Filed 4/19/17
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Plumas)
----
REBECCA MEGAN QUIGLEY, C079270
Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. CV1000225)
v.
GARDEN VALLEY FIRE PROTECTION
DISTRICT et al.,
Defendants and Respondents.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Plumas County, Janet Hilde,
Judge. Affirmed.
Jay-Allen Eisen Law Corporation, Jay-Allen Eisen; Law Offices of Reiner &
Slaughter, Russell Reiner, Todd E. Slaughter and April K. Gesberg for Plaintiff and
Appellant.
Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Joseph A. Salazar, Jr., Jeffry A. Miller and
Jonna D. Lothyan for Defendants and Respondents.
While assigned to fight a wildfire, plaintiff and appellant Rebecca Megan Quigley
was severely injured when a water truck ran over her as she slept at the fire base camp.
1
She sued, inter alia, defendants and respondents Garden Valley Fire Protection District,
Chester Fire Protection District, and their employees Frank DelCarlo, Mike Jellison, and
Jeff Barnhart for damages, claiming she was injured as a result of their negligence, a
dangerous condition of public property, and defendants’ failure to warn. The trial court
granted nonsuit against plaintiff’s complaint on the bases that defendants were statutorily
immune from liability and the firefighter’s rule prevented plaintiff from recovering.
Because we agree defendants are immune from liability for plaintiff’s injuries, we affirm
the judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In our review of a judgment of nonsuit, we “ ‘view the facts in the light most
favorable to the plaintiff.’ ” (O’Neil v. Crane Co. (2012) 53 Cal.4th 335, 347.) Thus,
“the court must accept as true all favorable facts asserted in the plaintiff’s opening
statement, indulge all legitimate inferences from those facts, and disregard all conflicting
evidence.” (Ewing v. Northridge Hospital Medical Center (2004) 120 Cal.App.4th 1289,
1296.)
The “Silver Fire” broke out in the Plumas National Forest on September 19, 2009.
The United States Forest Service (the Forest Service) initially managed the effort to fight
the fire. It set up a base camp at the Plumas County Fairgrounds. The base camp
included a sleeping area for firefighters. Forest Service rules required the Forest Service,
when establishing a camp, to provide a quiet, shaded sleeping area away from smoke,
noise, and dust, to post signs designating the area, and to rope off the area.
The Plumas County Fairgrounds has a racetrack with a large grassy infield. The
Forest Service set up a shower unit on the infield and arranged for an independent
contractor to service the unit.1 The unit included two 1,500-gallon bladders to hold
1 The independent contractor’s potential liability is not an issue before us.
2
water: one bladder held fresh water and the other collected used water from the showers.
Employees of the independent contractor would drive 30,000-pound water trucks onto the
infield to service the bladders. The truck drivers were never given a map or directions
showing where they could drive on the infield to access the bladders.
Fearing the fire might affect structures, the Forest Service called in a non-
firefighting team, referred to as NorCal Team 1 (NorCal 1), to manage the fire and the
base camp. NorCal 1 took control at noon, September 20. Individual defendants
DelCarlo, Jellison, and Barnhart were members of NorCal 1. The three men, all retired
Forest Service employees, became employees of defendant local fire agencies Chester
Fire Protection District and Garden Valley Fire Protection District in order to serve on
NorCal 1.
Plaintiff was a Forest Service firefighter on a hotshot crew working the Silver Fire.
She and her crew returned to the base camp around 9:00 p.m., September 20, after
fighting the fire all day. The designated sleeping area was full, so most of the crew
members slept in and around some horse barns in filthy conditions. Not wanting to sleep
there, plaintiff asked her supervisor if she could sleep on the infield. Her supervisor
agreed. Other people were already sleeping on the infield in tents and in sleeping bags on
the ground. Earlier that day, DelCarlo had ordered a California Conservation crew to
sleep near the shower unit, and he had authorized a different hotshot crew to sleep on the
infield. The infield was never signed or roped off as a sleeping area.
