Filed 7/31/23 Escajeda v. City of San Diego CA4/1
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
JOHN ESCAJEDA, a Minor, etc. et al., D080157
Plaintiffs and Appellants,
v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-00008994-
CU-PO-CTL)
CITY OF SAN DIEGO,
Defendant and Respondent.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
Keri G. Katz, Judge. Affirmed.
Gusdorff Law, Janet Gusdorff; Vaziri Law Group, Siamak Vaziri and
Elizabeth C. Munro for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Mara W. Elliott, City Attorney, Travis M. Phelps, Assistant City
Attorney, Meghan A. Wharton, Dave E. Abad and Tyler L. Krentz, Deputy
City Attorneys, for Defendant and Respondent.
Pedestrian John Escajeda was paralyzed and suffered massive internal
injuries after being struck by a car being driven by Ismael Angeles.
Surveillance video from a nearby bus indicates that Angeles entered the
intersection against a red traffic light. He has since fled and cannot be
located.
Escajeda’s attorneys filed this lawsuit against the City of San Diego
(City) and others alleging that the intersection constituted a dangerous
condition of public property. After the City moved for summary judgment, he
refined his theories, contending (1) the traffic signal light malfunctioned,
causing Angeles and Escajeda to believe they each had the right of way,
and/or (2) the City violated engineering standards by programming the signal
with a 1.0 second (as opposed to 1.4 second) red clearance interval.1
The trial court granted the City’s motion for summary judgment,
determining there was no substantial evidence that the lights malfunctioned
at the time of the accident and the City was entitled to design immunity
(Gov. Code,2 § 830.6) for designing the signal lights with a 1.0 second red
light interval.
On independent review, we agree with these rulings. The City met its
summary judgment burden by showing that Angeles entered the intersection
against a red light, and Escajeda did not offer evidence creating a triable
issue to the contrary. Thus, there was no evidence upon which a jury could
find that the signal lights malfunctioned so as to cause Angeles and Escajeda
to believe they each had the right of way. Additionally, the City established
1 A red clearance interval is the amount of time that all of the signals at
an intersection stay red following the end of a yellow signal for one of the
streets and before the conflicting signal turns green.
2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
2
it was entitled to design immunity under Hampton v. County of San Diego
(2015) 62 Cal.4th 340 (Hampton). Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Ocean View Boulevard runs generally east and west. It intersects with
South 32nd Street (the Intersection), as depicted below:
On September 11, 2017 at about 6:53 a.m., Angeles was driving
eastbound on Ocean View at about 33 miles per hour as he approached the
Intersection. Escajeda was standing on the curb at the southeast corner,
intending to cross Ocean View and walk northbound on South 32nd Street.
At the same time, an MTS bus was travelling westbound on Ocean View,
approaching the Intersection. One of its cameras recorded the scene,
including the traffic light facing westbound vehicles. The video, a screenshot
of which is copied below, shows the signal light for westbound traffic at the
Intersection was red at 6:53:03 a.m.
3
The same camera recorded Angeles’s car going eastbound through the
intersection while the light was red for westbound traffic. The frame copied
below, three seconds later, captured the moment before impact:
4
According to an investigating police officer, because the video shows the
traffic light was red for westbound traffic, then it also must have been red for
eastbound vehicles (i.e., Angeles’s direction of travel) as well. An accident
reconstructionist calculated that Angeles was about 100 feet from the limit
line when his light cycled to red. He continued to travel eastbound for about
2.2 seconds against the red light.
The bus’s camera recorded the moment of impact. The force launched
Escajeda’s body 84 feet. His lawyers inform us that he survived but is
completely paralyzed, nourished by a feeding tube and unable to
communicate.
