Opinion
Plaintiff Betsy Royster appeals from a summary judgment in favor of defendant Miguel Montanez in her action *365 for damages against him for personal injuries incurred when plaintiff stepped in a hole on premises occupied by defendant as his home.
The summary judgment was granted on the sole ground that the exclusive remedy for plaintiff’s injuries, incurred in the course of her employment, is an award of workers’ compensation.
Defendant’s motion for summary judgment was supported by a memorandum of points and authorities and by his declaration. The memorandum of points and authorities stated that plaintiff was “secretary to and employee of defendant Miguel Montanez doing business as Pronto Drilling,” and that defendant requested that “plaintiff, in her capacity as his secretary,” make the necessary arrangements for payment of an unpaid bill. The declaration of defendant in support of the motion stated that on the day of her injury, plaintiff “was employed by my company, Pronto Drilling, as a secretary/clerk/girl-Friday and had been so employed for several weeks prior thereto”; that after being requested to “make payment for me of a utility bill,” plaintiff came to defendant’s mobilehome in which he then resided “for the purpose of making further inquiry concerning the bill which I had asked her to pay.” The declaration further explained that this errand was requested of plaintiff because “she stood in the relationship of secretary and clerk to myself and therefore was acquainted with and knew how to perform tasks of this kind,” and that the injuries occurred as plaintiff “departed from the premises ... when she stepped into a depression in the soil
Plaintiff filed no declaration in opposition to the motion. She impliedly admitted her status as an employee of defendant and opposed the motion for summary judgment solely on the ground that workers’ compensation was not her sole remedy in view of defendant’s dual capacity.
Contentions
Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment because: (1) there is a triable issue of material fact in that the declaration of the defendant did not establish the existence of an employer-employee relationship between the parties; and (2) assuming the existence of an employment relationship, the dual capacity doctrine of
Duprey
v.
Shane
(1952)
*366 Defendant contends that: (1) plaintiff cannot raise for the first time on appeal the employee status issue, and (2) the dual capacity doctrine is inapplicable.
Discussion
Summary
Plaintiff’s failure, in the trial court, to raise any issue as to the existence of an employer-employee relationship forecloses any attack upon the judgment on that basis. Defendant’s concurrent roles as employer and occupier of land do not comprise dual capacity. Consequently, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment.
Employment Issue Foreclosed
We find no merit in plaintiff’s contention that it was error for the trial court to find that the parties stood in relation to each other as employer and employee. Defendant’s factual showing in this respect, by stating that Pronto was his company, perhaps failed to negate the possibility that defendant’s ownership was other than as sole proprietor; however, construed in the light of the statement in defendant’s memorandum of points and authorities that plaintiff was “secretary to and employee of defendant Miguel Montanez doing business as Pronto Drilling,” the declaration was sufficient to oblige plaintiff to take issue by stating contradictory facts. Rather than doing so, plaintiff at least impliedly admitted that defendant was her employer by stating in her memorandum of points and authorities in opposition that “[a]long with the obligations which defendant owed to plaintiff as an employer, defendant’s capacity as an owner or possessor of land generated a totally different set of obligations by the defendant toward the plaintiff.” (Italics added.) Nothing in plaintiff’s pleading'papers raised even a hint of doubt about the employment relationship. In addition, in her points and authorities, plaintiff advised the trial court: “As the material facts, as stated, in defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment are not in dispute, the issue before this Court is solely a matter of law.” (Italics added.)
By raising the issue of the employment relationship for the first time on appeal, plaintiff encounters the general rule that issues not presented to the trial court are considered waived.
*367
“An appellate court will ordinarily not consider procedural defects or erroneous rulings, in connection with relief sought or defenses asserted, where an objection could have been but was not presented to the lower court by some appropriate method.... The circumstances may involve such intentional acts or acquiescence as to be appropriately classified under the headings of estoppel or waiver.... Often, however, the explanation is simply that it is
unfair to the trial judge and to the adverse party
to take advantage of an error on appeal when it could easily have been corrected at the trial.” (6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Appeal, § 276, pp. 4264-4265. See also, 4 Cal.Jur.3d, Appellate Review, § 126, pp. 186-187;
Degnan
v.
Morrow
(1969)
Plaintiff asserts that, although it was not raised in the trial court, the question of the employment relationship has not been waived, citing
Central Mutual Ins. Co.
v.
Del Mar Beach Club Owners Assn.
(1981)
Plaintiff also relies on
Maxwell
v.
Colburn
(1980)
Dual Capacity Not Made Out by Defendant-employer’s Concurrent Role as Occupier of Land
Plaintiff contends that her action for damages for personal injuries incurred on the premises of defendant’s residence during the course of her employment as his secretary is not barred by the exclusive remedy provisions of the Worker’s Compensation Act (Lab. Code, §§ 3600, 3601)
2
because, under the reasoning of
Duprey
v.
Shane
(1952)
As a general rule, when the conditions of compensation exist, an injured employee is limited to worker’s compensation as the exclusive remedy and is precluded from bringing a tort action for damages against his employer. Section 3600 provides in relevant part: “Liability for the compensation provided by this division [is] in lieu of any other liability whatsoever to any person .. .. ” Section 3601 provides: “Where the conditions of compensation exist, the right to recover such compensation, pursuant to the provisions of this division is ... the exclusive remedy for injury or death of an employee against the employer .. .. ”
A policy of reciprocal concessions underlies the general rule of exclusivity of remedy. In exchange for relatively swift and certain compensation for injury, the employee relinquishes the opportunity to recover the greater award which might be had from a jury. The employee is relieved of the burden of litigating claims for damages, while the employer can anticipate and pass on to consumers the lower cost of employee injuries which results from a statutorily prescribed measure of damages.