Plaintiff arose the next day, September 21, and left the base camp with her crew to
fight the fire. During the day, Barnhart, a safety officer, inspected the camp, including
the shower unit and the infield. He saw the tents erected in the infield by the California
Conservation crew. Nevertheless, he recorded on a form that all sleeping areas were
separated from parking, shaded, and posted as a “sleeping area (no vehicles allowed).”
3
Plaintiff came back to the base camp that evening around 9:00 p.m. As was the
case the previous night, the designated sleeping area was full, so her crew returned to the
filthy horse barns to sleep. Plaintiff again received permission to sleep on the infield. As
she had the night before, plaintiff slept on the grass in her sleeping bag.
Around 10:00 p.m. that evening, an employee of the independent contractor drove
his water truck onto the infield to service the shower unit. He retrieved the used water,
and as he drove off the infield, he ran over plaintiff. The truck crushed plaintiff’s chest,
ribs, lungs and left shoulder, and it fractured her back. The accident permanently
damaged her heart, lungs, and eyes.
Following plaintiff’s opening statement at trial reciting the above facts, defendants
moved for nonsuit. Defendants contended they were immune from liability under various
provisions of the Government Claims Act (the Act) (Gov. Code, § 810 et seq.).2 Of
relevance here, defendants claimed they were not liable pursuant to the immunity
provided by section 850.4, which immunizes public agencies and their employees against
claims “for any injury resulting from the condition of fire protection or firefighting
equipment or facilities or, except as provided in Article 1 (commencing with Section
17000) of Chapter 1 of Division 9 of the Vehicle Code, for any injury caused in fighting
fires.” Defendants also contended they were not liable under the common law
firefighter’s rule, which generally prevents a firefighter from recovering damages for
negligence that precipitated the summoning of the firefighter, including “when an officer
is injured by the negligence of an officer from a different public safety agency in a joint
operation.” (Terry v. Garcia (2003) 109 Cal.App.4th 245, 253.)
Over plaintiff’s opposition that the statutory immunity was waived and did not
apply and that the firefighter’s rule did not apply, the trial court granted defendants’
2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
4
motion for nonsuit. Initially, the court ruled defendants had not waived their immunity
defense because it is jurisdictional and can be raised at any time. Substantively, the court
held defendants were immune from liability under section 850.4 because plaintiff’s
injuries were the result of the condition of a firefighting facility (the base camp) and were
caused by fighting the fire. Following plaintiff’s motion for new trial, the trial court
reaffirmed its ruling that section 850.4 was a jurisdictional immunity that barred
plaintiff’s action and also held that the firefighter’s rule barred plaintiff’s action because
she suffered her injuries during a joint response by different public agencies to a public
safety incident.
DISCUSSION
Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in granting nonsuit because defendants
waived their claim to statutory immunity and, regardless, the immunity does not apply
because plaintiff was not injured by a condition of a firefighting facility giving rise to
immunity under section 850.4. “We review the grant of a nonsuit de novo” (Legendary
Investors Group No. 1, LLC v. Niemann (2014) 224 Cal.App.4th 1407, 1412), upholding
the nonsuit “only where it is clear plaintiff’s counsel has stated all facts he expects to
prove and such facts do not constitute a cause of action” (Sturgeon v. Curnutt (1994)
29 Cal.App.4th 301, 305). Here, we conclude the trial court did not err in awarding
nonsuit because section 850.4 immunizes defendants from liability for plaintiff’s injuries
and defendants did not waive their claim to immunity. In light of this conclusion, we
need not decide whether the firefighter’s rule would also apply to prevent plaintiff’s
recovery.
