Baskin v. Hughes Realty, Inc.
This text of 235 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589 (Baskin v. Hughes Realty, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MANELLA, J.
*190In the underlying action for disability discrimination, appellant Tamara Baskin alleged that respondent Hughes Realty, Inc. (Hughes) violated the California Disabled *592Persons Act (DPA) ( Civ. Code, §§ 54 - 55.3.) by providing no designated and accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities within the parking lot of a grocery store.1 Specifically, she alleged that under the DPA, the store was obliged to designate an accessible path of travel from the street to the store's entrance that did not require wheelchair-bound patrons to travel behind parked vehicles. The trial court concluded that Baskin's claim, as alleged in her first amended complaint, failed on the undisputed facts. We affirm.
RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Baskin suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta, a bone disease that renders her unable to walk or stand independently, and requires her to use a wheelchair in order to be mobile. In June 2014, she initiated the underlying action against respondent Hughes, which operates a Ralphs grocery store near appellant's apartment. Baskin's original complaint asserted claims for injunctive relief and damages under the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Unruh Act) ( Civ. Code, §§ 51, 52 ) and other statutes, alleging that the store lacked a designated and accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities to the store's entrance from the adjacent public street.
In September 2015, after learning that Hughes had created a designated path for persons with disabilities in the store's parking lot, Baskin filed her first amended complaint (FAC), which contained claims for damages under the DPA and the Unruh Act relating to the period before Hughes established the path. The FAC alleged that on numerous occasions, the store's lack of a designated path deterred Baskin from going to the store because she was obliged to travel through its parking lot along vehicular lanes and behind parked cars.
In October 2015, Baskin voluntarily dismissed her claim under the Unruh Act. Prior to trial on the remaining claim under the DPA, Hughes filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence that it had not provided directional signs identifying the accessible path of travel, contending that the FAC alleged no such claim.
At Baskin's request, the trial of her DPA claim was bifurcated. Following a bench trial on the issue of liability, the trial court ruled that the DPA claim *191failed, concluding that Hughes was not required to provide a marked path of travel that did not pass behind parked cars, and that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage. On August 16, 2016, judgment was entered in favor of Hughes and against Baskin. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Baskin challenges the trial court's determinations (1) that an accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities from a street to a store's entrance may pass behind parked cars and (2) that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage. As explained below, we conclude that she has shown no reversible error.
A. Governing Principles
The DPA establishes protections for persons with disabilities. ( Munson v. Del Taco, Inc. (2009)
Under the remedial provisions of the DPA, disabled persons asserting a violation of sections 54 and 54.1 may obtain an award of damages and attorney fees. Subdivision (a) of section 53 provides that anyone who engages in such a violation "is liable for each offense for the actual damages and any amount as may be determined by a jury, or the court sitting without a jury, up to a maximum of three times the amount of actual damages but in no case less than one thousand dollars ... and attorney's fees as may be determined by the court in addition thereto ...."
Sections 54 and 54.1 do not, by themselves, require business owners to make structural modifications to their facilities. ( Californians for Disability Rights v. Mervyn's LLC (2008)
*192Coronado v. Cobblestone Village Community Rentals, L.P. (2008)
Sections 54 and 54.1 incorporate the ADA's protections against discrimination.
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MANELLA, J.
*190In the underlying action for disability discrimination, appellant Tamara Baskin alleged that respondent Hughes Realty, Inc. (Hughes) violated the California Disabled *592Persons Act (DPA) ( Civ. Code, §§ 54 - 55.3.) by providing no designated and accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities within the parking lot of a grocery store.1 Specifically, she alleged that under the DPA, the store was obliged to designate an accessible path of travel from the street to the store's entrance that did not require wheelchair-bound patrons to travel behind parked vehicles. The trial court concluded that Baskin's claim, as alleged in her first amended complaint, failed on the undisputed facts. We affirm.
RELEVANT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Baskin suffers from osteogenesis imperfecta, a bone disease that renders her unable to walk or stand independently, and requires her to use a wheelchair in order to be mobile. In June 2014, she initiated the underlying action against respondent Hughes, which operates a Ralphs grocery store near appellant's apartment. Baskin's original complaint asserted claims for injunctive relief and damages under the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Unruh Act) ( Civ. Code, §§ 51, 52 ) and other statutes, alleging that the store lacked a designated and accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities to the store's entrance from the adjacent public street.
