Opinion
The trial court granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment upon a finding that respondent owed no duty of care to prevent an attack of appellant by a pit bull present on respondent’s property with his express consent. We conclude that respondent owed a duty of care to appellant and reverse the judgment.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Respondent was the owner of a residence located on McLaughlin Street in Richmond. In 2005, he embarked upon a remodeling project at the residence that included construction of a new foundation. Respondent hired Burle Southard to act as general contractor for the project. Southard, in turn, hired appellant as an employee to work on the construction project under his supervision for a period of three to four months. With respondent’s approval, appellant and Southard stored equipment and materials in the backyard and garage of the residence. Appellant was given permission by respondent to enter the yard “at any time” to retrieve equipment or materials he stored there.
Respondent also hired two men, Armand and Greg Sanchez, to perform “weeding and gardening” work on the premises. The Sanchezes had two dogs, a pit bull terrier and a smaller pit bull-Labrador mix. Respondent *409 agreed that the Sanchezes could keep their two dogs loose in the fenced backyard and in a van they kept on the property. According to respondent’s declaration, he did not see or hear the dogs attack, bite or appear aggressive with anyone; they seemed “tame and friendly” to him.
Southard expressed a different view of the dogs. He declared that he “saw a ferocious looking pit bull dog” in the Sanchezes’ “very dilapidated looking van” in June or July of 2005. Southard confronted respondent about the dog. Respondent explained that the “van had been broken into in the past, and the dog was there to guard the van.” Southard communicated his fear and view to respondent that “he should certainly not have this pit bull” which had been trained as a “ ‘guard dog’ around this job site.” He told respondent, “ ‘that’s a pit bull,’ meaning that the dog was dangerous.” Southard thought respondent understood the concern he conveyed that “the dog would attack someone.”
On August 1, 2005, appellant called Southard to report that he needed to retrieve “wood planks for scaffolding” that were stored in respondent’s yard. In accordance with the consent previously given by respondent, Southard advised appellant to “go ahead and pick up what he needed.” The same day, respondent had specifically given Armand Sanchez permission to let the dogs “roam in the backyard.” Respondent left the house before appellant arrived and was gone for four or five hours. He was not advised that appellant “intended to visit” the residence that day. If respondent had known appellant planned to enter the yard, he would have “warned him about the pit bull.”
Appellant had never seen the dogs at the residence before, so he entered the backyard through a 12-inch gap in a cyclone fence around the house. Once appellant was about 10 to 12 feet into the yard at the comer of the foundation, the smaller mixed-breed dog growled at him, then the pit bull attacked him. Appellant escaped through the gap in the fence, but the pit bull followed into the driveway and continued to repeatedly bite him until he managed to jump onto respondent’s car.
The trial court determined that respondent had “no duty of care” to appellant to prevent the dog attack. The court found that property owners “must have actual knowledge of the vicious nature or dangerous propensities of another’s dog” to incur liability for injuries incurred on their property, and appellant “has not raised a triable issue of material fact as to the lack of [respondent’s] knowledge about the dangerous tendencies of the dog.” The summary judgment motion of respondent was granted, and judgment was entered in his favor. This appeal followed.
*410 DISCUSSION
Appellant argues that the trial court erred by granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing his negligence action. He asserts that the trial court committed several errors in resolving the summary judgment motion. First, he complains that the court applied “the wrong standard” of duty analysis that requires a “residential landlord” to “have actual knowledge of the vicious nature or dangerous propensities of another’s dog” to incur liability, whereas “this is not a landlord/tenant case.” Appellant also claims that the evidence adduced by defendant failed to meet his burden of proving he “did not actually know the dogs were dangerous,” even if we follow the erroneous “residential landlord/tenant’s pet” standard. Appellant adds that his evidence in opposition to the motion, particularly Southard’s declaration, established a “triable issue of fact” as to respondent’s knowledge of the danger posed by the pit bull guard dog.