1.0 Waiver of Immunity
We first address and reject plaintiff’s contention that defendants waived their
claim to immunity under section 850.4 by not expressly and separately pleading that
immunity in their answer. As the trial court determined, governmental immunity is
5
jurisdictional and may be raised at any time. (Paterson v. City of Los Angeles (2009)
174 Cal.App.4th 1393, 1404, fn. 5 [“Governmental immunity is a jurisdictional question
(Kemmerer v. County of Fresno (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 1426, 1435), and thus is not
subject to the rule that failure to raise a defense by demurrer or answer waives that
defense. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.80, subd. (a).)”]; see Richardson-Tunnell v. Schools Ins.
Program for Employees (SIPE) (2007) 157 Cal.App.4th 1056, 1061; Buford v. State of
California (1980) 104 Cal.App.3d 811, 826.)
Plaintiff relies on McMahan’s of Santa Monica v. City of Santa Monica (1983)
146 Cal.App.3d 683, at page 689 (McMahan’s) to assert that in contrast to other
governmental immunities, section 850.4 immunity is an affirmative defense that may be
waived. McMahan’s holds, without further elucidation, that the immunity afforded by
section 850.4 “is considered an affirmative defense and must be pled and proven or is
deemed waived.” (McMahan’s, at p. 689.) McMahan’s was an inverse condemnation
action arising from damage caused to the plaintiff’s property by a broken water main.
(Id. at p. 687.) On appeal, the city for the first time asserted it was immune from liability
pursuant to section 850.4 because the water main was a fire protection facility.
(McMahan’s, at pp. 687-689.) McMahan’s concluded the city waived the defense by not
pleading it. (Id. at p. 689.)
In support of its holding, McMahan’s cites De La Rosa v. City of San Bernardino
(1971) 16 Cal.App.3d 739, at page 747, and a government tort liability treatise.
(McMahan’s, supra, 146 Cal.App.3d at p. 689.) We discuss each in turn. De La Rosa
does not involve section 850.4, but instead discusses whether the design immunity of
former section 830.6 is an affirmative defense. (De La Rosa, at pp. 746-748.) Under
former section 830.6, the public entity was immune from liability “for maintaining a
dangerous condition of public property as long as the maintenance conforms to the
original plan or design.” (De La Rosa, at p. 747, italics added.) Thus, to trigger the
6
immunity, the public entity had to affirmatively show the dangerous condition alleged by
the plaintiff conformed to a plan or design. There is no such required showing for the
immunity under section 850.4, which applies, as alleged in this case, if the complained-of
injury resulted from the condition of a firefighting facility. Therefore, De La Rosa does
not appear to support the conclusion of McMahan’s that section 850.4 operates as an
affirmative defense.
Neither does the cited government tort liability treatise, which broadly states that
“[s]tatutory immunities and limitations on liability are regarded as affirmative defenses”
for purposes of pleading with particularity. (Van Alstyne, Cal. Government Tort
Liability Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1980) § 3.76, p. 301.) All of the examples cited by the
treatise involve immunities conditioned on factual showings of, for example,
reasonableness, existence of a design, purpose of a road, and circumstances under which
an emergency vehicle is operated. (Ibid.) It does not address a statute like section 850.4,
which provides absolute, not qualified, immunity for public entities and public
employees. (See Pacific Bell v. City of San Diego (2000) 81 Cal.App.4th 596, 602; see
also Recommendation Relating to Sovereign Immunity, Number 1 – Tort Liability of
Public Entities and Public Employees (Jan. 1963) 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (1963)
p. 862 (Recommendation) [“Section 850.4 provides for absolute immunity from liability
for injury . . . from failure to properly maintain fire protection equipment or facilities”].)
Therefore, we disagree with the conclusion of McMahan’s that the absolute
governmental immunity under section 850.4 may be waived if not raised as an
affirmative defense. Rather, the immunity under section 850.4, like that discussed in
Hata v. Los Angeles County Harbor/UCLA Medical Center (1995) 31 Cal.App.4th 1791,
at pages 1802 through 1804, required no affirmative showing on the part of the public
entity or public employee defendant claiming the immunity. Thus, the section 850.4
immunity could be raised at any time and was not waived.