In September 2015, after learning that Hughes had created a designated path for persons with disabilities in the store's parking lot, Baskin filed her first amended complaint (FAC), which contained claims for damages under the DPA and the Unruh Act relating to the period before Hughes established the path. The FAC alleged that on numerous occasions, the store's lack of a designated path deterred Baskin from going to the store because she was obliged to travel through its parking lot along vehicular lanes and behind parked cars.
In October 2015, Baskin voluntarily dismissed her claim under the Unruh Act. Prior to trial on the remaining claim under the DPA, Hughes filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence that it had not provided directional signs identifying the accessible path of travel, contending that the FAC alleged no such claim.
At Baskin's request, the trial of her DPA claim was bifurcated. Following a bench trial on the issue of liability, the trial court ruled that the DPA claim *191failed, concluding that Hughes was not required to provide a marked path of travel that did not pass behind parked cars, and that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage. On August 16, 2016, judgment was entered in favor of Hughes and against Baskin. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Baskin challenges the trial court's determinations (1) that an accessible path of travel for persons with disabilities from a street to a store's entrance may pass behind parked cars and (2) that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage. As explained below, we conclude that she has shown no reversible error.
A. Governing Principles
The DPA establishes protections for persons with disabilities. ( Munson v. Del Taco, Inc. (2009)
Under the remedial provisions of the DPA, disabled persons asserting a violation of sections 54 and 54.1 may obtain an award of damages and attorney fees. Subdivision (a) of section 53 provides that anyone who engages in such a violation "is liable for each offense for the actual damages and any amount as may be determined by a jury, or the court sitting without a jury, up to a maximum of three times the amount of actual damages but in no case less than one thousand dollars ... and attorney's fees as may be determined by the court in addition thereto ...."
Sections 54 and 54.1 do not, by themselves, require business owners to make structural modifications to their facilities. ( Californians for Disability Rights v. Mervyn's LLC (2008)
*192Coronado v. Cobblestone Village Community Rentals, L.P. (2008)
Sections 54 and 54.1 incorporate the ADA's protections against discrimination. Each provision states: "A violation of the right of an individual under the [ADA] also constitutes a violation of this section." ( §§ 54, subd. (c), 54.1, subd. (d).) Because the ADA requires the modification of facilities to remove barriers to access whenever " 'removal is readily achievable,' " sections 54 and 54.1 incorporate that requirement with respect to barriers to access identified in the ADA regulations. ( Californians for Disability Rights , supra, at p. 589,
Sections 54 and 54.1 also enforce compliance with disability-related state building standards when a building is constructed or altered. In order to give meaning to the DPA, the Legislature enacted a statutory scheme ( Gov. Code, § 4450 et seq. ; Health & Saf. Code, § 19955 et seq. ) providing for the establishment of building standards designed to ensure accessibility by the handicapped. ( Hankins v. El Torito Restaurants, Inc. (1998)
Under the statutory scheme, buildings are subject to the standards set forth in Title 24 of the California regulatory code, known as the California Building Standards Code (CBSC). ( Californians for Disability Rights , supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at p. 585,
B. Underlying Proceedings
1. FAC
The FAC alleged that when Baskin visited the Ralphs store by bus or wheeling herself, she encountered significant barriers. According to the FAC, because the store lacked a "designated, accessible path of travel" from the street to the store, gaining access to the store was difficult and dangerous for her. Baskin was required "to wheel herself up the vehicular drive aisle, among moving cars that [were] trying to get into and out of the busy parking lot, and then to wheel herself behind parked cars to the store entrance." The FAC alleged that between April 2013 and March 2015, on more than twenty occasions, the lack of a designated and accessible path deterred Baskin from patronizing the store.
