Jimenez v. Roseville City School District

247 Cal. App. 4th 594, 202 Cal. Rptr. 3d 536, 2016 WL 3029540, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 402
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 2016
DocketC075366
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 247 Cal. App. 4th 594 (Jimenez v. Roseville City School District) 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
Jimenez v. Roseville City School District, 247 Cal. App. 4th 594, 202 Cal. Rptr. 3d 536, 2016 WL 3029540, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 402 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

DUARTE, J.

Plaintiff Uriel Jimenez (Jimenez) was injured at a middle school within defendant Roseville City School District (District). The 14-year-old Jimenez was in a classroom where fellow middle school students were purportedly practicing break dancing, but in which some were also performing “flips.” This violated school rules in two ways: first, students had been ordered not to perform flips; second, the teacher who allowed the students to use his classroom for dancing violated school policy by leaving them unsupervised. Jimenez was seriously injured when other students waited for the teacher to leave them unsupervised, and then induced Jimenez to attempt a flip. The trial court granted the District summary judgment, concluding Jimenez assumed the risk of injury by participating in break dancing.

As we will explain, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Jimenez, we find two viable theories of liability. Accordingly, we shall reverse and remand with directions to the trial court to deny the District’s summary judgment motion.

BACKGROUND

The briefing agrees on most of the relevant facts. (See Meddock v. County of Yolo (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 170, 175, fn. 3 [162 Cal.Rptr.3d 796] [summary judgment case; “where the parties agree, we accept their agreed facts as mutual concessions”].)

The operative complaint alleged negligence and negligent supervision. The answer partly raised assumption of the risk. The summary judgment motion raised assumption of the risk and a defense based on a signed release. 1

The District’s supporting evidence included deposition excerpts as follows.

*598 Student Paul Jackson testified students break-danced before school, including doing flips, and that Alan Hall, a District teacher, then gave the students a place to practice in order to participate in a talent show. Flips had been witnessed by school officials and had not been forbidden by Assistant Principal Gutierrez. The students practiced in Hall’s classroom before school started. Jacob Simmons flipped Jackson when Hall was outside the room, then flipped Jimenez, who was injured as a result. Jimenez was hesitant about flipping, but did not actively protest. Hall gave no instructions about flipping.

Simmons testified that flips are part of break dancing. Gutierrez never told them not to flip off a stage. Hall later invited the boys to use his classroom to dance, “maybe” three weeks before the incident. Hall never forbade flips. Jimenez was “iffy” about learning to flip but agreed to try to flip at a time when Hall was not in the classroom, and Jimenez was then injured.

Jimenez testified he had been to four other dance rehearsals in Hall’s class, but none in other places before he was hurt. However, he had seen the other boys practicing on an outside stage before, and saw Jackson do backflips more than once before. Gutierrez had been present when Jackson was flipping on the stage, but did not tell Jackson to stop flipping. On the day in question, Hall had left the class without saying anything to the boys, and then Jackson and Simmons did flips. Jimenez has no memory of how he became injured.

Julius Larion testified a group had been practicing a dance routine for a talent show for about a week. Jimenez “wanted to . . . learn how to dance.” Before Hall’s room was used, the boys had used the gym, and did flips. Jimenez could not dance and had never tried to flip before.

Zachary Farr testified Simmons grabbed Jimenez’s arm, and Jimenez protested, saying “no, no, no” and Simmons flipped Jimenez.

In opposition, Jimenez in part presented the following evidence:

Daniel Etcheto, a break dancing expert, described break dancing in some detail. In short, he opined ordinary break dancing did not involve flips, but that some break-dancers with gymnastic or capoeira ability or experience may incorporate flips into their dancing. We discuss his declaration more fully post.

Richard Swanson, a school administration expert, testified that Hall violated supervisory norms by leaving the students unsupervised in violation of District policy, and by not giving the students “instruction about ground rules for their practice which would specifically mention prohibitions on risky *599 behavior.” Hall’s actions were ‘“totally outside the range of ordinary activity involved in a teacher’s role for a dance class or activity.”

Hall testified he was a computer and math teacher. He also coached cross country and track. Simmons asked Hall if they could practice break dancing for an upcoming talent show in his classroom, and Hall had the boys fill out the requisite release forms. Hall has no formal training at break dancing, had minimal experience with it from when he was a seventh grader, and all he did as far as a demonstration for the students was to spin on his back and jump up, and perform a robotic move associated with Michael Jackson. He did not tell the principal or vice principal that he was allowing students to use his classroom before school hours because ‘“[i]t didn’t seem necessary.” He regularly left the classroom for short periods of time during the practice sessions, to make copies, use the bathroom, or make a telephone call. He did not tell the students to stop their activity when he was gone, because ‘“[i]t didn’t seem necessary.” He had not been aware of any school rule requiring him to be present all the time or any school rule prohibiting flips, and he had not known flips were being done, nor did he know that flips were part of break dancing. He had left for the bathroom at the time Jimenez was injured.

Assistant Principal Pablo Gutierrez testified he did not know what was happening in Hall’s classroom before the accident, and school policy dictated that there should have been supervision at all times, and that if a teacher left such a classroom, another teacher should have been supervising, or the students should have been instructed to stop their activity until their teacher returned. Before Jimenez’s injury, Gutierrez had seen a student—part of a group that included Simmons and Jackson—flipping near a stage and he told that student to stop and said he did not want to see “ ‘anybody trying’ ” to flip; when the students moved to a grassy area, he again told them not to flip. On at least one of four occasions where he made such admonishments, Jimenez was present, though Jimenez had not been flipping. In Gutierrez’s opinion, Hall should not have left for the bathroom without telling the students to stop their activity and without finding another teacher to supervise them in his absence. He did not associate break dancing with flipping; in his view: ‘“[Rjemember, there are two things here. Break dancing is totally different from what I have in mind of flipping.”

The trial court found it was undisputed that break dancing ‘“can involve flips,” Jimenez assumed the risk of injury from such flips by voluntarily break dancing, and the District had no duty to protect Jimenez from the inherent risks of break dancing. Jimenez timely appealed from the ensuing judgment.

*600 DISCUSSION

I

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 Cal. App. 4th 594, 202 Cal. Rptr. 3d 536, 2016 WL 3029540, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimenez-v-roseville-city-school-district-calctapp-2016.