7
2.0 Applicability of Immunity
Plaintiff challenges the applicability of section 850.4 to her claims against
defendants. She does not appear to dispute that the base camp was a firefighting facility,3
but argues instead that the condition of the base camp that caused her injuries was not one
that affected the ability to fight a fire but was unrelated to fighting fires. Thus, she
contends, it does not trigger the statutory immunity of section 850.4. We conclude
plaintiff’s proposed construction of section 850.4 is not supportable.
In construing section 850.4, we extend no deference to the trial court’s
interpretation, but instead review the question of law regarding statutory construction de
novo. (John v. Superior Court (2016) 63 Cal.4th 91, 95.) “ ‘Our primary task in
interpreting a statute is to determine the Legislature’s intent, giving effect to the law’s
purpose. [Citation.] We consider first the words of a statute, as the most reliable
indicator of legislative intent.’ ” (Id. at pp. 95-96.) Where the language is clear, we do
not stray from its plain meaning “unless a literal interpretation would result in absurd
3 Nor would such a contention likely withstand scrutiny given the broad interpretation
courts have given the term “facility” in this context. (Heieck & Moran v. City of Modesto
(1966) 64 Cal.2d 229, 233 [closed valve in a city water system that prevented water from
reaching a fire was a fire protection facility triggering immunity]; New Hampshire Ins.
Co. v. City of Madera (1983) 144 Cal.App.3d 298, 303-305 [immunity even where water
delivery system was not controlled by fire personnel]; Lainer Investments v. Department
of Water & Power (1985) 170 Cal.App.3d 1, 8 [immunity where semiclosed valve was
installed on private property]; Cairns v. County of Los Angeles (1997) 62 Cal.App.4th
330, 335-336 [closed road that fire personnel could not access when responding to a fire
was a fire protection facility under § 850.4].) Neither would it suit the plain meaning of
the term “facilities” to construe it as excluding the base camp. When section 850.4 was
enacted, a facility was, in relevant part, “something that facilitates an action, operation, or
course of conduct easier—[usually] used in [plural]” or “something (as a hospital) that is
built, installed, or established to serve a particular purpose.” (Webster’s Seventh New
Collegiate Dict. (1963) p. 298, col. 2.) To “facilitate” meant “to make easier.” (Ibid.)
Under these definitions, the base camp would qualify as a firefighting facility. It was a
physical location and operation that made fighting the Silver Fire easier and was
established to serve that particular purpose.
8
consequences the Legislature did not intend.” (Coalition of Concerned Communities,
Inc. v. City of Los Angeles (2004) 34 Cal.4th 733, 737.) And, “we are, absent contrary
direction, bound to give the words the Legislature chose their usual and ordinary
meaning.” (Bernard v. Foley (2006) 39 Cal.4th 794, 807.) Neither are we permitted to
“insert what has been omitted, or . . . omit what has been inserted.” (Code Civ. Proc.,
§ 1858.) But where “the statutory language permits more than one reasonable
interpretation, courts may consider other aids, such as the statute’s purpose, legislative
history, and public policy” to discern the legislative intent. (Coalition of Concerned
Communities, Inc., at p. 737.) Regardless, we construe the language in the context of the
entire statutory framework, with consideration given to the policies and purposes of the
statute. (Jones v. Superior Court (2016) 246 Cal.App.4th 390, 397.)