2. Pretrial Proceedings
Trial on Baskin's DPA claim was set for June 13, 2016. On May 19, 2016, Baskin sought bifurcation of trial with respect to the issues of liability and damages. She requested that the court resolve certain issues of law relating to liability prior to a jury trial on factual issues, stating: "The parties do not dispute the vast majority of material facts. Instead, the dispute centers on whether [Hughes] violated applicable access standards at the times of [Baskin's] visits. [Baskin] contends that [Hughes] violated disabled access standards by (1) failing to provide a properly signed, wheelchair-accessible route from the public right of way to the Ralphs entrance[,] and (2) requiring wheelchair users to travel behind parked cars to the Ralphs entrance. As to the first issue, [Hughes] concedes that no signage was provided. However, it argues that it did not violate disabled access standards because, at the times of [Baskin's] visits, it was not required to provide signage indicating the existence and location of the wheelchair-accessible routes. As to the second issue, [Hughes] argues that the applicable standards do not prohibit wheelchair users from travelling behind parked cars to reach a facility entrance."
On the same date, Hughes filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence relating to certain barriers to access Baskin intended to establish at trial, including the purported lack of signs designating the path of travel for *194persons with disabilities. Hughes contended it was not obliged to rebut the *595existence of the barriers because the FAC failed to allege them with sufficient specificity. Hughes argued, inter alia, that the FAC did not allege that the path of travel Hughes offered-that is, the path that passed behind parked cars-must have directional signs identifying it as the accessible route.
At a hearing on June 13, 2016, the trial court granted Baskin's request to bifurcate trial. The court ruled that it would resolve the issues of liability on the basis of trial briefs and closing arguments presented at a hearing. For purposes of the bench trial on liability, the parties agreed that during the pertinent period, (1) Baskin was disabled, (2) Hughes operated the store, (3) the path of travel from the street to the store offered to persons with disabilities passed behind parking spaces, (4) there was no marked accessible path, and (5) there was no directional signage. The parties disagreed regarding the version of the CBSC standards applicable to the store during the period Baskin was allegedly deterred from patronizing it. The court directed the parties to submit trial briefs addressing the pertinent issues, including whether the FAC pleaded a claim for inadequate signage, and whether the applicable CBSC standards were those promulgated in 2001, in view of alterations to the store in 2007.
3. Trial on Liability
i. Baskin's Trial Brief
Baskin's trial brief contended the 2007 alterations to the store required application of the 2001 CBSC standards relating to access for persons with disabilities.2 Relying on those standards, she argued that a permissible access route could not pass behind parked cars, placing special emphasis on the standards for parking spaces for the disabled, which required that such spaces be located as close as possible to an accessible entrance, and positioned so that "persons with disabilities were not compelled to wheel or walk behind parked cars other than their own." (Former Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24, *195§§ 1114B.1.2, 1129B.3.3.) Baskin further maintained that the 2001 CBSC standards required signage identifying the accessible path.3
Baskin opposed Hughes's contention that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage. Noting that the 2001 CBSC standards characterized an "accessib[le]" path as one meeting those standards, Baskin argued that because the FAC asserted the absence of a "designated , accessible path of travel," it necessarily alleged that Hughes had not complied with the 2001 CBSC signage standards. (Italics added.)
*596ii. Hughes's Trial Brief
Hughes' trial brief contended that notwithstanding the 2007 alteration to the store, Baskin's DPA claim was properly evaluated in light of the 2013 CBSC standards, as the occasions on which she was allegedly deterred from shopping at the store occurred between April 2013 and March 2015. Hughes argued that "compliance with existing law of the time of [Baskin's] visits provides a safe harbor regardless of the alteration history of the subject property. ... It goes without saying that there cannot possibly be a violation when the subject property complied with existing law at the time of [Baskin's] visits." (Italics omitted.) Hughes also pointed to former section 18944.15 of the Health and Safety Code, which provided that for purposes of specified DPA claims alleging a violation of CBSC accessibility standards, compliance with the 2013 CBSC standards was "an alternative method of compliance."
Hughes contended the 2013 CBSC standards permitted accessible paths to include vehicular routes and routes passing behind parked cars, arguing that the standards "plainly contemplate[d] that disabled individuals will use the same circulation paths that non-disabled individuals use ...." Hughes further argued that the corresponding ADA standards, as well as the 2010 and 2001 CBSC standards, permitted accessible paths to pass through vehicular lanes in store parking lots.
