Baker-Smith v. Skolnick

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
DocketB282946
StatusPublished

This text of Baker-Smith v. Skolnick (Baker-Smith v. Skolnick) 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
Baker-Smith v. Skolnick, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 7/9/19 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

MACKENZIE BAKER-SMITH, B282946

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC587234) v.

DROR SKOLNICK et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Michele E. Flurer, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Effres & Associates, Justin Jacob Effres, Esner, Chang & Boyer, and Stuart B. Esner for Plaintiff and Appellant. Macdonald & Cody LLP, Scott L. Macdonald, and Douglas M. Carasso for Defendants and Respondents. __________________________ A flying mattress made Mackenzie Baker-Smith swerve on the freeway and crash at high speed. She sued a company for failing to secure the mattress. The jury ruled against her, but heard an incorrect jury instruction about negligence per se. This doctrine presumes defendants are negligent if they violate a law. A special exception excuses law violations if a defendant can prove it tried but could not comply with the law. Giving that excuse instruction here was error. We reverse and remand. I We summarize the case in the trial court. The first essential point is the Vehicle Code requires cargo to be secured to vehicles. We return to this secure-the-cargo law shortly. A Baker-Smith was driving on the freeway when a mattress suddenly flew at her car. She veered to avoid it and hit a barrier. Two eyewitnesses chased a truck to get the license number. One called 911 with the truck’s description and plate. An officer stopped that pickup, which was towing a trailer. The driver was Dror Skolnick, the owner of G&L Design Building & Landscape, Inc. We refer to Skolnick and G&L collectively as G&L. Skolnick gave different accounts about a mattress in his trailer. When he was pulled over, Skolnick told police he was unaware of anything flying out of his truck but admitted there “may” have been a mattress in the back. Skolnick was pulling a four-wheel uncovered trailer with seven foot sides. Skolnick opened the trailer’s back doors for the officer. There was no mattress. According to the officer, Skolnick added Skolnick “wasn’t aware if for sure there was a mattress because the guys he says he works with or works for, do the loading of the vehicle.”

2 At trial, Skolnick’s equivocation changed to certainty: there was no mattress. Skolnick testified his trailer was “[e]mpty, for sure,” that day. Skolnick told the jury he used the trailer to pick up trash a day or two before the crash. At the dump, Skolnick unloaded everything from the trailer and cleaned it with a broom. Then he took it and left it at a job site. A couple days before the crash, Skolnick directed his employee Juan Lopez to put tools in the trailer, but then Skolnick changed his mind and told Lopez to “make sure it’s nothing in there.” Skolnick said Lopez told him the trailer was empty. Skolnick later retrieved the trailer from the job site because, the day after that, he planned to use the trailer to pick up plants from a nursery. G&L is a landscaping business and Skolnick was buying plants for a job. He towed the trailer to his house, parked it out front overnight, and left for the nursery from his house the next morning, which was the day of the crash. At trial, Skolnick admitted, on the day of the crash and after police pulled him over, Skolnick said “maybe” his trailer contained a mattress. Skolnick also admitted he did not check his trailer before leaving home that morning, but checking would have been “quick and easy.” Baker-Smith said the mattress came from a white dump truck, while the G&L truck was blue and the trailer was black. Lopez died before trial. B Baker-Smith sued G&L. The main theory at trial was negligence per se, which is the doctrine that a defendant breaking a law is presumptively negligent. Baker-Smith claimed G&L broke the secure-the-cargo law: Vehicle Code section 23114, subdivision (a) requires vehicles be loaded so contents stay put.

3 Baker-Smith contended G&L broke this law because eyewitnesses saw the mattress leave G&L’s vehicle. G&L claimed it did not break this law because the eyewitnesses were wrong: Skolnick never carried a mattress that day, and the eyewitnesses were untrustworthy, so the mattress came from elsewhere. Alternatively, even if the mattress did fly out of Skolnick’s trailer, G&L maintained Skolnick was not negligent because he asked Lopez to empty the trailer and Lopez confirmed it was empty, so Skolnick had been diligent and knew nothing about a mattress, which excused him. C The focus of this appeal is three jury instructions, which we quote as delivered. All were California Civil Jury Instructions, or CACI, instructions. Two instructions were about negligence per se: CACI 418 and CACI 420. The third is CACI 400, which is about burden of proof and the elements of negligence generally. We begin with CACI 418, which states the basic doctrine of negligence per se. This instruction does not mention the burden of proof. In material part, it stated: “If you decide: 1. That Dror Skolnick violated [California Vehicle Code section 23114, which requires vehicles to be loaded so as to prevent their contents from escaping] and 2. that the violation was a substantial factor in bringing about the harm, then you must find that Dror Skolnick was negligent. “If you find that Dror Skolnick did not violate this law or that the violation was not a substantial factor in bringing about

4 the harm, then you must still decide whether Dror Skolnick was negligent in light of the other instructions.” The second jury instruction was CACI 420, which we call the “excuse instruction.” Again there is no mention of the burden of proof. As given in this case, CACI 420 stated: “A violation of a law is excused if the following is true: that despite using reasonable care, a person was not able to obey the law.” The third instruction was CACI 400, which set out the essential factual elements of negligence. This instruction does define the burden of proof. We quote it as given, emphasizing the burden-of-proof language: “Mackenzie Baker-Smith claims that she was harmed by Dror Skolnick’s negligence. To establish this claim, Mackenzie Baker-Smith must prove all of the following: 1. That Dror Skolnick was negligent; 2. That Mackenzie Baker-Smith was harmed; and 3. That Dror Skolnick’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing Mackenzie Baker-Smith’s harm.” (Italics added.) No other instruction mentioned burden of proof in connection with the doctrine of negligence per se. In sum, the court instructed the jury Baker-Smith had the burden of proof. The implication was no burden shifted to G&L about whether its excuse for violating the secure-the-cargo law was valid. D Next we recount the first question on the special verdict form, which is important for this appeal: “1. Was Dror Skolnick / G&L . . . negligent?

5 “If you answered ‘Yes,’ to question 1, then answer question 2. If you answered ‘No’ to question 1, stop here, answer no further questions, and have the presiding juror sign and date this form.” The jury answered no to this first question. This no- negligence finding ended the case. But this one question created complete ambiguity about why the jury answered no: was it because the jury believed there was no mattress, or because it believed Skolnick had a valid excuse for violating the secure-the-cargo law? One cannot say. The special verdict form did not include a question specifically asking the jury whether G&L was the source of the mattress. Neither was there a question asking if Skolnick had a valid excuse, if, indeed the jury found he had violated the Vehicle Code. The court entered a defense judgment. Baker-Smith appealed. We granted her motion to augment the record. II The sole contention on appeal concerns jury instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
Baker-Smith v. Skolnick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-smith-v-skolnick-calctapp-2019.