Opinion
The owners of a house rented to a tenant they knew had a drinking problem and kept firearms in the rented dwelling. While under the influence of alcohol, the tenant accidentally shot a visitor. We hold the landlords did not owe a duty of care to the visitor because the injury was not foreseeable.
Facts and Procedure
On February 8, 1992, plaintiff Lisa Sturgeon visited a friend’s home. Sturgeon’s friend lived in Roseville in a house Thomas Curnutt rented from his parents, the defendants, Hugh and Wilma Curnutt. During Sturgeon’s visit, Thomas displayed a firearm, and, while he waved it around, it accidentally fired. The bullet entered and exited Sturgeon’s abdomen, penetrated her elbow, reentered her body and exited her buttocks, severing a tendon there.
In opening statement at trial, Sturgeon’s attorney outlined the injury and indicated the evidence would show alcohol was present and Thomas appeared to be under the influence. After the incident, Thomas suggested Sturgeon might go to the hospital. However, he did not call an ambulance. After Sturgeon left, Thomas wiped the chair Sturgeon had been sitting in and disappeared for a day, staying at his father’s home. Thomas has a history of alcohol problems. His father was aware of them, having paid for Thomas’s rehabilitation at Charter Hospital.
Counsel began to mention Hugh paid for an attorney to represent Thomas in a battery case. The defense promptly objected. A hearing was held outside the presence of the jury. The defendants objected to any evidence concerning Thomas’s 1992 conviction for battery, which occurred subsequent to this incident. They objected on the basis such evidence was irrelevant and prejudicial. Sturgeon argued that paying for an attorney and bail showed the defendants had control over Thomas, who was 35 at the time of trial. The court excluded the evidence as irrelevant, without significant probative value, and prejudicial.
The discussion then turned to Thomas’s conviction in 1991 for driving under the influence of alcohol in 1989. The defendants objected, arguing the conviction did not show any propensity for violence. The defense explained its theory of the case was that the defendants, as landlords, had a duty to remove dangerous conditions and such a condition existed in Thomas’s gun ownership and misuse of alcohol. The court ruled the conviction for driving under the influence could be mentioned in the opening statement.
Sturgeon’s attorney resumed his opening statement. He declared Hugh knew Thomas used alcohol, having paid for an alcohol rehabilitation program. Hugh also knew of Thomas’s driving while under the influence conviction and helped him get insurance after that conviction.
Thomas and his wife owned the property at 315 Grove Street. When they divorced, Hugh bought the property. He rented the property to another son, and then to an unrelated third party. During this period, Hugh made four or five trips to the property to check both the outside and inside. When Thomas needed a place to live, Hugh asked the tenant to move out and Thomas moved in. Hugh went to the house several times and had an opportunity to look around. On one trip, he took Thomas to a rehabilitation center.
Outside the presence of the jury, the defense moved for a nonsuit, arguing the injury to Sturgeon was unforeseeable. Sturgeon argued a tenant who is an alcoholic and has firearms is similar to a tenant who possesses a dangerous dog; in both cases the landlord has liability for a dangerous condition on the premises. The trial court disagreed, granting the motion for nonsuit, and Sturgeon appeals.
Discussion
I
Sandard of Review
Section 581c of the Code of Civil Procedure authorizes a motion for nonsuit after plaintiff’s opening statement. In ruling on the motion, the court must accept as true all facts set forth in the statement and indulge in every legitimate inference that may be drawn from such facts.
(Timmsen
v.
Forest E. Olson, Inc.
(1970)
II
Landlord Liability
Sturgeon’s action against the defendants is based on the theory of landlord liability. The existence of the landlord’s duty to others to maintain the property in a reasonably safe condition is a question of law for the court.
(Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center
(1993)
Generally, a landowner has a duty to maintain the land in a reasonably safe condition.
(Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center, supra,
The first of the
Rowland
considerations is foreseeability. While we characterize foreseeability as a consideration, it is more than that. If the court concludes the injury was not foreseeable, there was no duty. There is no need to discuss the remaining considerations. (See
Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center, supra, 6
Cal.4th at pp. 679-680.) However, the opposite is not necessarily true. A foreseeable injury does not necessarily ordain a conclusion of duty. (See
Bily
v.
Arthur Young & Co.
(1992)
Foreseeability supports a duty only to the extent the foreseeability is reasonable. In a recent case, a woman was raped in a secluded area of a shopping center. She sued the shopping center. {Ann M. v. Pacific Plaza Shopping Center, supra, 6 Cal.4th at pp. 670-671.) Discussing the foreseeability of injury, the Supreme Court noted there were no prior similar incidents in the shopping center. It therefore found the plaintiffs injury was not foreseeable. {Id. at pp. 679-680.)
Despite the absence of prior similar incidents, it is possible, in today’s criminal environment, to foresee a woman will be attacked in a secluded area of any shopping center. It is also possible heavy rainfall will cause the Sacramento and American Rivers to inundate Sacramento. Yet, we continue to visit shopping centers and live and work here. Objective foreseeability (the logical opposite only of impossibility) is tempered by subjective reasonableness, both in our everyday decisions as individuals and in the decisions of the courts concerning duty.
Sturgeon’s opening statement indicated the defendants knew Thomas misused alcohol and had firearms. Sturgeon contends this evidence is similar to a landlord knowing the tenant has a vicious dog. In
Uccello
v.
Laudenslayer, supra,
We reject Sturgeon’s analogy to vicious dogs. In
Uccello,
the landlord knew the tenant’s dog was vicious and previously attacked and bit people. It was this knowledge that made the foreseeability of harm to others “obvious.”
(Uccello
v.
Laudenslayer, supra,
In
Baldwin
v.
Zoradi
(1981)
When there is no evidence a tenant has violent propensities or handles firearms unsafely while drinking, a landlord’s knowledge that the tenant misuses alcohol and possesses firearms is not a cue the landlord needs to protect visitors from injury. (See
Bigbee
v.
Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co., supra,
III
Excluded Evidence
Sturgeon contends the trial court erred in excluding evidence Hugh paid for an attorney for Thomas’s defense in a battery action after this incident. She claims this ruling was error because such evidence would show Hugh had control over his son. The court excluded the evidence on the basis its minimal probative value was outweighed by its potential for prejudice. We find no abuse of discretion in this ruling. Evidence of the battery suit was certainly prejudicial and the act of paying for a defense attorney does not show control.
The judgment is affirmed.
Sims, Acting P. J„ and Scotland, J„ concurred.