Angeles, who was driving on a suspended license, told police at the
scene that “[t]he sun was in his eyes and it was bright when he got to the
[traffic] light and could not see.” Somewhat inconsistently, he also claimed
his light was yellow. In any event, he admits never seeing Escajeda,
explaining that the sun in his eyes, his windshield was wet and dirty, and his
wipers “did not work well.” That was an understatement. A police officer
described his wiper blades as “rotted.”3
Escajeda commenced this action in 2018, and in November 2019 filed
the operative complaint (Complaint) against Angeles, the City of San Diego,
and others.4 Because only the City’s motion for summary judgment is
involved in this appeal, we limit our discussion to those claims. The
Complaint generally alleges that the Intersection is a dangerous condition of
public property in a multitude of ways. It also claims that the crosswalk
3 Angeles plead guilty to reckless driving in violation of Vehicle Code
section 23105, subdivision (a).
4 The other named defendants are the County of San Diego and
Southwest Traffic Signal Services, Inc.
5
signal and traffic control lights “malfunctioned and were improperly operated
and timed.”
In May 2021, the City moved for summary judgment on the grounds
that as a matter of law: (1) the Intersection did not constitute a dangerous
condition; (2) even if it does, design immunity applies; and (3) under section
830.8, the City is immune for not installing signs or warnings.5
In his opposition, Escajeda assumed for purposes of the motion that he
began crossing the street as soon as the pedestrian signal “turned to walk,”
and that Angeles struck him after running the red light.6 That scenario
would be consistent with the bus video, as well as the statement made by
Escajeda’s brother to police that “they always push the pedestrian signal
button at that intersection and always wait for the signal to change before
crossing the street.”
Supported by a declaration from a traffic engineer, the centerpiece of
Escajeda’s opposition was that certain standards required a 1.4 second red
light interval at the Intersection, but the City had instead designed the
system with a 1.0 second delay. He also presented a declaration from an
accident reconstructionist, who stated that with a 1.4 second delay, Angeles
“would have had additional time” to steer or brake “thereby avoiding the
accident.” Similarly, Escajeda’s “departure from the sidewalk” would have
been delayed, “giving him additional time to react . . . and avoid the
5 The trial court found it unnecessary to consider this last point, as do
we.
6 Escajeda’s opposition states, “Plaintiff John Escajeda walked into the
intersection as soon as he was perceivably able to and his light turned to
walk.[fn.] At the same time, Mr. Angeles’s light had turned to red and he
collided with Mr. Escajeda.”
6
accident,” and he “would not have been as far out into the road at the time of
impact.”
While the motion was pending, additional evidence was produced,
including a 15 second video of the Intersection’s traffic lights that a police
officer recorded on the day of the accident. The trial court allowed additional
discovery and briefing to deal with it. Seven months elapsed between the
filing of the motion and the hearing.
By the time of the hearing in December 2021, Escajeda’s theories had
evolved and he now asserted:
1. The City was not entitled to design immunity for
programming the signal lights with a 1.0 second delay
because (a) the red light clearance interval was not
specifically approved; (b) there was no evidence of who
approved the plan; and (c) using a 1.0 second delay was not
the product of “considered engineering judgment.”
2. There was substantial evidence that the City had
attempted to repair and/or upgrade the pedestrian signal
light at the Intersection as recently as one day before the
accident. This, in combination with other evidence created
a triable issue that the pedestrian signal light
malfunctioned.
3. Angeles “said the light was never red for him”—which
created a triable issue that the signal lights malfunctioned,
leading Angeles and Escajeda to believe they each had the
right of way.
After conducting a hearing, the trial court ruled that the City was
entitled to design immunity and there was no evidence creating a triable
issue that the signal lights malfunctioned.
7
DISCUSSION
A. The Trial Court Correctly Determined There Was No Substantial
Evidence That a Signal Light Malfunction Caused the Accident
Under Code of Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (c), a motion
for summary judgment shall be granted if all the papers submitted show
there is no triable issue as to any material fact and the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law. A defendant meets its burden on
summary judgment by showing that the plaintiff cannot prove its causes of
action, or by establishing a complete defense to the plaintiff's causes of
action. (Id., subd. (p)(2).) The burden then shifts to the plaintiff to show a
triable issue of fact material to the causes of action or defense. (Ibid.) We
evaluate a summary judgment ruling independently. (Saelzler v. Advanced
Group 400 (2001) 25 Cal.4th 763, 767.) We give no deference to the trial
court’s ruling or reasoning and decide only whether the correct result was
reached. (Carnes v. Superior Court (2005) 126 Cal.App.4th 688, 694.)