The statute at issue, section 850.4, is part of the Act, enacted in 1963 following a
report of the California Law Revision Commission (the Commission). (§ 810, subd. (b);
Cal. Gov. Tort Liability Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 4th ed. 2017) Legislative Response:
Government Claims Act, § 1.40, p. 24.) Under the Act, “ ‘[a] public entity is not liable
for an injury,’ ‘[e]xcept as otherwise provided by statute.’ (§ 815, subd. (a); see Guzman
v. County of Monterey (2009) 46 Cal.4th 887, 897 [‘there is no common law tort liability
for public entities in California . . . ’]; Eastburn v. Regional Fire Protection Authority
(2003) 31 Cal.4th 1175, 1179 [‘the intent of the Tort Claims Act is to confine potential
governmental liability, not expand it’].)” (Hampton v. County of San Diego (2015)
62 Cal.4th 340, 347 (Hampton).) However, pursuant to the Act, public entities may be
liable “for injuries caused by maintaining dangerous conditions on their property when
the condition ‘created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury which was
incurred’ and either an employee’s negligence or wrongful act or omission caused the
dangerous condition or the entity was on ‘actual or constructive notice’ of the condition
9
in time to have taken preventive measures. (§ 835; see Cornette [v. Department of
Transportation (2001) 26 Cal.4th 63,] 66.)” (Hampton, at pp. 347-348.)
Even where a dangerous condition is demonstrated, however, a public entity may
prevail if a specific statutory immunity applies. (See Hampton, supra, 62 Cal.4th at
pp. 347-348.) One such immunity is codified in section 850.4, which together with
sections 8504 and 850.2,5 specifically limits the liability that can arise from a public
agency’s decisions and actions regarding the provision of fire protection and firefighting
services. Section 850.4, as mentioned above, provides that “[n]either a public entity, nor
a public employee acting in the scope of his employment, is liable for any injury resulting
from the condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment or facilities or, except as
provided in Article 1 (commencing with Section 17000) of Chapter 1 of Division 9 of the
Vehicle Code, for any injury caused in fighting fires.”
In construing the language of the statute, we note that with section 850.4, the
Legislature apparently classified injuries into two groups: (1) “any injury resulting from
the condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment or facilities,” and (2) subject to
a specific exception, “any injury caused in fighting fires.” Use of the disjunctive “or”
between the two clauses renders these two classes of injuries alternatives. (See In re
Jesusa V. (2004) 32 Cal.4th 588, 622 [“The ‘ “ordinary and popular” ’ meaning of the
word ‘or’ is well settled. [Citation.] It has a disjunctive meaning: ‘In its ordinary sense,
the function of the word “or” is to mark an alternative. . . .’ ”].) Only the latter prong is,
on its face, limited to injuries that are sustained in the course of an active engagement in
4 Section 850 states that “[n]either a public entity nor a public employee is liable for
failure to establish a fire department or otherwise to provide fire protection service.”
5 Section 850.2 states that “[n]either a public entity that has undertaken to provide fire
protection service, nor an employee of such a public entity, is liable for any injury
resulting from the failure to provide or maintain sufficient personnel, equipment or other
fire protection facilities.”
10
fighting fires. And, there is nothing in the syntax of the statute to suggest that “in
fighting fires” also modifies the first clause at issue here. (See In re Application of
Roberts (1910) 157 Cal. 472, 474 [where statute contains clauses connected by
disjunctive, the language used in one clause does not affect or modify words used solely
in other clause, but each clause “is to be construed as if it stood alone and were read in
connection with the general words applying to all”].) Thus, there is no language in the
statute itself limiting the “condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment or
facilities” to those related to the ability to fight fires.
Nonetheless, plaintiff asserts that a construction of section 850.4 that does not read
“condition” as limited to conditions affecting the ability to fight fires is contrary to
legislative intent. We disagree. The Act arose from a study of governmental tort liability
prepared by the Commission. The Commission’s report on its study, Recommendation,
supra, 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at page 801, was submitted to the Legislature and
is a significant source for ascertaining legislative intent. The Commission also added a
written comment to each new statute it proposed. These comments were also before the
Legislature and were approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee as an expression of their intent. (See Milligan v. City of
Laguna Beach (1983) 34 Cal.3d 829, 831-832.)
