R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 2014
DocketG049924
StatusUnpublished

This text of R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3 (R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3) 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
R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 10/20/14 R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

R.G., a Minor,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G049924

v. (Super. Ct. No. CIVDS1000241)

SAN BERNARDINO CITY UNIFIED OPINION SCHOOL DISTRICT,

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino, David Cohn, Judge. Affirmed. Mancini & Associates, Marcus A. Mancini, Christopher Barnes; Benedon & Serlin, Gerald M. Serlin and Kelly R. Horwitz for Plaintiff and Appellant. Orrock, Popka, Fortino, Tucker & Dolen, Dennis G. Popka; Arias & Lockwood and Christopher D. Lockwood for Defendant and Respondent.

* * * Plaintiff R.G., a special education high school student, asserted she was raped by fellow high school student James. She filed a Government Torts Act claim, and upon rejection, sued defendant San Bernardino City Unified School District for negligent supervision and maintaining a dangerous condition of property. After plaintiff’s case-in- chief, the court granted defendant’s motion for nonsuit. Plaintiff contends the court erroneously found defendant owed no duty to her and that she had not made a prima facie case that its student parking lot constituted a dangerous or hazardous condition of property. We disagree. The duties plaintiff seeks to impose were not mandated by enactment and she has not shown any physical feature of the lot made it a dangerous condition of property. The judgment is affirmed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

On appeal from a nonsuit judgment, we “view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs and . . . disregard conflicting evidence on behalf of the defendant. Only if, after indulging every legitimate inference favorable to plaintiffs, we find that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor, can we uphold the judgment of nonsuit.” (Miller v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist. (1973) 8 Cal.3d 689, 699.) We state the facts with this standard in mind.

FACTS

Plaintiff is a special education student who attended a regular high school. She met James in Algebra class and they talked occasionally. James received a one-day suspension, effective the day of the incident. When a student is suspended, the school is required to notify his or her parent or guardian. Each day, a list of suspended students is e-mailed to security guards and staff

2 and the suspension is noted on the teachers’ computerized attendance record programs. Teachers must report a suspended student’s presence in class to the administrative office. Upon suspending James, the school tried to call James’ legal guardian, but was unable to reach her. James also did not tell her about his suspension and went to school on the day of the incident. He went to his first class, physical education, but avoided his teacher and hid under a tree or blended in with other students by walking with them around the track. Before lunch, he twice encountered plaintiff, who had been given a hall pass and asked to find a student in another classroom. The second time, plaintiff went with James to the student parking lot where he raped her between two cars. A camera mounted in the student parking lot has not worked since 2006. Five or six security guards patrol designated areas of the campus, including the student parking lot, and rotate during the day depending on where students are located. During lunch, no one monitors the student parking lot because the guard checks out students who leave campus for lunch. Upon seeing a suspended student, guards are to take steps to have the student removed from school grounds. They must also ensure students outside of ongoing classes have hall passes and take noncompliant students to the office or class, or report them to the vice-principal. No guard challenged James that day for not having a pass. Although James “ditch[ed]” classes every day and walked around campus, guards stopped him only about four times and merely told him to go to class or get a pass.

DISCUSSION 1. Duty Plaintiff argues the court erred in finding defendant did not owe her a duty on her negligence claim. According to her, defendant had a duty to “create a safe and secure environment” by adhering to its safety plan because one “that exists in name alone” is insufficient, while compliance would have ensured “suspended students were not on campus,” in hallways without permission during class, or loitering in the student

3 parking lot. Specifically, she urges defendant had a duty to enforce procedures for suspending students, contacting their parents or guardians, circulating a list of suspended students to teachers and security guards, ensuring students had hall passes when outside of ongoing classes, and having guards patrol the student parking lot throughout the day. To summarize, although argued as a negligent supervision claim, what plaintiff actually asserts is that the safety plan created mandatory duties with which defendant had to comply. It did not. “Under the Government Claims Act . . . , there is no common law tort liability for public entities in California; instead, such liability must be based on statute. (Gov. Code, § 815, subd. (a) [‘Except as otherwise provided by statute: [¶] . . . A public entity is not liable for an injury, whether such injury arises out of an act or omission of the public entity’].” (Guzman v. County of Monterey (2009) 46 Cal.4th 887, 897 (Guzman); all further undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.) “A private cause of action lies against a public entity only if the underlying enactment sets forth the elements of liability set out in section 815.6.” (Ibid.) An “[e]nactment” is “a constitutional provision, statute, charter provision, ordinance or regulation.” (§ 810.6.) For liability under section 815.6, “‘[f]irst . . . the enactment at issue must be obligatory, rather than merely discretionary or permissive, in its directions to the public entity; it must require, rather than merely authorize or permit, that a particular action be taken or not taken. [Citation.] It is not enough, moreover, that the public entity or officer have been under an obligation to perform a function if the function itself involves the exercise of discretion. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] Courts have construed this first prong rather strictly, finding a mandatory duty only if the enactment ‘affirmatively imposes the duty and provides implementing guidelines.’” (Guzman, supra, 46 Cal.4th at p. 898; Clausing v. San Francisco Unified School Dist. (1990) 221 Cal.App.3d 1224, 1240 [“If rules and guidelines for the implementation of an alleged mandatory duty are not set forth in an otherwise prohibitory statute, it cannot create a mandatory duty”] (Clausing).)

4 “‘Second, but equally important, section 815.6 requires that the mandatory duty be “designed” to protect against the particular kind of injury the plaintiff suffered. The plaintiff must show the injury is “‘one of the consequences which the [enacting body] sought to prevent through imposing the alleged mandatory duty.’” [Citation.] Our inquiry in this regard goes to the legislative purpose of imposing the duty. That the enactment “confers some benefit” on the class to which plaintiff belongs is not enough; if the benefit is “incidental” to the enactment’s protective purpose, the enactment cannot serve as a predicate for liability under section 815.6.

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R.G. v. San Bernadino City Unified School Dist. CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rg-v-san-bernadino-city-unified-school-dist-ca43-calctapp-2014.