Morohoshi v. Pacific Home

5 Cal. Rptr. 3d 512, 112 Cal. App. 4th 937
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 2004
DocketB159594
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Cal. Rptr. 3d 512 (Morohoshi v. Pacific Home) 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
Morohoshi v. Pacific Home, 5 Cal. Rptr. 3d 512, 112 Cal. App. 4th 937 (Cal. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

5 Cal.Rptr.3d 512 (2003)
112 Cal.App.4th 937

Yoshi MOROHOSHI et al. Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v.
PACIFIC HOME et al. Defendants and Respondents.

No. B159594.

Court of Appeal, Second District, Division Seven.

October 22, 2003.
Review Granted January 22, 2004.

*513 Lange & Koncius, Joseph J.M. Lange, Los Angeles, and Jeffrey A. Koncius, for Plaintiffs and Appellants Yoshi Morohoshi and Hikaru John Morohoshi.

Giovanniello & Michels, Alexander F. Giovanniello Helen A. Michels, Anaheim, and Cristian L. Peirano, for Defendant and Respondent Harbor Regional Center.

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiffs Yoshi and Hikaru Morohoshi appeal from the judgment following a special verdict finding defendant Harbor Regional Center was not negligent in the death of plaintiffs' son, Bobby Morohoshi, a developmentally disabled adult. Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in refusing to allow the jury to find defendant vicariously liable for Bobby's death caused by the negligence of defendant's agent Pacific Home. We agree and modify the judgment accordingly.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

This case was previously before us on the Morohoshis' appeal from a summary judgment in favor of defendant Harbor Regional Center (Harbor).[1] In an opinion *514 discussed more fully below we reversed the judgment, holding Harbor owed Bobby a mandatory, nondelegable duty to ensure he received adequate care and treatment at Pacific Home.[2]

Upon remand, the case went to trial against Pacific Home and Harbor on causes of action for negligence and abuse of a dependent adult.

The facts showed Harbor is a nonprofit community agency which, under contract with the state Department of Developmental Services, provides developmentally disabled individuals with access to services and support best suited to their needs.

Bobby Morohoshi was plaintiffs' adult developmentally disabled son. He suffered from severe diabetes. Harbor placed Bobby in Pacific Home in 1995 where he resided until his death in 1998.

Harbor arranged for nurses to visit Bobby twice a day to test his blood sugar and administer his insulin. Pacific Home's owner and her sister, who were registered nurses, originally performed this function. Later this function was performed by home health nurses and other members of Pacific Home's staff.

In 1998, Pacific Home hired new staff including Esther Sisson. Sisson was responsible for testing Bobby's blood sugar level the night before he died. She failed to do so. The next morning Bobby lay dead in his bedroom.

Prior to trial, the Morohoshis moved in limine for an order preventing Harbor from contending the fault for Bobby's death may or should be apportioned between Harbor and Pacific Home. They based their motion on their contention Harbor was vicariously liable for any negligence by Pacific Home in providing care to Bobby. The trial court denied the motion. Harbor moved in limine for an order prohibiting the Morohoshis from presenting any evidence or arguing Harbor could be held vicariously liable for Pacific Home's tortious conduct. The trial court granted this motion.

Later, in a discussion of the special verdict form the trial court repeated its view Harbor could not be held vicariously liable for Pacific Home's negligence and required the parties to draft a verdict form which would allow the jury to apportion negligence.

The jury found Pacific Home liable for Bobby's death on the basis of negligence and found it guilty of abuse of a dependent adult. The verdict awarded the Morohoshis economic damages of $5,644.36 and noneconomic damages in the amount of $600,000. The jury found Harbor not negligent and awarded no damages against it.

The Morohoshis filed a timely appeal.

DISCUSSION

Whether viewed from the perspective of law of the case or well-established common law principles, the trial court erred in ruling Harbor could not be held vicariously liable for the negligence of Pacific Home.

The law has long recognized one party may owe a duty to another which, for public policy reasons, cannot be delegated.[3] Such nondelegable duties derive from statutes, as we held in Morohoshi I, and from common law precedents as we discuss below.[4]

*515 I. HARBOR'S NONDELEGABLE DUTY DERIVES FROM STATUTES.

In Morohoshi I we recognized Harbor could be held liable for its own negligence toward Bobby[5] but we also specifically held Harbor was vicariously liable under the rationale of nondelegable duty for any negligence on the part of Pacific Home.[6]

As we explained in Morohoshi I, in enacting the Lanterman Act, the state of California accepted responsibility for developmentally disabled persons and established a system by which public and private entities provide services and supports to them.[7] Under the Lanterman Act, the Department of Developmental Disabilities ("DDS"), a public agency, is responsible for executing laws related to the care, custody, and treatment of individuals with developmental disabilities.[8] DDS contracts with private non-profit community agencies called regional centers to provide the developmentally disabled with "access to the services and supports best suited to them throughout their lifetime."[9] Harbor is one of these regional centers.

Article Two of the Lanterman Act establishes the regional centers' responsibilities to their consumers.[10] Regional centers are required to develop and implement an individualized program plan (IPP) for each consumer which specifies the consumer's needs for services and supports. These services and supports appear in statements of goals and also specific time-limited objectives in the IPP. Under the Act, both goals and objectives "shall be stated in terms that allow measurement of progress or monitoring of service delivery."[11] The IPP must be reviewed, re-evaluated, and modified no less than every three years by a planning team composed of regional center staff, the consumer, and where appropriate, the consumer's parents, to ascertain whether the planned services have been provided and the objectives have been fulfilled within the time specified in the IPP.[12]

The Lanterman Act is replete with language establishing this duty is mandatory, not discretionary, and non-delegable.

For example, section 4648 states in pertinent part; "In order to achieve the stated objectives of a consumer's individualized program plan, the regional center shall conduct activities including, but not limited to all of the following: (a) Securing needed services and supports ... (1) It is the intent of the legislature that services and supports assist individuals with developmental disabilities in achieving the greatest self-sufficiency possible and in exercising personal choices. The regional center shall secure services and supports that meet the needs of the consumer, as determined by the consumer's individual program plan. (2) ... Services and supports shall be flexible and individually tailored to the consumer ... (3) A regional center may, pursuant to vendorization or a *516 contract, purchase services or supports for a consumer ... which the regional center ... determines will best accomplish all or any part of that consumer's program plan." (Italics added.)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Cal. Rptr. 3d 512, 112 Cal. App. 4th 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morohoshi-v-pacific-home-calctapp-2004.