Punitive Damages May Be Awarded In Products Liability Actions

Punitive damages are authorized in California pursuant to Cal. Civ. Code § 3294.  In Products Liability claims, punitive damages may be awarded where a plaintiff can prove oppression, fraud or malice.  See Hasson v. Ford Motor Co., (1982) 32 Cal. 3d 388, 402. (“In order to justify an award of punitive damages on this basis, the plaintiff must establish that the defendant was aware of the probable dangerous consequences of his conduct, and that he wilfully and deliberately failed to avoid those consequences.”) In the context of punitive damages, California Courts have defined malice to include not only a malicious intention to injury the specific person harmed, but conduct evincing a conscious disregard of the probability that the actor’s conduct will result in injury to others. See Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co., (1981) 119 Cal. App. 3d 757, 808.

Thus, depending on the nature of the defect and injury resulting therefrom, certain facts and circumstances could support a claim for punitive damages in a device defect case.  If you or a loved one has been injured due to a defective device, contact one of our defective device attorneys today for a free consultation and case evaluation.

Two – Year Statute for Injury or Death Actions

Victims of personal injury or wrongful death actions must be aware of the time frame to which their claims may be brought.  Generally, there is a two-year statute of limitations to file suit for “assault, battery, or injury to, or for the death of, an individual caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another.  See Cal. Civ. Code § 335.1.  The time usually begins to when the injury is accrued whether the plaintiff is ignorant of the cause of action or the identity of the tortfeasor. See fox v. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. (2005) 35 Cal. 4th 797, 80-809.  However, the discover rule may act to postpone the accrual if under certain circumstances the plaintiff is delayed in discovering that he/she has been injured. Thus, knowledge of the injury is important.

If you or a loved one has been injured, contact one of our personal injury attorneys today for a free consultation and case evaluation.

 

HOA Disputes – When Plumbing and Pipes Constitute Common Area

Many of the HOA disputes we handle for our homeowner clients involve failing pipes and plumbing fixtures which result in damage to the homeowner’s unit.  Plumbing failures are an unfortunate part of owning a unit subject to an association.  Problems arise when the HOA Board decides that it will not cover damage to property resulting from water intrusion caused by a plumbing or pipe failure.

Typically, the CC&Rs will define “common area” and exclusive use common area” and an effective CC&Rs will be clear as to what plumbing fixtures will be the responsibility of the HOA.  Disputes arise when an HOA Board takes the position that a particular plumbing fixture constitutes “exclusive use common area” so as to pass the responsibility and expense to the homeowner.

At least one Court of Appeal case in California has addressed this issue and somewhat cleared up the question.  In Dover Village Assn. v. Jennison, (2010) 191 Cal. App. 4th 123, a failed plumbing fixture underneath a unit failed causing sewage to back up into the unit.  The HOA sought the repair cost from the homeowner citing to the fact that the particular plumbing fixture that failed was exclusive use common area because that section of piping somehow only served that unit.  After the trial judge ruled in favor of the homeowner, the HOA appealed.

On appeal, the Dover Village Court agreed with the trial court, affirmed the ruling and held that “interconnected sewer pipes cannot really be said to be the “fixtures” of any particular unit. A sewer system is a series of interconnected pipes which ultimately feed into one common line. Differentiating parts of that interconnected system is unreasonable. The portion of piping coming from one unit is no more affixed to that unit than it is to the sewer system and other pipes or piping within that system.” Id. at 129.

Thus, the argument that a pipe is somehow exclusively used by a particular unit will fail as a matter of law where that pipe is part of the piping system to be maintained by the HOA.  The Dover Village Court also rejected the HOA Board’s argument that it was somehow entitled to deference under the law to decide whether the owner is responsible or not.  That argument was rejected and the Court posited that the Davis-Stirling Act does not make the Board the ultimate judge of legal issues affecting the development.

