Huerta v. City of Santa Ana

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 23, 2019
DocketG056076
StatusPublished

This text of Huerta v. City of Santa Ana (Huerta v. City of Santa Ana) 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
Huerta v. City of Santa Ana, (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 08/23/19

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

CYNTHIA HUERTA, et al.,

Plaintiffs and Appellants, G056076

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2015-00823806)

CITY OF SANTA ANA, OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Glenn Salter, Judge. Affirmed. DiMarco Araujo Montevideo, Brooke L. Bove and John A. Montevideo for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Carpenter, Rothans & Dumont, Justin Reade Sarno and Steven J. Rothans, for Defendant and Respondent. * * * Cynthia Huerta, Maria De Jesus Gonzalez and Andres Gonzalez are the parents of three girls who were tragically killed on Halloween night in 2014 when they were struck by a speeding motorist while they were crossing the street in a marked crosswalk. The driver fled the scene. He was later arrested and pleaded guilty to felony vehicular manslaughter. Huerta and the Gonzalezes sued the City of Santa Ana (the City), alleging a cause of action for damages based on a claim that the crosswalk constituted a “dangerous 1 condition of public property” pursuant to Government Code sections 835 and 835.2. They contend the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the City, arguing there were triable issues of fact related to whether the crosswalk qualified as “a dangerous condition of public property” and whether the City had notice of that dangerous condition before this accident. While it has long been the law that, in the absence of a statute or charter provision to the contrary, a city has no duty to light its streets, an exception to that rule may exist if a ‘“peculiar condition”’ of the property makes lighting necessary. (Antenor v. City of Los Angeles (1985) 174 Cal.App.3d 477, 483 (Antenor).) Huerta and the Gonzalezes assert that a large tree adjacent to the north end of the crosswalk, in conjunction with a nearby street light, caused a shadow to be cast over the crosswalk making it unreasonably dark at night. As a result, they argue their children were rendered invisible to any approaching driver—thereby creating a “peculiar condition” that qualifies as an exception to the Antenor rule, thus requiring additional lighting in the crosswalk. They also argue the crosswalk constituted a “dangerous condition of public property” because the posted speed limit in the area was too high for the nighttime conditions.

1 All further statutory references are to the Government Code, unless otherwise indicated.

2 For reasons discussed below, we disagree with both contentions. After scrutinizing these facts, we cannot find a “dangerous condition of public property” or any “peculiar condition” that would trigger an obligation by the City to modify its street lighting at the accident scene. Moreover, as the trial court observed in granting the City’s motion for summary judgment, it is undisputed that the driver who hit the girls was exceeding the posted speed limit, and therefore the speed limit was not a proximate cause of these tragic deaths. We therefore must affirm the judgment.

FACTS On Halloween night in 2014, Huerta’s daughters, Lexi Perez-Huerta and Lexandra Perez-Huerta, and the Gonzalezes’ daughter, Andrea Gonzalez, were all struck and killed by a car while crossing Fairhaven Avenue in a marked crosswalk. The speeding driver who killed the girls later admitted he was criminally reckless when he pleaded guilty to three counts of felony vehicular manslaughter involving “gross negligence.”

1. The Intersection Fairhaven is a two-way, four-lane street that runs east-west. The accident occurred at the “T” intersection where Old Grand Street meets Fairhaven from the south. The marked crosswalk bisects Fairhaven from the southeast corner of the intersection to the northern side of Fairhaven. There is an elementary school at the northern end of the crosswalk, where a large tree grows between the street and the school. The posted speed limit for that section of Fairhaven is generally 45 miles per hour, but it is reduced to 25 miles per hour when children are present. There are several signs along the northern (westbound) side of Fairhaven, alerting approaching cars to the existence of the upcoming crosswalk; these warnings begin approximately 630 feet east of the crosswalk. During school hours, the crosswalk is monitored by a crossing guard.

3 At night, the intersection is illuminated by a single street light at the southeast corner of Fairhaven and Old Grand, near the south end of the crosswalk. The next closest street light is on the south side of Fairhaven, approximately 230 feet west of the intersection. In their complaint, Huerta and the Gonzalezes assert that on the night of the accident, “the intersection was ‘pitch black’ at the subject crosswalk.” The civil engineering expert retained by Huerta and the Gonzalezes stated in a declaration filed with the court that the night time lighting at the intersection—as measured two years after the accident in November 2016—was “dim.” Directly below the one street light at the southeast corner the light level was according to the expert significantly below what would be “expected.” The expert also stated that the north end of the crosswalk, farthest away from the street light, was the “dimmest” part of the crosswalk. There is a large tree on the north side of Fairhaven that overhangs the right lane of Fairhaven (the number two westbound lane) where the crosswalk terminates in front of the school.

2. The Accident The three girls were all wearing black clothing on Halloween. At approximately 6:45 p.m. that evening, they entered the crosswalk at the southern end where the street light is located, and began to cross Fairhaven northbound toward the school. A westbound vehicle, preparing to turn left onto Old Grand Avenue, yielded for 2 them in the westbound left turn lane. Moments after they passed in front of that stopped

2 Huerta and the Gonzalezes emphasize that the driver who had stopped at the crosswalk for the girls was preparing to make a left turn, claiming “it would be reasonable for a[nother] motorist [i.e., Bell] to presume the car is waiting for oncoming traffic to pass before he turns left,” rather than yielding to pedestrians in the crosswalk. They suggest this fact made the stopped vehicle “less suspicious than if a car had been stopped at the crosswalk in the regular lanes of traffic.” They identify no evidence to suggest there was oncoming traffic close enough to impede the stopped vehicle from making a safe left turn. We note the girls had time to safely cross the eastbound lanes of Fairhaven just moments before passing in front of the stopped vehicle in the westbound

4 car, Jaquinn Ramone Bell, driving at a speed somewhere between 50 and 70 miles per hour in the westbound number two lane, struck and killed all three girls. The accident 3 was captured on the adjacent school’s surveillance video. There is no evidence Bell attempted to stop before hitting the girls. Bell fled the scene, but he was apprehended two days later following an investigation and manhunt. Huerta and the Gonzalezes sued Bell, the City of Santa Ana, and the Orange Unified School District. As against the City, they alleged a single cause of action for damages based on the theory that the crosswalk qualified as a “dangerous condition of public property” pursuant to section 835.

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Huerta v. City of Santa Ana, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huerta-v-city-of-santa-ana-calctapp-2019.