S. Cal. Gas Co. v. Superior Court of L. A. Cnty.(In Re S. Cal. Gas Leak Cases)

441 P.3d 881, 247 Cal. Rptr. 3d 632, 7 Cal. 5th 391
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 2019
DocketS246669
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 441 P.3d 881 (S. Cal. Gas Co. v. Superior Court of L. A. Cnty.(In Re S. Cal. Gas Leak Cases)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. Cal. Gas Co. v. Superior Court of L. A. Cnty.(In Re S. Cal. Gas Leak Cases), 441 P.3d 881, 247 Cal. Rptr. 3d 632, 7 Cal. 5th 391 (Cal. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by Cuéllar, J.

*634 **883 *394 This case concerns a massive, months-long leak from a natural gas storage facility located just outside Los Angeles. According to the allegations before us, the accident severely harmed the economy of a nearby suburb. We must decide if local businesses - none of which allege they suffered personal injury or property damage - may recover in negligence for income *635 lost because of the leak. Our decision turns on whether the entity that allegedly caused the leak had a tort duty to guard against what we and other courts have termed "purely economic losses."

The businesses argue that they deserve compensation for such losses, that the entity responsible must bear the full costs of its alleged negligence so tort law can play its essential role of forcing people and organizations to take sufficient account of the risks they generate, and that courts can sensibly apportion liability under these circumstances within meaningful limits. Tort law indeed lies in the heartland of our common law system. It serves society's interest in allocating risks and costs to those who can better prevent them, and it provides aggrieved parties with just compensation. But a proper assessment of competing considerations in light of our precedent suggests, *395 and the extent of consensus across other jurisdictions confirms, that claims for purely economic losses suffered from mere proximity to an industrial accident create intractable line-drawing problems for courts. So the claims before us are best not treated as compensable in negligence.

We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

I.

Because this case comes to us at the demurrer stage, we take as true all properly pleaded material facts - but not conclusions of fact or law. ( Centinela Freeman Emergency Medical Associates v. Health Net of California, Inc. (2016) 1 Cal.5th 994 , 1010, 209 Cal.Rptr.3d 280 , 382 P.3d 1116 ( Centinela ).)

A.

Near the northwestern corner of Los Angeles lies Porter Ranch, a residential neighborhood home to some 30,000 people. Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas) stores vast amounts of natural gas in an underground facility in the hills surrounding the community. Known today as the "Aliso Facility," that subterranean storage site was once an oil reservoir. It was repurposed about 40 years ago for its present use. SoCalGas supplies over 21 million people with natural gas from its four storage facilities, but the Aliso Facility is the company's largest. It holds up to 80 billion cubic feet of natural gas, which SoCalGas pumps underground at high pressure into more than 100 "injection wells." Because natural gas is odorless, SoCalGas adds a nausea-causing chemical to the gas so that people notice when a leak happens.

In October 2015, a leak happened - and people noticed. An uncontrolled flow of natural gas from the Aliso Facility coated nearby neighborhoods in an oily mist. At its peak, the leak released some 55 tons of natural gas every hour. Porter Ranch residents reported unpleasant odors, headaches, dizziness, and respiratory problems. In addition to those symptoms, students at local schools complained of nosebleeds and vomiting.

That November, the Los Angeles County health department directed SoCalGas to establish a relocation program available to Porter Ranch residents who lived within a five-mile radius of the leak site. The Department of Conservation's Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources required SoCalGas to provide real-time data about the leak, **884 as well as a timeline for stopping it. A month later, with the flow of gas slowing but still significant, the Los Angeles County Board of Education decided to relocate students and *396 staff from two Porter Ranch schools for the duration of the academic year. And a month after that, SoCalGas expanded its relocation program, *636 citing complaints of poor air quality from people living outside the initial five-mile boundary. About 15,000 people were relocated in total, scattering to locations dozens - and in some cases hundreds - of miles away.

SoCalGas finally got the leak under control in February 2016 - four months after detecting it. All told, about 100,000 tons of natural gas escaped the Aliso Facility, releasing enough greenhouse gases into the atmosphere to erase several years' worth of efforts to combat climate change in California.

B.

Plaintiffs are Porter Ranch area businesses seeking to represent a class of "[a]ll persons and entities conducting business within five miles of the [Aliso] Facility from October 23, 2015 to [the] present." 1 They allege that SoCalGas's negligence caused the leak. The resulting relocation of many Porter Ranch residents devastated the local economy: by depriving local businesses of customers, the environmental disaster cost local businesses considerable earnings.

That harm, Plaintiffs maintain, is ongoing. Sales at businesses of all stripes declined sharply, and in many cases, stayed down. Enrollment at a local martial arts center, Plaintiff King Taekwondo, nosedived during the leak and has not recovered. The same was true of a neighborhood day care, Plaintiff Polonsky Family Day Care. Restaurants, gas stations, and pharmacies were affected, too. So were beauty salons, doctor's offices, party suppliers, and a photography store.

With the en masse relocation of Porter Ranch residents and the diminution in property values caused by the leak, home mortgage lenders and home improvement businesses suffered economically as well. Plaintiff First American Realty saw clients get cold feet, loans fall out of escrow, and sales tumble. A local contractor's business dropped by 25 percent, as customers moved away or decided against home improvements for the time being. "Since the onset of the gas leak," in other words, business operations throughout Porter Ranch "have either halted or slowed substantially" - and Plaintiffs "have not yet recovered from the blow to their bottom lines."

Yet no named plaintiff in this action alleges personal injury or property damage. Accordingly, Plaintiffs acknowledge they are suing SoCalGas to recover solely for the income they lost because of the leak.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 P.3d 881, 247 Cal. Rptr. 3d 632, 7 Cal. 5th 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-cal-gas-co-v-superior-court-of-l-a-cntyin-re-s-cal-gas-leak-cal-2019.