Lopez v. Baca

JOHNSON, Acting P. J., Dissenting.

I regretfully but respectfully dissent from what I view as a miscarriage of justice. As the majority opinion itself reminds us, appellate courts are instructed to review the trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo and in doing so to consider all of the evidence the parties offered in connection with the motion (except that which the [trial] court properly excluded).1 This means we have an affirmative duty to consider all the evidence the parties tendered unless we find the evidence the trial court excluded was properly excluded under operative principles of the law of evidence. Thus, whether appellant formally challenged the trial court’s evidentiary rulings in his briefs to this court is irrelevant. In our de novo review of the summary judgment we cannot properly ignore evidence appellant tendered to the trial court unless we conclude it was properly excluded by the trial court.

It clearly would have been the better and safer practice for appellant to have included a specific section in his opening brief labeled “Erroneous Evidentiary Rulings.” To do so, however, appellant would have to have asked permission to file a brief much longer than the Rules of Court ordinarily permit. Respondent lodged objections to 19 categories of evidence and as to each listed multiple grounds. I counted 66 separate objections in total. None of them, however, cites a single case or provides any justification or explanation beyond the number of a code section.

The trial court provided no assistance either, because the judge sustained all 66 of the objections in a single sentence granting all objections. During *1021the hearing on the summary judgment motion, appellant’s counsel attempted to argue against certain specific objections to specific pieces of evidence. But the trial court did not attempt to refute appellant’s argument or even engage in a discussion on those objections. Instead the judge merely mentioned some other objection on the list, then did not allow appellant’s counsel the opportunity to respond to that second objection.

It is argued the trial judge thoroughly considered these 66 objections before deciding to grant each and every one of them. The record belies that assumption. Attached to this dissent are appendices containing all portions of the record related to the lodging, consideration, and ruling on these objections.

Appendix A has the three and a half pages into which Consuelo Baca’s counsel managed to pack his 66 objections to 19 categories of evidence. As the cover page indicates, these objections were lodged only three days before the hearing. Inevitably, as even a cursory review of that appendix reveals, the brevity of this document precluded any written discussion of how and why even one of these objections applies to the item of evidence Baca suggests should be excluded. Somehow, however, the trial judge managed to figure out how each of these objections applied, researched them, and concluded every one of them provided an independent and sufficient reason for excluding the category of evidence against which they were lodged. Having done so, the trial court included a sentence in its tentative ruling sustaining all those objections “for the reasons given” in appendix A.

Appendix B has the five pages of transcript from the summary judgment hearing containing the court and counsel’s entire discussion of these 66 objections. When Jose Antonio Lopez’s counsel asks to respond to the exclusion of the first item of evidence—the police reports from the Los Angeles Polie Department—the judge first reminds him the court “sustained all the objections for the reasons indicated.” The lawyer then takes one of the specific objections to those reports, the lack of authentication, and points out the documents he submitted include official certifications sufficient to overcome that objection, and also fall within an exception to the hearsay rule and hence that objection was invalid as well. Rather than dispute this response to two of the 66 objections, the trial court merely moves on to another of the objections Baca’s counsel had listed, saying “Well, he also has a relevance objection.” When Lopez’s lawyer volunteers to respond to that objection, too, the judge merely completes the list of other objections to that class of evidence, saying “also overbreath [sic] objection, also objects that the evidence fails to distinguish between a phone inside the bar and public pay phones outside.” Lopez’s counsel is only three words into his response to *1022these two additional objections when he is interrupted by the trial judge who still has one more from Baca’s list, “Fails to establish prior similar incidents, with accent [sic] on the word ‘similar,’ those are all critical and very sound objections which the court sustained.”