To establish that a signal light malfunction caused the accident, there
must be evidence that the traffic signals simultaneously indicated to Angeles
and Escajeda that each had the right of way. This would happen only if
Angeles entered the Intersection on a green or yellow light—and at the same
time—Escajeda’s signal indicated something other than “Don’t Walk.”
On this theory, the City carried its burden on summary judgment by
offering admissible evidence that Angeles entered the Intersection on a red
light. The bus’s video shows a red light for westbound traffic on Ocean View
Boulevard at 6:53:03 a.m. The accident occurred about three seconds later.
Obviously, the video does not show the signal light that would have been
facing Angeles, going eastbound on Ocean View. But a police officer
8
experienced in investigating traffic collisions stated that if the light was red
for westbound traffic, it must have also been red for eastbound traffic too:
“Based on the signal light timing at this intersection, if the
lights cycled to yellow, then to red for westbound traffic,
then the light cycled to yellow then to red for eastbound
traffic also.”
The officer concluded, therefore, that Angeles entered the intersection
against a red light, stating:
“When Angeles’[s] light cycled to red, he was approximately
105 feet away from the limit line. He continued to travel
eastbound after his signal light had been red for
approximately 2.1895 seconds.
“Angeles said the sun was in his eyes and it was bright
when he got to the light and he could not see. . . .
“When the pedestrian signal cycled to ‘walk,’ [Escajeda]
began to cross the intersection in the marked crosswalk
from south to north on South 32nd Street.
“Angeles drove through the intersection violating the
circular red traffic signal and collided into [him].”
The City supplemented this evidence in two ways. First, the police
officer who first responded to the accident stated that he checked the traffic
signals and saw no malfunctions. Second, the City submitted a declaration
from Duncan Hughes, a traffic engineer. He explained that the signals are
designed with a fail-safe circuit to prevent conflicts, such as a situation where
a driver travelling eastbound (like Angeles) and a pedestrian walking
northbound (such as Escajeda), would each simultaneously be given the right
of way. Hughes stated that this device “is hard-wired” to prevent conflicting
phases. If there is any “problem with a controller, the monitor itself, the 24V
power supply, of if signal light wiring is removed or damaged,” the conflict
monitor “automatically puts the signal into all-red flash mode until the issue
9
is resolved and the monitor is reset.” Based on the bus video and the
sequencing of signals at the Intersection, Hughes opined that “the traffic
signals were operating properly at the time of the collision.”
The City also submitted a declaration from John Fisher, a registered
traffic engineer with over 50 years’ experience in the planning, design, and
operation of traffic control devices. In addition to conducting a site
inspection, he reviewed police reports pertaining to the accident, traffic
surveys, maintenance records, and applicable engineering standards. Like
Hughes, he explained that the conflict monitor “operates in the fail-safe mode
and ensures that there are no instances of conflicting signal displays.” Fisher
also concluded, “No systemic traffic signal malfunction was identified in the
maintenance records . . . .” He examined records showing that “City signal
electricians responded to six service requests in the one-year period prior to
the [i]ncident, involving traditional and routine situations typically
encountered in urban areas.” He further opined that “[w]ork performed by
traffic signal technicians at the intersection prior to the [i]ncident and for the
two days after [it] . . . identified no signal system malfunctions.”
On appeal, Escajeda contends that none of this matters, and a triable
issue exists based on a “plethora” of evidence that “a signal malfunctioned” at
the Intersection. Chief among this abundant evidence, he claims, is that
Angeles “testified he went through the intersection under a green light, which
is first person percipient evidence of a malfunction at the time of the
accident.” (Italics added.) Indeed, appellate counsel maintains that the trial
court clearly erred because the judge “does not even make mention of the
driver’s testimony.” In his reply brief, Escajeda again claims that both the
trial court and the City “ignore the driver’s testimony that he drove through
the intersection under a green light.”