Duprey
v.
Shane, supra,
For many years, the dual capacity doctrine lay dormant in California. As recently as 1976, it was announced that “[a]ttempts to extend the rule of
Duprey
have been repeatedly rejected [citations].”
(Shook
v.
Jacuzzi
(1976)
Recently, our courts have begun to apply the dual capacity doctrine more actively, especially in the area of products liability.
(Bell
v.
Industrial Vangas, Inc.
(1981)
It is now clear that sufficient involvement in the manufacturing, marketing or distribution of a defective product sold to the public may invest the employer with the dual capacity of employer and marketer.
3
An employer-marketer owes to its employees to whom it has supplied a product the same duty it owes to any other foreseeable user of its defective products which are placed in the stream of commerce.
(Bell, supra,
*370 In order to determine whether the dual capacity exception applies to new fact situations, we must examine the nature of the particular duty relationship between the employer and the employee upon which tort liability is predicated to see if it is really distinct from the employer’s duty as such.
“[A] coincidental employment relationship will not shield an employer from a common law liability where the concurrent cause of the injury is attributable to the employer’s
separate and distinct relationship
to the employee and which invokes
a different set of obligations
than the employer’s duties to its employees.”
(Bell, supra,
A distinct relationship will be found when the employer assumes some obligation not normally imposed by the employer-employee relationship (Dup
rey, supra,
Such an analysis precludes extension of dual capacity liability based upon the employer’s failure to provide a safe place to work. At common law, an employee could sue his employer for failing to provide a safe place of employment. However, if the employee knew of the hazard and remained at the workplace (even under protest), he was deemed to have assumed the risk and was denied recovery. Recovery was also made difficult by the reluctance of fellow employees to testify against the employer and by the defenses of contributory negligence and the fellow *371 servant rule. (Prosser, Law of Torts (4th ed. 1971) pp. 526-528; 1 Larson (1978) Law of Workmen’s Compensation, § 4.30, pp. 25-28.)
The Labor Code still imposes a duty upon the employer as such to “furnish employment and a place of employment which are safe and healthful for the employees therein.” •(§ 6400.) But, the Workers’ Compensation Act compensates employees for injuries arising out of unsafe conditions of the work place, including enhanced compensation if serious and wilful conduct is involved. (§ 4553;
Johnson
v.
Industrial Accident Commission
(1952)
In Johns-Manville Products Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 27 Cal.3d at pages 474-475, our Supreme Court examined the liabilities of an employer for hazards of the workplace. Although it discussed dual capacity only in passing, the court made it clear that when the conditions of employment exist, workers’ compensation remains the sole remedy available to an employee who is injured by his employer’s failure to provide a safe place of employment.
The question on appeal was the sufficiency of the plaintiff-employee’s complaint which, as described by the court, charged the employer with “knowingly ordering the employee to work in an unsafe environment, concealing the risk from him, and, after the employee had contracted an industrial disease, deliberately failing to notify the state, the employee, or doctors retained to treat him, of the disease and its connection with the employment, thereby aggravating the consequences of the disease.” (Id., at p. 468.) (Italics added.)
Respecting the sufficiency of these allegations, the court said (id., at pp. 469, 474): “We conclude that while the workers’ compensation law bars the employee’s action at law for his initial injury, a cause of action may exist for aggravation of the disease because of the employer’s fraudulent concealment of the condition and its cause.
*372 “. . . . It seems clear that [Labor Code] section 4553 is the sole remedy for additional compensation against an employer whose employee is injured in the first instance as the result of a deliberate failure to assure that the physical environment of the work place is safe.”
In so holding, the court necessarily rejected dual capacity liability of an employer as an occupant of premises constituting the workplace. This holding is in accord with the rule in other jurisdictions. 4
The holding in Johns-Manville accords with the rationale of the dual capacity doctrine. By occupying land or other premises as a workplace, an employer cannot be said to have undertaken some extra-employer role or to have assumed some obligation which is separate and distinct from its capacity as an employer. Occupation of land is a normal and usual incident of being an employer.
Sound policy considerations also support the holding in
Johns-Manville, supra,
*373 Furthermore, a substantial proportion of work-related injuries are caused, or plausibly can be alleged to be caused, by a dangerous condition of the place of employment. If the dual capacity doctrine were to be construed, so broadly as to create premises liability in every such instance, little would be left to which exclusivity of remedy could attach. The statutory mandate of sections 3600 and 3601 would largely be consumed by dual capacity exceptions, the immunity accorded to employers would be substantially nullified, and the balance of reciprocal concessions which is the foundation of the workers’ compensation system would be seriously disturbed.
From the foregoing, we conclude that defendant’s liability at law cannot be premised upon the unsafe condition of his residence which premises became plaintiff’s place of employment by virtue of her errand.
The judgment is affirmed.
Lui, J., and Danielson, J., concurred.
Notes
The effective date of the amendment was January 1, 1981. The notice of appeal herein was filed January 27, 1981.
Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Labor Code.
The following excerpt from a footnote in Bell reveals the range of activities where product liability may arise under the dual capacity doctrine.
“While the declaration asserts such products were not manufactured by Vangas, it does not similarly deny any involvement in marketing or distribution which may be sufficient to give rise to strict liability for a defective product.”
(Bell, supra,
Discussing the dual capacity doctrine, Professor Larson states: “It is held with virtual unanimity that an employer cannot be sued as the owner or occupier of land, whether the cause of action is based on common-law obligations of landowners or on statutes such as safe place statutes or structural work acts.” (2A Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law (1976) § 72.82, p. 14-234.)