Lopez’s lawyer is not yet discouraged by the trial judge’s complete refusal to engage in any meaningful discussion or justification of any specific objection, and instead responds, “I’m going to address each of the objections, Your Honor.” He starts with what seems to me a completely irrelevant and specious objection—to the effect the police in some instances may have been responding to calls originating from a telephone booth purportedly located just outside the nightclub rather than a phone inside the club. Whether the calls came from one phone or the other appears irrelevant. The calls all related to crimes allegedly occurring on the premises of the nightclub.

But Lopez’s counsel was drawn into an argument over whether there was such a phone booth and whose responsibility it was to show whether it existed and which calls came from which phone. Even if relevant, this is the kind of objection better left to an Evidence Code section 402 hearing at or immediately before the trial, a factual hearing likely to be much longer than the two pages worth of consideration it received at this summary judgment hearing. To expect a plaintiffs counsel, on three days’ notice, to produce the testimony and documents required to demonstrate which calls originated from where and whether it made any difference is both unrealistic and unfair. To expect him to do the same as to 65 other objections is ridiculous. Summary judgments are just that, summary proceedings. They are not suitable nor designed for the resolution of complex evidentiary issues, especially those involving the proof of foundational facts.

In any event, the trial court failed to resolve the tennis match over this particular objection. Instead, while Lopez’s counsel was responding to the relevance objection as to the police “crime reports” (of the 16 specific crimes at Baca’s nightclub over the prior five years), the court was looking at the “incident reports” (of the 236 responses to calls from the nightclub). This led to a confusing exchange where the lawyer is talking about three assaults with deadly weapons, four robberies, a battery, and a discharge of a gun in the nightclub and the judge responds, “But it is mostly drug related though. Look at it.”

It soon becomes clear the trial court is referring to the “incident reports” not the “crime reports” document and his comments about the crimes being “drug related” is not correct as to the 16 crimes Lopez’s lawyer was *1023discussing.2 But this fact, if true, would not even supply valid grounds for excluding the “incident reports” document. The presence of some arguably irrelevant material in a document is not sufficient reason for excluding the entire document, only for excluding those irrelevant portions of the document.

Apparently realizing the trial judge was not seriously considering any responses to Baca’s 66 objections as to the evidence Lopez already had put before the court, Lopez’s lawyer shifted the discussion to evidence he had been unable to produce for the hearing—the detailed police investigative reports on the robberies, assaults with a deadly weapon and firearms which had occurred during weekday nights the previous five years. These reports, he urged, would clearly document violent criminal activity at Baca’s nightclub. He explained those reports would have been before the court at this summary judgment hearing except the police department was tardy in complying with his subpoena (which it turns out was his third such subpoena for these reports) because they gave priority to such requests in criminal cases.

But the trial judge would hear none of it. Nor would he grant a short continuance of the hearing to allow the police department to comply with the order to produce these documents, which it had promised to do within two weeks. (Nor did he allow introduction of these documents when they were attached to the motion for reconsideration a couple of weeks later, accompanied by the earlier subpoenas to the police department, the first one issued some seven months before the summary judgment hearing.) Thus ended the discussion of Baca’s 66 objections, without either Baca’s counsel or the trial judge having explained or provided a valid justification for a single one of those objections nor for the exclusion of a single item of evidence.

Appendix C is the final order granting summary judgment and sustaining all 66 objections to all 19 categories of evidence. It is as close as the trial judge gets to justifying all those rulings. In its entirety this part of the order reads: “Good Cause Having Been Shown Therefor [sic], It Is Ordered . . . HD 1. The court sustains all of defendant’s evidentiary objections filed *1024on February 13, 2001.” Having excluded nearly all of Lopez’s evidence bearing on the issue of whether violent criminal activity had occurred at Baca’s nightclub prior to Lopez’s near fatal shooting, the trial court order then continues: “2. The reading of all of plaintiff’s evidence reveals that the evidence surviving rulings on evidentiary objections is immaterial as to those issues of foreseeability and causation.” Accordingly, the court grants summary judgment against plaintiff Lopez.