10
This sounds like a good argument. We often refer to the example of
conflicting witness testimony about whether a traffic light was red or green
as a prototypical question of fact. (See, e.g., Schmier v. Supreme Court (2000)
78 Cal.App.4th 703, 712.) Here, however, Escajeda’s briefs contain no record
cite for Angeles’s supposed “testimony.”7 That alone would allow us to
disregard it. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(C); see Ragland v. U.S.
Bank National Assn. (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th 182, 195.) We have nevertheless
searched the appellant’s appendix for Angeles’s testimony—but there is none.
What we find instead is a footnote in Escajeda’s trial court opposition, which
states that his lawyers cannot locate Angeles and as a result have been
unable to take his deposition.
That leaves us with Angeles’s lawyer-prepared interrogatory answers
as the closest thing to testimony. There, he stated “[u]pon information and
belief” that his light was yellow (i.e., not green). Answering “on information
and belief” is lawyer-speak that could be nothing more than wishful thinking.
In some sense, it is consistent with the explanation Angeles gave to police at
the scene—he never saw Escajeda because the sun was in his eyes, his
windshield was wet and dirty, and his wipers did not work.
Accordingly, the evidence on whether Angeles’s light was red when he
entered the Intersection consists of (1) video showing the westbound light for
Ocean View Boulevard was red; (2) expert declarations stating that because
the light for westbound traffic was red, so too would have been the one for
7 Page 26 of Escajeda’s opening brief cites “3RT 69:24-26.” But that page
contains argument by the City’s lawyer, not any testimony from Angeles or
anyone else. Escajeda nevertheless doubles down in his reply brief,
asserting, “The City and the trial court ignore the driver’s testimony that he
drove through the intersection under a green light.” The only record cite
given is “(Opening br., at 26),” which is no cite at all.
11
eastbound; (3) expert declarations establishing that a fail-safe device
precluded conflicting signals; and (4) Angeles’s interrogatory response that
effectively admits he drove into the Intersection at full speed and effectively
blind. Like the trial court, we can only conclude on this record that Angeles
entered the intersection on a red light and there was no substantial evidence
from which a reasonable trier of fact could decide otherwise.8
Turning his attention to the pedestrian signal, Escajeda insists that a
15 second video taken by a police officer and another video taken by
Escajeda’s uncle a few days after the incident show the pedestrian signals
malfunctioning. He also points to other evidence that seemingly shows the
pedestrian signals were repaired or upgraded the day before the accident.
Not surprisingly, the City disputed all of this evidence. But even
crediting it for purposes of summary judgment, it does not change the
outcome. Given the undisputed evidence that Angeles ran the red light,
whether Escajeda’s pedestrian signal functioned properly simply is not
relevant. If Angeles entered the Intersection on a red light, then no matter
what the pedestrian signal showed, it could not have been a cause of the
collision. This is perhaps best illustrated by the table below.
8 Escajeda contends that whether the traffic signals were functioning is
“questionable” because police officers at the scene did not examine all of the
lights and did not “watch [the] signal all the way through.” That officers at
the scene could have done a more thorough investigation of the signal lights
does not undercut the probative value of other evidence showing the signals
cycled correctly and were equipped with a failsafe device to prevent
conflicting signals.
12
Signal Light for Pedestrian Signal for Result
Eastbound Ocean Northbound on South
View Boulevard 32nd Street
Red “Walk” Not a malfunction.
Red “Don’t Walk” A malfunction, but if the
pedestrian abides by the
signal, he does not step off
the curb.
Red Something ambiguous, If interpreted as “Walk,”
not clearly “Walk” or not a malfunction because
“Don’t Walk” the opposing traffic has a
red light. If interpreted
as “Don’t Walk,” a
malfunction, but if the
pedestrian abides by the
signal, he remains at the
curb.