I. The Summary Judgment Standards.
We adhere to established rules in reviewing the trial court’s ruling on respondent’s summary judgment motion. “A defendant’s motion for summary judgment should be granted if no triable issue exists as to any material fact and the defendant is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) The burden of persuasion remains with the party moving for summary judgment. [Citation.] When the defendant moves for summary judgment, in those circumstances in which the plaintiff would have the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence, the defendant must present evidence that would preclude a reasonable trier of fact from finding that it was more likely than not that the material fact was true [citation], or the defendant must establish that an element of the claim cannot be established, by presenting evidence that the plaintiff ‘does not possess and cannot reasonably obtain, needed evidence.’ [Citation.]”
(Kahn v. East Side Union High School Dist.
(2003)
*411
Appellant’s negligence action “requires a showing that the defendant owed the plaintiff a legal duty, that the defendant breached that duty, and that the breach was a proximate or legal cause of injuries suffered by the plaintiff.”
(Ambriz v. Kelegian
(2007)
“On appeal from a summary judgment, ‘[w]e review the trial court’s decision de novo, considering all of the evidence the parties offered in connection with the motion . . . and the uncontradicted inferences the evidence reasonably supports.’ [Citation.] The evidence must be viewed in favor of the plaintiff as the losing party, construing the submissions of the plaintiff liberally and those of the defendant strictly.”
(Bell v. Greg Agee Construction, Inc.
(2004)
II. Respondent’s Duty of Care as a Landowner.
Our inquiry proceeds to the nature and extent of respondent’s legal duty of care as landowner for the injuries incurred on his property by appellant. “ ‘Generally, one owes a duty of ordinary care not to cause an unreasonable risk of harm to others. . . .’ [Citation.]”
(Padilla
v.
Rodas
(2008)
“An exception to the statutory rule of liability for failure to use ordinary care in the management of one’s property requires clear support in public policy.”
(Laico
v.
Chevron U.S.A., Inc., supra,
As appellant acknowledges, where a landlord has relinquished control of property to a tenant, a “bright line” rule has developed to moderate the landlord’s duty of care owed to a third party injured on the property as compared with the tenant who enjoys possession and control. “ ‘Because a landlord has relinquished possessory interest in the land, his or her duty of care to third parties injured on the land is attenuated as compared with the tenant who enjoys possession and control. Thus, before liability may be thrust on a landlord for a third party’s injury due to a dangerous condition on the land, the plaintiff must show that the landlord had actual knowledge of the dangerous condition in question, plus the right and ability to cure the condition.’ [][] Limiting a landlord’s obligations releases it from needing to engage in potentially intrusive oversight of the property, thus permitting the tenant to enjoy its tenancy unmolested.”
(Stone v. Center Trust Retail Properties, Inc.
(2008)
*413
Consistent with this rule, “a landlord owes a duty of care to his tenant’s invitees to prevent injury from the tenant’s vicious dog when the landlord has ‘actual knowledge’ of the dog’s vicious nature in time to protect against the dangerous condition on his property.”
(Yuzon v. Collins
(2004)
This is not a case, however, in which the plaintiff has asserted passive neglect on the part of a landlord for failure to inspect or take security measures to protect third parties from a dangerous condition on a tenant’s property. The present action is distinguishable on many decisive levels. First and foremost, respondent was not an absentee landlord with limited access to the property. He did not surrender his possessory interest in the property in any way; he continued to control the premises at least intermittently while the construction project proceeded. The dog owners were not respondent’s tenants who had sole possessory rights associated with the property, but rather temporary invitees who performed landscaping services. And unlike tenants, they were neither vested with exclusive possession of the property nor were entitled to keep their dogs there without express permission granted by respondent. Thus, the essential foundation that underlies the carefully circumscribed duty imposed upon landlords—the restraint upon the landlord’s right to engage in intrusive oversight or control of the tenant’s use of the property—is absent here.
The court in
Uccello, supra,
“
‘The crucial element is
control.’ [Citation.]”
(Alcaraz v. Vece
(1997)
Given respondent’s continued presence on the property, he not only had much greater awareness of events that occurred there, but he also did not relinquish the right or compromise his ability to prevent foreseeable harm on the premises. Further, appellant does not rely merely on respondent’s failure to conduct a reasonable inspection of the property. Nor does this case present the situation of a landlord with no knowledge of the dog aside from a rental agreement which provided that a pet could be kept on the premises. (Cf.
