Hacala v. Bird Rides, Inc. ( 2023 )


Menu:
  • Filed 4/10/23
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    SARA HACALA et al.,                   B316374
    Plaintiffs and Appellants,     Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                             20STCV28230
    BIRD RIDES, INC., et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of
    Los Angeles County, Mark H. Epstein, Judge. Reversed in part,
    affirmed in part.
    McGee Lerer & Associates, Rowena J. Dizon and Dean
    Ogrin for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
    Quarles & Brady, Stacy A. Alexejun, Ankineh Zadoorian
    and Evan Thomsen for Defendants and Respondents.
    _________________________
    “At the core of California tort law is a rule born of
    common law judgments and reaffirmed in statute: ‘Everyone
    is responsible, not only for the result of his or her willful acts,
    but also for an injury occasioned to another by his or her want
    of ordinary care or skill in the management of his or her property
    or person.’ ” (Brown v. USA Taekwondo (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 204
    ,
    224 (Brown) (conc. opn. of Cuéllar, J.), quoting Civ. Code, § 1714,
    subd. (a).)1 “This is the Legislature’s ‘conclusory expression[ ]’
    that, as ‘legal duties are not discoverable facts of nature,’
    generally speaking, ‘liability should be imposed for damage
    done.’ ” (Brown, at p. 224 (conc. opn. of Cuéllar, J.).) Thus, our
    high court has long recognized a general duty of ordinary care
    is to be presumed and, “in the absence of [a] statutory provision
    declaring an exception to the fundamental principle enunciated
    by section 1714 of the Civil Code, no such exception should be
    made unless clearly supported by public policy.” (Rowland v.
    Christian (1968) 
    69 Cal.2d 108
    , 112 (Rowland); Brown, at p. 218.)
    In 2017, Bird Rides, Inc. (Bird) launched its electric
    motorized scooter rental business in the City of Los Angeles
    (the City) by deploying hundreds of Bird scooters onto the City’s
    streets and sidewalks.2 Bird offers the scooters for rent through
    a smartphone “app” that enables Bird to control, unlock, and rent
    its scooters to customers who have downloaded the app from
    1     Statutory references are to the Civil Code, unless otherwise
    designated.
    2    We draw the facts from the allegations of the operative
    second amended complaint, which we assume to be true at the
    demurrer stage. (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at pp. 209–210;
    Southern California Gas Leak Cases (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 391
    , 395.)
    2
    Bird’s website. The app also allows Bird to monitor and locate
    its scooters around the City. This feature is crucial to Bird’s
    business, as the company markets and offers its scooters as a
    “dock-less” system that allows customers to pick up and leave
    scooters at any public location without the inconvenience of
    retrieving or returning the scooters to a designated docking
    location. Before Bird deployed its dock-less scooters, the City
    granted the company a permit, under which Bird agreed, among
    other things, to comply with standards prohibiting scooter
    parking within 25 feet of a street corner with a single pedestrian
    ramp, to have staff available 24 hours a day for emergency
    scooter removals, to remove improperly parked scooters within
    two hours between 7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. daily, and to educate
    its agents and customers to follow the City’s parking standards.
    On November 23, 2019, Sara Hacala and her daughter
    were walking on a City sidewalk just after twilight. The
    sidewalk was crowded with holiday shoppers and Hacala
    did not see the back wheel of a Bird scooter sticking out from
    behind a trash can. She tripped on the scooter, fell, and
    sustained serious physical injuries.
    Hacala, her husband, and her daughter sued Bird and
    the City for negligence and other related claims.3 The trial
    court sustained defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend,
    concluding neither Bird nor the City owed plaintiffs a duty
    of care. The court reasoned it was a “third-party user” who
    3     Hacala’s husband and daughter sued defendants for loss
    of consortium and negligent infliction of emotional distress,
    respectively. Hacala asserted a public nuisance claim against
    Bird based on the same allegations underlying her negligence
    claim against the company.
    3
    had negligently parked the scooter, and defendants had no
    “special relationship” with any party that required them to
    protect plaintiffs from the third party’s alleged misconduct.