To properly respond to this blunderbuss of evidentiary pellets, appellant would first have had to reconstruct the possible basis for respondent’s one or two word, general and vague, objections—all 66 of them. Then appellant would have had to discuss why each of those objections was not valid— often for multiple reasons, as to the particular item of evidence at issue. He would have had to repeat that effort 66 times—and would thereby have to produce a veritable treatise on the law of evidence. That, it seems to me, is an unrealistic responsibility to thrust on this or any other appellant.

It certainly is beyond what this court or any appellate court should be expected to do. Yet, given what respondent did below—and what the trial court not only permitted but ratified by granting all 66 of these objections with no explanation or justification—this would be the only course of action available to us if we were to fulfill our affirmative duty to determine whether the trial court properly excluded each and every one of these 19 categories of evidence.

At this point, I wish to register the strongest disapproval of the approach adopted below in the presentation and treatment of evidentiary objections in summary judgment proceedings. To allow a party to lodge a barrage of objections, with no supporting factual and legal argument to support them, is to impose an unfair burden on the opposing party. And for a trial court to grant those objections en masse with no explanation for its decisions places an undue burden on the appellate court as well as the opposing party.

It is difficult to imagine the trial court here individually analyzed these 66 objections and found them all valid under the Evidence Code and relevant decisional authority. A cursory review of the 66 objections reveals many completely lack merit. For others, the merit, if any, certainly is not apparent from the mere label “irrelevant” or “lack of foundation” or “vague” or “hearsay not falling within any of the hearsay exceptions.” A trial court owes it to this court, if not the parties, to select the specific objections it finds possess merit and explain its grounds for so finding, either in writing or on the record. Here the trial court did neither, and in fact did not defend its decision as to specific objections when its blanket ruling was challenged during the summary judgment hearing.

*1025Merely as an illustration of the questionable nature of the trial court’s blanket affirmative of all 66 of these objections, I make a quick examination of the court’s exclusion of the computer printouts from the police department. The first printout was a summary reflecting 16 reported crimes at the club during a five year period, including two assaults with deadly weapons and five robberies. The other computer printout reflected 236 “police patrol reports for service” during that same five years.

Both of these computer printouts were authenticated as public records.3 They were not hearsay because they were introduced to establish the bar owner had notice of criminal activity,4 not necessarily for the truth of the statements therein. But even if considered hearsay they fall under at least two alternative hearsay exceptions—as public records5 and as business records.6 The certifications recited all the foundational facts for either of these exceptions to the hearsay rule—kept in the regular course of police department business, recorded at or near the time of the events reported by declarants who had personal knowledge, etc. From the record of the summary judgment hearing it is apparent the trial court fully comprehended the abbreviations, code sections, etc. the officers employed in these summary reports, thus they were not too vague for the trier of fact on the summary judgment motion. This evidence also is relevant for at least two reasons. First, it contradicts and thus impairs the credibility of the bar owner’s declaration claiming violent crime was unforeseeable and she was unaware of such criminal activity at her club. Second, the substance of these police reports supports an inference strongly supporting a triable issue this bar had experienced significant violent criminal activity prior to the shooting of appellant.

To fully explain why each of the objections lodged against this evidence lacks merit would require several more pages, and there still would be *1026another 18 categories of evidence and another 60 or so objections to go. But the paragraph above does suggest the daunting task appellant would have faced in preparing a brief responding to the entire roster of objections the trial court sustained.

