Alpert v. Villa Romano Homeowners Assn.

Citation96 Cal.Rptr.2d 364,81 Cal.App.4th 1320
Decision Date31 May 2000
Docket NumberNo. B118182.,B118182.
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeals
PartiesAnn ALPERT, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. VILLA ROMANO HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, Defendant and Respondent.

GOODMAN, J.*

Ann Alpert (Alpert) appeals from the judgment of nonsuit entered in favor of respondent Villa Romano Homeowners Association (VRHA) at the close of Alpert's case-in-chief. Alpert's complaint alleged that she suffered severe injuries when she tripped and fell on the upturned and broken sidewalk adjacent to the condominium complex managed by VRHA.1 In this appeal Alpert asks that we determine if the owner and possessor of property owes a duty to warn or protect pedestrians from allegedly dangerous conditions known to be present. We conclude that there is such a duty and that the trial court erred in granting the defense motion for nonsuit made at the close of Alpert's case-in-chief.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In the late morning of July 27, 1992, Alpert, then 69 and in good health, took her four-year-old dog, BJ, a poodle weighing approximately eight pounds, for a walk near her home in Marina del Rey. She had BJ on a leash. Alpert walked her dog several times a day, but had never fallen before while walking him. This day, on the way home, she passed in front of the VRHA condominium property (the property), which is near the condominium complex in which she resided. The weather was dry and clear; the summer sun was overhead. Alpert's walk ended when one of her feet came in contact with an upturned, jagged piece of sidewalk, causing her to lose her balance and fall, face first, to the sidewalk. After her fall, she noticed that there was grass growing in this break in the sidewalk.

The fall knocked the wind out of her. In the fall, Alpert fractured her right wrist, fractured and lacerated her left knee, broke her fourth and fifth ribs, and sustained a large hematoma in the area of her right breast. She sought medical attention for her injuries, eventually having surgery to repair her left knee. During her recovery from the fall, she contracted pneumonia. At the time of trial, she was unable to walk more than a block without pain, and was using a wheelchair to go longer distances.

Luz Enriquez (Enriquez) had been the gardener for VRHA for 20 years. He worked at the property three times each week. In addition to performing gardening services in the area of the property between the condominium buildings and the sidewalk, including the lawn, which he routinely mowed, he did similar work in the area between the sidewalk and the curb. He routinely removed leaves and other debris from the sidewalk, including removing such material that accumulated from time to time in the crack at the location of the upturned sidewalk. He also watered the vegetation on both sides of the sidewalk, utilizing the sprinklers which VRHA had installed in both areas. Enriquez was aware of the break in the sidewalk and recalled that it had been there for a few years prior to the date of Alpert's fall.

Bernardo Segala had been hired by VRHA to trim trees on its property. During the year 1992 and prior to Alpert's fall, at the request of VRHA he trimmed trees on the lawn between the sidewalk and the condominium property and on the portion of the lawn between the sidewalk and the street.

John Pettijohn, who had expertise in concrete repairs, measured the difference in elevation caused by the break in the sidewalk at the scene of the fall at between three-fourths of an inch and one inch.

Elihu Crane, a resident of VRHA, was a member of its board of directors from 1990 through April 1992, and president of its board of directors for part of that time. During that two-year period there was no person or committee of the board which had responsibility for inspecting the sidewalk in front of the property. VRHA's view was that the City of Los Angeles (the city) controlled the sidewalks and all VRHA needed to do was to keep the sidewalk clean.

Judith Crane was in charge of the gardening committee of the VRHA. She inspected the property shortly after becoming chairman of that committee in the summer of 1992. She had been aware for some time of the existence of cracks in the sidewalk in the area in which Alpert fell and of other cracks in the sidewalk which ran along the property.