As relevant to our construction of section 850.4, the Commission recommended
that, “[e]xcept to the extent that public entities are liable under Vehicle Code Sections
17000 to 17004 for the tortious operation of vehicles, public entities and public personnel
should not be liable for injuries caused in fighting fires or in maintaining fire protection
equipment. There are adequate incentives to careful maintenance of fire equipment
without imposing tort liability; and firemen should not be deterred from any action they
may desire to take in combatting fires by a fear that liability might be imposed if a jury
believes such action to be unreasonable. The liability created by the Vehicle Code for
11
tortious operation of emergency fire equipment should be retained, however, for such
liability does not relate to the conduct of the actual firefighting operation.”
(Recommendation, supra, 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at p. 828, italics added.)
The Commission proposed that section 850.4 be enacted to read: “Neither a
public entity, nor a public employee acting in the scope of his employment, is liable for
any injury resulting from the condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment or
facilities or, except as provided in Article 1 (commencing with Section 17000) of Chapter
1 of Division 9 of the Vehicle Code, for any injury caused in fighting fires.”
(Recommendation, supra, 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at p. 862.) The Commission’s
comment with respect to this section stated: “Section 850.4 provides for absolute
immunity from liability for injury caused in fighting fires (other than injuries resulting
from operation of motor vehicles) or from failure to properly maintain fire protection
equipment or facilities. There are adequate incentives to careful maintenance of fire
equipment without imposing tort liability; and firemen should not be deterred from any
action they may desire to take in combatting fires by a fear that liability might be
imposed if a jury believes such action to be unreasonable.” (Ibid., italics added.)
That the Commission in its comment again separates injuries “caused in fighting
fires” from those that result “from failure to properly maintain fire protection equipment
and facilities” supports our interpretation of the language of section 850.4 viewing these
two classes of injuries as distinct. Additionally, that the Commission did not suggest
limiting the immunity related to maintenance of fire protection equipment or facilities to
those instances where the failure to maintain equipment or facilities affects the
firefighters’ ability to fight fires means the plain language of the statute is not contrary to
stated legislative intent. Thus, while it may be possible to infer some contrary intent in
the recommendation of the Commission, its comment to section 850.4 supports an
12
interpretation of the plain language of the statute that is not limited to conditions of
firefighting facilities and equipment that affect the ability to fight fires.
Razeto v. City of Oakland (1979) 88 Cal.App.3d 349 (Razeto) came to the same
conclusion. There, the plaintiffs sued public entities after vandals allegedly turned on a
publicly-maintained fire hydrant causing a stream of water to be directed at the plaintiffs’
house resulting in damage to the house and its contents. (Id. at pp. 350-351.) Razeto
considered whether the trial court properly awarded summary judgment based on the
conclusion that section 850.4 applied to immunize the defendants for injuries caused by
firefighting equipment. (Razeto, at p. 351.) To that end, Razeto reviewed the legislative
history of section 850.4. It noted that prior to 1961, public entities could be held liable
for dangerous and defective property conditions, including “dangerous and defective fire
department property.” (Razeto, at pp. 351-352.) After sovereign immunity was generally
eliminated by Muskopf v. Corning Hospital Dist. (1961) 55 Cal.2d 211, at page 221, the
Commission was engaged to develop legislation to preserve necessary sovereign
immunity. (Razeto, at p. 352.)
Razeto noted that immunity for firefighting activities had not previously been
extended to include defective or dangerous fire equipment when the injury did not occur
during the fighting of a fire, and that it would seem to be inconsistent with the
recommendations and policy rationale set forth in the Recommendation “to find that
section 850.4 was designed to provide immunity for dangerous and defective fire
protection equipment which causes injury or property damage while not in use fighting
fires.” (Razeto, supra, 88 Cal.App.3d at pp. 351-352, italics added.) Nonetheless, Razeto
concluded, “[t]he [Commission’s] comment to [section] 850.4 states in clear terms that
immunity is to be provided for dangerous and defective fire protection equipment.” (Id.
at pp. 352-353.) “Hence, although there is an inferable contrary intent, the statute is clear
and unambiguous. It explicitly provides sovereign immunity for any injury resulting
13
from the ‘condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment.’ In the face of that clear
statutory language we are not at liberty to use a remotely inferable contrary legislative
intention to show that a different meaning should be given to the statute.” (Id. at p. 353.)