Portillo v. Aiassa, supra,
Therefore, the cases that decline to impose a duty of care unless a landlord has actual knowledge of the animal, coupled with the right to have it removed from the premises, are not dispositive. Under the facts presented in the case before us, we do not merely examine the evidence for proof of respondent’s
*415
actual knowledge of the vicious nature of the dogs and his ability to prevent the attack, as we would if he was a residential landlord.
(Portillo v. Aiassa, supra,
First, we consider the foreseeability of the risk. “Foreseeability is a ‘crucial factor’ in determining not only the existence of the landowner’s legal duty, but its ‘scope.’ [Citation.]”
(Barber v. Chang
(2007)
We observe that while respondent had no knowledge of prior specific incidents of violence or aggressiveness by the dogs, the evidence demonstrates that he must be charged with awareness of the risk. According to Southard’s declaration, construed liberally as it must be, he observed the dogs and related his perception to respondent that the pit bull was “ferocious looking” and “dangerous.”
2
When respondent told Southard that the dog was present to “guard” the van on the property, Southard communicated his concern that the pit bull should not be loose on the jobsite for fear that an attack on someone may result. Respondent was also cognizant that he had given permission to at least Southard and appellant to visit the property freely and unannounced to obtain tools, equipment or materials. The residence was under construction, so the regular appearance in the yard of workers or others
*416
associated with the remodeling project was expected. In short, the risk of harm was eminently foreseeable with the exercise of reasonable care. It is reasonably foreseeable that a “guard dog” kept in an area open to others may injure someone.
(Portillo v. Aiassa, supra,
Second, respondent had the unfettered ability to prevent the dangerous condition on the property. He retained complete possession and control of the property, so he not only had the opportunity to inspect the premises regularly without restriction, but the dog owners had no right to keep the dogs there without his express consent. Failure to eliminate the dangerous condition was not due to respondent’s inability to restrain or remove dogs from the premises. He essentially participated in creation of the dangerous condition of the property by authorizing or permitting the dogs to run loose in the yard. (Cf.
Kalis v. Shattuck
(1886)
Further, the extent of the burden imposed on respondent to exercise due care was minimal. As we have emphasized, unlike a residential landlord respondent was not required to encroach upon his tenant’s possession and enjoyment of the property to inspect the premises and undertake efforts to remove the dangerous condition. He needed to do nothing more than direct the dog owners to keep the dogs in the van or effectively contain them when they were in the yard. Failing that, he could have at least advised appellant, to whom he granted free access to the property, to be aware of the existence of the dogs whenever he visited. Instead, respondent consented to the unrestrained presence of the dogs on the property without informing those known to visit the premises of the potential danger. None of the precautions respondent could have taken to effectively reduce or eliminate the risk of harm were at all burdensome to him. Although we realize that the responsibility of the dog owners for the attack upon appellant may be primary, respondent’s conduct is still closely connected to appellant’s ensuing injury. And, considering the final Rowland factor, we observe that normally insurance is available for homeowners to cover the risk that eventuated here.
*417 DISPOSITION
We conclude that as a matter of law respondent owed a duty of care to appellant. 3 Accordingly, the judgment in favor of respondent is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent with the views expressed herein.
Costs on appeal are awarded to appellant.
Marchiano, P. J., and Margulies, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 22, 2008, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 12, 2008, S167335.
Notes
The court added: “Simply put, a landlord should not be held liable for injuries from conditions over which he has no control.”
(Uccello, supra,
In a prior order we took judicial notice of materials submitted by appellant without objection from respondent in the nature of various ordinances enacted to protect people from “pit bull dogs,” and studies which indicate the high incidence of fatal attacks upon humans by “pit-bull type dogs” as compared to other dog breeds. Since nothing in the record proves respondent’s access to that information, we decline to consider it for the purpose of determining if he owed a duty to protect appellant from the Sanchezes’ pit bull. Instead, we rely on the evidence presented in Southard’s declaration that respondent had been specifically advised the dog was a pit bull, appeared “ferocious,” and should not be present unrestrained on the jobsite.
We do not express any views on the separate and contrasted fact-specific issues of breach of duty, causation and damages, which are posed to the trier of fact.
(McGarry v. Sax
(2008)
