Jones v. Sorenson

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 2, 2018
DocketC084870
StatusPublished

This text of Jones v. Sorenson (Jones v. Sorenson) 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
Jones v. Sorenson, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 8/2/18 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Nevada) ----

MARY E. JONES, C084870

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. CU15081472)

v.

DANITA SORENSON,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Nevada County, Thomas M. Anderson, Judge. Reversed with directions.

Law Offices of Gary A. Angel, Gary A. Angel and Frear Stephen Schmid for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Michael Maguire & Associates, Paul Kevin Wood and Kathryn Saldana; Tiza Serrano Thompson & Associates and Gavan Rhys Munter for Defendant and Respondent.

1 Despite the prevalence of “do-it-yourself” manuals and television shows, most homeowners eventually decide that some home repairs or maintenance would best be done by hiring someone to do the work. Inevitably, some workers are injured. There are sometimes confusing rules about when a homeowner is liable for injuries to workers on the property, either in tort or under the workers’ compensation system. The common questions include whether the person hired by the homeowner was (1) required to be a licensed professional to do the work, and (2) if so, whether the person had the required license. As stated by our Supreme Court, “It is doubtful the average homeowner realizes tree trimming can require a contractor’s license.” (Fernandez v. Lawson (2003) 31 Cal.4th 31, 37 (Fernandez).) Plaintiff Mary E. Jones appeals from a judgment after a grant of summary judgment to defendant Danita Sorenson. Sorenson hired a gardener to work on her property and the gardener hired Jones to help her. Jones was injured when she fell from a ladder while trimming a tree at least 15 feet tall. Jones sued Sorenson, claiming such work required a license but the gardener was not licensed and the gardener’s negligence caused the fall. Jones claimed that Sorenson was liable to Jones under a respondeat superior theory, because she was as a matter of law the employer of both the gardener and Jones. The trial court ruled in effect that the terms “gardener” and “nurseryperson” as used in Business and Professions Code section 7026.11 were synonymous, and therefore Sorenson could avoid tort liability because a person acting as a nurseryperson may trim trees 15 feet tall or higher without a contractor’s license, although a gardener cannot.2

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code. 2As this case illustrates, a homeowner wanting tall trees (15 feet or taller) trimmed may minimize liability by hiring a licensed tree service contractor, that is, a person holding a

2 We disagree with this reading of the relevant statute, which distinguishes between a “gardener” and a “nurseryperson”; the latter refers to a licensed operator of a nursery, whereas a gardener does not require a license. There is no evidence that the gardener Sorenson hired was also a nurseryperson. This means Sorenson--the movant on summary judgment--has not refuted the claim that she was the gardener’s (and therefore Jones’s) employer, and potentially liable under a respondeat superior theory for the gardener’s alleged negligence. We shall reverse the judgment without addressing other subsidiary points. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Generally, a contractor includes a person who prunes trees, with two exceptions relevant to this case, one for a “nurseryperson” performing incidental tree pruning, and one for a “gardener” performing incidental pruning of trees less than 15 feet tall. (§ 7026.1, subd. (a)(4).) We will revisit these statutory exceptions, post. The Pleadings The complaint alleged Sorenson hired “Odette Miranda dba Designs by Leo” to trim and cut trees on Sorenson’s property, and Miranda (sometimes called “Leo” in the record) hired Jones to help her. “While trimming and cutting a tree over 15 feet tall, and while using a ladder provided by Miranda, [Jones] fell” and was hurt. Miranda was negligent in various ways (failure to train, supervise, provide proper equipment, etc.), but because Miranda was an unlicensed contractor, Sorenson was deemed by law to be Miranda’s employer. Therefore, Sorenson was liable for Miranda’s negligence on a respondeat superior theory, i.e., Miranda’s negligence was “imputable to defendant

“C-61/D-49 Tree Service” specialty license issued by the Contractors State License Board. (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 16, § 832.61; Dept. of Consumer Affairs, Contractors State License Bd. (2015) Description of Classifications, p. 16 [licensing a person who “prunes trees, removes trees, limbs or stumps . . . .”].)

3 Sorenson.” Further, Sorenson was liable for “failing to properly oversee and supervise the work being performed by her employees.” Miranda was not then a named defendant. The answer denied these allegations and raised various affirmative defenses, including that no contractor’s license was required on the alleged facts. The Summary Judgment Proceedings The undisputed facts showed that Miranda had done landscaping work for Sorenson for 13 or 14 years, including weeding, trimming, maintaining a front-yard pond, and so forth. Miranda did not routinely use a ladder. Miranda was not licensed or insured. Sorenson had used a licensed contractor to remove trees or do extensive tree trimming. Jones worked as a helper for Miranda about twice a year, and Miranda paid Jones. Jones had worked at Sorenson’s property four times, and once she had trimmed trees from the ground. This time Jones used a small ladder and a larger pole ladder to prune lilacs and remove plums from a tree. Miranda then told Jones to use a ladder to trim branches from an oak tree that was over 15 feet tall. Jones confirmed the larger ladder was stable and set up correctly before climbing it to the third rung from the top, and then began using loppers to trim branches that Miranda pointed out, as Miranda held the ladder. Because Jones could not reach a fourth branch (about eight to 10 feet off the ground), Jones got off the ladder; it was moved slightly, then before climbing it again Jones made sure it was stable and properly placed. She again reached the third rung from the top and held the loppers with one hand, but before she began to trim the branch Jones suddenly felt the ladder move and saw that Miranda was not holding it. Jones does not know what caused the ladder to fall. Sorenson was not present. Jones’s claim for workers compensation benefits was denied by Sorenson’s homeowner’s insurance carrier because Jones had not satisfied statutory minimum work requirements under the Labor Code. There were some factual disputes. Miranda testified Jones declined to move the ladder and was chopping at a branch instead of cutting it, causing the ladder to bounce--

4 while Miranda held it--when the ladder fell. Jones denied bouncing the ladder, and testified Miranda was no longer holding it, thereby allowing it to tilt. Sorenson testified she had hired Miranda that day for routine pond and landscape maintenance, not to trim trees. But Miranda testified Sorenson told her to trim at least two oak branches. Jones testified Sorenson told Miranda to get a ladder from a shed, to trim the lilacs. Jones also testified Sorenson was “in and out” and did not leave the property, though Sorenson did not see Jones fall, so far as Jones knew. Sorenson’s legal theories were: (1) by statute the incidental pruning of trees by a nurseryperson did not require a contractor’s license; (2) by statute the incidental pruning of trees less than 15 feet tall by a gardener did not require a contractor’s license; and 3) Sorenson was not present and was not herself negligent.

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Jones v. Sorenson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-sorenson-calctapp-2018.