State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Selma Trailer & Manufacturing Co.

210 Cal. App. 3d 740, 258 Cal. Rptr. 545, 54 Cal. Comp. Cases 167, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 472
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 1989
DocketF009522
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 210 Cal. App. 3d 740 (State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Selma Trailer & Manufacturing Co.) 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
State Compensation Insurance Fund v. Selma Trailer & Manufacturing Co., 210 Cal. App. 3d 740, 258 Cal. Rptr. 545, 54 Cal. Comp. Cases 167, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 472 (Cal. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Opinion

BROWN (G. A.), J. *

Plaintiff State Compensation Insurance Fund (State Comp) and interveners Ignacio Guzman and Olga Guzman appeal from the judgment following the trial court’s order dismissing their respective complaint and complaint-in-intervention under the three-year statute for delay in prosecution (Code Civ. Proc., § 583.410). 1

Procedural Background and Facts

On October 9, 1981, intervener Ignacio Guzman (intervener/employee) suffered serious work-related injuries when he allegedly fell from the elevated basket of a manlift in the process of pruning walnut trees. Guzman worked for Cesar Fernandez, a labor contractor who had been hired by the *744 owner of a walnut orchard, defendant Serafín Berbería, Jr., to prune the trees. State Comp was Fernandez’s workers’ compensation carrier. The manlift, also known as a “TreeFarmer,” which Fernandez owned was manufactured in the 1960’s by defendant Selma Trailer and Manufacturing Company in Selma. In 1971 defendant Chamberlain Manufacturing Corporation acquired Selma Trailer and manufactured this line of equipment through its Manlift Division until 1976. The other manufacturing defendants were subsequent owners of the manufacturing division.

On October 8, 1982, pursuant to Labor Code section 3852, 2 State Comp filed suit against the manufacturing defendants based on the disability and rehabilitation benefits it was required to pay to Guzman. On September 17, 1985, interveners, Guzman and his wife, pursuant to court order, filed a complaint-in-intervention alleging causes of action against the manufacturing defendants for strict product liability, the landowner defendant Berbería for negligence and willful failure to warn, and both the manufacturing and landowner defendants for loss of consortium. 3 State Comp amended its complaint to substitute in the other manufacturing and landowner defendants. Between September 24 and October 3, 1985, State Comp and interveners served the defendants. On October 7, 1985, State Comp and interveners filed returns of summons and proofs of service.

Defendants filed answers to the complaint and complaint-in-intervention, cross-complaints against one another for equitable indemnity and answers to the cross-complaints between November 1985 and early January 1986.

In September 1986, defendants filed motions to dismiss the complaint and complaint-in-intervention for delay in prosecution. According to the moving papers, State Comp’s almost three-year delay in serving its complaint had resulted in prejudice to defendants due to the loss of evidence including important records from the Selma plant. Defendants also urged the timing *745 of the dismissal periods was the same for interveners as it was for State Comp.

The trial court denied the motion without prejudice. While observing the issue was “a very close one,” the court stated it believed the interests of justice under the circumstances required the policy favoring a trial on the merits should prevail. It was unable to conclude at that time that defendants had suffered or would suffer substantial actual prejudice as a result of the delay.

In June 1987 at-issue and counter at-issue memoranda were filed in the trial court by interveners and the landowner defendant. On July 8, 1987, the court served notice on the parties that trial was calendared for October 23, 1987, 14 days after the running of the 5-year mandatory dismissal statute for failure to diligently prosecute.

On July 28, 1987, defendants renewed their motion to dismiss. Once again, defendants argued because the complaint and complaint-in-intervention had not been served until almost four years after the accident, material evidence had been lost resulting in substantial prejudice to them. Defendants urged additional evidence had been lost, including evidence purportedly lost by the employer and the intervener/employee, since the time of the first dismissal motion resulting in prejudice to defendants. Defendants also complained State Comp had, intentionally or otherwise, frustrated their (defendants’) discovery and trial preparation. Plaintiff and interveners disputed each of defendants’ factual contentions.

On July 30, 1987, State Comp filed a motion to specially set trial to commence not later than October 7, 1987, the date upon which the five-year mandatory dismissal statute ran. An order shortening time was issued so that the motions to dismiss and to specially set trial, as well as a motion by manufacturing defendants to compel further answers to interrogatories from State Comp, were argued and submitted on August 27, 1987.

On September 10, 1987, the trial court issued its order dismissing the complaint and complaint-in-intervention, denying the motion to specially set, and finding the motion to compel moot. Plaintiff and interveners appeal the judgment of dismissal.

The intervener/employee who was rendered a quadriplegic as a result of his fall did not know how the accident occurred. He was pruning one-half of a tree while Fernandez, his employer, was pruning the other half. The last thing the employee remembered was that the two had been working for *746 several hours and lunch time was approaching. It is not clear from the record what the employer, apparently the only person present at the time, knew or could remember about the accident.

According to plaintiff’s and interveners’ apparent theory of the case, the basket of the manlift on which the employee stood at the time of the accident was defective. A safety device, namely, a perimeter ring around the basket, could theoretically have prevented the employee’s fall. Also, it was apparently their position that had the basket door opened to the inside rather than the outside, the fall would not have occurred.

The manufacturing defendants pursued alternative, intervening or contributing causes of the accident as possible defenses. One defense theory was that the employee slipped and fell due to the employer’s contributory negligence. According to the employee, the hydraulic saw which Fernandez had supplied him for pruning the trees had been leaking hydraulic fluid from the saw’s control handle over the two weeks preceding the accident. Each time the employee reported the leak, the employer would take the saw to have it repaired. However, the control handle continued to leak. Sometimes when it leaked, the fluid spilled on the floor of the basket and his feet would slip. Based on these facts the defendants were prepared to argue the saw control handle must have leaked on the date in question and caused the accident.

Another defense theory was that the basket had been modified after delivery to the first purchaser of this particular Treemaster such that the modification contributed to the accident. Defendants were also apparently investigating the Guzmans’ separation during the pendency of the action and its effect on Mrs. Guzman’s cause of action for loss of consortium.

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Bluebook (online)
210 Cal. App. 3d 740, 258 Cal. Rptr. 545, 54 Cal. Comp. Cases 167, 1989 Cal. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-compensation-insurance-fund-v-selma-trailer-manufacturing-co-calctapp-1989.