Atkins v. Bisigier

16 Cal. App. 3d 414, 94 Cal. Rptr. 49, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1596
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1971
DocketCiv. 9773
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 Cal. App. 3d 414 (Atkins v. Bisigier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkins v. Bisigier, 16 Cal. App. 3d 414, 94 Cal. Rptr. 49, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1596 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

AULT, J.

Patricia Atkins sustained severe and permanent personal injuries on May 27, 1967, when she dove into a swimming pool maintained in connection with the Saddleback Villa Apartments in Tustin, California. The apartment complex and pool were owned by B. & B. Group Number 10, a co-partnership consisting of five individual partners. Mrs. Atkins filed a complaint against the partnership and the individual partners, charging negligence and seeking to recover $1,000,000 in damages. The defendants answered, denying negligence and pleading contributory negligence as an affirmative defense. A jury trial resulted in a unanimous defense verdict. Mrs. Atkins’ motion for new trial was denied and she has appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict.

Respondents purchased the apartment house complex in October 1966. Already constructed on the property, next to a recreation hall, was a large shallow swimming pool of unusual design. It was roughly triangular in shape with its base, approximately 54 feet in length, running parallel to the recreation hall. At each end of the base, where the sides joined, the angles were stubbed off by wide steps leading down into the pool. The third comer, opposite the center of the base, was rounded off to form a curve. The distance from the center of the base to the curve was approximately 26 feet.

Depth markers around the sides of the pool at water level indicated the water varied in depth from 3 feet along the base and at both sides of the steps to 6 feet at the curve. Actually the water depth was somewhat less than indicated by the markers. With the water level of the pool at the center of the tiles around its edges, the deepest point in the pool was at the drain where the water was approximately 5.25 feet deep. The drain was located about 4 feet out from the center of the curve opposite the base and the entire pool sloped, like a bowl, toward this low point with no sudden break in the slope. There were no depth markers on the edge of the deck or the walls next to the pool. There were fixtures for attaching a rope and buoys across the pool in a line parallel to the base. There was no diving board.

*419 On the night of May 27, 1967, two of the respondents’ tenants, Jeffrey Jay Wollaston and Bill McEwen, held a party in the recreation room, with the permission of the apartment manager, Mrs. Mosely. Appellant, age 40, was an invited guest at the party. She testified she consumed two or three drinks of vodka-brandy-wine punch, and possibly one vodka tonic during the evening. About 9 p.m. she and another guest, David Lathrop, decided to go swimming. After changing into swimsuits, Lathrop dove into the pool, and plaintiff walked in, using the steps at the right end of the pool as she faced it from the recreation room side. For at least 30 minutes and perhaps an hour, she swam around in the pool. Plaintiff, an excellent swimmer, swam across the width of the pool numerous times. She testified she swam in only the right half of the pool, which she found to be shallow but gradually getting deeper toward the center. She assumed the far end of the pool was deep. Lathrop left to obtain cigarettes, leaving plaintiff sitting on the deck adjacent to the area where she had been swimming. The air felt colder than the water; she became cold and dove into the water from the deck near the center of the curved side toward the far comer, which she assumed to be the deep end of the pool. Her head hit the concrete, and she blacked out. When Lathrop returned a few moments later, plaintiff was floating, face down, in the center of the pool. Her spinal cord was so severely damaged she is now permanently a quadriplegic.

At the time of the accident, the rope and buoys were not in use, but were hanging on the recreation room wall. While in conflict, there was testimony the pool was lighted by two floodlights on the recreation room building and two underwater lights. Plaintiff testified she had previously stood in the pool, near the point at which she dove, and had found the water about shoulder deep. She also stated the area of the pool toward which she dove appeared darker and deeper than the area of the pool where she had been swimming. She had been taught in Red Cross and Girl Scout classes “to know your water, what to expect,” “You should not dive into water unless it looked visibly deep.” Sammy Lee, a champion Olympic diver called as a witness by plaintiff, testified it was a “cardinal rule in swimming and diving” that in unfamiliar water, “always go in feet first.” He also testified the function of a rope and buoys was to mark the place where the pool changes from shallow to deep.

Early in the trial, the court informed the jury certain safety laws and regulations, to which counsel had referred, might, or might not, be relevant to the issues, depending upon evidence to be presented. During the trial appellant’s attorney urged, and introduced evidence to show, respondents’ pool violated the following safety regulations found in California Administrative Code, title 17, article 2:

*420 Section 7788 in that: It lacked depth markers on the deck, required of pools more than 20 feet wide; the numbers on the side of the pool were partially obscured by the water level; the depth markers indicated the water in the pool was deeper than it actually was.
Section 7809 in that the lighting of the pool was inadequate.
Section 7786 in that: The slope was steeper than specified for a pool exceeding 20 feet in width (it was 1 foot in 10 feet and should have been 1 foot in 12 feet); the pool did not have a rope and buoys separating the deep from the shallow section of the pool. Appellant also contended the pool violated California Health and Safety Code section 24101.2 and was a public nuisance under section 24106 of that code.

After advising the jury the swimming pool in question was a “public pool” as a matter of law, the trial court gave jury instructions based upon the provisions of Health and Safety Code section 24101.2 and on sections 7788 and 7809 of title 17, article 2, of the Administrative'Code, requiring depth markers and adequate lighting. 1 However, the court refused appellant’s instructions based upon section 7786 of title 17, article 2 of the Administrative Code2 and instructed the jury the regulations concerning *421 rate of slope and the requirement of a rope and buoys contained in the section and referred to during the trial were determined, as a matter of law, to be inapplicable to the case and were to be disregarded. Appellant contends this was error.

The provisions of section 7786, at least as applied to a pool designed as the one under consideration, are not unambiguous. At the trial, one engineer testified if the pool had been one inch deeper, no rope at all would have been required; another stated three different ropes were necessary. A third believed no rope was required under the circumstances by the provisions of the section. The trial court, however, did not base its refusal to instruct on the section on the ground the section was not applicable to this particular pool.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Cal. App. 3d 414, 94 Cal. Rptr. 49, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-bisigier-calctapp-1971.