Reida v. Lund

18 Cal. App. 3d 698, 96 Cal. Rptr. 102, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1424
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 1971
DocketCiv. 36520
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 18 Cal. App. 3d 698 (Reida v. Lund) 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
Reida v. Lund, 18 Cal. App. 3d 698, 96 Cal. Rptr. 102, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1424 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

FLEMING, J.

Michael Clark, aged 16, left his home in Long Beach shortly after 8 o’clock on the evening of 24 April 1965, taking without permission a family automobile, credit cards, and his father’s 6.5 x 55 *701 millimeter Swedish Mauser military rifle equipped with telescopic sight. About 6 o’clock the following morning he stationed himself near Santa Maria on a hill overlooking Highway 101 and began firing at passing automobiles, as a consequence of which three persons were killed and others seriously wounded. When the police moved in on his position, Michael put the rifle to his head and killed himself.

William, Lucille, and Kim Reida, victims of Michael’s shooting, brought this action for personal injuries and wrongful death against Michael’s estate and against Forest Clark and Joyce Clark, Michael’s parents. The complaint charged the parents with negligence in the training, supervision, and control of Michael, and negligence in making firearms available to him. A summary judgment was entered in favor of the Clarks, and the Reidas have appealed.

The declarations, interrogatories, transcripts, and depositions presented to the trial court on the motion for summary judgment disclosed the following facts. Forest Clark was a Long Beach businessman, a veteran of two wars, an active member of his church, and the father of three children, Michael, 16, another son 15, and a daughter, 10. Michael, a student of average scholastic ability in the eleventh grade at Woodrow Wilson High School, was friendly, quiet, neat, a member of the Boy Scouts, and a member of the Sea Scouts. He liked music, dances, and sports, and he played saxophone in the high school band. He got along well with others, including his brother and sister. He regularly attended church with his family, he did not use alcohol or drugs, he never displayed emotional instability, nor had he ever been in trouble with the school authorities, the police, or the juvenile authorities. According to the father’s declaration Michael had never intentionally harmed anyone prior to the shootings. In 1961 Forest Clark purchased a Mauser rifle and converted it into a hunting rifle with telescopic sight. On two occasions, the first on a rifle range and the second on a hunting trip, he showed Michael how to operate the rifle. Together with a sack of steel-jacketed military ammunition, the rifle was stored in the garage in a locked cabinet to which there were two keys, one which was regularly kept in the father’s dresser drawer in a location known to Michael, and the other which had disappeared earlier but whose whereabouts were known to the younger son. On the night of Michael’s disappearance the father did not know the rifle had been taken, and he did not discover it until the morning of the shootings.

Joyce Clark, a housewife and school teacher, declared that to her knowledge her son Michael had been congenial, non-aggressive, and without emotional problems. He never intentionally injured any living thing and she could not explain why he had acted the way he had. She had not known the rifle was missing until after the shootings took place.

*702 In opposition to the motion plaintiffs filed the declaration of a psychologist, who said he had read the Clarks’ declarations, the transcript of the coroner’s inquest, and newspaper articles about the shootings. On the basis of his reading he concluded: that Michael suffered from schizophrenia, paranoid type; that the symptoms of this disease must have been apparent to the Clarks; that the Clarks knew or should have known that Michael was capable of violent, irrational acts and might use any weapon available to him; that their denials of such knowledge were inconsistent with Michael’s behavior at Santa Maria and therefore incredible.

Plaintiffs’ complaint in effect charged two kinds of negligence: (1) failure of the Clarks to train, control, and supervise Michael, and (2) failure of Forest Clark to keep the rifle out of Michael’s hands. A summary judgment was proper only if the declarations of the moving parties were sufficient to sustain a judgment in their favor and the declarations of the opposing parties did not show facts sufficient to present a triable issue. (R.D. Reeder Lathing Co. v. Allen, 66 Cal.2d 373, 376 [57 Cal.Rptr. 841, 425 P.2d 785].)

I

No triable issue of fact appeared with respect to the Clarks’ asserted failure to train, control, and supervise Michael. Parents are responsible for harm caused by their children only when it has been shown that “the parents as reasonable persons previously became aware of habits or tendencies of the infant which made it likely that the child would misbehave so that they should have restrained him in apposite conduct and actions.” (Weisbart v. Flohr, 260 Cal.App.2d 281, 291 [67 Cal.Rptr. 114].) The Clarks adamantly denied any forewarning of Michael’s behavior. After ample opportunity for investigation and discovery, the Reidas offered nothing but the bald conclusion of a psychologist who had never met any member of the Clark family that the Clarks were not telling the truth. Ordinarily, affidavits containing no more than conclusions and opinions are insufficient. (Fuller v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 7 Cal.App.3d 690, 693 [86 Cal.Rptr. 705].) Here the only supporting data in opposition to the summary judgment consisted of: (1) a diagnosis of mental disease, said to be paranoid schizophrenia, arrived at from depositions and newspaper reports by a person who was neither a physician nor a psychiatrist; (2) a conclusion by the diagnostician that symptoms of the disease must have been obvious to the parents; (3) an expression of the diagnostician’s disbelief in the trustworthiness of contrary declarations tendered by the Clarks. Such data lacks even a modicum of evidentiary value, for it amounts to no more than the psychologist’s personal and unsupported expression of disbelief in the testimony of another. Causes may *703 arise in which knowledge of events remains so confined within the bosom of a declarant that proof to controvert the declarant’s version is difficult to come by and therefore of necessity excused. (See Frye v. Felder, 246 Cal.App.2d 136, 138-139 [54 Cal.Rptr. 627]; Bauman, California Summary Judgment: A Search for a Standard, 10 U.C.L.A. L.Rev. 347.) (3c) In this instance, however, the Clarks’ version of Michael’s life was verifiable. If Michael’s asserted paranoid schizophrenia had been obvious to his parents it would have been manifest in some degree to other persons —teachers, doctors, fellow students, friends, acquaintances, neighbors. The names of such persons had been furnished the Reidas, yet the latter produced no evidence whatever to contradict the declarations of the Clarks on the motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiffs suggest the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur established a presumption that from the happening of the criminal events which took place the parents must have been at fault in the upbringing of their son. We think this contention is fully answered in respondents’ brief: Is this tragic event of such a nature that one could say it was probably the result of negligence of the parents in bringing up the child? If so, would not every criminal act of.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Cal. App. 3d 698, 96 Cal. Rptr. 102, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reida-v-lund-calctapp-1971.