NOT FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT JUN 26 2015
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
PHILADELPHIA INDEMNITY No. 13-15753
INSURANCE COMPANY, a foreign
corporation, and MID-CENTURY D.C. No. 4:12-cv-00567-PJH
INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiffs - Appellants, MEMORANDUM*
v.
SIMPLEX GRINNELL, L.P., a limited
partnership,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Phyllis J. Hamilton, Chief District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 8, 2015
San Francisco, California
Before: HAWKINS and WATFORD, Circuit Judges, and RAKOFF,** District
Judge.
*
This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent
except as provided by 9th Cir. R. 36-3.
**
The Honorable Jed S. Rakoff, District Judge for the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.
Page 2 of 6
We hold that Simplex Grinnell, LP (“Simplex”) owed a duty of care to the
owner and tenant of the University of Sports (“UoS”) facility and that the
“completed and accepted” doctrine does not bar this insurance subrogation suit.
1. Simplex owed a duty of reasonable care to El Capitan Investments, LLC
(“El Capitan”), the owner of the UoS facility, and University of Sports, LLC, its
tenant. The district court held that Simplex was not a “design-builder” and did not
owe plaintiffs a duty of care under Biakanja v. Irving, 320 P.2d 16 (Cal. 1958),
which established a multi-factor test for determining when a defendant may be
liable to a party not in privity. Id. at 19. Courts analyze the Biakanja factors on a
case-by-case basis, but “it is possible to derive general rules that govern common
scenarios.” Beacon Residential Cmty. Ass’n v. Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP,
327 P.3d 850, 857 (Cal. 2014).
This case falls closely under the reasoning of the California Supreme Court’s
recent decision in Beacon. There, applying Biakanja, the court held that architects
who had provided services to an apartment development owed a duty of care to a
homeowners association and its members—subsequent purchasers of
condominiums in the development with whom the architects were not in privity.
Id. at 852, 857, 859. As the court explained, California case law establishes that
architects, engineers, and other “design professionals” who act negligently in the
Page 3 of 6
exercise of their specialized services may be liable when their negligence causes
personal injury or property damage to owners and third parties. Id. at 855. They
owe duties of care not only to current owners, see Stewart v. Cox, 362 P.2d 345,
347–48 (Cal. 1961), but also to future owners and other parties who would
foreseeably be harmed by negligence in construction. See Beacon, 327 P.3d at
854; Sabella v. Wisler, 377 P.2d 889, 893 (Cal. 1963) (future homeowners);
Stewart, 362 P.2d at 348 (neighbors).
The parties stipulated that Simplex acted as the “design-builder of the
sprinkler system.” The general contractor, Zak’s Enterprises, and original owner,
Bishop & Bishop Land, relied at least in part on Simplex’s design and
implementation of the sprinkler system, even if the general contractor or owner
could have rejected Simplex’s design. See Beacon, 327 P.3d at 859. Beacon
suggests that Simplex therefore owed a duty of care in its design and
implementation of the sprinkler system both to current and future owners and to
tenants who, like the neighbors briefly alluded to in Stewart, belong to the class of
third parties who would foreseeably suffer injury from the failure of a sprinkler.
Simplex owed these duties even though it was engaged as a subcontractor, see
Stewart, 362 P.2d at 348, and served as design-builder for the sprinkler system
rather than for the facility as a whole, see Beacon, 327 P.3d at 854.
Page 4 of 6
Simplex argues that any fault in its sprinkler system was actionable only in
contract, not in tort. California law is clear, however, that a subcontractor may be
liable in tort for defective design or construction work. See, e.g., Beacon, 327 P.3d
at 854–55; Stewart, 362 P.2d at 348. The cases cited by the district court involve
instances in which it was not clear that the claims were cognizable in tort at all.
See Aas v. Superior Court, 12 P.3d 1125, 1130–31 (Cal. 2000) (negligence causing
solely economic damage), superseded by statute as stated in Rosen v. State Farm
Gen. Ins. Co., 70 P.3d 351, 356–57 (Cal. 2003); Applied Equip. Corp. v. Litton
Saudi Arabia Ltd., 869 P.2d 454, 460–61 (Cal. 1994) (conspiracy to interfere with
contract); Mintz v. Blue Cross of Cal., 92 Cal. Rptr. 3d 422, 432 (Ct. App. 2009)
(interference with contractual relations). Generally, California “tort law provides a
remedy for construction defects that cause property damage.” Aas, 12 P.3d at
1130.
2. The “completed and accepted” doctrine does not bar plaintiffs’ suit
against Simplex. The completed and accepted doctrine protects contractors from
liability to third parties for injury or damage resulting from “patent” construction
defects—those defects that an owner knew or should have known about—in the
contractors’ completed and accepted work. Neiman v. Leo A. Daly Co., 148 Cal.
Rptr. 3d 818, 823 (Ct. App. 2012). The completed and accepted doctrine,
Page 5 of 6
however, bars liability only to third parties, not owners. Jones v. P.S. Dev. Co.,
Inc., 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 882, 891–92 (Ct. App. 2008), disapproved on other grounds,
Reid v. Google, Inc., 235 P.3d 988, 1001 n.7 (Cal. 2010). Nor does the completed
and accepted doctrine bar suit by third parties to whom a duty is owed under the
Biakanja factors. See id. at 892.
In addition, the completed and accepted doctrine does not bar suit here
because the defect in question was not “patent.” “In the context of a patent defect,
the word ‘patent’ ‘refers to the patency of danger and not merely to exterior
visibility.’” Sanchez v. Swinerton & Walberg Co., 55 Cal. Rptr. 2d 415, 421 (Ct.
App. 1996) (quoting Halliday v. Greene, 53 Cal. Rptr. 267, 271 (Ct. App. 1966)).
Neither the stipulated fact that a soccer ball had previously struck a guarded
sprinkler head, causing some water discharge, nor the conclusion that the absence
of a protective net was “obvious to anyone who looked up at the ceiling of the UoS
soccer facility,” necessarily renders “patent” the risk that a soccer ball would strike
a guarded sprinkler head and cause catastrophic damage. If UoS and El Capitan
knew that the head guards were inadequate to guard the sprinklers against a risk of
serious flooding, that knowledge might constitute a supervening cause or affect
recovery under a theory of contributory negligence. But it would not imply that
Simplex owed them no duty. See Stewart, 362 P.2d at 348–49.
Page 6 of 6
3. The district court held that Simplex had no duty to install stronger guards
or recommend protective netting. Whether Simplex should have installed stronger
head guards or recommended installation of a protective net is relevant not to the
existence of a duty but to whether that duty was breached. Because the parties did
not brief this issue below or on appeal, we do not address that issue here.
REVERSED and REMANDED.