Hughes maintained that the FAC contained no claim for inadequate signage, relying on the principle that statutory claims must be alleged with specificity. Additionally, Hughes contended any such claim failed, arguing *196that the 2013 CBSC standards required signs only when an accessible route offered to persons with disabilities did not coincide with the route used by the general public.
iii. Closing Arguments
At the hearing on the liability issues, in response to the trial court's request for clarification of the DPA claim, Baskin's counsel stated that during the pertinent period, the store lacked a route for wheelchair users through the parking lot from the street to the store's entrance (1) that passed behind no parked cars and (2) was designated by suitable signs.4 Counsel did not contest Hughes's contention that the ADA mandated no such route, but argued that the 2001 CBSC standards required safe access routes permitting wheelchair users to move from a facility's "entry points"-namely, bus stops, sidewalks, and parking spaces-to its entrance without passing behind parked cars. Counsel further argued that the FAC alleged the absence of required signage.
Hughes's counsel contended that neither the 2013 CBSC standards nor their predecessors-namely, the 2001 and 2010 CBSC standards-required Hughes to provide a path of travel that passed behind no parked cars and was designated by signs. Counsel also argued that the FAC failed to plead a claim for inadequate signage.
iv. Statement of Decision
In a detailed statement of decision, the court rejected Baskin's contention that the 2001 CBSC standards applied to her DPA claim. Applying the 2013 CBSC standards, the court determined that Hughes was not required to establish a path of travel from the street to the store that did not pass behind parked cars. The court further determined *597that the FAC pleaded no claim for inadequate signage.
C. Ruling that Accessible Path May Pass Behind Parked Cars
We begin with Baskin's challenges to the trial court's ruling that the CBSC standards did not require Hughes to provide a path of travel that did not pass behind parked cars. Because that ruling constitutes a determination of law on undisputed facts, we review it de novo. ( Limited Stores, Inc. v. Franchise Tax Bd. (2007)
1. Determination that the 2013 CBSC Standards Govern the DPA Claim
Baskin contends the trial court erred in evaluating her DPA claim solely in light of the 2013 CBSC standards, arguing that the FAC's allegations also required application of the 2010 CBSC standards. The FAC alleged that on specific dates between April 2013 and March 2015, the lack of an accessible path deterred her from shopping at the store. Although the 2013 CBSC standards were published in 2013, they became effective on January 1, 2014. (See Health & Saf. Code, § 18398, subd. (b).) Baskin's opening brief argues that the occasions on which she was allegedly deterred from patronizing the store in 2013 must be evaluated under the prior standards, that is, the 2010 CBSC standards. As explained below, Baskin's contention fails, as her briefs on appeal, viewed collectively, identify no error in the court's conclusion that the 2013 CBSC standards applied to all the incidents identified in the FAC.
At the outset, we observe that Baskin has abandoned the contention she presented to the trial court, namely, that the DPA
*598claim must be evaluated under the 2001 CBSC standards, as her briefs do not discuss or mention that *198contention. For that reason, our focus is on whether any of the incidents alleged in the FAC are subject to the 2010 CBSC standards.
In applying the 2013 CBSC standards to all the incidents alleged in the FAC, the trial court relied on two factors, namely, considerations of due process, which the court concluded "permit[ted] a finding of liability based only on the law in effect when the alleged offending act occur[red]," and former section 18944.15 of the Health and Safety Code. Subdivision (a) of the latter statute stated that "for the purpose of any claim" under the DPA asserting a violation of a CBSC accessibility standard, "[u]pon the publication date of the 2013 [CBSC standards] ..., compliance with the building standards for disabled accessibility as provided in [the 2013 CBSC standards] shall be authorized as an alternative method of compliance." The statute, by its own terms, specified time limits for the "alternative method of compliance" set forth in subdivision (a), including that the statute was operative only until January 1, 2015.7
The trial court thus appears to have concluded that an incident alleged in the FAC was properly assessed under the building standards in effect on the date of the incident, unless former section 18944.15 of the Health and Safety Code permitted the application of the 2013 CBSC standards. Applying that rationale, the court impliedly determined (1) that the alleged incidents that occurred after the effective date of the 2013 CBSC standards-that is, January 1, 2014-were directly subject to those standards, and (2) that the remaining alleged incidents-which occurred in 2013-were subject to the 2013 CBSC standards, by virtue of former section 18944.15 of the Health and Safety Code.
