I.C. v. Compton Unified School Dist.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 6, 2025
DocketB322148
StatusPublished

This text of I.C. v. Compton Unified School Dist. (I.C. v. Compton Unified School Dist.) 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
I.C. v. Compton Unified School Dist., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 1/15/25; Certified for Publication 2/6/25 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

I.C., B322148

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC665118 v.

COMPTON UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Thomas D. Long, Judge. Affirmed.

Law Offices of Hirji & Chau, Rosa K. Hirji and Alexander F. Rodriguez for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Olivarez Madruga Law Organization, Terence J. Gallagher and Leslie Anne Burnet for Defendants and Respondents.

_____________________________ SUMMARY In September 2016, plaintiff was a student, almost 16 years old, when he and a friend started a fistfight during their art class. The teacher, who weighed 375 pounds and had recently been using a walker because of a back condition, immediately intervened to prevent the two boys from hurting themselves or someone else. While pulling the larger boy away from plaintiff – and being hit himself by plaintiff, who continued to throw punches after the other boy stopped—the teacher lost his balance and fell onto plaintiff, breaking plaintiff’s leg. One of the other students recorded the teacher’s intervention in the fight. Plaintiff sued the teacher and the school district for negligence. Plaintiff contended the teacher should not have tried to stop the fight because of his weight and physical condition, and he should have done something else, sooner, to prevent the fight. Plaintiff also contended the school district had failed to train its teachers how to safely intervene in physical altercations between students. After 15 days of trial, the jury, who viewed the video of the incident many times during the trial, concluded that neither the teacher nor the school district was negligent, and that plaintiff and the other boy were each 50 percent responsible for the harm to plaintiff. Plaintiff appeals, contending the trial court should have granted his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV); erred in refusing multiple special instructions plaintiff requested; and erred in excluding an expert witness. We find no error and affirm the judgment. FACTS We have reviewed the record and recount the relevant facts, as we must, in the light most favorable to the verdict. We

2 will supplement our recitation as necessary in connection with plaintiff’s contentions on appeal. 1. Plaintiff’s Injury The incident resulting in this lawsuit occurred on September 19, 2016, during defendant Marco Godinez’s art class at Dominguez High School in the Compton Unified School District (the District). Mr. Godinez had been an art teacher at Dominguez High for about 15 years. Class had begun, with the students seated and working on their assigned projects. Plaintiff I.C., who was almost 16 years old, and his friend Christopher L. began “horseplaying.” The horseplay was “slap- boxing,” which in this case consisted of playfully trying to tap each other on the cheek and avoid getting tapped at the same time. Mr. Godinez, who was at his desk in the center of the class grading assignments in sketch books, saw them and told them to stop, and they stopped. They did not, however, stop for long. According to another student, A.F., the punching started approximately 30 seconds later. Mr. Godinez heard chairs screeching and looked up to see the two boys were on their feet and striking each other with full force. He yelled at them to stop as he made his way toward them, and saw a spray of blood somewhere between them. He intended to come in from behind Christopher, who was bigger, and pull him away. (The video of the incident begins at this point in the altercation.) As Mr. Godinez grabbed Christopher around his shoulder, plaintiff hit Christopher, who collapsed downward, “and I [Mr. Godinez] ended up going down trying to protect [Christopher] from hitting the table.” As Mr. Godinez was “wrapping [Christopher] up,” “holding [him] underneath me,” Mr. Godinez started to fall forward. Plaintiff continued trying to

3 hit Christopher but instead struck Mr. Godinez three times, in the face, collarbone area and shoulder. Then Christopher escaped Mr. Godinez’s grasp, and when that happened, Mr. Godinez “ended up falling the rest of the way. And instinctually I just tried to stop myself from falling by reaching forward, and what was there was [plaintiff].” Mr. Godinez “ended up grabbing around or grabbing [plaintiff] by the legs to keep me from falling forward.” He landed on plaintiff, who began screaming that his leg was broken. As they were on the floor, Mr. Godinez began to pull plaintiff toward him and put his hand behind plaintiff because he wanted to protect him until he could turn around to look for Christopher. At this point, he was not putting any weight on plaintiff. When he saw the fight was over, he directed his attention to plaintiff; told him “to stop rolling, stop moving”; stood up with help from students who rushed over to him; and told a student to call 911. Plaintiff’s leg was broken and bleeding, with the bone protruding from his skin. At trial, Mr. Godinez explained what happened in detail, with the jury viewing the 13- or 14-second video, which he testified was an accurate depiction of what he recalled happening that day. Christopher also testified about what was happening on the video, frame by frame. He described Mr. Godinez’s actions, after plaintiff and Mr. Godinez went down on the floor at about four seconds into the video, as “holding [plaintiff] down” for the remaining 10 seconds. A.F., who was at the same worktable as plaintiff and Christopher, testified, based on his observation of the fight, to his belief “that if [plaintiff] would’ve stopped punching [after Christopher stopped punching], this wouldn’t have escalated the

4 way that it did.” He testified that when Mr. Godinez fell on plaintiff, it appeared to him (A.F.) “that he fell on him on accident,” and that “Mr. Godinez did not intentionally tackle or try to bring down or actually drop [plaintiff].” 2. Mr. Godinez’s Physical Condition Plaintiff tried to establish that Mr. Godinez was negligent when he chose to intervene in the fight, falling because he was in no physical condition to intervene and was not trained to do so. Plaintiff presented evidence from Mr. Godinez’s medical records and testimony from doctors that Mr. Godinez was obese (375 pounds and six feet two inches tall); suffered from sciatica; called or went to doctors for back pain on several days in September 2016, with a last visit to the emergency room for back pain on Friday, September 16, 2016, three days before the accident; and had been using a walker to get around. His emergency room doctor on September 16, 2016, Amy Koplovsky, testified from the medical record of that day that he “can stand and walk a few steps but then has a shooting pain down his legs which cause his legs to buckle and needs the walker.” She gave him a shot of Toradol and testified she hoped it would alleviate his pain that night, but it was highly unlikely to do so in the future. She also testified that, “hopefully,” the Toradol, “in combination with the prednisone, if he’s doing stretches, exercising, the recommended treatment, that all those things combined would be factors that would hopefully alleviate the inflammation and pain.” Mr. Godinez testified that he woke up the following morning (Saturday) “feeling much, much better,” and did stretches for sciatica throughout the weekend. He continued to feel much better on Monday morning, the day of the fight, and had no back pain until that evening, after the incident, when his

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I.C. v. Compton Unified School Dist., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ic-v-compton-unified-school-dist-calctapp-2025.