Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 2014
DocketB242912
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2 (Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2) 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
Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/13/14 Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

HENRY TANG et al., B242912

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC462188) v.

NBBJ, LP, et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Susan Bryant-Deason, Judge. Affirmed in part and reversed in part. Wellman & Warren, Scott W. Wellman, Stuart Miller for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Tucker Ellis, Bart L. Kessel, Rebecca A. Lefler, Anne Swoboda Cruz for Defendant and Respondent NBBJ, LP. Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Jeffry A. Miller, Brittany H. Bartold, Dana A. Fox, Dawn Flores-Oster for Defendants and Respondents L.A. Arena Company, LLC, and L.A. Arena Funding, LLC. ___________________________________________________ After a two-year-old child fell to his death from the third floor at Staples Center, his family brought suit against the owner of the arena and the architectural firm that designed it. In succession, the trial court sustained demurrers to some of plaintiffs’ claims without leave to amend; granted judgment on the pleadings in favor of the architectural firm; and disposed of the remaining claims by way of summary judgment. The court found that the arena owner owed no duty to plaintiffs. We reverse the summary judgment and the dismissal of plaintiffs’ claim of an unlawful business practice, and remand the case for further proceedings. FACTS On November 21, 2010, Henry Tang and Hoai Mi Nguyen attended a basketball game with their children, including two-year-old Lucas Tang. They were seated in a luxury box on the third level of Staples Center. Apart from a rear portion containing bar stools and a couch, the box has two tiered rows of fixed seats. Extending up from the carpeted floor at the front of the box to a height of 15 to 16 inches is a solid wall topped by a shelf. The shelf is 11 inches wide, projects toward the front row of seats in the box, and runs the entire length of the box, even in front of the stairs. Affixed to the shelf is a tempered glass barrier. The glass barrier rises 10 inches in front of the seats, and is 26 inches high in front of the stairway that bisects the box. Beyond the barrier is a 25-foot drop to the arena floor. It is undisputed that Nguyen picked up Lucas and stood him on the shelf in front of the glass barrier. She wished to photograph the child while he stood on the shelf with his back to the basketball court. Lucas did not climb onto the shelf by himself. Nguyen situated Lucas on the center of the shelf where the glass barrier is 26 inches high and 35 inches wide; she realized that there is a lower glass section nearby. Tang was in the rear portion of the suite, not near Lucas, as Nguyen took photographs while standing near the bottom of the stairway that ascends to the living room area. After each photograph, Nguyen looked down, checked the image, and then looked up to take another photograph. Nothing prevented Lucas from walking to his left or right along the shelf while Nguyen looked at her camera. Nguyen testified, “I was holding my

2 camera, and I took the last picture of him, and I glanced at the fourth picture. When I glanced back up to take the next one, I noticed he wasn’t there.”1 Nguyen screamed, “Lucas fell.” The child died from injuries sustained in the fall. It is undisputed that “no one was holding onto Lucas at the time Nguyen was taking the fourth photograph of Lucas, and Nguyen did not ask any other adult to watch or hold or keep an eye on Lucas while Nguyen was taking the fourth picture.” Nguyen agreed that Lucas would not have been standing on the ledge had she not placed him there. Neither Nguyen nor Tang know how Lucas got from the 26-inch-high portion of the glass barrier to the 10-inch-high portion. Nguyen would not have allowed Lucas to crawl by himself on the section of the shelf where the glass is only 10 inches high. At no time since Staples Center opened in 1999 has any other person fallen from a luxury suite. In a request for admissions, Nguyen admitted that the shelf in front of the seats “was constructed to provide an area for patrons to place food, items and beverages while viewing an event at the Staples Center.” The shelf was used for that purpose by people in the Tangs’ box on the day of the accident. Assistant Engineering Bureau Chief Ken Gill from the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) did the plan check for Staples Center, to determine if the proposed arena complied with all state and local building regulations. Gill did not approve the shelf in front of the glass partition. He testified that the shelf was not submitted for approval before Staples Center was built; rather, the plans show a glass barrier standing up 26 inches from the floor, without a shelf. Gill first learned about the existence of the shelf after this accident: he does not know how the shelf came to be attached to the barrier. He testified that had the construction plan been submitted with an 11-inch-wide shelf, he would not have approved it because “somebody can climb over

1 The police report stated that while Nguyen was “focusing on her iPhone, she observed what she described as a glimpse of Lucas’s foot falling.” During her deposition, Nguyen took issue with “focusing” on her phone, but agreed that “while you were looking at your iPhone, you then out of the corner of your eye saw a part of Lucas’s body going over the tempered glass.”

3 this beverage bench and your effective guardrail height will be reduced from 26-inch to whatever dimension is shown here, about 10 and [one]-quarter-inch.” Gill is not aware of any specialized permit being issued after the construction plans were approved that would authorize the addition of an 11-inch shelf in front of the boxes. He noted that a 26-inch guardrail is authorized in front of the seating area, without a beverage bench or shelf sticking out. Lee Zeidman, General Manager of Staples Center, admitted in his deposition that sitting or standing on the shelf or beverage bar at the front of the boxes is “dangerous.” He acknowledged his awareness that people do stand or sit on the shelf. If management is notified that someone is sitting or standing on the shelf, security personnel will be dispatched to tell that person to get off of the shelf. Despite knowing that people stand and sit on the shelf, Zeidman “never took any action to prevent climbing or sitting on the drink rail” because he “felt it wasn’t necessary” since no one had fallen from it. Zeidman agreed that Staples Center markets the luxury suites for use by families including children. There are no warning signs at Staples Center relating to patrons’ use of the shelf. Richard Fortman is a principal inspector at LADBS, where he has worked for 24 years. He was designated as LADBS’s “person most knowledgeable.” Fortman did not recall inspecting the safety barriers at Staples Center, and does not know which inspector in his department examined the barriers or guardrails (the preferred term). The purpose of the guardrail, Fortman said, is to prevent someone from falling from an upper level to the ground below. He testified that the owner of Staples Center and the arena building contractor have inspection report cards showing which inspector looked at the property; LADBS does not keep copies of these report cards. Terry Knox has served as a building department official in multiple jurisdictions in California.

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Tang v. NBBJ CA2/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tang-v-nbbj-ca22-calctapp-2014.