For a signal malfunction to have caused this accident, both Angeles and
Escajeda must have been given the right of way. Having determined there is
no substantial evidence that Angeles’s light was anything other than red,
evidence of a malfunctioning pedestrian signal is irrelevant. Even were we to
assume the evidence created a triable issue that the pedestrian signal
malfunctioned, as we have explained it would not be a material factual
dispute—and only material triable issues preclude summary judgment.
(Romero v. American President Lines, Ltd. (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th 1199, 1203
[“ ‘The presence of a factual dispute will not defeat a motion for summary
judgment unless the fact in dispute is a material one.’ ”].)
B. The Trial Court Correctly Determined That Design Immunity Applies
A public entity may be liable for injuries caused by dangerous
conditions of public property. (§§ 830, 835.) However, section 830.6,
13
commonly referred to as “design immunity,” precludes liability for any injury
caused by “the plan or design of . . . , or an improvement to, public property.”
(Advisory Com. notes, foll. § 830.6.) “A public entity claiming design
immunity must establish: (1) a causal relationship between the plan or
design and the accident; (2) discretionary approval of the plan or design prior
to construction; and (3) substantial evidence supporting the reasonableness of
the plan or design.” (Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 343.) In a proper case,
design immunity may be resolved on a motion for summary judgment.
(Grenier v. City of Irwindale (1997) 57 Cal.App.4th 931, 939–940.)
Escajeda does not dispute the first element—a causal relationship
between the plan or design and the accident. Indeed, the Complaint alleges
that Escajeda was injured as a “legal, direct and proximate result” of the
dangerous condition of public property. (See Cayley v. Nunn (19876) 190
Cal.App.3d 300, 306 [defendant moving for summary judgment can rely on
allegations in plaintiff’s complaint].)
As for the discretionary approval element based on the 1.0 second red
interval, a public entity can establish this element with a declaration stating
the plans were approved by the entity’s engineer, and the plans themselves
show they were signed by the engineer in such capacity. (See Laabs v. City of
Victorville (2008) 163 Cal.App. 4th 1242, 1263 [city established discretionary
approval where city engineer declared another city engineer had approved
plans, and where plans themselves showed they had been signed and
approved by second engineer in his official capacity].) In this case, the City
met its summary judgment burden on this element by filing a declaration
from Duncan Hughes, the Deputy Director of the City’s Traffic Engineering
Division, which stated:
14
1. Plans for constructing the signal lights at the
Intersection were approved in July 1962 “by City
representatives from the Engineering Department prior to
the start of construction, indicating that the design was
approved by the City.” The signature sheet of these plans
was lodged.
2. In 1981, plans for constructing the traffic signal at the
Intersection were approved by “City representatives” from
the engineering department prior to the start of
construction, “indicating that the design was approved by
the City.” This construction replaced “almost all of the
equipment, conduit, and wiring” that was installed in 1962.
The signature page of these plans was lodged.
3. Additional work was done in November 1997 under
plans signed by a representative of the City engineering
department, “indicating that the design was approved by
the City.” The plans called for the installation of new
conduit and communications cable underground. The work
was completed in 1998 and had “no impact on the traffic
signal design from the 1981 plans.” The signature pages of
these plans were lodged.
4. In June 2011, new sewer mains and pedestrian ramps
were constructed on Ocean View Boulevard and vicinity,
which was completed in January 2014. Nothing in the
scope of that work affected the operation of the traffic
signal equipment as constructed through the 1981 plans.
The plans were lodged.
5. The City installed “high visibility . . . crosswalks and
advance limit lines at the [I]ntersection” in December 2016.
Hughes approved and signed the plans himself.
On the third element of design immunity, the City also carried its burden
of establishing the reasonableness of its approvals. In deposition testimony,
Hughes stated that a 1.0 second red clearance interval is “right in the middle
of the California [Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD)]
range of 0.1 to 2 seconds.” He noted that in the exercise of “engineering
15
judgment,” for “unusual configurations,” that time period could be increased,
but “we default to a 1.0 second red clear at the end of every phase.” Although
recognizing there are other “recommended practice[s],” Hughes explained the
City’s view that “1.0 second is adjustable upwards in special circumstances”
based on the judgment of the particular engineer who is evaluating the
particular signal. He concluded that the Intersection is, therefore, in
compliance with the current California MUTCD guidelines.
