and habitability is not in issue. It was practical to expect that the tenant would maintain and repair the premises as the carefully negotiated lease so obligated the tenant. There does not appear to be a shortage of commercial properties.
(Muro
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Appellant also contends respondent did not relinquish control of the building. We disagree. Respondent did not keep control of the premises by coming on to the property to retrieve inedible meat as part of its rendering business. Respondent’s employees entered the premises as other persons who did business with appellant’s employer. In addition, forcing appellant’s employer (Stockton) to list respondent as a named insured on the insurance policy covering the property was simply good business practice, it did not demonstrate that respondent retained control of the building. Further, as
However, contrary to respondent’s assertion, respondent, a commercial landowner, cannot totally abrogate its landowner responsibilities merely by signing a lease. As the owner of property, a lessor out of possession must exercise due care and must act reasonably toward the tenant as well as to unknown third persons.
(Becker
v.
IRM Corp., supra,
However, the landlord’s responsibility to inspect is limited. Like a residential landlord, the duty to inspect charges the lessor “only with those matters which would have been disclosed by a reasonable inspection.”
(Becker
v.
IRM Corp., supra,
Here, respondent, as the moving party of the summary judgment motion, had the burden to show as a matter of law that there were no triable issues of fact.
(Becker
v.
IRM Corp., supra,
Lucas, P. J., and Boren, J., concurred.
Notes
Appellant’s wife, Martha Mora, also filed suit for loss of consortium.
(Rodriguez
v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
(1974)
As a result of the accident, appellant (29 years old) was completely disabled and now requires oxygen 12 hours per day. Approximately 20 other people were also injured including 2 employees in nearby businesses who were hospitalized.
A California Division of Occupational Safety and Health investigation conducted after the accident showed numerous Code of Regulations (designated as Administrative Code until 1988) violations including that the vessel did not have suitable operative pressure gauges, the safety valves were corroded, the welds on the tank were made by a person other than a manufacturer, and there was no evidence of inspection and maintenance necessary to assure operation of the pressure vessel. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, §§ 465, subd. (e), 467, subds. (a), (b), 3328, subd. (f).)
Real property is land, that which is affixed to land, and that which is immovable by law. (Civ. Code, § 658.) At common law an item “affixed to land” was a “fixture.” (Civ. Code, § 660.) Three factors are utilized to determine if an item has become a fixture: “ ‘(1) physical annexation; (2) adaptation to use with real property; (3)
intention
to annex to realty.’ ”
(Cornell
v.
Sennes
(1971)
The exceptions to the general rule imposed liability on the lessor of property when the lessor volunteered or contracted to repair the premises and failed to do so, when the lessor knew of an undisclosed danger, when the leased premises were to be open to the public and there was a known dangerous condition, when the injuries occurred in an area which remained
Our discussion does not deal with a commercial landlord’s responsibilities in other factual situations such as if a commercial landlord concealed a dangerous condition (cf.
Rowland
v.
Christian, supra,
This case does not present the question of whether a landlord found liable for a failure to inspect may thereafter properly seek indemnity from the tenant who violated a contractual provision to maintain or repair.
Lessors also have the duty to take reasonable steps to prevent injury when the landowner knows of a dangerous situation, and the landowner has the right and ability to reenter.
(Leakes
v.
Shamoun
(1986)
Once a court finds a duty exists, it is for the jury to determine if the inspection was reasonable under the circumstances.
(Isaacs
v.
Huntington Memorial Hospital, supra,
