Torres v. Dateland Construction Co. CA4/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 2023
DocketE078625
StatusUnpublished

This text of Torres v. Dateland Construction Co. CA4/2 (Torres v. Dateland Construction Co. CA4/2) 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
Torres v. Dateland Construction Co. CA4/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 10/5/23 Torres v. Dateland Construction Co. CA4/2

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

RUDY RAUL TORRES,

Plaintiff and Appellant, E078625

v. (Super.Ct.No. PSC2001806)

DATELAND CONSTRUCTION OPINION COMPANY, INC.,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Richard Oberholzer,

Judge. Affirmed.

Haffner Law, Joshua H. Haffner, and Trevor Weinberg, and Alfredo Torrijos for

Plaintiff and Appellant.

Berman, Berman, Berman, Schneider & Lowary, Mark E. Lowary, Kelly M.

Henry, and Gina M. Genatempo for Defendant and Respondent.

1 A construction worker fell into a shallow trench while carrying a heavy wood

form across a construction site managed by his employer, a general contractor. He sued

the subcontractor who excavated the trench under theories of premise liability and

negligence. The trial court granted summary judgment on both causes of action because

the subcontractor had no duty to warn employees where the employee could easily have

avoided the open and obvious condition, and no Cal-OSHA regulations or company

policies required warnings for a trench of the type the subcontractor built. We agree with

the trial court and also conclude premises liability does not apply in this suit against a

subcontractor. We therefore affirm the judgment.

I

FACTS

On June 21, 2018, plaintiff and appellant Rudy Raul Torres was working for Sun

Country Builders (Sun Country) as a laborer and carpenter at a construction site staffed

by multiple contractors, all involved in a project called Villa Hermosa Phase II in Indio.

Torres suffered injuries that day when he stepped onto a board laid across an open fire

riser trench on the site. The board gave way, and Torres fell partially into the trench.

Torres filed a complaint stating causes of action for general negligence and

premises liability against a subcontractor who performed electrical work at the site, and

later amended the complaint to add a second subcontractor, respondent Dateland

Construction Company, Inc. (Dateland), as a defendant. After discovery, Dateland filed a

motion seeking summary judgment, which it supported with a declaration by a

2 construction industry expert; Torres’s interrogatory responses; a declaration by its project

manager; a statement of undisputed facts; and portions of the deposition transcripts of

Torres, three people at the site on the day of the injury, and the person designated the

most knowledgeable at Dateland.

Torres opposed summary judgment and submitted a separate statement of material

facts, a copy of the contract between Sun Country and Dateland, a copy of the

construction site report about Torres’s injury, portions of Torres’s depositions, portions

of the deposition of the employee Dateland designated as its person most knowledgeable,

and a declaration from another construction industry expert witness.

Because this is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment, we refer to

those sources in setting out the facts below.

Sun Country served as the general contractor for the Villa Hermosa Phase II

project, and Dateland worked as one of the subcontractors. Dateland’s job was “to

provide all water, fire suppression system distribution, storm drain and sanitary sewer

material and installation work.” It agreed to have a full-time supervisory presence and to

provide Sun Country with its safety policies and procedures, which had to “meet or

exceed Cal OSHA regulations.”

As part of its work, Dateland dug a fire riser trench on June 20, 2018 and left it

there unattended the next day, when its workers were elsewhere at the site. The trench

would have to be left open for inspection by a fire marshal before a concrete kicker could

3 be installed. Such inspections are a routine part of fire riser installation, and it typically

takes several days for the inspection. The inspection was set for June 22.

On the morning of June 21, Torres was building concrete forms and moving them

across the jobsite. Torres was working alone in the middle of the site. Two other Sun

Country employees were doing the same work together. Those employees took a longer

route to the front of the building, while Torres took a shorter, more direct route. Torres

carried his concrete form—a single wood panel weighing between 25 to 35 pounds—on

his right shoulder. Torres says he was walking fast when he stepped on a wood plank,

which collapsed. He says part of his left leg went into the trench, and the wood concrete

form fell on him. He said he did not see the open trench because the wood plank obscured

it and there were no warning signs or barriers.

Photographs taken after the incident show a trench with wood planks partially

fallen into it.

4 It is unknown who placed the board over the trench. Sun Country was the only entity

using lumber boards of the sort left over the trench, but it had a policy against building

bridges out of boards to allow access over trenches. Daryl McFarland, at the time a Vice

President for Sun Country charged with overseeing project operations, reported that a

Sun Country employee said he saw Torres place the boards across the trench, but Torres

denied that accusation.

At his deposition, Torres testified the trench was around five- to six-feet deep but

said he did not know its length. Dateland objected to Torres’s estimate. It said it routinely

digs fire riser trenches to a depth of about two feet and no more than three feet and had

done so at this site. Based on photos of the trench, McFarland estimated it was 2 feet

deep. Everardo Ortiz, an assistant superintendent in charge of jobsite safety who saw the

trench after the incident, testified it was about two feet deep. He said the area did not

require caution tape “because it wasn’t that deep of a trench,” and tape was required only

5 for trenches at least four feet deep. Ortiz conducted June 20 and 21 safety inspections that

included the fire riser trench and noted no safety issues. The safety inspection on June 21

occurred at 10:00 a.m., after Torres’s fall, but did not note the incident. Ortiz said he

should have included in the safety report that boards had been placed over the fire riser

trench, a fact noted in the incident report.

Dateland designated Dennis Chuck, the project manager, as its “Person Most

Knowledgeable.” He submitted a declaration offering to testify that he personally

oversaw the jobsite work. He said, “Dateland was contracted only for the installation of

fire risers which required trenches which are uniformly no more than two feet deep, and

approximately two (2) feet wide. . . . The trenches created by Dateland which were

present on the date of the incident were all that same size.” He said Dateland had

prepared an exemplar fire riser trench to allow its proposed construction industry expert

to inspect the trench. He said he observed the exemplar, and it was prepared in the same

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