The City bolstered this showing with a declaration from its expert,
Fisher, who stated that a red clearance interval of 1.0 second “met and
exceeded the guidelines” of California MUTCD. He further explained that
“[t]he conflict monitor operates in the fail-safe mode and ensures that there
are no instances of conflicting signal displays.”9
On appeal, Escajeda contends the 1.0 second all red delay was “too short”
and “there is a clear dispute of material fact” whether it complied with the
California MUTCD. Opposing summary judgment, he submitted a
declaration from Richard Haygood, a traffic engineer, who opined that
engineering practices must be used in setting the delay, and the Institute of
Transportation Engineers (ITE) establishes a formula that in this case
required the delay to be 1.4 seconds. Haygood criticized City engineers,
stating that their adoption of a 1.0 second delay as a default rule was not
reasonable nor did it comport with engineering practices.
9 He also reviewed accident statistics and concluded that from 2008 to
the time of the incident, “there was only one prior collision which involved an
eastbound or westbound vehicle on Ocean View Boulevard colliding with a
pedestrian in a crosswalk.” The pedestrian in that accident was on a scooter,
admitted he was not paying attention, and crossed against a steady red hand
“Don’t Walk” signal.
16
In urging reversal, Escajeda contends there was “no evidence” that the
City exercised “any engineering judgment” regarding the red light interval.
He maintains that the California MUTCD was amended in 2009 and 2014,
requiring the City to “reassess” the 1.0 second default setting “under the
revised ITE test.” Because Hughes admitted that the City did not do so,
while at the same time insisting that they relied on the California MUTCD as
the expression of engineering judgment, Escajeda maintains there is a triable
issue that the City failed to follow its own standards in setting the red light
interval at the Intersection. He concludes that this “absence of judgment”
precludes application of design immunity.
In the past this might have been a good argument, but it is now
foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in Hampton.10 There, a driver
injured in an automobile accident and his wife sued the County of San Diego
for a dangerous condition of public property. They alleged that the
intersection where the collision occurred “afforded inadequate visibility under
applicable County design standards” because of a high embankment.
(Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 344.) In opposing a motion for summary
judgment based on design immunity, the plaintiffs argued there were
disputed issues regarding discretionary approval because the plans for the
intersection did not show the embankment. (Id. at p. 345.) They asserted
that an engineer can only make a discretionary decision to approve a design,
despite its nonconformity with governing standards, if the engineer is aware
of the nonconformity. According to plaintiffs, “ ‘an engineer who approves a
nonconforming design on the mistaken belief it conformed to governing
10 Although the City frequently cites Hampton in its brief, Escajeda chose
to not discuss or cite it in his reply.
17
standards has acted through inadvertence, not discretion.’ ” (Id. at pp. 348–
349.)
The Supreme Court disagreed, explaining that the plaintiffs’ argument
conflated two different elements of design immunity. The court held that the
discretionary approval element of section 830.6 “does not implicate the
question whether the employee who approved the plans was aware of design
standards or was aware that the design deviated from those standards.”
(Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 343.) Nor does the discretionary approval
element require the entity to show that the employee who approved the plans
had authority to disregard applicable standards. (Ibid.) Rather, the
discretionary approval element may be established “either by evidence of
appropriate discretionary approval or evidence that the plan conformed with
previously approved standards.” (Id. at p. 350.)
Thus, the discretionary approval element of design immunity asks only
whether a person given discretion to approve the design or plan actually
approved it. (Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 357.) Courts do not inquire
whether the City engineer who approved the design was aware of any change
in standards. Nor do we consider whether it was wise to approve the plan.
Here, for example, the only issue on this second element of design
immunity is whether someone with discretion to approve the design of the
signal lights at the Intersection did in fact approve it. (Hampton, supra, 62
Cal.4th at p. 357.) As explained above, the evidence offered by the City on
this point established such approval—and on appeal Escajeda does not
contend otherwise. His argument is that there were contested issues of fact
“as to whether the City actually had a plan or used engineering judgment
given changed directives in the California MUTCD”—not that the engineer
18
approving the plans lacked authority to do so. (Capitalization and boldface
omitted.)
