Opinion
Robert J.Owens appeals from an order dismissing the action following the sustaining of Kings Supermarket’s demurrer to Owens’s second amended complaint. The only issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in holding that a supermarket owes no duty to a customer injured by the negligence of a third party on public streets adjacent to the premises.
On January 1, 1984, plaintiff double-parked his car in the traffic lane in front of Kings Supermarket located at 751 Webster Street in San Francisco. *382 Plaintiff exited his car for the purpose of buying a newspaper at the market. Plaintiff was injured when a car owned and operated by Lula and Earnest Butler rolled forward and crushed plaintiff’s legs against his car. 1
Plaintiff filed the initial complaint in this action on April 30, 1984. The complaint alleged that Kings Supermarket was in the possession and control of “certain premises, located at 751 Webster Street, City and County of San Francisco, State of California, known and described as a grocery market.” The complaint further alleged that there was a roadway adjacent to the sidewalk at the front of Kings Supermarket that was used as a parking area for customers. Paragraph seven of the complaint alleged that plaintiff was injured in the “parking area” and that the use of the parking area without lighting and without warning was “known to” Kings Supermarket.
Kings Supermarket demurred to this complaint on the ground that the power to regulate a public street is vested in the state or the municipality and that the supermarket did not owe a duty to plaintiff “for the conduct of a third party in areas off the premises over which the occupier of the property has no control.” In opposition, plaintiff did not dispute that the accident had occurred in a public street. Instead, plaintiff contended that the supermarket had a duty to persons in the public roadway arising from its “special use” of the road as a parking area for customers and for the acceptance of deliveries. The court sustained the demurrer with leave to amend.
Plaintiff filed a first amended complaint that was virtually identical to the original complaint, except that a new paragraph five alleged that the sidewalk and roadway were used for the commercial benefit of the supermarket for the delivery of goods and as a customer parking area. The first amended complaint further alleged that Kings Supermarket “by word and deed, encouraged, solicited, and invited persons to park in the street traffic lanes for purposes of purchasing liquor and groceries at Defendant Supermarket . . . .” The first amended complaint further alleged that this commercial use of the public street created a hazardous condition that caused plaintiff’s injuries.
Kings Supermarket again demurred. In addition to the arguments stated in its first demurrer, Kings also addressed plaintiff’s new “hazardous condition” theory by noting that although there is authority to the effect that the *383 possessor of land may have a duty to persons injured off the premises if the injury is caused by a dangerous condition on the land, plaintiff was attempting to extend that duty to injuries caused by an alleged dangerous condition of an adjacent public street. Plaintiff again did not dispute that the accident had occurred in the public street, and instead pressed the argument that a duty arose from Kings Supermarket’s alleged adaptation of “the public way storefront area to the commercial use and benefit” of defendant. The court sustained the second demurrer, but again granted leave to amend.
Plaintiff filed his second amended complaint on January 2, 1985. It was identical in nearly all respects to the first amended complaint except that it included an allegation that plaintiff was on defendants’ premises when he was injured. The second amended complaint also included new allegations to the effect that the supermarket had ratified the conduct of the Butlers, who were alleged to be agents of the supermarket.
On May 14, 1985, the court sustained the demurrer and this time granted leave to file a third amended complaint only against the Butlers. Plaintiff filed a third amended complaint on May 14, 1985. On July 16, 1985, the court ordered that the action be dismissed against Kings Supermarket only. Plaintiff filed a timely notice of appeal from that order.
I.
Plaintiff’s first contention on appeal is that because the second amended complaint alleged that plaintiff was injured while on “[defendant's premises” a cause of action was stated, apparently based on the general principles of premises liability articulated in
Rowland
v.
Christian
(1968)
It is axiomatic that the function of a demurrer is to test the legal sufficiency of the pleading by raising questions of law.
(Baldwin
v.
Zoradi
(1981)
This exception is applicable to the pleadings in this case: The original complaint clearly alleged that plaintiff was injured in the street adjacent to the supermarket premises. The same allegations were made in the first amended complaint. Only when it became apparent to plaintiff that the court would not accept his argument that the alleged “special use” of the public street by the supermarket imposed a duty, did plaintiff allege, for the first time, that the injury occurred on “defendant’s premises” rather than in the street. Plaintiff offered no explanation for this inconsistency to the court below or on appeal. The conclusion is inescapable that this amendment was made solely for the purposes of avoiding a demurrer. Thus, the court properly disregarded the allegation that the accident occurred on defendants’ premises. For purposes of this appeal we shall assume, as alleged by plaintiff’s original and first amended complaints, that plaintiff was injured while on the street adjacent to the premises of the supermarket. 3
II.
