Case # | Name | Category | Court | Judge | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A164168
|
Modification: Berry v. Frazier
Demurrer inappropriate where complaint incorrectly designated statutory remedy as cause of action but alleged facts sufficient to support causes of action that could serve as a basis for such recovery. |
Torts |
|
I. Petrou | May 16, 2023 |
B316606
|
Razoumovitch v. 726 Hudson Ave.
Apartment owners failed to show that tenant's attempt to enter locked apartment by climbing onto his apartment balcony was so unforeseeable that it negated their general duty of safety maintenance. |
Torts |
|
J. Segal | May 15, 2023 |
A164405
|
Moses v. Roger-McKeever
Condo owner had no duty to protect invitee from hazard in the building's common walkway, over which owner had no control. |
Torts |
|
V. Swope | May 9, 2023 |
C095259
|
Hernandez v. City of Stockton
Plaintiff failed to comply with government claim requirements when he identified an uplifted sidewalk as the dangerous condition in his claim, but an empty tree well as the dangerous condition in the civil action. |
Torts |
|
E. Duarte | May 2, 2023 |
A165175
|
Wellsfry v. Ocean Colony Partners
Summary judgment was appropriate where golfer was injured by stepping on tree root because he assumed the risks inherent in interacting with the natural terrain of an outdoor golf course. |
Torts |
|
I. Petrou | May 1, 2023 |
B313073
|
Bidari v. Kelk
Plaintiffs' malicious prosecution claim failed because complaint based the claim on acts--including arrest, warrant proceedings, and bail--that did not involve judicial proceedings nor would terminate in their favor. |
Torts |
|
F. Rothschild | May 1, 2023 |
A164168
|
Berry v. Frazier
Demurrer inappropriate where complaint incorrectly designated statutory remedy as cause of action but alleged facts sufficient to support causes of action that could serve as a basis for such recovery. |
Torts |
|
I. Petrou | May 1, 2023 |
D080377
|
Downey v. City of Riverside
Plaintiff could plead a viable cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress based on hearing a car accident over the phone where she had knowledge of the dangerous condition that caused the accident. |
Torts |
|
T. O'Rourke | Apr. 27, 2023 |
B316374
|
Hacala v. Bird Rides, Inc.
Bird scooters owed a general duty of care to mother who tripped on the wheel of its scooter because an entity must use ordinary care in the management of its property. |
Torts |
|
A. Egerton | Apr. 11, 2023 |
B322810
|
Modification: Carrillo v. County of Santa Clara
Allegations in plaintiff's medical negligence complaint did not support a delayed discovery exception to the one-year statute of limitations. |
Torts |
|
L. Scaduto | Mar. 16, 2023 |
B322810
|
Carrillo v. County of Santa Clara
Allegations in plaintiff's medical negligence complaint did not support a delayed discovery exception to the one-year statute of limitations. |
Torts |
|
L. Scaduto | Mar. 15, 2023 |
A161844
|
Marin v. Department of Transportation
No triable issue of fact existed regarding Department of Transportation's liability for death of contractor's employee where it properly delegated responsibility for workplace safety matters to contractor. |
Torts |
|
T. Jackson | Feb. 27, 2023 |
A163130
|
Degala v. John Stewart Company
Subcontractor employee's claims against the general contractor and site owner were not barred by the Privette doctrine where employee was attacked by a third party and the defendants were involved in site security matters. |
Torts |
|
M. Miller | Feb. 9, 2023 |
A161051
|
McGovern v. BHC Fremont Hospital, Inc.
Medical negligence claims of plaintiff who sustained injuries at a hospital were not time-barred because her initial letter to preserve evidence did not constitute notice of intent to commence action. |
Torts |
|
M. Wiss | Jan. 6, 2023 |
B313718
|
Pereda v. Atos Jiu Jitsu LLC
Jiu jitsu studio was not liable as ostensible agent for sparrer's injury when facts showed it did not exercise control over the independent jiu-jitsu studio it was affiliated with where the injury occurred. |
Torts |
|
B. Hoffstadt | Nov. 28, 2022 |
B314946
|
Brown v. Beach House Design & Development
General contractor who hired subcontractor to work on beach house could be liable for injuries to subcontractor's carpenter since they retained control over the scaffolding and actually exercised that control. |
Torts |
|
L. Edmon | Nov. 23, 2022 |
B315309
|
Valdez v. Costco Wholesale Corp.