Baskin has shown no error in those determinations. Her opening brief accepts item (1), and otherwise contains no discussion of former section 18944.15 of the Health and Safety Code. Although her reply brief attacks the court's reliance on that statute, she contends only that the statute did not apply to incidents that allegedly occurred in 2015 because the statute was *199then inoperative. However, the statute is irrelevant to whether those incidents are subject to the 2013 CBSC standards because-as Baskin's opening brief acknowledges-they occurred after January 1, 2014, the effective date of the 2013 CBSC standards. Accordingly, Baskin has failed to show that the trial court erred in evaluating her DPA claim exclusively under the 2013 CBSC standards. *5992. Determination that Paths May Pass Behind Parked Cars
Baskin contends the trial court erred in determining that under the 2013 CBSC standards, Hughes was not required to provide an accessible route that did not pass behind parked cars for persons using wheelchairs. As explained below, we disagree.
Hughes relied on section 11B-206.2.1 (2013 section 11B-206.2.1), which provided that "[a]t least one accessible route shall be provided within the site from ... public streets and sidewalks," and section 11B-206.3 (2013 section 11B-206.3), which stated that accessible routes "shall coincide with or be located in the same area as general circulation paths."8 (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24, §§ 11B-206.2.1, 11B-206.3.) At the hearing on liability, the parties submitted maps and overhead photos of the store's parking lot, which showed that between rows of painted parking places, there were vehicular lanes leading from the adjacent streets to the store's entrances. We agree with the trial court that nothing in the 2013 CBSC regulations precluded those vehicular lanes from serving as accessible routes merely because they passed rows of parking places.9
*200We find further support for our conclusion from the related ADA standards. Because the State Architect and the California Building Standards Commission are required by statute to promulgate CBSC standards not less stringent than the corresponding ADA standards, the latter offer a baseline for evaluating the intent underlying the former. Hughes directed the trial court's attention to pertinent ADA regulations (see 28 C.F.R. (2012) § 36.104, appendix to § 36.304(d) ), including the 2010 ADA Standards for Titles II and III Facilities (2010 ADA Standards) as well as the 1991 Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities (1991 ADA Standards). Hughes also pointed to the guidance notes accompanying the 2010 standards prepared by the United States Department of Justice (Justice Department). Because the Justice Department is authorized to enforce the ADA, its guidance notes are entitled to deference by *600courts seeking to construe the ADA. ( Wilson v. Murillo (2008)
The ADA standards permit accessible routes through parking lots to use vehicular lanes, and contain no express restriction barring routes from passing behind parked cars. Sections 206.2.1 and 206.3 of the 2010 ADA Standards, which are materially identical to sections 11B-206.2.1 and 11B-206.3 of the 2013 CBSC regulations, have been interpreted by the Justice Department to permit access routes in the area of the "general circulation path" that involve vehicular lanes.10 The guidance notes accompanying the 2010 ADA Standards state that an access route "must be in the same area as the general circulation path" and "may include vehicular ways." Similarly, the 1991 ADA Standards state that "[t]he accessible route shall, to the maximum extent feasible, coincide with the route for the general public," and may include *201"parking access aisles" and "crosswalks at vehicular ways."11 Although our research has disclosed no judicial decision expressly addressing whether the ADA permits a route passing behind parked cars, several courts have construed the ADA standards to permit routes through parking lots that make use of vehicular lanes ( Wilson v. Pier 1 Imports (US), Inc. (E.D.Cal 2006)
In our view, because the 2013 CBSC standards closely track the 2010 ADA standards, the former cannot reasonably *601be understood to bar routes making use of vehicular lanes between rows of parking spaces. Aside from requiring that the CBSC standards be no less stringent than the ADA standards, the statutory scheme governing the CBSC obliges the State Architect and the California Building Standards Commission to promulgate the CBSC standards only after consulting with specified parties, including at least one private organization representing persons with disabilities. ( Gov. Code, § 4450, subd. (b) ; Health & Saf. Code, § 18935, subd. (a).) In view of these procedural requirements, we conclude that had the State Architect and the California Building Standards Commission intended to bar routes making use of vehicular lanes between rows of parking spaces, they would not have propounded regulations materially identical to the ADA standards.
