Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 2022
DocketB313718
StatusPublished

This text of Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC (Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC) 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
Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 11/23/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

RAMON PEREDA, B313718

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 19STCV23693)

ATOS JIU JITSU LLC et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mark C. Kim, Judge. Affirmed.

Fraceschi Law, Decker Law, and James D. Decker for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Tyson & Mendes, Susan L. Oliver, Emily S. Berman, and JiEun Choi for Defendants and Respondents. ****** A 49-year-old jiu-jitsu student injured during a sparring match sued the studio where he was taking lessons as well as the national jiu-jitsu association under whose auspices the studio’s students could compete. The trial court granted summary judgment for the national association (as well as the association’s founder) on the ground that the association was not liable for the student’s injury because it had no actual control over the studio’s sparring practices and the association’s conduct did not give rise to a reasonable belief in the student that it had such control. The student appeals. His appeal raises two questions, one procedural and one substantive. First, did the trial court violate the student’s right to due process by granting summary judgment on the issue of lack of control, when it was the student who first explicitly raised and briefed that issue in his opposition to summary judgment? Second, is the student’s belief that the association had control over the studio’s sparring practices “reasonable” by virtue of the franchise-type relationship between the association and studio? We conclude that the answer to both questions is “no,” and accordingly affirm the grant of summary judgment. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Facts A. Plaintiff In 2017, Ramon Pereda (plaintiff) was 49 years old. He was a former competitive bodybuilder who was familiar with sports that involved grappling: He was a wrestling celebrity at his high school; he kickboxed; he knew judo; and he had nearly achieved a brown belt in Taekwondo.

2 B. Plaintiff joins a local jiu-jitsu studio In the summer of 2017, plaintiff decided he wanted to learn Brazilian jiu-jitsu. A subset of jiu-jitsu generally, Brazilian jiu- jitsu is a sport in which competitors spar with one another on a mat and, through various grappling-type maneuvers, attempt to get one another into a chokehold; the match ends when the competitor who ends up in a chokehold submits, typically by “tapping out.” As this description implies, “choking” is a “major” and “integral” part of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Plaintiff’s neighbor told him about The Jiu Jitsu League (the League), which is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu studio where the neighbor was a part-time instructor. Plaintiff also visited a website for Atos Jiu Jitsu, LLC, which does business as Atos Jiu- Jitsu Association (Atos). Atos’s website listed its various “affiliates,” of which the League was one; clicking on the link for the League—which was identified on the website as “Atos Long Beach”—jumps to a separate website dedicated to the League.1 Plaintiff then went to the League’s studio in Signal Hill, California, three or four times over the course of a week to watch

1 Although some of the information about the website appears to have come from the trial court’s taking judicial notice of what the website provides after the court visited the website, the parties did not object to court’s doing so (Shuster v. BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 505, 512, fn. 4 [failure to object to judicial notice in trial court forfeits challenge on appeal]) and the website’s content—separate and apart from the truth of that content—is something “not reasonably subject to dispute and [is] capable of immediate and accurate determination by resort to sources of reasonably indisputable accuracy” (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (h)).

3 the students sparring. The League’s studio had a banner indicating that it was affiliated with “Atos.” On July 18, 2017, plaintiff signed a membership agreement with the League. The agreement contained no reference to Atos. C. Plaintiff is injured On August 15, 2017, plaintiff attended what was his tenth training session at the League’s studio. During the 30-minute portion of the session that involved sparring with other students, plaintiff sparred with Adam Nadow (Nadow), who was a purple belt. This was not plaintiff’s first time sparring with Nadow. During their second spar that day, Nadow got plaintiff into a chokehold, and plaintiff considered tapping out, but was saved by the buzzer ending his match. Afterward, plaintiff felt out of breath, had a limp, and experienced some confusion. D. The relationship between the League and Atos Atos was founded by Andre Galvao (Galvao), who is a world-renowned Brazilian jiu-jitsu champion. Galvao founded Atos, which is “a collection of independent, individually owned and operated [Brazilian] jiu-jitsu studios throughout the nation.” Galvao owns and operates his own studio in San Diego, California. Kevin and Haley Howell (the Howells) independently own and operate a separate Atos-affiliated studio—the League— in the Long Beach area. As an “affiliate” of the national Atos association, the League’s students may compete in national Brazilian jiu-jitsu competitions as part of the Atos-brand team. The League is also given Atos’s teaching curriculum and its code of conduct, although the League is not required to implement either. Otherwise, Galvao and Atos have no further control over the League or the Howells: Neither Galvao nor Atos have any ownership interest in the League; neither employed the Howells;

4 and neither supervises the League’s day-to-day operations, including the classes where the students spar. Galvao is not on the League’s roster of instructors, but he teaches individual classes at studios around the world and thus has on a few occasions taught at the League as a “guest instructor”; Galvao has also presided over belt promotion ceremonies for the League’s students. II. Procedural Background In July 2019, plaintiff sued the League, the Howells, and Nadow for negligence related to the injury he suffered during the August 2017 sparring session. After substituting Atos and Galvao for “Doe” defendants, plaintiff filed the operative first amended complaint. In that complaint, plaintiff alleges that the League’s use of “the Atos name, . . . Atos logo and trade dress,” as well as the Atos teaching curriculum renders Atos and Galvao liable for plaintiff’s injury for “fail[ing] to adequately supervise or monitor” the League or the Howells’ operation of the League. Atos and Galvao (collectively, defendants) moved for summary judgment. In their moving papers, defendants sought summary judgment on two grounds—namely, that (1) plaintiff assumed the risk of a choking injury by voluntarily participating in jiu-jitsu classes, and (2) nothing defendants did “increased the risk” of injury to plaintiff (and hence plaintiff could not escape the assumption-of-risk bar). In his opposition to the motion, plaintiff spent four pages of his briefing explicitly arguing that “Atos and Galvao are liable under the doctrine of ostensible authority.” In their reply, defendants briefly responded that the “doctrine of ostensible agency” did not “app[ly]” to them in order to render them liable for the “acts and/or omissions” of the

5 Howells and that the “doctrine . . . is completely irrelevant” to whether plaintiff assumed the risk of injury. After a hearing, the trial court issued its ruling granting defendants summary judgment.

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Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pereda-v-atos-jiu-jitsu-llc-calctapp-2022.