Therefore, Razeto held, section 850.4 acted to immunize the public entity defendants
from liability. (Razeto, at p. 353.)
Varshock v. Department of Forestry & Fire Protection (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th
635 and Potter v. City of Oceanside (1981) 114 Cal.App.3d 564 do not persuade us
otherwise. Varshock concerned whether section 850.4’s other ground for imposing
immunity—for “any injury caused in fighting fires”—barred recovery where firefighters
unsuccessfully used a fire truck to attempt to rescue persons from a home involved in a
wildfire. (Varshock, at pp. 642-643.) Potter involved a fire captain who was summoned
to the scene where the plaintiff had broken a natural gas line while operating a trenching
machine. When the plaintiff started the machine as directed by the fire captain, the
escaping gas exploded. The sole issue on appeal was whether section 850.4’s immunity
for “injuries caused by fighting fires” applied. The Court of Appeal ruled it did not, as
the negligence was the captain’s directions, not the resulting fire. (Potter, at pp. 565-
566.) Thus, both Varshock and Potter are inapposite to consideration of the scope of the
immunity for injuries “resulting from the condition of fire protection or firefighting
equipment or facilities” because neither interpreted that language.
We also disagree with plaintiff that our interpretation of the statute will lead to
absurd results. She offers several examples of potential sympathetic factual scenarios,
which are unavailing for two primary reasons. First, for many of the examples she
proffers, there is an adequate incentive for firefighters to maintain the facilities and
equipment to avoid the risk of potential injury. For example, if a group of visitors were
injured while at the base camp by slipping in a puddle, or if a fuel tank were left in an
unstable position and fell over, sparking an explosion, the firefighters would be at as
14
great a risk of injury as the visitors. Thus, the firefighters and public agencies are
adequately incentivized to exercise care to avoid the occurrence of those potential risks.
Second, her other proffered examples are generally remedied through other means. Most
firefighters injured on the job in California would be able to recover for injuries incurred
as a result of a “condition of fire protection or firefighting equipment or facilities”
pursuant to the California Workers’ Compensation and Insurance Act. (See § 814.2 [the
immunities of the Act do not override the Workers’ Compensation and Insurance Act].)
Thus, if as plaintiff conjectures, a firefighter were electrocuted by faulty wiring while
showering at the base camp or fire station or if a firefighter slipped on wet stairs at the
firehouse, she generally would have an adequate alternate remedy.6 Thus, we are not
persuaded an unconstrained construction of the term “condition” in the first prong of
section 850.4 leads to absurd results.
Moreover, while a broad construction of section 850.4 that provides immunity
regardless of whether the nature of the condition affects the ability to fight fires may
occasionally yield results that seem unjust, that unbridled construction is supported by the
plain language of the statute and is not contradicted by other evidence of legislative
intent. One must recall that immunity from tort liability does not deny that a tort
occurred, but absolves the favored defendant from the resulting liability to reflect a public
policy priority. (Whitcombe v. County of Yolo (1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 698, 705.) Here,
the Legislature intended to give fire protection agencies as much latitude as necessary to
fulfill their mission. (See Recommendation, supra, 4 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. at
pp. 827-829, 861-863.) If the Legislature believes the immunity sweeps too far, it has the
power to tighten its scope. We will not assume its role.
6 This is not true in this unusual case because plaintiff, as a federal employee, is not
covered by the California Workers’ Compensation and Insurance Act.
15
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to their costs on appeal. (Cal.
Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).) (CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION)
/s/
BUTZ, Acting P. J.
We concur:
/s/
DUARTE, J.
/s/
HOCH, J.
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