Beyond the evidentiary issues, in my view it is not necessary the prior criminal activity be precisely identical to the crime that nearly killed appellant, as the trial judge appeared to intimate. The computer printouts need not reflect past instances where boyfriends of “B-girls” shot bar patrons who didn’t like the idea of paying extra because the girl sitting next to them turned out to like them only for commercial reasons. It is enough those printouts revealed significant violent criminal activity of some kind and/or the unlawful presence and use of firearms on the premises sufficient to suggest the bar owner should provide security officers to protect patrons from the threat of physical injury. The robberies, assaults with deadly weapons (whether guns or others), and patrons possessing and firing weapons (whether negligently or intentionally) reported in these police computer printouts certainly qualify as significant violent criminal activity. At a minimum, they appear sufficient to create a triable issue this bar owner should have employed security officers to protect patrons from physical injury at the hands of third parties. The fact she did employ such officers on the three weekend nights further suggested she was aware of the potential for violent criminal activity at her bar. Only if none of the prior violent crimes were committed on weekday nights would the bar owner lack notice of the need for such preventive measures on those nights. The computer printout of the 16 violent crimes negated that possibility, since a majority of those crimes took place on weekday nights.

Once the level of prior violent criminal activity warranted security measures, the bar owner failed to provide those measures at her own risk.7 If some other type of violent crime occurred, the bar owner would be liable to *1027the victim of that crime unless, of course, the security measures required by the prior criminal activity—but which she failed to provide—could not have prevented this new crime. In the case before this court, a triable issue *1028exists whether the prior criminal activity justified the employment of security guards.

I now move on to the second ground the trial court asserted for granting summary judgment. After excluding all the evidence of prior violent criminal activity and therefore finding there was no need for Baca to employ security guards on weekday evenings, the court also raised the causation issue. “There’s no showing the failure to provide a security guard caused the shooting. That’s the basic problem.” On this issue, however, the admitted evidence was more than sufficient to create a triable issue the absence of a security guard was a “but for” and proximate cause of Lopez’s injuries.

Here the evidence before the court on the summary judgment motion established the victim got into an altercation with the assailant’s girlfriend when the victim discovered she was a B-girl not a fellow customer. The assailant became so enraged he pushed appellant against the wall, then left the bar to get a gun. Still enraged, he returned to the bar with the weapon he retrieved from his car, approached appellant, held the gun to his head, and shot him.

According to evidence in the record, including respondent’s own deposition, one of the primary duties of the security guards the bar employed on weekends was to search customers for firearms before they entered the premises. Another B-girl employed at the nightclub described in some detail how the weekend security guards patted down patrons before they entered the premises.8 At her deposition, Lopez’s counsel asked this witness, Alma Rosa Granados Aguilar, “Did you also see him [the security guard] checking the men who were going into the nightclub on weekends?” She replied, “Yes.” When asked what was done to check them, Ms. Aguilar responded, “He would check all the way down like this [gesturing down her body].” The lawyer then asked, “So he would check his legs check his sides, his chest, his pockets? Do you know what he was checking for?” Ms. Aguilar’s response: “So they wouldn’t have any weapons.”

*1029So had there been a security guard on duty that fateful weekday night there is at least a triable issue this guard would have performed his prime function and prevented the assailant from reentering the premises with the weapon he used to shoot appellant in the head. Indeed, even a moderately observant security guard probably would have intervened at an earlier point in this series of events and prevented the criminal assault—either by restraining or removing the B-girl’s boyfriend. (The presence of such a guard may have been enough in itself to dissuade the assailant from this violent course of action.) Unless we are willing to say these guards lack the required skill as a matter of law we are left with a triable issue on the causation issue.

If the trial court erred in excluding the evidence appellant originally tendered, it also erred in refusing to grant appellant’s request for a continuance to procure the more detailed police arrest and incident reports on which the computer printouts were based. During the oral argument on the summary judgment motion, appellant responded to the trial court’s exclusion of the police computer printouts with a request for a short continuance. He advised the court he had subpoenaed the full police reports, including the officers’ notes and the narratives of all the crimes reflected on those printouts and expected to receive those documents shortly. He also advised the court he would have had them long before the hearing except the department told him they were giving priority to such requests in criminal cases. And indeed appellant had first subpoenaed all these police documents seven months before the summary judgment hearing—and only three months after filing his complaint. He also had issued two further subpoenas when the requested police reports were not forthcoming. He ultimately obtained an order requiring the department to turn over the records some four days before the summary judgment hearing, an order the department failed to honor, thus depriving appellant of these detailed investigation reports at the time of the hearing. The police reports finally became available two weeks after that hearing.

