Washington v. Rosales CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 2, 2020
DocketG058187
StatusUnpublished

This text of Washington v. Rosales CA4/3 (Washington v. Rosales 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
Washington v. Rosales CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 11/2/20 Washington v. Rosales 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

PATRICIA WASHINGTON,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G058187

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00898817)

ALISSON ROSALES, OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Craig L. Griffin, Judge. Affirmed. Hunt & Adams and John C. Adams III for Plaintiff and Appellant. Law Office of Anthony T. Schneider and Darren P. Johnson for Defendant and Respondent. * * * Patricia Washington appeals from the judgment entered after the trial court granted defendant Alisson Rosales’s motion for summary judgment. Washington sued Rosales, the instructor of a “boot-camp” group fitness class, alleging her negligence was a cause of Washington’s injury during the class. Rosales moved for summary judgment on the basis that Washington signed a release that waived any liability claims arising out of her participation in the class. Washington contends the judgment must be reversed because (1) the court erred by concluding the 2014 release was not rendered unenforceable by the Health Studio Services Act (Civ. Code, § 1812.80 et. seq.), (2) the court erred by shifting the burden to her to demonstrate a triable issue of fact on the issue of gross negligence, which would not be subject to waiver, (3) the court erred by sustaining Rosales’s objections to the declaration of her expert witness, and (4) there were triable issues of fact pertaining to whether Rosales’s supervision of the class was grossly negligent. We find no error and affirm the judgment. The Health Studio Services Act is a consumer protection law that applies to membership agreements; it creates specific limits on the financial commitments that may be extracted from health and fitness club members. It has no applicability to a tort liability waiver that establishes no membership or financial commitments. Moreover, Rosales’s motion was grounded on her affirmative defense of release, rather than on an assertion that one or more of the elements of Washington’s negligence cause of action could not be proven. Therefore the burden properly shifted to Washington, once Rosales presented prima facie evidence of the release, to demonstrate why the release did not relieve Rosales of liability. We find no error in the court’s evidentiary rulings because (1) the expert never identified the source or substance of the “industry practices” and “safety standards” he relied on in opining that Rosales’s management of her class was grossly negligent; (2) he improperly opined about the facts of the case; and (3) many of his opinions were irrelevant to the circumstances of Washington’s injury. And finally,

2 the evidence offered by Washington was insufficient to establish a triable issue of fact on the issue of gross negligence because she produced no evidence to support her expert’s opinion that Rosales’s class was dangerously configured at the time of her injury.

FACTS Rosales is the owner and operator of Fit Body Boot Camp Foothill Ranch. The boot camp classes involve a variety of exercises, some involving weights, that are designed to provide a full body workout. Washington, a medical doctor who claims she is no longer able to practice her medical specialty due to the injuries she suffered in this accident, began participating in Rosales’s boot camp classes in 2012. She signed an “acknowledgement and assumption of risk and full liability” around that same time. In the year before her injury in 2016, Washington regularly attended classes, often six days per week. In 2014, Washington signed a second “waiver and release of liability” that states she “waive[s] any and all rights, claims or causes of action of any kind whatsoever arising out of my participation in the Activity, and do[es] hereby release and forever discharge Fit Body Boot Camp, . . . their affiliates, managers, members, agents, attorneys, staff volunteers, . . . for any physical or psychological injury, including but not limited to illness, paralysis, death, damages, economical or emotional loss, that I may suffer as a direct result of my participation in the aforementioned Activity.” The waiver goes on to explicitly acknowledge that injuries may be caused by the “actions of others, including but not limited to, participants, volunteers, spectators, coaches, event officials and event monitors.” And finally, the waiver expressly includes a waiver of claims “for negligence on the part of Fit Body Boot Camp, Foothill Ranch, its agents, and employees.”1

1 The 2012 release was not offered into evidence, and thus its specific terms remain unclear. Rosales asserted that Washington signed a third release in 2016, but

3 According to Rosales, she had all participants in her boot camp classes, including Washington, sign the 2014 release because it had been updated to reflect the inclusion of rope climbing activities. In her deposition, she recalled that Washington signed the 2014 release in her presence, at her Foothill Ranch Boot Camp location. According to Washington, she complained to Rosales about another participant in the Boot Camp class, Stephanie Crowther, in February 2016, after Crowther ran into her during a running exercise. Before that incident, Washington had never experienced any similar collisions in the boot camp class. On March 2, 2016, Washington was participating in a morning boot camp class with what she estimated to be “[o]ver 60” participants.2 Following an initial warm-up, the class engaged in a “farmer’s carry” exercise, in which the participants walked the length of a mat (later established to be 150-feet-long and 50-feet-wide) and then back, with their arms at their sides and weights in each hand. According to Washington, participants followed their “own speed and path” during the exercise, and there were other participants in front of and behind her, to her left and right, and walking toward her. Washington estimated that one person was about five feet in front of her and a person to her left was seven feet away. She did not know how far away any person behind her might have been. Washington first saw Crowther when Washington was just beginning her farmer’s carry. Crowther was five to six feet away, approaching Washington’s right side from the opposite direction, and walking at a similar pace. Washington kept her eyes on Crowther; she shifted her course by taking one step to her left in order to give Crowther

Washington affirmatively denied signing that one. Consequently, Washington took the position that “the only release of relevance here is that one from 2014.” 2 Other witnesses recalled the class size as being significantly smaller, but for our purposes that dispute of fact is irrelevant.

4 more space. At about the same time, Crowther shifted her course toward Washington, and the weight in Crowther’s right hand (the hand closer to Washington) was “suspended away from her body.” When the two passed each other, the weight Crowther was holding out away from her body struck Washington in the hand causing her injury. Before the collision between Washington and Crowther, Rosales had never seen anyone “stray off their path and present a danger to another person” during the farmer’s carry exercise in any of her classes. Washington filed her complaint in January 2017, alleging causes of action against Crowther and other defendants, including Fit Body Boot Camp Foothill Ranch.

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Bluebook (online)
Washington v. Rosales CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-rosales-ca43-calctapp-2020.