For the first time on appeal, Baskin contends that under section 11B-502.7.1 of the 2013 CBSC standards, accessible routes for wheelchair users may not pass behind parked cars. That provision required that parking spaces for persons with disabilities and the "access aisles" serving those spaces-that is, the "pedestrian spaces" immediately adjacent to such spaces-be designed "so that persons using them are not required to travel behind parking spaces other than to pass behind the parking space in which they parked ." ( *202Cal. Code Regs., tit. 24, §§ 11B-202, 11B-502.7.1, italics added.) The provision resembles the 2001 CBSC standards upon which Baskin relied before the trial court, which imposed a similar requirement. The court rejected Baskin's contention, concluding that the requirement in question attached solely to parking places for the disabled.
We reach the same conclusion under the 2013 CBSC standards. In view of the language italicized above, the requirement applies solely to the parking spaces delegated to persons with disabilities. Had the State Architect and the California Building Standards Commission intended that requirement to include all accessible routes, they could have said so in simple express terms. (See Goebel v. City of Santa Barbara (2001)
Relying primarily on CHE , supra ,
Our focus is on the CBSC standards and the statutory scheme governing their promulgation, as it is well established that the DPA, by itself, "does not impose an affirmative duty to eliminate access barriers except as required by specific building standards," notwithstanding "the DPA's general guarantee of 'full and equal access.' " ( Californians for Disability Rights , supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at p. 587,
*602Marsh , supra , 64 Cal.App.3d at p. 888,
*203Under the scheme, the approval of the CBSC standards by the California Building Standards Commission is "a quasi-legislative act of administrative rulemaking." ( Plastic Pipe & Fittings Assn ., supra , 124 Cal.App.4th at p. 1406,
Here, Baskin contends that the 2013 CBSC standards, properly interpreted, bar accessible routes for wheelchair users from passing behind parked cars. As explained above, those standards impose no such prohibition. Because Baskin does not challenge the validity of the 2013 CBSC standards, insofar as they constitute acts of quasi-legislative rulemaking, she has otherwise failed to show that the statutory scheme mandates the prohibition she advocates.
Baskin's reliance upon CHE is misplaced. CHE arose under the statutory scheme as originally enacted, which directed the State Architect to develop suitable building standards, and in the interim, required builders to adhere to certain standards set forth by the American Standards Association (ASA standards). ( CHE , supra , 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 131,
On appeal, the restaurant contended the access it offered constituted an adequate "primary entrance." ( CHE , supra , 150 Cal.App.3d at p. 131,
CHE provides no assistance to Baskin. That case focused on the interpretation of a specific term within an ASA standard-namely, "primary entrance"-which the appellate court concluded was reasonably construed to exclude the entrance provided by the restaurant. As no regulatory entity had promulgated the ASA standard, the court looked to the Legislature's intent in enacting the statutory scheme. However, Baskin has identified no term or phrase within the pertinent 2013 CBSC standards which, reasonably construed, expresses the prohibition she advocates, and no evidence that it was the intent of the California Building Standards Commission to impose that prohibition. Because the 2013 CBSC standards do not contain the prohibition critical to Baskin's DPA claim-that routes for wheelchair users may not pass behind parked cars-her claim fails.
Furthermore, although we agree with CHE that the Legislature's intent was to devise a system aimed at achieving full and equal access for persons with disabilities with due attention to their safety, we see nothing in CHE supporting the existence of the "[e]quality of [s]afety" principle upon which Baskin relies. CHE affirms that adequate safety is a key factor in equality of access for persons with disabilities, but does not discuss or mention any such principle.13
*604*205In our view, any such "equality of safety" principle would render the statutory scheme governing the CBSC standards unworkable. Because some disabilities may create ineradicable risks of injury, it would be difficult or impossible to devise building standards that equalized the risk of injury for everyone. Furthermore, because disabilities may create different risks of injury, it would be difficult or impossible to devise feasible standards that eliminated the specific heightened risk attending each such disability.