    Plaintiffs appeal the judgment of dismissal.
    We conclude the judgment is correct as to the City, but
    the trial court erred when it dismissed the claims against Bird.
    Because plaintiffs’ claims against the City are premised on the
    public entity’s discretionary authority to enforce the permit, the
    City is immune from liability under the Government Claims Act
    (Gov. Code, § 810 et seq.). In contrast, regardless of the permit’s
    terms, Bird may be held liable for breaching its general duty
    under section 1714 to use “ordinary care or skill in the
    management of [its] property.” (§ 1714, subd. (a).)
    As we will explain, having deployed its dock-less scooters
    onto public streets, Bird’s general duty encompasses an
    obligation, among other things, to use ordinary care to locate and
    move a Bird scooter when the scooter poses an unreasonable risk
    of danger to others. Moreover, because it was foreseeable that
    someone could be injured if Bird breached this duty, and because
    Bird agreed to take measures to prevent such injuries when it
    obtained the permit from the City, we cannot find that public
    policy clearly supports an exception to the fundamental principle
    that a company like Bird is liable for injuries proximately caused
    by its want of ordinary care in the management of its property.
    (See Rowland, supra, 69 Cal.2d at pp. 111–112.) Finally, because
    Bird’s alleged conduct constitutes a public nuisance, and because
    that alleged conduct physically injured Hacala, we conclude
    Hacala is authorized to assert a private action for public nuisance
    against the company. We therefore reverse the judgment
    4
    dismissing the claims against Bird and affirm the judgment
    in all other respects.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The operative second amended complaint asserts five
    causes of action for (1) negligence against Bird; (2) public
    nuisance against Bird; (3) statutory negligence against the City;
    (4) loss of consortium against defendants by Hacala’s husband;
    and (5) negligent infliction of emotional distress against
    defendants by Hacala’s daughter.
    With respect to Bird, the complaint alleges the company
    “created tripping hazards when [it] deployed dock-less electric
    motorized scooters in the City of Los Angeles which [it] knew
    would likely be parked and/or placed on the sidewalk in a manner
    that obstructed the pedestrian right-of-way, unless [it] educated
    [its] users and [its] agents on the City of Los Angeles’ rules
    and guidelines on where to park the scooters.” Despite this
    foreseeable risk, the complaint alleges Bird negligently “failed to
    communicate with and inform and educate its users [and agents]
    to park scooters only in areas designated by the CITY”; “failed to
    locate and remove scooters that [were] parked in violation of the
    requirements set forth by the CITY in its Permit”; and “failed
    to install ‘always-on front and back lights that are visible from
    a distance of at least 300 feet’ on its scooters . . . as required by
    its Permit.” The complaint asserts this conduct was negligent
    and created a public nuisance.
    As for the City, the complaint asserts the City is vicariously
    liable under the Government Claims Act for its employees’
    alleged negligent failure to “monitor[ ] BIRD’s compliance with
    the Permit and [to] use[ ] the CITY’s powers to impose fees on
    BIRD.” The complaint alleges it was foreseeable that “scooters
    5
    would likely continue to be parked improperly and in an unsafe
    manner on the CITY’s public sidewalks” unless such actions were
    taken.