Having disposed of plaintiff’s contention that the demurrer to the second amended complaint improperly attacked the truth of the factual allegations set forth in that complaint, we turn to the primary issue before us: Did the court err in finding that the supermarket owed no duty to a customer who was injured by the negligence of a third party in a public street adjacent to the supermarket premises? The determination that
*385
the defendant owes the plaintiff no duty of care is a complete defense to a cause of action for negligence.
(Sprecher
v.
Adamson Companies
(1981)
In the proceedings below, plaintiff advanced two legal theories in support of his contention that Kings Supermarket owed him the duty to exercise ordinary care: First, plaintiff relies on the principle that the owner or occupier of land has a duty to exercise ordinary care to prevent injuries to persons on adjacent property or public streets caused by a natural or artificial condition of the property which the owner-occupier controls. (See
Sprecher
v.
Adamson Companies, supra,
In
Sprecher
v.
Adamson Companies, supra,
The fact that plaintiff was injured while in the public street, rather than on the premises possessed by the supermarket, also precludes application of the duty recognized in
Isaacs
v.
Huntington Memorial Hospital, supra,
Thus, although it is indisputable that the scope of premises liability has been greatly expanded in the last 10 years, plaintiff is attempting to extend the duty
beyond
the premises and into an undefined zone of “commercial use.” The imposition of such a duty is foreign to the concept upon which all premises liability is based, i.e., that possession includes the attendant right to manage and control, thereby justifying the imposition of a duty to exercise due care in the management of the property. (See, e.g.,
Sprecher
v.
Adamson Companies, supra,
The rationale for refusing to so extend the concept of duty was spelled out clearly in
Steinmetz:
“[I]t is impossible to define the scope of any duty owed by a landowner off premises owned or controlled by him. The instant case cannot be distinguished from that of a movie theater showing the latest academy award winning movie, or a department store holding its annual clearance sale, neither of which is able to afford sufficient parking for the number of invitees seeking to enter the premises. We are aware of no obligation upon the movie theater or department store owner to provide additional lighting on the city streets or hire security guards to patrol those streets for the safety of its invitees. Nor can the instant situation be distinguished from that of a homeowner whose business guests must park on city streets because there is not sufficient parking on the premises. It is not legally incumbent upon the homeowner to provide additional lighting or hire security guards to escort his guests to their cars. And if the department store, movie theater or residence is located in a high crime area, why should the duty be discharged simply by affording the invitee safe passage to his vehicle? Why should it not continue until the invitee is safely away from the
*387
‘high crime area?’ ‘To ask the questions is to demonstrate the futility of attempting to impose and define such a duty.’ [Citations.]” (
Plaintiff’s allegations that Kings Supermarket had adapted the public street to its “commercial benefit” are an apparent attempt to bring his case within a very narrow exception to the general rule that a person has no duty to exercise ordinary care to render safe property over which he or she has no right of possession or control. This exception was recognized in two cases imposing a duty on street vendors for injuries to patrons incurred on public streets:
Schwartz
v.
Helms Bakery, Ltd.
(1967)
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the second amended complaint on the ground that the defendant supermarket did not, as a matter of law, owe a duty to a customer who was injured by the negligence of a third party on an adjacent public street.
The order dismissing the action as to Kings Supermarket is affirmed.
Smith, J., and Benson, J., concurred.
Notes
Lula and Earnest Butler were the named defendants in plaintiff’s second cause of action for negligence in the second amended complaint. The court permitted plaintiff to file a third amended complaint alleging only a cause of action for negligence against the Butlers. The order dismissing the action was as to Kings Supermarket only, and the Butlers are not party to this appeal.
In his opposition to the demurrer to the second amended complaint, plaintiff made no argument that a duty arose based on the new and conclusory allegations that the Butlers were agents of the supermarket and that defendant ratified the Butlers’ conduct. Moreover, on appeal, apart from a one-sentence reference to these allegations, plaintiff makes no argument and cites no authority to the effect that those allegations stated a cause of action against the supermarket. We conclude, therefore, that plaintiff has both waived the issue by not arguing it to the court below and abandoned it on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 13.)
Plaintiff does not specifically contend that the denial of leave to amend the second amended complaint following the third successful demurrer constituted an abuse of discretion. In any event, we note that it is not an abuse of discretion to deny leave to amend where the plaintiff alleged facts in the original complaint that cannot, as a matter of law, give rise to a cause of action.
(Mercury Casualty Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