Baskin maintains that the trial court erred in its application of the 2013 CBSC standards, arguing that the record discloses a material factual dispute that must be resolved in her favor. The crux of her contention is that the stipulated facts and evidence at trial conclusively established that the routes Hughes actually offered to wheelchair users did not comply with the 2013 CBSC standards. As explained below, we disagree.
Although Baskin did not assert the existence of the purported factual dispute at trial, she argues that it was identified in her trial brief, which stated that "[a]t [the] Ralphs [store], like any other shopping center, pedestrians could choose to reach the entrance by walking between the cars parked in the parking lot. ... Wheelchair users do not have this option because ... a wheelchair cannot fit between two parked cars." On appeal, she contends this presents a factual issue whether the routes Hughes offered to wheelchair users-which made use of the vehicle lanes-coincided with, or were located in the same area as the " 'general circulation paths,' " for purposes of 2013 section 11B-206.3. She further argues that although the stipulated facts did not resolve that issue, the maps and photos she submitted at trial conclusively showed that the routes Hughes offered to wheelchair users diverged from those "available to ambulatory individuals."14
*206In view of the evidence presented at trial, the issue Baskin identifies is one of law, not fact. Generally, the application of statutes and regulations to stipulated and undisputed facts presents a question of law. ( Chen v. Franchise Tax Bd. (1998)
D. Ruling Regarding Signage-Based Claim
Baskin contends the trial court erred in rejecting her DPA claim insofar as it was predicated on inadequate signage. Prior to trial, Hughes filed a motion in limine to exclude all evidence relating to inadequate signage on the ground that the FAC pleaded no such claim. At the trial on liability, the court determined that the FAC failed to plead a signage-based claim. Baskin challenges that ruling, arguing that the court applied excessively stringent pleading requirements. As explained below, we discern no error in the trial court's ruling.
1. Governing Principles
" 'An objection to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that a complaint fails to state a cause of action is in the nature of a general demurrer to the complaint or a motion by a defendant for judgment on the pleadings.' [Citation.]" ( Clemens v. American Warranty Corp. (1987)
*207Generally, "[w]he[n] a party relies for recovery upon a purely statutory liability it is indispensable that he plead facts demonstrating his right to recover under the statute. The complaint must plead every fact which is essential to the cause of action under the statute." ( Green v. Grimes-Stassforth S. Co. (1940)
In addition to contending the FAC pleaded no signage-related claim, Hughes's trial brief asserted that any such claim failed on its merits, arguing that under the 2013 CBSC standards, directional signs were not required for the route provided to wheelchair users at the store. Hughes relied on section 11B-216.6 (2013 section 11B-216.6) which states: "Directional signs ... indicating the accessible route to the nearest accessible entrance shall be provided at junctions when the accessible route diverges from the regular circulation path." (Former Cal. Code Regs, tit. 24, § 11B-216.6.)15 Hughes also pointed to the related State Architect advisory note, which states: "Directional signs are needed where the accessible route diverges from the route for the general public and should *606be located at decision points .... Directional signs are not needed where paths are equal and/or readily apparent. ... [¶] ... Too many signs can be confusing to everyone utilizing the site."
2. Analysis
Baskin has offered two distinct theories in support of a signage-based claim. Under the first theory, Baskin asserts that Hughes failed to provide a suitably signed path that did not require her to pass behind parked cars; under the second theory, Baskin asserts that Hughes failed to provide signs showing the actual route or routes from the street to the store. We discuss each theory separately.
a. Lack of Signage Identifying Path Not Passing Behind Parked Cars
Baskin's first theory is directly tied to certain allegations in the FAC that Baskin asserted at trial, namely, that the store's parking lot lacked a "designated, accessible path of travel" from the street to the store that did not pass *208behind parked cars. The FAC clearly distinguishes that missing path from the path that Baskin actually used to patronize the store, as the FAC alleges: "The lack of a designated, accessible path to [the store] means that ... the only way for [Baskin] to get to the [store's] entrance is to wheel herself up the vehicular drive aisle, among moving cars that [were] trying to get into and out of the busy parking lot, and then to wheel herself behind parked cars to the store entrance." Under this theory, Baskin's signage-based claim asserts that inadequate signage is a feature of the missing path, rather than of any path Baskin may have actually used.