    At plaintiffs’ request, the trial court took judicial notice
    of the “2018 City of Los Angeles Dockless On Demand Personal
    Mobility Conditional Permit” (the Permit). The Permit allegedly
    governs Bird’s dock-less scooter operations in the City. Among
    other things, the Permit requires:
    •     Bird’s scooters must “not be parked within 15 [feet]
    of street corner pedestrian ramps (25 [feet] if there is
    only a single pedestrian ramp)”;
    •     Bird must “ensure their Vehicles are parked in the
    landscape/furniture zone of the sidewalk”;
    •     Bird must “ensure their Vehicles are not parked in
    a way that impedes the regular flow of travel in the
    public way”;
    •     Bird must “inform Customers on how to properly
    park a Vehicle”;
    •     Bird must “have smart technology equipment to
    identify that a vehicle is upright and properly
    parked, and GPS tracking”;
    •     Bird must “remedy inoperable or improperly parked
    vehicles within two hours” between “the hours of 7am
    and 10pm daily”;
    •     Bird must “remove electric scooters from the public
    right-of-way on a daily basis”;
    •     Bird must “have a staffed operations center in the
    City and a 24-hour contact person available for
    emergency removals”;
    6
    •      Bird’s scooters must “have always-on front and back
    lights that are visible from a distance of at least 300
    feet under normal atmospheric conditions at night,”
    which “must stay illuminated for at least 90 seconds
    after the Vehicle has stopped”;
    •     Bird must maintain “insurance against claims for
    injuries to persons or damages to property that may
    arise” from its operations; and
    •     Bird must indemnify the City for any violation of law
    by Bird “or its users, or any bodily injury including
    death or damage to property arising out of or
    in connection with any use, misuse, placement
    or misplacement . . . of [Bird’s] device, property or
    equipment by any person.”
    Defendants challenged the pleading by demurrer, arguing
    neither Bird nor the City had “a duty to protect Hacala from
    the conduct of third parties” absent a “special relationship”
    with the “unknown user or rider of the scooter” who apparently
    “abandoned” it in a hazardous location. They maintained the
    “mere utilization” or permitting “of a dock-less scooter system
    [was] not sufficient” to establish the requisite special relationship
    or an actionable charge of “misfeasance,” because Hacala had not
    alleged defendants “instructed or required the scooter . . . to be
    parked in [a] prohibited area.” Because the loss of consortium
    and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims were both
    premised on defendants’ alleged negligence, defendants argued
    the absence of a legal duty disposed of those claims as well.
    Additionally, the City separately urged it was immune from
    liability under the Government Claims Act.
    7
    As for the public nuisance claim, Bird argued its conduct
    could not constitute “a per se public nuisance” because it was
    “expressly permitted” by the City. Additionally, Bird argued
    Hacala lacked standing because she could not allege a “ ‘special
    injury’ ” distinct from that allegedly suffered by the general
    public.
    Plaintiffs opposed the demurrer, arguing it
    mischaracterized the basis for their negligence claims.
    Notwithstanding the absence of a special relationship, plaintiffs
    maintained defendants’ general duty of due care included the
    duty to refrain from exposing plaintiffs to an unreasonable risk
    of injury at the hands of third parties. They argued the Permit’s
    mandates established defendants knew Bird’s dock-less scooter
    operations created an unreasonable risk that third parties would
    abandon scooters in hazardous locations unless defendants
    took reasonable measures to ameliorate the foreseeable harm.
    And, because the Permit represented an “ ‘operational’ ”
    implementation of “ ‘basic policy decisions,’ ” plaintiffs argued
    the City’s duty to enforce it was “ ‘ministerial’ ” and not subject
    to the immunities afforded under the Government Claims Act.
    The trial court sustained defendants’ demurrer without
    leave to amend, concluding plaintiffs had alleged neither
    actionable “misfeasance” nor a “special relationship” giving rise
    to a duty to protect Hacala “against the conduct of third parties.”
    In the court’s view, plaintiffs could not allege defendants “created
    a peril or made [Hacala’s] situation worse,” because defendants
    “did not require that the scooter be placed in an area that would
    cause injuries.” Thus, the court reasoned plaintiffs’ claims
    necessarily sounded in “nonfeasance” and the general duty of
    care codified in section 1714 did not apply. Because the absence
    8
    of a legal duty was dispositive, the court sustained defendants’
    demurrer to the negligence, loss of consortium, and negligent
    infliction of emotional distress claims without reaching the City’s
    immunity defense. The court likewise sustained Bird’s demurrer
    to Hacala’s public nuisance claim, concluding Hacala could not
    allege she was exposed to a harm different from the harm
    allegedly suffered by the general public.
    The court entered judgment dismissing the entire action.
    Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    1.     Standard of Review
    We review a judgment of dismissal after an order
    sustaining a demurrer de novo, exercising our independent
    judgment about whether the complaint states a cause of action
    as a matter of law. (Los Altos El Granada Investors v. City of
    Capitola (2006) 
    139 Cal.App.4th 629
    , 650.) In reviewing the
    sufficiency of a complaint against a general demurrer, “we give
    the complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole
    and its parts in their context.” (Blank v. Kirwan (1985) 
    39 Cal.3d 311
    , 318 (Blank).) We “assume the truth of all facts properly
    pleaded by the plaintiffs, as well as those that are judicially
    noticeable.” (Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn. v. City of La Habra
    (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 809
    , 814.) “We may affirm on any basis stated
    in the demurrer, regardless of the ground on which the trial court
    based its ruling.” (Krolikowski v. San Diego City Employees’
    Retirement System (2018) 
    24 Cal.App.5th 537
    , 549; Carman v.
    Alvord (1982) 
    31 Cal.3d 318
    , 324.)
    When the trial court denies leave to amend, “we also must
    decide whether there is a reasonable possibility that the defect
    can be cured by amendment.” (Koszdin v. State Comp. Ins. Fund
    9
    (2010) 
    186 Cal.App.4th 480
    , 487.) “The plaintiff bears the
    burden of proving there is a reasonable possibility of amendment.
    [Citation.] . . . [¶] To satisfy that burden on appeal, a plaintiff
    ‘must show in what manner he can amend his complaint
    and how that amendment will change the legal effect of his
    pleading.’ ” (Rakestraw v. California Physicians’ Service
    (2000) 
    81 Cal.App.4th 39
    , 43.) The showing can be made for
    the first time on appeal. (City of Stockton v. Superior Court
    (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 730
    , 746.)
    2.     The City Is Immune from Liability for Its Employees’
    Discretionary Enforcement Decisions
    Under the Government Claims Act, the City, as a public
    entity, is not liable for injuries arising out of acts or omissions of
    its employees, except as provided by statute. (Gov. Code, § 815,
    subd. (a).) Likewise, the City is not liable for injuries resulting
    from its employee’s act or omission where the employee is
    immune from liability. (Id., subd. (b).) As relevant here, under
    Government Code section 821, a public employee is immune
    from liability “for an injury caused by . . . his failure to enforce
    an enactment.” (See also id., § 820.4 [“A public employee is not
    liable for his act or omission, exercising due care, in the execution
    or enforcement of any law.”].)
    Plaintiffs’ claims against the City are all premised
    on the allegation that the City, acting through its employees,
    “negligently and carelessly increased the risks to public safety
    because they did not monitor BIRD’s compliance with the CITY’s
    rules and parking standards set forth in the Permit that were
    designed to keep the public safe.” That alleged conduct plainly
    falls within the purview of the immunity afforded the City
    under the Government Claims Act. Under Government Code
    10
    section 821, these unidentified public employees are immune
    from liability for injuries resulting from the employees’ alleged
    failure to enforce the City’s rules and parking standards for
    dock-less scooters. It therefore follows that the City is likewise
    immune from liability for plaintiffs’ alleged injuries. (Gov. Code,
    § 815.2, subd. (b); see also id., § 818.2 [“A public entity is not
    liable for an injury caused by . . . failing to enforce any law.”];
    id., § 818.4 [“A public entity is not liable for an injury caused
    by. . . the failure or refusal to . . . deny, suspend or revoke,
    any permit . . . .”]; Sutton v. Golden Gate Bridge, Highway &
    Transportation Dist. (1998) 
    68 Cal.App.4th 1149
    , 1165 [public
    entity immune from claims based on alleged failure to enforce
    traffic laws]; Ellison v. San Buenaventura (1976) 
    60 Cal.App.3d 453
    , 459 [claims for damages resulting from issuance of permits
    are not actionable].)