In my view, the trial court abused its discretion in denying appellant the rather short continuance required to acquire and submit the detailed police reports he had subpoenaed over seven months earlier. Appellant had been more than diligent in his efforts to obtain these records from the police department. The trial court’s asserted reason for denying the continuance— the records should have been subpoenaed earlier—does not square with the facts in the record. Accordingly, I would reverse the denial of the continuance as well and consider the evidence appellant would have been able to put before the trial court had the court granted that request. (By the way, the reconsideration motion is based in part on a claim the trial court erred in *1030refusing to grant the continuance appellant’s counsel requested during the summary judgment proceedings.)

The evidence appellant could not introduce because the trial court denied the requested continuance further strengthens appellant’s claim he had created triable issues on the prior criminal conduct and causation issues. The more specific information as to certain of the crimes listed in the police department’s initial computer printouts bolstered the earlier submission. The computer printouts reflected 12 of 17 crimes occurred on weeknights when the nightclub had no security guards. The police reports gave detailed information about several of the violent crimes which took place on weeknights—an attempted robbery, an assault with a deadly weapon, a robbery with a gun, and negligent discharge of a firearm involving a customer who fired seven rounds into the bar. This evidence directly refutes the bar owner’s declaration she knew of no violent activity on her premises during weeknights. Beyond that, this evidence firmly establishes the foreseeability of such criminal acts, including the threat of firearms on the premises, and the need to supply security guards on weeknights as well as weekends.9

For these reasons I conclude there was more than ample evidence to create triable issues as to foreseeability and causation. Unfortunately, the trial court struck this evidence erroneously and in a blanket fashion which imposed an onerous and unfair burden on appellant to oppose and on this court to evaluate the validity of those decisions. Therefore, I would reverse on two grounds.

First, the trial court’s method of sustaining 66 evidentiary objections (which respondent had failed to explain or justify) with a single sentence should not be effective to sustain any of those objections. Hence all that evidence should be deemed admitted for purposes of this summary judgment motion. Otherwise opposing parties and appellate courts will face impossible burdens in opposing and reviewing these en masse evidentiary rulings.

Second, I conclude the one major category of evidence discussed in this dissent—the police computer printouts of arrest and incident reports and the reports themselves as to some of those crimes—was both admissible and sufficient in itself to raise triable issues as to the foreseeability of violent *1031activity. Other evidence not subject to the trial court’s blanket evidentiary ruling established triable issues as to causation. The trial court based its summary judgment on the purported absence of evidence on those two issues. In that, as well as its evidentiary rulings, the trial court was in error.

Finally, as treated in the majority opinion, this case raises a fundamental issue about the role of appellate courts in reviewing summary judgments. That opinion relies heavily on two related contentions: First, the appellate court cannot review the propriety of the trial court’s exclusion of some 19 items of evidence because Lopez is deemed to have waived any opposition to those evidentiary rulings. Second, the appellate court cannot consider whether the evidence in the record establishes a triable issue that the level of violent criminal activity required security guards on weekday nights, because Lopez is deemed to have “abandoned” this argument.

For reasons explained above (see pp. 1020-1024, ante), I conclude Lopez had no responsibility to oppose the trial court’s evidentiary rulings because Baca’s 66 evidentiary objections were not adequately lodged and the trial court did not make sufficient rulings as to any of those objections to which anyone could reasonably respond. Furthermore, also for reasons explained above (see fn. 8, ante), I conclude Lopez did not abandon the argument that the level of violent criminal activity occurring at Baca’s nightclub during weeknights imposed a duty to employ security guards on those nights as well as weekend nights. Instead what he did was emphasize Baca caused that level of violence by operating her nightclub in an illegal manner. She was not simply an innocent property owner operating a socially useful business in a high crime area who experienced enough violent crimes on her premises to require her to take security measures to protect her customers. By employing B-girls in violation of the law, Lopez contended she was responsible for the increased level of violent crimes on her premises. In that sense it was not a “pure notice” case. But this does not mean Lopez “abandoned” any contention the violent criminal activity on the premises required security guards.