Dr. Stephen Wexler, a licensed civil engineer and licensed general contractor, testified as an expert witness at Alpert's request. Dr. Wexler had experience in building concrete structures, including sidewalks, and in landscaping for the projects he built. Dr. Wexler also had expertise in determining the cause of sidewalk damage from root structures and root growth and expertise regarding human factors in relation to premises liability. Dr. Wexler inspected the scene of the fall on several occasions. He observed that there was mature vegetation on the property, including pine trees (some of which were 100 feet tall) between the sidewalk and buildings on the property, and bottlebrush trees in the area between the sidewalk and the street curb. In his opinion, the root of a pine tree had caused the sidewalk to be uplifted and to break. This opinion was confirmed by his observation of 15 to 20 sidewalk cracks in the area, of which seven or eight had caused serious distortions in the sidewalk in the form of uplifted panels of concrete or of cracks in panels which had been uplifted. There was a second such root-caused cracking and tilting within 15 feet of the scene of Alpert's fall. He had observed that roots of pine trees can grow in length to be as much as four times the height of the tree itself. He explained that tree roots seek out the area under the sidewalk because water tends to collect there. He noted that the sprinklers at the property water the sidewalk as well as the lawn and other vegetation.

In Dr. Wexler's opinion, the sidewalk defect at the location of Alpert's fall had existed for years prior to the fall and had been caused by the progressive growth of a subterranean tree root under the sidewalk. He noted that the area of greatest angular uplift in the sidewalk was adjacent to the lawn, indicating in his opinion that the root that caused the uplift had come from a tree growing on the lawn as the root sought moisture. He explained that roots taper down in size the farther from the tree they grow. It was also his opinion that the growth of the trees and their root systems had been enhanced by the fertilizing, watering, and trimming of the trees, which VRHA had done on its property. Further, the roots remained near the surface due to the very hard-packed soil in the area, thus increasing the likelihood of cracking the sidewalk.

On cross-examination, Dr. Wexler testified that it was unlikely that the root that had caused the sidewalk at the point of Alpert's fall to be upturned and to break had come from a tree in the area between the sidewalk and the street as roots of the bottlebrush trees planted in that area were smaller than those of the pine trees. Rather, it was his opinion that the root which had caused the sidewalk defect had come from a tree growing on the main lawn.

At the conclusion of Alpert's case-in-chief, VRHA made a written motion for nonsuit. During argument on that motion Alpert's motion for leave to reopen was denied. The court granted the motion for nonsuit, after which Alpert filed a timely appeal.2

CONTENTIONS ON APPEAL

Alpert contends the trial court erred (1) in concluding that VRHA, as owner of the property, owed Alpert no duty of care, (2) in refusing to permit Alpert to reopen to cure any defect that resulted in the nonsuit, (3) in refusing to permit Alpert to make offers of proof of certain evidentiary matters, and (4) by excluding evidence of knowledge of the condition of the sidewalk prior to the fall on the part of the board of directors of VRHA.3

DISCUSSION
1. Standard of review.

In reviewing a judgment entered upon a grant of a motion for nonsuit after the close of the plaintiffs case-in-chief (Code Civ. Proc, § 581c),4 the appellate court reviews the entire record of the trial court (Kidron v. Movie Acquisition Corp. (1995) 40 Cal.App.4th 1571, 1581, 47 Cal. Rptr.2d 752) and views the evidence in the light most favorable to appellant. (Freeman v. Lind (1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 791, 799, 226 Cal.Rptr. 515.) We do not weigh the evidence or consider the credibility of the witnesses who have testified; rather we are required to accept as true the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, disregarding conflicting evidence. (La-Monte v. Sanwa Bank California (1996) 45 Cal.App.4th 509, 517.) "`"The judgment of the trial court cannot be sustained unless interpreting the evidence most favorably to plaintiffs case and most strongly against the defendant and resolving all presumptions, inferences and doubts in favor of the plaintiff a judgment for the defendant is required as a matter of law."`"5 (Freeman v. Lind, supra, 181 Cal.App.3d at p. 799, 226 Cal.Rptr. 515.)

This healthy skepticism of removing factual questions from juries is inextricably bound to the California Constitution, which preserves "inviolate" the right to trial by jury.6

2. The trial court's ruling.

At the conclusion of Alpert's case-in-chief, VRHA presented a written motion for nonsuit to the court and counsel.7 Such a motion has the effect of a demurrer to the evidence: It concedes the truth of the facts proved and contends that those facts are not sufficient as a matter of law to sustain the plaintiffs case. (See Lussier v. San Lorenzo Valley Water Dist. (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 92, 98, 253 Cal.Rptr. 470.) A judgment of nonsuit is an involuntary dismissal (Costa v. Regents of University...

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