Opinion
Pedro Velasco and his son, Pedro Velasco, Jr., sustained personal injuries when a bottle exploded. In their first amended complaint plaintiffs alleged that they took the remains of the bottle to an attorney who proceeded to place the bottle fragments in a paper bag which he left on top of his desk. Plaintiffs alleged that the agents of the owner of the building in which plaintiffs’ attorney worked “negligently . . . destroyed or disposed of the aforesaid remnants of the exploded bottle” while cleaning the office of plaintiffs’ attorney. Defendant Commercial Building Maintenance Company was served as a Doe defendant and filed a demurrer to the first amended complaint.
It was neither alleged that the paper bag was in any way marked to designate that its contents pertained to a case nor is it here contended that plaintiffs could have so alleged had leave to amend been granted. Further, the record does not reflect that plaintiffs sought leave to file a second amended complaint to so state.
Plaintiffs purport to appeal from the order sustaining the demurrer of defendant Commercial Building Maintenance Company without leave to amend. While an order sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend is nonappealable
(Taylor
v.
State Personnel Bd.
(1980)
Language in
Williams
v.
State of California
(1983)
Relying on
Williams
v.
State of California, supra,
In
Agnew
v.
Parks
(1959)
For the reasons described in
Smith
v.
Superior Court, supra,
J’Aire Corp.
v.
Gregory
(1979)
Focusing on the second of these factors, we note that plaintiffs’ case against respondent rests entirely on the fact that the bag containing the bottle fragments had not been deposited in the trash can by plaintiffs’ attorney. Plaintiffs contend that it should have been reasonably foreseeable to the custodian upon discerning bottle remains or simply seeing a bag on the attorney’s desk that its contents would pertain to a client’s case. “ ‘[F]oreseeability is not to be measured by what is more probable than not, but includes whatever is likely enough in the setting of modern life that a reasonably thoughtful [person] would take account of it in guiding practical conduct. ’ [Citation.] One may be held accountable for creating even ‘ “the risk of a slight possibility of injury if a reasonably prudent [person] would not do so.”’ [Citations.]”
(Bigbee
v.
Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co.
(1983)
A reasonably thoughtful maintenance employee should not be expected to believe that he or she would destroy valuable evidence which might decrease a client’s chance of recovery in a product liability action when that employee sees on an attorney’s desk an unlabeled bag containing a broken bottle. On the contrary, a reasonably thoughtful janitor is entitled to assume that, if an item that seemed to be garbage were actually evidence, its container would be appropriately marked and, quite likely, not left lying about. Absent such a designation, it is reasonable for a maintenance person who sees a bag containing a broken bottle in the course of cleaning an office to remove it in much the same way as he or she would throw away the remains of a mid-morning coffee break. No important policy would be furthered by a holding that maintenance workers have a duty not to throw away what appears to be trash simply because such objects are located in an attorney’s office. If loss of evidence dealt with in the manner herein described should *879 have been foreseeable, that loss should have been foreseen by the attorney, not by respondent.
The order of dismissal is affirmed.
Spencer, P. J., and Lucas, J., concurred.
