Ziegler v. Santa Cruz City High Sch. Dist.

168 Cal. App. 2d 277
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1959
DocketCiv. No. 17954
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 168 Cal. App. 2d 277 (Ziegler v. Santa Cruz City High Sch. Dist.) 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
Ziegler v. Santa Cruz City High Sch. Dist., 168 Cal. App. 2d 277 (Cal. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

168 Cal.App.2d 277 (1959)

IRENE MAY ZIEGLER, Appellant,
v.
SANTA CRUZ CITY HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT et al., Respondents.

Civ. No. 17954.

California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. One.

Mar. 2, 1959.

Dent E. Snider, J. Frank Murphy and Eugene J. Adams for Appellant.

Lucas, Wyckoff & Miller for Respondents.

BRAY, J.

Plaintiff appeals from judgment of nonsuit in favor of defendants in an action for damages for the death of plaintiff's minor son on school property. The complaint contained two grounds for recovery, one based upon the Public Liability Act (Gov. Code, 53051, dangerous and defective condition of public property); the other based on alleged negligence in failing to adequately supervise their students.

Questions Presented

Was the evidence insufficient to show (1) a dangerous and defective condition; (2) negligent supervision?

Evidence

The school building houses elementary and junior high school students. The playground areas and the exits to them are separate for each group. The accident occurred at the rear entrance to the junior high school, where the doors open onto a landing from which nine steps lead down to the playground area. The landing and steps are guarded by an iron handrail on each side. The handrail is 33 inches high and 2 1/4 inches wide at the top. It is supported by bars arising from each step. Adjacent to the stairs and railing on one side is a concrete stairwell leading to the basement of the building. The distance from the top of the railing to the bottom of the stairwell is 12 1/2 feet.

Leonard Evans, plaintiff's deceased son, was 13 years, 7 months old and in the 8th grade of the junior high school. On the day in question he had attended a dance in the school and during the dance the school principal, Mr. Miller, observed *280 Leonard in horseplay with a 9th grade student, Richard. Leonard poked Richard in the ribs a few times. When the students were dismissed, Leonard proceeded out onto the stair landing where he placed his right buttock on the railing adjacent to the stairwell with one foot on the landing and one foot dangling. At this time Richard came out on the landing. Two 8th graders testified that Richard raised his arms as though to push Leonard. It is not clear from the evidence whether Richard actually pushed Leonard over or that, in endeavoring to avoid Richard, Leonard leaned backward and lost his balance. Leonard fell over the railing and into the stairwell. Leonard died from the injuries received in the fall.

1. Was There a Dangerous or Defective Condition?

[1] The court having granted a nonsuit, our duty is to determine whether there is any substantial evidence, or any reasonable inferences from the evidence, which would have supported a judgment in favor of plaintiff. [2] There was nothing inherently dangerous or defective about the railing, the landing or the steps, if the landing and steps were used for the purposes for which they were intended; namely, exit from and entrance to the building. Although the landing and the stairway were heavily trafficked by students coming and going in the building, they were perfectly safe if used in the normal and customary way. According to Mrs. Prince, one of the teachers who had taught at the school for the past 10 1/2 years, no one had ever fallen over the railing. The railing was of standard construction under the Uniform Building Code. Apparently it was a railing of the type used in many schools which have steps leading into a building or even steps from one floor of a building to another floor. There was evidence that to the knowledge of the school people during a period of about two years the railing had been occasionally used by students for partially sitting on and leaning against. The principal and Mrs. Prince both testified to having seen students doing so. The principal had directed teachers and students to keep the area clear, although there was no specific cautioning against sitting on the railing. Two students testified to the occasional practice of sitting on the railing. One of them stated that he had once seen in the daily bulletin a warning against doing so.

Plaintiff contends that this occasional use to the knowledge of the school people constituted the railing a dangerous and defective one. We do not agree. [3] A dangerous or defective condition is one from which it reasonably would be anticipated *281 that injury would occur to those coming into contact with the condition. (Jones v. City of Los Angeles (1951), 104 Cal.App.2d 212, 215 [231 P.2d 167].) This interpretation is not limited to property originally so designed as to be inherently dangerous in its ordinary and customary use. Its actual use may cause the property to constitute a dangerous or defective condition. Thus, in Bauman v. City & County of San Francisco (1940), 42 Cal.App.2d 144 [108 P.2d 989], the court held that a dangerous condition existed where the defendant permitted baseball to be played on its playground without erecting a barrier for the protection of small children playing in an adjacent sandbox. [4] "There can be no doubt that a dangerous or defective condition can be created by the use or general plan of operation of government operated property, as well as by a structural defect." (P. 153.) [5] The court pointed out that no hard and fast rule can be laid down as to what constitutes a dangerous or defective condition but that each case must depend upon its own state of facts. [6] It further stated that it is well settled that as a general rule the question is one of fact for the jury to determine.

In Gallipo v. City of Long Beach (1956), 146 Cal.App.2d 520 [304 P.2d 106], a small boy fell from a pipeline, about a foot in diameter, adjacent to a bridge over a railroad right of way. No walkway had been provided for pedestrians on the bridge. Paths appeared to lead from the highway to the pipeline. The city knew that children were crossing on the pipeline and that the only action taken to guard against this practice was to set up a kind of barricade at a halfway point along this route. In holding that the manner in which the city operated and maintained the bridge constituted a dangerous or defective condition, the court stated that the use of the pipeline as a crossing was so closely connected with or in such proximity to the bridge as to make the city liable for that use. "Additionally, where children of tender years are exposed to hazard by the manner of operation or maintenance of a municipal facility, the failure of the city to provide a barrier to prevent injury at the point or from the source of danger has been held to constitute a dangerous condition within the statute." (P. 528.) See Teilhet v. County of Santa Clara, 149 Cal.App.2d 305, 307 [308 P.2d 356], for discussion of the rule that the use of public property may constitute a dangerous or defective condition of the property. However, in those cases the use which made the property *282 dangerous was more than the occasional use proved in this case. As conceded by plaintiff at oral argument, the use being made of the railing by Leonard would not have been dangerous were it not for the pushing or the attempted pushing by his fellow student.

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168 Cal. App. 2d 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ziegler-v-santa-cruz-city-high-sch-dist-calctapp-1959.