Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High School Dist. CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 1, 2014
DocketG049198
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High School Dist. CA4/3 (Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High 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
Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High School Dist. CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 10/1/14 Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

MARK SONETTI II,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G049198

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2012-00580070)

HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HIGH OPINION SCHOOL DISTRICT et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, James Di Cesare, Judge. Reversed. Allen Flatt Ballidis & Leslie, and Michael C. Bock for Plaintiff and Appellant. Gibeaut, Mahan & Briscoe, Gary R. Gibeaut and John W. Allen for Defendants and Respondents. * * * I. INTRODUCTION This is a high school football injury case. The plaintiff, Mark Sonetti, was hit from behind during a kickoff coverage drill. He lurched forward, striking another player with his chin. He broke his jaw. Sonetti has filed this action against Huntington Beach High Union School District alleging his injuries were the result of the district’s negligence. The district filed a successful motion for summary judgment based on primary assumption of the risk, and Sonetti has taken this appeal. The law of assumption of the risk as regards sports injuries is easy to conceptualize, but sometimes hard to apply: The plaintiff assumes the normal, inherent risks in the sports activity, but does not assume increased risks attributable to the defendant, usually an organizer, instructor, or promoter. As we explain below, the basic rule is that courts should ascertain what is the standard practice as regards a given safety feature in an organized sporting activity. Going the extra mile beyond what is normal, or providing safety precautions beyond what is standard practice, is not required of a defendant. But complying with standard, customary safety procedures is. Sonetti argues that supplying helmets and mouthguards is a standard, customary safety procedure that would have prevented or ameliorated his injury. The case comes to us on summary judgment, so the conflicts in the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it are resolved in favor of plaintiff. Here, the district failed to establish that kickoff coverage drills are normally run without helmets. The evidence is conflicting on the point, and there is evidence from which an inference may be drawn that standard practice is for kickoff coverage drills to be run with helmets at the time Sonetti was injured. Moreover, even the district admitted it is standard practice to supply mouthguards for kickoff coverage drills and the evidence is conflicting as to whether the district actually supplied them for the practice that injured Sonetti. Accordingly, we reverse.

2 II. FACTS In August 2011 Sonetti played football for Fountain Valley High School for three years. He had made the varsity team in his junior year, and was returning as a varsity player for his senior season. In each of his previous seasons, helmets and mouthguards had been used in all fall kickoff coverage drills.1 There is no dispute that it is standard practice in kickoff coverage drills for players to wear mouth guards. In fact, Fountain Valley’s coach testified at his deposition that a player would not be allowed to be in the drill if he wasn’t wearing one.2 Sonetti testified at his deposition that mouthguards were normally given out to the players when they received their helmets. The evidence on summary judgment, however, was uncontradicted that the team’s helmets had not yet arrived by the Monday of the kickoff coverage drill.3 Shoulder pads had been given out the preceding Saturday, but Sonetti testified that he wasn’t given a mouthguard when he picked up his shoulder pads.4 For his part, coach Shipp was only able to testify that mouthguards “should” have been given out, or that he “wanted to think” they had been. His testimony did not establish that mouthguards had been actually given out. He also indicated that mouthguards normally

1 Sonetti testified directly to that fact in his deposition. No fall kickoff coverage drill had ever been run without a helmet. Sonetti’s coach, defendant John Shipp, also admitted as much at his deposition. We reproduce the relevant swath of testimony: “Q. Okay. When it’s anything short of a full contact drill, are helmets required, in your opinion? “A. Yes, sir. “Q. Okay. What is the key determining factor or factors that triggers the need for helmets? “A. Well, I mean, helmets – the helmets, if we can wear helmets, we’re going to wear helmets. That’s what we do. Because the kids need to wear them so they get used to wearing the helmets and keeping their heads up and being able to tackle properly. “Q. If the helmets had arrived prior to the day of the accident, would the players have been wearing them during that particular kickoff drill? “A. Yes, sir. Had they been fitted properly, yes.” (Italics added.) 2 Shipp said at one point, “I mean, all of our kids are supposed to be wearing mouthguards.” And when asked: “For the particular kickoff coverage drill in which Mark was injured, if you realized he wasn’t wearing a mouthpiece, you would have sent him to go get a mouthpiece. [¶] Right?” he answered “Absolutely.” 3 As shown by an uncontroverted statement from the team’s equipment manager. 4 The relevant testimony was: “Q. And when you picked up your shoulder pads the Saturday before your injury, did you also pick up a mouthguard? “A. I don’t believe so.”

3 come attached to the helmets, a fact that would buttress the inference mouthguards were not given out to team members prior to Monday’s practice since helmets had not yet arrived.5 As to those helmets, we recount in the margin the particular part of coach Shipp’s deposition testimony relied on by the district as to whether it was standard practice to run kickoff coverage drills with helmets in the fall.6 There is no dispute spring drills are not normally run with helmets (Sonetti himself testified to that) but as to the fall, Shipp’s testimony is less than pellucid. There is also no dispute in the record as to what the kickoff coverage drill run that Monday was to entail: There was to be no tackling. However, blocking was envisaged, and coach Shipp admitted that, in the context of the drill, a defender running down the field could end up being blocked.7 As Sonetti described what happened, he

5 “Q. The mouthguards are attached to the helmets. [¶] Right? “A. No. Well, they should be, but they were given – they get their own individual mouthpiece and they should have been given that. “Q. Okay. “A. That day. [In context, the “day” being referred to appears to be the Saturday when the shoulder pads were handed out.] “Q. Do you know if the mouthguards had been given out prior – strike that. [¶] For the season in which the accident occurred, do you know if the mouthguards had been given out for that season prior to the day of the accident? “A. They should have been. “Q. Do you know whether they were or not? “A. I would like to think yes, but I can’t – I can’t recollect.” 6 Here it is: “Q. Whatever those parameters are, on how many prior occasions, and you can do it percentagewise or give me an estimate as to the number of times, great, had you conducted that exact type of coverage drill before in which the players did not wears helmets? “A. You know, you just, you mentioned 1,000 times, a little bit of an exaggeration, but that’s a drill that was practiced many times. “Q. And the players habitually would not wear helmets? “A. Yes, sir. “Q.

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Sonetti v. Huntington Beach Union High School Dist. CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sonetti-v-huntington-beach-union-high-school-dist--calctapp-2014.