If you are a homeowner subject to an HOA and have been financially damaged by your HOA or you find yourself in a dispute with your HOA, contact one of our HOA dispute attorneys today for a free consultation and case evaluation.

HOA Disputes – Discretion of the Board and the Legal Standard

Many HOA disputes originate from a board’s decision and how a decision may impact a particular homeowner.  The CC&Rs authorize Boards to make decisions that will benefit the association.  While an HOA cannot enforce a rule that is arbitrary or serves no benefit to the HOA, California Courts give a wide berth to an HOA Board’s authority to make a business decision and will often not disturb the decision as long as it benefits the HOA and is not arbitrary, discriminatory or otherwise illegal.

Items such as external unit décor, paint color, parking, architectural renovations and budgetary decisions (to name a few) will be within the Board’s sound discretion.  Homeowners who are on the adverse end of a particular Board decision, have every right and even a duty to scrutinize the decision, but homeowners should be mindful of the fact that Courts will allow Boards to make decisions whether they agree with the decision or not and without concern about how the decision affects the particular homeowner challenging the same.

This is not to say that a Board is free to make any decision it wants.  The Supreme Court in California articulated a formulation that courts can apply in deciding whether a particular Board decision is lawful and within its sound discretion.  The Supreme Court in Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn., (1999) 21 Cal. 4th 249 held as follows:

“The formulation we have articulated affords homeowners, community associations, courts and advocates a clear standard for judicial review of discretionary economic decisions by community association boards, mandating a degree of deference to the latter’s business judgments sufficient to discourage meritless litigation, yet at the same time without either eviscerating the long-established duty to guard against unreasonable risks to residents’ personal safety owed by associations that “function as a landlord in maintaining the common areas”…or modifying the enforceability of a common interest development’s CC & R’s.

Common sense suggests that judicial deference in such cases as this is appropriate, in view of the relative competence, over that of courts, possessed by owners and directors of common interest developments to make the detailed and peculiar economic decisions necessary in the maintenance of those developments. A deferential standard will, by minimizing the likelihood of unproductive litigation over their governing associations’ discretionary economic decisions, foster stability, certainty and predictability in the governance and management of common interest developments. Beneficial corollaries include enhancement of the incentives for essential voluntary owner participation in common interest development governance and conservation of scarce judicial resources. Id at 251-52.”

If you have a question regarding your HOA Board’s decision which impacts you or your property, contact one of our HOA Dispute Attorneys today for a free consultation and case evaluation.

HOA Disputes – Negligence Claims Are Proper Against HOAs

Often times, deferred maintenance or an HOA’s failure to exercise reasonable care in maintaining common areas cause damage to a homeowner’s individual unit.  When the HOA refuses to make repairs, a homeowner can bring a civil action to seek the cost of repair.  Typically, negligence claims are appropriate in such circumstances.

Under California law, an HOA is charged with the duty to exercise due care in the maintenance of common areas and those areas under its control.  See Frances T. v. Village Green Owners Assn., (1986) 42 Cal. 3d 490, 499.  The Supreme Court of California held in Village Green that “a condominium association may properly be held to a landlord’s standard of care as to the common areas under its control.” Id. at 500.  Thus, a homeowner could sue their HOA for its negligent failure to maintain the common area resulting in damage to the homeowners individual’s unit.

In White v. Cox, (1971) 17 Cal.App.3d 824, the Court held that a condominium owner could sue the unincorporated association for negligently maintaining a sprinkler in a common area of the complex. In so holding, the court recognized that the plaintiff, a member of the unincorporated association, had no “effective control over the operation of the common areas … for in fact he had no more control over operations than he would have had as a stockholder in a corporation which owned and operated the project.” Id. at 830.  Since the condominium association was a management body over which the individual owner had no effective control, the court held that the association could be sued for negligence by an individual member.

If you are a homeowner subject to an HOA and your property has been damaged as a result of some common area failures, contact one of our HOA dispute attorneys today for a free consultation and case evaluation.