154 Cal.Rptr. 724
Docket No. 54347.Court of Appeal of California, Second District, Division Three.
April 26, 1979.
Appeal from Superior Court of Los Angeles County, No. C200861, Jerry Pacht, Judge.
Page 438
COUNSEL
Wright Thompson and Lawrence M. Adelman for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
David W. Cornwell for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
COBEY, Acting P.J.
Plaintiffs, Jimmy C. and Brenda L. Young, appeal from a judgment that they take nothing by their first amended complaint for negligence from defendant, City of Inglewood.[1] The appeal lies. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 581d, 904.1, subd. (a).)
(1) The sole issue on appeal is whether plaintiffs have stated a cause of action for negligence against the city. We believe that they have and will therefore reverse.
Page 439
FACTS
The pertinent facts alleged by plaintiffs in the challenged pleading may be summarized as follows: Plaintiffs owned a residence in the city, which they decided to remodel extensively. In February 1976, plaintiff, Brenda L. Young, filed with the city an application for a building permit for this work. At this time she informed the city that the contractor for the work was one Cox and she paid all the necessary fees to the city. Cox, in turn, hired an architect by the name of Craig to draw the plans and specifications to be used by Cox in remodeling plaintiffs’ house. Craig, without any authority whatsoever, then changed plaintiffs’ aforementioned application for a building permit by crossing out Cox’s name as the designated contractor and inserting instead the words “not selected.” Craig then signed the application, again without any authority therefor, as the authorized agent of the owners, the plaintiffs. Thereupon the city, through specified employees, issued a building permit for the remodeling, although, according to plaintiffs’ information and belief, such employees then knew that Cox, and not Craig, was going to do the remodeling and such employees then also knew or, with the exercise of reasonable care, should have known, that Cox was not then and never had been a licensed contractor. Cox, an experienced but unlicensed contractor, thereafter undertook the remodeling and abandoned the work uncompleted after several months of unworkmanlike and negligent effort to the great damage of plaintiffs.
DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs seek to hold the city liable, pursuant to Government Code section 815.6,[2] for its just-described alleged negligence in issuing its building permit for their remodeling. More specifically, plaintiffs contend that they have alleged in effect that the city did not exercise reasonable diligence in discharging an unspecified mandatory duty (actually imposed upon it by Bus. Prof. Code § 7031.5)[3] which is to issue building permits only when the work covered by the permit is to be done either by a state-licensed contractor or by one exempt from such licensing.
Page 440
The city replies that it is immune from such liability under the specific immunity accorded it with respect to the discretionary issuance of permits by Government Code section 818.4.[4]
Unfortunately for the city, the issues raised by the invocation of these two sections of the Governmental Tort Liability Act of 1963 were both resolved against it in Morris v. County of Marin (1977) 18 Cal.3d 901, 904-905, 906, fn. 2, 911, 917 [136 Cal.Rptr. 251, 559 P.2d 606], some two years ago when our Supreme Court dealt with the legal effect of a similar precondition for the issuance of a building permit by a city or a county. We refer to the requirement imposed upon such local entities by Labor Code section 3800 — namely, that the applicant for such a permit must first have on file or file a certificate attesting to the adequacy of the workers’ compensation insurance coverage of the work to be done under the permit. Our Supreme Court held that compliance with this requirement constituted a mandatory duty under section 815.6 and, being a mandatory duty, the specific immunity granted to public entities by section 818.4
did not extend to noncompliance with this duty since such immunity covered only discretionary activities of public entities.
Here we deal with a failure by the city to comply with another mandatory precondition for the issuance of a building permit. The result must be the same as in Morris.[5]
Page 441
DISPOSITION
The judgment under appeal and the order, sustaining, without leave to amend, the city’s general demurrer to plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, are both reversed for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.
Allport, J., and Potter, J., concurred.
Page 442