Only when considering the third and final element of design immunity—
reasonableness of the design—does a court consider whether an employee
approved a design that deviates from applicable standards, and whether it
was wise to approve the plan. (Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at pp. 351, 357.)
But significantly, section 830.6 requires only that “the trial or appellate court
determine[ ] that there is any substantial evidence upon the basis of which
(a) a reasonable public employee could have adopted the plan or design or the
standards therefor . . . .” In other words, to establish the third and final
element of design immunity, the government does not have to prove that the
design was reasonable—it only has to introduce sufficient evidence to sustain
a finding that it was, even if that evidence is disputed.
In this important way, “a case involving design immunity does not
function as a typical summary judgment case would.” (Menges v. Department
of Transportation (2020) 59 Cal.App.5th 13, 21 (Menges).) In a typical
summary judgment motion, if the court determines there is conflicting
evidence on a material issue, the motion must be denied. But here, where the
third element of design immunity is the issue, section 830.6 provides that the
government merely has to introduce sufficient evidence to sustain a finding
in its favor, even if that evidence is disputed. (Menges, at p. 21.)
Substantial evidence to establish this third element may consist of
(1) “[d]iscretionary approval of the design plans themselves [citation];
[(2)] the expert opinion of a civil engineer as to the reasonableness of the
design [citation]; or [(3)] evidence the design or plan complies with prevailing
professional standards [citation]. ‘A mere conflict in the testimony of expert
witnesses provides no justification for the matter to go to a lay jury who will
19
then second-guess the judgment of skilled public officials.’ ” (Menges, supra,
59 Cal.App.5th at p. 21.) Thus, in this unique context, the City is entitled to
judgment if there is any reasonable basis upon which a public official could
have approved the design, even if the evidence on that question is conflicting
and would otherwise present a triable issue of fact.11
Here, the City introduced expert opinion evidence that its approval of the
signal design was reasonable. Fisher’s declaration states, “the plans for the
Incident location were reasonable such that competent professionals could
have approved them.” Elaborating, he concluded, “there were no defective
roadway features, traffic controls, sight distance limitations, street lighting
issues or evidence of signal system malfunctions.” Further, “California
MUTCD-compliant traffic control devices were present as approved by
qualified engineers.” This satisfies the third element of the design immunity
defense.12
Design immunity “does not necessarily continue in perpetuity.” (Cornette
v. Dept. of Transportation (2001) 26 Cal.4th 63, 66.) In seeking reversal,
Escajeda further contends that the trial court ignored evidence of “changed
conditions”—e.g. increased traffic volumes and prevailing speeds—that
reasonably would have required engineers to reassess whether the 1.0 second
red light delay interval was appropriate. This argument, however, is waived
11 Especially in his reply brief, Escajeda’s argument misses this crucial
point. He asserts, “On summary judgment, the question is not which expert
is correct or most believable. Instead, the question is whether there are
disputes of fact . . . .” That may be true in every other summary judgment
context, but not with respect to the third element under section 830.6.
12 Because of this disposition, it is unnecessary to address the City’s
contention that the undisputed evidence established the plans conformed to
all applicable engineering standards.
20
by Escajeda’s failure to raise it in the trial court. In response to the City’s
separate statement of undisputed facts, Escajeda stated he “does not contend
there were any changed roadway conditions” that would cause the City to
lose design immunity. Accordingly, we agree with the City that it cannot be
raised for the first time on appeal. A party may not change positions and
adopt new and different theories on appeal; it is unfair to the trial court and
manifestly unjust to the opposing party. (Ernst v. Searle (1933) 218 Cal. 233,
240–241; Magallanes de Valle v. Doctors Medical Center of Modesto (2022) 80
Cal.App.5th 914, 924.)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. The City is entitled to costs incurred on
appeal.
DATO, J.
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
DO, J.
21