Nonetheless, for the sake of discussion, I will assume appellant’s opening brief should have challenged the propriety of the trial court’s order sustaining the 66 objections in his opening brief. Furthermore, I will assume he did not properly raise and argue the position that the prior violent criminal activity Baca’s nightclub experienced on weeknights imposed a duty to employ security guards on those nights as well as weekends. This leaves the question whether an appellate court is a “potted plant” unable to consider issues unless they are spoon fed by the parties. Reading a record redolent with error, must we ignore the stench just because the lawyers failed to rub our noses in it? I don’t think so.

*1032Indeed, the practices of this division and most if not all other appellate courts in this state belie such an approach to the appellate function. As of the moment this majority opinion and my dissent are filed, this division has at least one and probably more letters out to counsel in other cases requesting them to brief issues the aggrieved party failed to raise in the original round of briefing. In the past 20 years, I know of literally scores of cases we have decided based on issues not raised in the briefs. Among other situations during that period, we have affirmed summary judgments based on alternative grounds not mentioned in the respondents’ briefs, and we have reversed summary judgments based on triable issues we found in the record, which appellants had failed to identify in their briefs. Indeed, this practice is so common the law was changed over a decade ago to require appellate courts to provide both sides an opportunity to respond when the appellate court elects to decide a case on an issue not discussed in the briefs.10

It is difficult to see how it could be otherwise. The Courts of Appeal, more than the Supreme Court, are in the “error correction” business. For all cases of that genre, where no important unsettled legal issues are at stake, we are indeed the “court of last resort.” This is a great responsibility. The parties depend upon us to insure justice was done in the trial court—that the judges there applied the correct legal principles to the true facts of the case. These are not contests to choose which lawyer did the best job. Nor, at the appellate level, should a party suffer because his or her lawyers were inept in their briefing. If the court’s research—including its own independent research—demonstrates the correct legal principles when applied to the facts revealed in the record yield a certain result, then that should be the judgment of the court. The lawyers’ lapses should not and cannot relieve the appellate court of its duty nor disarm it of its ability to insure the parties receive justice in the trial courts of this state.

Thus, even assuming appellant’s lawyer, in his briefing, erroneously waived the evidentiary issues and “abandoned” the key substantive issue, I would regard it as irrelevant in this case. If this court fulfills its duty to apply the correct legal principles to the record before it, certain propositions are crystal clear: First, the evidence of prior violent criminal activity was admissible and thus improperly excluded. Second, this evidence was sufficient, at a minimum, to create a triable issue Baca had sufficient *1033notice to have a duty to employ security guards on weeknights at her nightclub. And third, uncontested evidence was sufficient, at the least, to create a triable issue the security guards, had they been on duty, would have disarmed or restrained the assailant and thus prevented him from shooting Lopez in the head. This is enough to reverse summary judgment in this case, and I would do so.

On June 5, 2002, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.

*1034Appendix A

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*1039Appendix B

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*1045Appendix C

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Merrill v. Navegar, Inc. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 465, 476-477 [110 Cal.Rptr.2d 370, 28 P.3d 116], quoted in majority opinion, ante, at page 1014.

But this exchange does make it clear the trial court is fully capable of interpreting the abbreviations and numbers used on the “incident reports” as shorthand references to what crimes were involved in those 236 police calls. This dissolves yet another of the multiple objections levied against this evidence—but one Lopez never had a chance to reach—the alleged failure to accompany this document with an explanation of the meaning of these abbreviations and numbers. A summary judgment is heard by a judge not a jury. If the evidence can be understood by the factfinder hearing the summary judgment motion, that should be sufficient. Producing testimony that will make it understandable by a jury can await this later stage of the proceedings, and its absence cannot be grounds for excluding the underlying evidence at the summary judgment stage.

