Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 2015
DocketB259427
StatusUnpublished

This text of Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6 (Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6) 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
Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 12/3/15 Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

PEDRO LOPEZ SANTIAGO et al., 2d Civil No. B259427 (Super. Ct. No. 1390566) Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Santa Barbara County)

v.

ISIDRO CHAVEZ et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Pedro Lopez, Jr., (Lopez) was stabbed to death on property owned by Isidro and Maria Chavez (respondents). Lopez's parents, Pedro Lopez Santiago and Guadalupe Ramirez (appellants), sued respondents for negligence, premises liability, and wrongful death. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of respondents, and appellants appeal from that judgment. We affirm. BACKGROUND Respondents own a four-unit apartment building in Santa Maria (the property). Each unit is occupied by tenants who pay rent to respondents. On March 5, 2010, M.P. and H.A. lived in unit "D" with their mother. At about 10:00 p.m. that night, Lopez was stabbed to death in the carport of unit D by Christian Chavez,1 a member of the West Park Gang. The operative complaint

1 Although Chavez and respondents share a last name, they are not related. alleged that M.P. and H.A. were members of the same gang, invited Chavez over that night "for one of their frequently occurring parties," and "stood next to Chavez" while he committed the crime. M.P. had also allegedly been stabbed in a prior incident and involved in another prior stabbing, while Lopez was not affiliated with any gang and "had been jogging by the building while he stopped to visit a tenant at the property when he was violently stabbed to death . . . ." The complaint also alleged that other tenants had previously complained to respondents about "loud drunken parties several nights per week in the carport and driveway area [of unit D], gang member activity, police raids, drug use on the premises, sex in public and acts of violence." Respondents purportedly "did nothing to prevent this illegal and dangerous activity from continuing" by, for example, evicting M.P. or H.A., ordering them "to stop engaging in violent and illegal conduct," "post[ing] signage restricting the behavior" or "put up any lighting to deter, and did not call the police to stop the illegal conduct." Respondents also allegedly knew about two prior police "raid[s]" on the he property "just weeks prior to the Lopez murder as well as several other crimes at [unit D] including drug arrests, sexual assault, drunk in public, theft, and resisting arrest." Appellants sought to hold respondents liable for the damages they suffered as a result of Lopez's death on the grounds that (1)"further criminal and/or dangerous activities" on the property were foreseeable to respondents such that they owed a duty to prevent such activities; and (2) Lopez's death was caused by the breach of that duty. In moving for summary judgment, respondents each declared under oath that prior to the stabbing incident they had no knowledge of any criminal activity on the property, including illegal drug usage in the common areas or "loud drunken parties" or "any prior acts of physical violence on th[e] property." Respondents also said they had no prior knowledge of Chavez or Lopez or of any disturbance or disagreement between them and/or the occupants of unit D. In opposing summary judgment, appellants submitted a declaration from private investigator Hector Garcia along with a report summarizing interviews

2 Garcia conducted with other tenants at the property over two-and-a-half years after the stabbing incident. According to the report, each interviewee referred to loud parties and drinking at unit D prior to the stabbing, and a few said they had complained (or had been told that other tenants had complained) to respondents about the noise. Every interviewee, however, also said there had been no prior acts of violence on the property, and that subsequent to the stabbing respondents had prohibited the residents of unit D from having any more parties there. Appellants also submitted a declaration from one of appellants' attorneys with a copy of a deposition subpoena served on the Santa Maria Police Department attached as an exhibit. Counsel then offered, based on her "personal[] review[]" of the records produced in response to the subpoena, that within the 30 days preceding the stabbing incident "there were law enforcement responses to 5 burglaries, 2 acts of vandalism, 2 arrests for parole violations, 2 arrests for sex crimes, 3 acts of battery, and 1 arrest for domestic violence within a one block radius of the property." Finally, appellants requested judicial notice of two supplemental police reports regarding the stabbing pursuant to Evidence Code2 section 452, subdivision (h). Along with the reports, appellants included copies of a search warrant issued for unit D during the investigation of the incident and the supporting affidavit. Respondents filed written objections to all of appellants' proffered evidence on hearsay grounds and opposed the request for judicial notice of the police reports and their attachments on the ground that the documents were not judicially noticeable and were offered for inadmissible hearsay contained therein. At the outset of the hearing on the summary judgment motion, the court stated, "Well, it's the unusual case where we can grant summary judgment, but this is looking to me like one that may be appropriate for it because I'm not seeing any

2 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Evidence Code.

3 evidence of knowledge of similar violent crimes in the area." The court added, "[i]t is just hard to see what knowledge would have been communicated to the owners of the building and what action they could have taken that would have prevented the ultimate tragedy here." After arguing her position, appellants' attorney asked for a continuance of the hearing to "give us the opportunity to cure whatever the concerns or the defects are in the interest of justice since it's a triable issue of fact and such an important issue . . . ." Counsel anticipated that further discovery could demonstrate that respondents "didn't replace broken lights or install lighting or signage" in order to deter the commission of criminal acts on their property. Respondents opposed the request as contrary to the rules of summary judgment and characterized it as "a delaying tactic." The court responded, "I don't know as I should," yet granted a two-month continuance. Respondents' counsel asked for a ruling on their evidentiary objections and the court replied, "It was before receiving the objections already my view that the court doesn't take judicial notice of the truth of the content of police reports, and that we need more than hearsay evidence to find a triable issue here." At the continued hearing, appellants' attorney acknowledged that no additional evidence had been offered in opposition to the summary judgment motion. After further argument, the court ruled that "even if we were to consider the hearsay - which I don't think we should," it was insufficient to defeat summary judgment as a matter of law.3 Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of respondents.

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Santiago v. Chavez CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santiago-v-chavez-ca26-calctapp-2015.