It is unnecessary to address whether the FAC's allegations adequately pleaded the first theory because that theory fails on its merits.16 As discussed above (see pt. C. of the Discussion, ante ), the 2013 CBSC standards did not require Hughes to create the missing accessible route described in the FAC. For that reason, the 2013 CBSC standards cannot reasonably be regarded as mandating directional signs identifying any such route.
3. Lack of Signage Identifying Actual Paths
Baskin's second theory, as set forth in her trial brief and on appeal, is that Hughes failed to provide directional signs identifying the actual route or routes to the store. As noted above (see pt. C. of the Discussion, ante ), Baskin's trial brief stated that "[a]t [the] Ralphs [store], like any other shopping center, pedestrians could choose to reach the entrance by walking between the cars parked in the parking lot. For example, a pedestrian could walk into the parking lot between the cars parked along [the public street] and weave their way to the entrance. ... Wheelchair users do not have this option because ... a wheelchair cannot fit between two parked cars." Baskin's trial *607brief further contended that due to the restricted options available to wheelchair users, the 2013 CBSC standards required directional signs informing them how to reach the store's entrance.
Viewed in the context of the FAC's allegations, Baskin's second theory is that Hughes failed to provide signs identifying routes that made use of the vehicular lanes, such as the routes Hughes actually provided. As noted above, *209the FAC alleges that "the only way for [Baskin] to get to the [store's] entrance" made use of "the vehicular drive aisle, among moving cars that [were] trying to get into and out of the busy parking lot," and led her "behind parked cars to the store entrance." (Italics added.) On appeal, Baskin acknowledges that the routes relevant to her second theory are those making use of the parking lot's "vehicular drive aisles," which Hughes offered as the accessible routes. Accordingly, under the second theory, Baskin's signage-based claim asserts that adequate signage was required of such routes, rather than of the missing path targeted by the first theory.
In our view, the trial court correctly determined that the FAC did not plead the second theory, as it failed to plead that the routes Hughes offered that made use of the vehicular drive lanes were in some manner unobvious or easily overlooked. Because the State Architect falls within the Department of General Services, which is charged with the enforcement of the CBSC standards ( Campbell v. State Personnel Bd. (1997)
Nothing in the FAC reasonably suggests that the routes that Hughes offered, making use of vehicular access lanes, were not readily apparent. Indeed, the FAC alleges that Baskin recognized that the only paths available to her made use of those lanes; furthermore, the sole defects in those paths identified in the FAC were that they placed Baskin among moving cars and led her past parked cars. Although the FAC asserted the absence of "a designated, accessible path," that allegation referred to the target of the first theory, not the paths Baskin actually used to travel to the store. The FAC thus failed to plead a "fact ... essential to the cause of action under the statute." ( Green, supra, 39 Cal.App.2d at p. 56,
Baskin contends that Hughes waived its objections to the signage-based claim by failing to demur to the FAC in a timely manner. We disagree. As Witkin explains, although certain objections to a complaint-such as lack of certainty in the allegations-are waived by failure to assert a timely demurrer, the principal defect ordinarily asserted by a general demurrer-namely, failure to state facts sufficient to state a cause of action-is not so waived, and may properly be raised prior to trial. (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra , Pleading, §§ 952, 958-959, pp. 367-368, 372-373.) That is the defect Hughes asserted in its motion in limine to exclude all evidence relating to *210inadequate signage, which was " 'in the nature of a general demurrer' " ( Clemens , supra , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 451,
Had the FAC sufficiently pleaded a signage-based claim predicated on the second *608theory, we would conclude that it failed on the merits. The maps and overhead photos of the parking lot submitted at the hearing on liability show that the parking lot surrounding the store is not large, and that the rows of painted parking spaces define clear vehicular access lanes. For that reason, the routes to the store's entrances that Hughes offered are readily apparent to wheelchair users entering the lot from the streets. In sum, the trial court did not err in rejecting Baskin's DPA claim insofar as it was predicated on inadequate signage.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondent is awarded its costs on appeal.
We concur:
EPSTEIN, P. J.
WILLHITE, J.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
235 Cal. Rptr. 3d 589, 25 Cal. App. 5th 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baskin-v-hughes-realty-inc-calctapp5d-2018.