    Plaintiffs contend the City is not immune under the
    Government Claims Act because “the duties [the City] was
    required to perform by its own regulations were ministerial or
    ‘street-level’ acts, requiring no discretion.” (See Nunn v. State
    of California (1984) 
    35 Cal.3d 616
    , 622 [“The immunity afforded
    by Government Code sections 818.2 and 821 attaches only to
    discretionary functions.”].) “A ministerial duty is one that is
    required to be performed in a prescribed manner under the
    mandate of legal authority without the exercise of discretion
    or judgment.” (County of San Diego v. State of California (2008)
    
    164 Cal.App.4th 580
    , 593.) Plaintiffs maintain their claims arise
    from the City’s alleged failure to perform ministerial functions
    because “the Permit prescribed the specific acts available to
    the City . . . to ensure Bird’s compliance with the Permit’s rules
    after the Permit was issued.”
    11
    The Permit’s express terms undermine plaintiffs’ position.
    “Whether an enactment creates a mandatory duty is a question
    of law” that we decide as a matter of “ ‘statutory interpretation.’ ”
    (Haggis v. City of Los Angeles (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 490
    , 499.)
    To establish a mandatory or ministerial duty, the enactment
    at issue must be “obligatory, rather than merely discretionary or
    permissive, in its directions to the public entity; it must require,
    rather than merely authorize or permit, that a particular
    action be taken or not taken.” (Id. at p. 498.) “It is not enough,
    moreover, that the public entity or officer have been under an
    obligation to perform a function if the function itself involves
    the exercise of discretion.” (Ibid.) In determining whether
    “ ‘a particular statute is intended to impose a mandatory duty,
    rather than a mere obligation to perform a discretionary
    function,’ ” the “enactment’s language ‘is, of course, a most
    important guide.’ ” (Id. at p. 499.)
    The Permit’s terms bear the distinct hallmarks of an
    enactment granting discretionary enforcement authority to
    a public entity. Under the Permit, “[t]he City reserves the right
    to amend, modify, or change the terms and conditions [of the
    dock-less scooter pilot program] at its discretion.” (Italics added.)
    “At the City’s discretion,” it is authorized to establish “additional
    operating zones,” including “on-street parking spaces.” “The
    City reserves the right to determine where Vehicle parking is
    prohibited or to create geo-fenced stations within certain areas
    where Vehicles shall be parked,” and “[t]he City reserves the
    right to determine certain block faces where dockless parking
    is prohibited.” (Italics added.)
    Critically, the Permit’s plain language directly contradicts
    plaintiffs’ contention that it “specif[ies] ministerial steps [for]
    12
    removing the scooters and imposing fees for such removals.” On
    the contrary, while the Permit mandates that “Operators shall
    remove electric scooters from the public right-of-way on a daily
    basis,” it stipulates that “[a]ny Vehicle that is parked in one
    location for more than 5 consecutive days without moving may
    be removed by the City’s Bureau of Sanitation and taken to a
    City facility for storage at the expense of the Operator.” (Italics
    added.) Consistent with this discretionary language, the Permit
    provides that “[i]f Vehicle parking standards are not met on a
    monthly basis, the City reserves the right to revoke the Program
    permit.” (Italics added.) Construing these terms “in a reasonable
    fashion and attributing to [them their] ordinary and proper
    meaning” (Posey v. State of California (1986) 
    180 Cal.App.3d 836
    ,
    850), we conclude the City had the discretion—but was not under
    a mandatory duty—to remove improperly parked scooters or to
    revoke Bird’s permit for noncompliance. (See Bonds v. California
    ex rel. Cal. Highway Patrol (1982) 
    138 Cal.App.3d 314
    , 322 [“A
    decision to remove or not to remove a stranded vehicle, without
    more, is thus a discretionary action and comes within the
    immunity described in Government Code section 820.2.”].)
    The judgment correctly dismissed the City from this action.
    3.     Plaintiffs Have Not Shown They Can Amend the
    Complaint to State a Claim for Dangerous Condition
    of Public Property Against the City
    Plaintiffs maintain they can cure their pleading against the
    City by asserting a new claim for injuries caused by a dangerous
    condition of public property under Government Code section 835.