Evidence Code sections 1450-1454; Alvarez v. State of California (1999) 79 Cal.App.4th 720, 728-729 [95 Cal.Rptr.2d 719].

Evidence Code section 1200 (“ ‘Hearsay evidence’ is evidence . . . that is offered to prove the truth of the matter stated.”); see, e.g., Magnolia Square Homeowners Assn. v. Safeco Ins. Co. (1990) 221 Cal.App.3d 1049, 1057 [271 Cal.Rptr. 1] (notice of defects not hearsay).

Evidence Code section 1270 (“ ‘a business’ includes every kind of business, governmental activity, . . . whether carried on for profit or not.”); Evidence Code section 1271 (evidence of events, etc. recorded in regular course of business is admissible as exception to hearsay rule); Rousseau v. West Coast House Movers (1967) 256 Cal.App.2d 878, 887 [64 Cal.Rptr. 655] (police reports admissible as business records to prove prior criminal acts where based on officer’s observations); Aguimatang v. California State Lottery (1991) 234 Cal.App.3d 769, 798 [286 Cal.Rptr. 57] (computer printouts admissible as business records).

Evidence Code section 1280 (evidence of events, etc. recorded by a public employee within the scope of employee’s duty is admissible as exception to hearsay rule). The official records exception, unlike the business records exception, benefits from the statutory presumption that an official duty has been regularly performed and thus does not require a witness to testify about a record’s identity or method of preparation, etc. (See People v. Dunlap (1993) 18 Cal.App.4th 1468, 1477 [23 Cal.Rptr.2d 204].)

The majority opinion suggests appellant Lopez somehow waived or abandoned any claim the incidents of prior criminal activity at Baca’s nightclub established the foreseeability required to impose a duty to employ security guards. It is true Lopez relied heavily, in his briefs, on the arguments the majority opinion emphasizes. He did argue the employment of security guards on weekends tended to support the inference they were required on weeknights, too. And he also argued Baca’s employment of B-girls increased the risk of violence and thus increased the need for security guards at all times. (Incidentally, in my view, there is some merit in both these positions, that is, when deciding whether the foreseeability of violent criminal conduct on weeknights has reached the level requiring employment of security guards, both these factors raise that level somewhat.) But in stressing these two factors, Lopez did not abandon his claim the prior violent criminal activity on weeknights also required Baca to employ security guards on weekday nights.

In the “Statement of the Case” in his opening brief, appellant emphasizes the “fifteen arrests for criminal incidents including robberies, assaults with a deadly weapon, attempted *1027robbery, a gun discharge, and a battery over the previous five years.” Later he mentions the B-girl operation created a dangerous situation, but says that led to “a history of violence” and “there were 199 police calls at the nightclub address in the five years before the incident.” He then devotes a full one-thitd of his “Statement of Facts” to the testimony of an expert whose review of the evidence showed the police records of all these violent crimes and that 60 percent occurred during weekday nights. (In determining whether appellant “abandoned” the violent prior criminal activity argument in his briefing, it is irrelevant this particular expert’s testimony may not have been admissible in the summary judgment motion. As demonstrated above, the evidence of this prior violent criminal activity was present elsewhere in the record.)

In the “Argument” portion of the brief, Lopez’s counsel first addressed “Duty” and continued to point to the prior violent crimes as evidence Baca had a duty to employ security guards. “That the atmosphere of such a place is conducive to crime is further evidenced by the police reports concerning El Castillo. El Castillo is essentially a magnet for crime. The nightclub had previously experienced violent incidents such as robbery, battery, and assault with a deadly weapon - the incident which occurred in the present case.” The fact Lopez argued Baca had caused the violent criminal acts to occur by operating an illegal “fiscera” nightclub does not mean Lopez had somehow “abandoned” the argument this pattern of prior criminal acts made future crimes foreseeable and therefore created a duty. Indeed, unless the operation of the nightclub resulted in criminal activity there would be no need to employ security guards.

In the “Breach of Duty” section of his brief, Lopez once again relied in part on the existence of prior criminal activity, arguing, “[e]ven if the present case is treated as a purely notice case where the only question is whether the innocent defendant had notice that criminal acts were foreseeable, it is apparent that El Castillo had notice.” And later, he argues, “The primary role of the security guards at El Castillo was to check for weapons, thereby demonstrating that El Castillo recognized that its operation attracted patrons with weapons. fi[| . . . There is nothing to show that days such as Tuesdays are immune from the danger present on other days. ... 60 percent of the serious incidents reported by the Los Angeles Police Department at El Castillo occurred Monday through Thursday.”

This does not sound like an appellant whose opening brief has waived or abandoned the argument that Baca had notice of enough prior criminal activity at her nightclub during weekday nights to require her to employ security guards. In his reply brief, Lopez makes alternative arguments. First, he argues the police reports and other evidence of prior criminal activity were erroneously excluded. Second, he argues, assuming such evidence remains properly excluded on appeal, the other admitted evidence was sufficient to defeat summary judgment. So even in his reply brief, Lopez does not “abandon” his argument that prior violent activity established foreseeability. He merely provides a series of fallback arguments in case we rule that evidence inadmissible.

“While this evidence was excluded below, it is admissible hearsay to show that El Castillo had been running an illegal Fichera bar for years where the nightclub address was a magnet for criminal activity and had a long police record. HQ The main function of this additional evidence was to show prior similar incidents but such incidents are not necessary to the resolution of this case.” Lopez then proceeds to use the unobjected to evidence to establish his fallback positions—Baca ran an illegal operation which was inherently dangerous and thus had a special duty to employ security guards and/or she had assumed the duty to employ security guards and breached that duty by failing to employ them on weekday nights.

The trial court evidently misunderstood the true facts as reflected in the record. Somehow the judge gained the impression the assailant merely walked in off the street and shot Lopez—rather than being present in the bar, becoming angry when Lopez refused a high priced beer for the assailant’s B-girl girlfriend, physically assaulting Lopez, and then going out to his car and returning with a gun. During the summary judgment hearing the trial judge first said, “I know the whole history of the case. I’ve read it backwards and forwards.” Shortly thereafter, the judge said, “How did [the B-girl] activity contribute to this unfortunate event where somebody walks in off the street and puts a bullet in your client’s head?” Obviously, the motive for this particular shooting arose directly from the B-girl activity at the nightclub and was not a random shooting by someone wandering in off the street. But there is at least a triable issue the presence of security guards would have prevented the shooting under either scenario, because the guards had the duty to search and disarm anyone entering the nightclub.

I don’t think it is necessary or important to decide whether this court should also consider the expert testimony appellant tendered with his reconsideration motion. Unlike the detailed police reports it is not evidence appellant’s counsel mentioned in his request for a continuance. But if considered, the expert’s testimony, especially his opinion fully 60 percent of the criminal activity at the bar occurred on weekday nights, is yet further, very powerful evidence demonstrating foreseeability and supporting a duty to supply security guards on weeknights in order to protect patrons from violent criminal acts.

“Before the Supreme Court, a court of appeal, or the appellate department of a superior court renders a decision in a proceeding other than a summary denial of a petition for an extraordinary writ, based upon an issue which was not proposed or briefed by any party to the proceeding, the court shall afford the parties an opportunity to present their views on the matter through supplemental briefing. If the court fails to afford that opportunity, a rehearing shall be ordered upon timely petition of any party.” Government Code section 68081, added by Statutes 1989, chapter 262, section 1, page 1307.