Costco gas station attendant who stopped fight between customers was immune from liability under the Good Samaritan statute. |
Torts |
|
E. Lui | Nov. 21, 2022 |
B307969
|
Thompson v. County of Los Angeles
Denial of leave to amend was appropriate where amending complaint would be fruitless because plaintiff could not identify any mandatory duty that defendant public entity failed to discharge. |
Torts |
|
J. Wiley | Nov. 17, 2022 |
B314031
|
Fajardo v. Dailey
Summary judgment was inappropriate where there was no clear evidence regarding whether a sidewalk defect was trivial as a matter of law other than the size of a height differential. |
Torts |
|
J. Segal | Nov. 14, 2022 |
A162593
|
Ramirez v. PK I Plaza 580 SC LP
*Privette* doctrine did not protect shopping center owner from liability for independent contractor's injuries because owner did not hire the contractor nor delegate its duty to provide a safe workplace. |
Torts |
|
J. Humes | Nov. 11, 2022 |
A161023
|
Amiodarone Cases
Patients' claims were preempted by the federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act because patients could not state an independent state-law claim for drug companies' alleged failure to warn of a drug's side effects. |
Torts |
|
J. Richman | Nov. 7, 2022 |
A162817
|
Dhital v. Nissan North America, Inc.
Plaintiffs' fraudulent inducement claim regarding their new Nissan was not barred by the economic loss rule because their allegations of presale fraudulent inducement were independent of the subsequent contract. |
Torts |
|
J. Streeter | Oct. 28, 2022 |
E073917
|
Defries v. Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A.
Failure to instruct jury on nondelegable duty was prejudicial when plaintiff's theory of the case was based on imputed negligence resulting from manufacturer's nondelegable duty to provide a safe product. |
Torts |
|
M. Raphael | Oct. 27, 2022 |
C093295
|
Modification: McCullar v. SMC Contracting, Inc.
Subcontractor retained responsibility for its employee's workplace injury even though the general contractor created the hazard. |
Torts |
|
A. Hoch | Oct. 14, 2022 |
B321016
|
Enterprise Rent-A-Car of L.A. v. Superior Court (Grigoryan)
Rental car agency was not negligent in relying on renter's foreign driver's license and local California address to rent car involved in accident. |
Torts |
|
B. Currey | Oct. 10, 2022 |
B306423
|
Kruthanooch v. Glendale Adventist Medical Center
In an Elder Abuse Act case, substantial evidence did not support that medical center had a robust caretaking or custodial relationship with elderly patient. |
Torts |
|
L. Lavin | Oct. 7, 2022 |
B305837
|
Karton v. Musick, Peeler, Garrett LLP
Denying motion for setoff predicated upon the tort-of-another doctrine was proper where the movant provided no evidence it incurred the costs in an action against any third party. |
Torts |
|
F. Rothschild | Oct. 5, 2022 |
A162508
|
T.L. v. City Ambulance of Eureka, Inc.
Ambulance company owed a general duty of care to plaintiff who sustained injuries by unbuckling herself and stepping out of a moving ambulance while being transported. |
Torts |
|
K. Banke | Sep. 30, 2022 |
C090751
|
Miller v. Roseville Lodge No. 1293
Summary judgment was appropriate where independent contractor's injured employee seeking to hold hirer liable failed to demonstrate hirer exercised retained control or failed to disclose a concealed hazardous condition. |
Torts |
|
L. Earl | Sep. 29, 2022 |
C093295
|
McCullar v. SMC Contracting, Inc.
Subcontractor retained responsibility for its employee's workplace injury even though the general contractor created the hazard. |
Torts |
|
A. Hoch | Sep. 15, 2022 |