    To state a claim against a public entity under the statute,
    a plaintiff must plead: “(1) a dangerous condition existed on
    the public property at the time of the injury; (2) the condition
    13
    proximately caused the injury; (3) the condition created a
    reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury sustained;
    and (4) the public entity had actual or constructive notice
    of the dangerous condition of the property in sufficient time
    to have taken measures to protect against it.” (Brenner v. City
    of El Cajon (2003) 
    113 Cal.App.4th 434
    , 439, citing Gov. Code,
    § 835.) Government Code section 830 defines a “[d]angerous
    condition” as “a condition of property that creates a substantial
    (as distinguished from a minor, trivial or insignificant) risk of
    injury when such property . . . is used with due care in a manner
    in which it is reasonably foreseeable that it will be used.”
    To plead a dangerous condition existed, a complaint’s
    allegations “must establish a physical deficiency in the property
    itself”—that is, the property must be “ ‘physically damaged,
    deteriorated, or defective in such a way as to foreseeably
    endanger those using the property itself,’ or possesses physical
    characteristics in its design, location, features or relationship to
    its surroundings that endanger users.” (Cerna v. City of Oakland
    (2008) 
    161 Cal.App.4th 1340
    , 1347–1348 (Cerna).) While a
    “public entity may be liable for a dangerous condition of public
    property even where the immediate cause of a plaintiff’s injury
    is a third party’s negligent or illegal act,” there must be “some
    physical characteristic of the property [that] exposes its users
    to increased danger from third party negligence or criminality.”
    (Id. at p. 1348.) “[I]t is insufficient to show only harmful third
    party conduct . . . . ‘ “[T]hird party conduct by itself, unrelated
    to the condition of the property, does not constitute a ‘dangerous
    condition’ for which a public entity may be held liable.” ’ ” (Ibid.)
    Plaintiffs argue the operative complaint’s allegations
    are sufficient to plead the dangerous condition element of their
    14
    proposed claim. They emphasize the City authorized the Bureau
    of Sanitation to remove improperly parked scooters because it
    allegedly “knew that scooters were being parked improperly . . .
    on public property,” and they contend the City’s alleged failure to
    exercise this authority under the Permit allowed the dangerous
    condition to persist and injure Hacala.
    The foregoing allegations are insufficient to plead
    a dangerous condition under the governing statutes. What
    plaintiffs describe is at most “only harmful third party conduct
    . . . ‘ “unrelated to the condition of the property.” ’ ” (Cerna,
    supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1348.) The allegations do not
    establish the existence of “some physical characteristic of the
    property [that] expose[d] [Hacala] to increased danger from
    third party negligence.” (Ibid., italics added; cf. Stanford v.
    City of Ontario (1972) 
    6 Cal.3d 870
    , 882–883 [evidence showing
    public entity had constructive notice of a “dangerous, unshored,
    unsloped excavation” on public property sufficient to establish
    liability under Gov. Code, § 835].)
    Plaintiffs contend they can satisfy the “physical defect
    requirement” by amending the complaint to allege the City
    “failed to place markings on its sidewalks” to alert the public
    to “where scooters should be parked.” Because members of the
    public allegedly “would not know where to park [Bird] scooters”
    unless they “were told where to park,” plaintiffs contend the
    City can be held liable for failing to take protective measures
    to prevent this foreseeable third-party conduct. We disagree.
    A public entity may be liable under Government Code
    section 835 for failing to take protective measures to safeguard
    the public from a dangerous condition of the property itself;
    however, when the danger at issue is third-party conduct,
    15
    liability attaches only if the alleged physical condition of the
    property “increased or intensified” the risk of misconduct. (Zelig
    v. County of Los Angeles (2002) 
    27 Cal.4th 1112
    , 1137 (Zelig).)
    Thus, “courts have consistently refused to characterize harmful
    conduct on the part of a third party as a dangerous condition in
    the absence of some concurrent contributing defect in the property
    itself.” (Moncur v. City of Los Angeles (1977) 
    68 Cal.App.3d 118
    ,
    123 (Moncur), italics added.) In other words, “ ‘liability can
    arise only when third party conduct is coupled with a defective
    condition of property,’ ” such that the risk of injury was
    “increased or intensified by the condition of the property.” (Zelig,
    at p. 1137; