Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 2020
DocketB294297
StatusUnpublished

This text of Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8 (Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8) 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
Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/11/20 Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

MICHAEL CARRACELA, B294297

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC588898) v.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mark C. Kim, Judge. Affirmed. Boucher, Raymond P. Boucher, Maria L. Weitz; Aitken Aitken Cohn and Richard A. Cohn for Plaintiff and Appellant. Leon Bass, Jr., Richard D. Arko; Murchison & Cumming, Friedrich W. Seitz, Gina E. Och; Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Robin Meadow and Eleanor S. Ruth for Defendant and Respondent. ____________________ Michael Carracela appeals the summary judgment of his negligence claim against Southern California Edison Company (Edison). We affirm. I We recount facts and inferences in the light most favorable to Carracela. (Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 843 (Aguilar).) Carracela suffered a serious electrocution injury while doing demolition work for a project replacing a bridge at the Port of Long Beach (the Port). Carracela worked as a journeyman laborer for Miller Environmental, Inc., a subcontractor on the project. The general contractor was a joint venture of three companies: Shimmick Construction, Inc., FCC Construccion S.A., and Impreglio, S.p.A. The general contractor retained the corporation Safe Utility Exposure, Inc. to coordinate utility services. The Port retained Parsons Brinckerhoff, Inc. to manage construction of the project, including utility coordination. The Port also retained Safework, Inc. to oversee construction safety. On July 24, 2013, Carracela was working on a particular part of the project: demolition and demolition clean-up for an overpass and off-ramp on a pier called Pier T. He and a coworker, Victor Cruz Bolanos, were in the basket of an 80- or 85- foot aerial boom lift. Bolanos operated the lift. Carracela had an air hose to clean concrete debris from the top of a partially demolished off-ramp. (The trial papers sometimes referred to this as an “on-ramp” but Carracela’s appellate briefs refer to the “Pier T Off-Ramp.” We refer to this area as the “off-ramp,” “off- ramp bridge,” and “overpass” throughout the opinion.) Carracela

2 was clearing debris off the top of the horizontal girders or I- beams that had supported the roadway. A sign on the overpass read “15 FT 3 IN.” A photo of the overpass shows the overpass sign attached to the side of girders. Bolanos said the girders were two feet “wide.” A Miller safety director said the girders were four to five feet tall. While Carracela and Bolanos were above the girders, a steel stud entangled the air hose. To disentangle the hose, Bolanos pulled the basket back and to his right. Then he went higher and extended the boom to create slack. In doing so, he raised the lift toward a power line. When he raised the lift, Bolanos was looking down through the basket for the hose and looking at his controls. At his deposition, Bolanos agreed he lost track of the power lines when he raised the lift. Electricity arced from the line to Carracela. Bolanos estimated Carracela’s head was 10 feet from the line. Carracela sustained serious injuries, including electrical burns to his upper body, nerve damage in his writing hand, and a head wound that resulted in neurological damage. Edison owned power lines in the area, including the one that injured Carracela. The line was a 12,000-volt line. There are different types of lines. This one was a distribution line. Testimony about the line’s height put it at 60 feet or more in the air. A photo of the overpass shows a roadway under the overpass and a lower road to the right. Carracela says there is a dispute about the distance between the top of the off-ramp bridge and the lines. We discuss this issue later in the opinion. On July 22, 2015, Carracela filed a complaint against the general contractor, Edison, and others. The complaint alleged six

3 causes of action. Only the third cause of action, negligence, involves Edison. The third cause of action says Edison “owned, operated, designed, manufactured, installed, tested, inspected, and maintained overhead electrical power lines that intersected the construction area” for the project, including the line above Carracela’s worksite when he was injured. Carracela said Edison breached its duty of reasonable care because it: 1) “negligently designed, manufactured, tested or failed to consider the results of testing, operated, inspected or failed to inspect, and maintained” the power line and/or the power system; 2) failed to provide “customary power line protection;” 3) allowed construction or demolition within the power line’s path; 4) failed to dismantle the line in a timely manner; 5) failed to de-energize or insulate the line; and 6) failed to erect a barrier or to provide other warning devices to keep workers like Carracela from getting dangerously close to the line. Carracela said harm to people who might accidentally make contact with an arc flash from the line was reasonably foreseeable. He alleged the negligence was a substantial factor in his injuries. On May 1, 2018, Edison moved for summary judgment. It said Carracela could not prove duty, breach, or causation. The court issued a tentative ruling and held a hearing on the motion on July 17, 2018.

4 The tentative ruling found Edison satisfied its initial burden of negating breach. The court noted Carracela “admitted . . . he has no evidence that PUC’s General Order No. 95 was violated with respect to height requirements – i.e. the power lines were not lower than required by the PUC.” It was undisputed Edison had no part in the demolition work and did not control Miller’s equipment or the manner of Miller’s work. The court determined Edison negated the element of breach of duty. Three facts undergirded the court’s reasoning: 1) Edison’s power line complied with General Order 95 height requirements; 2) Edison lacked notice that workers were operating a boom lift next to power lines on the date of the incident; and 3) no one asked Edison to de-power the line. The court addressed causation and duty but its ruling did not rest on these elements. The court admitted declarations of two of Carracela’s experts but concluded they did not create a triable issue. The court found the declarations did not refute the three pertinent facts we listed and it did not refute that Carracela and his coworkers knew about the power lines and knew they needed to stay at least 10 feet away. At the hearing, the court granted a request by Carracela to continue the July 17, 2018 hearing to give counsel more time to review the tentative. On July 30, 2018, Carracela applied ex parte to file an amended separate statement and additional supporting evidence. Some of the additional evidence was new and other evidence was from 2017. The court granted his request, continued the summary judgment hearing, and allowed Edison to respond.

5 Edison filed a supplemental reply. An attachment to the reply included an e-mail exchange Carracela had referenced but not included in his papers. Both sides say the e-mails help them. In the exchange, the general contractor asked Edison project manager, Nolan Lam, if someone from Edison could be present during demolition at a “phase 1B transmission line” in case the poles “got hit by rubble or equipment.” This is not the line that injured Carracela.

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Carracela v. Southern Cal. Edison Co. CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carracela-v-southern-cal-edison-co-ca28-calctapp-2020.