Ebert v. Press CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 2016
DocketD068153
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ebert v. Press CA4/1 (Ebert v. Press CA4/1) 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
Ebert v. Press CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 5/20/16 Ebert v. Press CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

VIRGINIA EBERT, D068153

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2012-00095315-CU-PO-CTL) THELMA PRESS, Individually and as Trustee, etc.,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Judith F.

Hayes, Judge. Judgment dismissing defendant individually affirmed, appeal otherwise

dismissed.

Law Office of Susan M. Goldbeck and Susan M. Goldbeck for Plaintiff and

Appellant.

Koeller, Nebeker, Carlson & Haluck, Robert C. Carlson, Sharon A. Huerta and

Scott A. Davis for Defendant and Respondent Thelma Press, and Nonparty and

Respondent Travelers Property Casualty Insurance Company. After a neighbor's tree fell in her yard, plaintiff Virginia Ebert (Ebert) sued the

neighbor, defendant Thelma Press, individually (Press) and in her capacity as trustee of

the living trust that owned the land on which the tree grew (Trustee) (together the Press

defendants), for negligence, trespass and nuisance. The trial court granted summary

adjudication of the negligence and trespass causes of action and dismissed Press from the

case before allowing the case to proceed to trial against Trustee.

Ebert appeals and argues the court erred by: (1) dismissing Press, (2) granting

summary adjudication as to the negligence and trespass causes of action, and (3)

awarding sanctions against Ebert and her counsel as a result of a motion to quash a

subpoena served on third party Travelers Property Casualty Insurance Company

(Travelers). The Press defendants and Travelers moved to dismiss the appeal in part,

arguing the summary adjudication and sanctions orders are not appealable at this time in

the absence of a final judgment.

We grant the motion to dismiss the appeal in part, declining to reach the sanction

order and limiting our discussion of the summary adjudication orders to those issues

properly raised in connection with an appeal from the judgment dismissing Press, and

affirm the judgment dismissing Press.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Ebert owned and lived on property (the Ebert property) adjacent to property

occupied by Press and owned by the Louis M. and Thelma Press Living Trust (the Press

property). In April 2011, a eucalyptus tree (Tree 1) growing on the Press property fell

2 onto the Ebert property. The tree was 80 to 100 years old, 117 feet tall, and weighed

approximately 29 tons, and, when it fell, caused damage to Ebert's fence, garden boxes,

landscaping and slope, diminution in the value of Ebert's property and emotional stress to

Ebert. The following October, the Presses' insurance carrier paid for a tree care service to

remove the fallen tree from Ebert's property. However, there was a second large

eucalyptus tree (Tree 2) on the Press property from where its limbs continued to drop

onto the Ebert property. Ebert asked the Press defendants to remove or prune Tree 2 but

they refused to do so.

In April 2012, Ebert filed a complaint against the Press defendants.1 In February

2013, Tree 2 was removed but part of the tree remained lying on the Press property in the

canyon near Ebert's property. Thereafter, Ebert filed a first amended complaint (the

FAC), alleging a cause of action for general negligence and four separate causes of action

for "intentional tort" against the Press Defendants. The FAC does not specifically

identify the intentional torts but appears to assert claims for trespass, private nuisance,

and public nuisance related to Tree 1 and private nuisance related to Tree 2.

Before trial, the Press defendants filed a motion for summary judgment or

summary adjudication, attaching a declaration from Robert W. Walton, Jr. (Walton), a

certified and registered consulting arborist. In his declaration, Walton stated he inspected

Tree 1 the month after it fell and concluded it fell because the root system buried beneath

1 The Complaint also asserted a single cause of action (fifth) against another neighbor but the court later dismissed that cause of action. That cause is not at issue on this appeal. 3 the soil was infected with brown cubicle rot. Walton concluded the decay could not have

been detected from visual inspection of the tree before it fell and the rot would not have

been apparent absent excavation of the soil around the tree's root system; something a

reasonable person would not have done because doing so could destabilize the tree,

causing it to fall.

Ebert opposed the motion, relying in large part on declarations from herself and

two arborists, Ronald Matranga and Joseph Bileci, Jr. Ebert, although not an arborist or

otherwise qualified as an expert, described her own inspection and observations of Tree

1. Matranga described his examination of Tree 1, which occurred over five months after

it fell, and stated he observed indicia of decay but admitted he could not determine if that

indicia was visible before the tree fell. Bileci, who never examined the tree himself,

relied solely on the declarations of Walton, Ebert and Matranga, and concluded a

professional arborist inspecting the tree before it fell likely would have recommended

removal or further inspection via root collar excavation.

Meanwhile, nonparty Travelers moved to quash two subpoenas Ebert had served

on it. The subpoenas sought the claim file related to Tree 1, documents related to

Travelers's general procedures for handling claims, and documents related to the Presses'

insurance policy, among other items, as well as the deposition of a person most

knowledgeable from Travelers. Travelers argued the subpoenas were overbroad and

constituted an abuse of discovery, and requested sanctions against Ebert. The court

4 granted the motion to quash and awarded Travelers $1,500 in sanctions for plaintiff's

misuse of the Discovery Act.

The trial court then granted the Press defendants' motion for summary adjudication

as to the causes of action for negligence and public nuisance. In finding the Press

defendants were not negligent, the court relied on the declaration of Walton for the

conclusion that no reasonable homeowner would have concluded the tree was diseased

and likely to fall, found Matranga's declaration did not present a triable issue of fact,

struck Bileci's declaration in its entirety but also found it did not present a triable issue of

fact, and found Ebert had not established notice of the tree's diseased state or that the

failure to act absent such notice constituted negligence. The court also struck several

sentences related to trespass to timber statutes, finding the motion for summary

adjudication of the second cause of action moot as a result, and denied the motion as to

Ebert's cause of action for private nuisance. Accordingly, the court stated the case would

proceed to trial on Ebert's causes of action for common law trespass as to Tree 1,

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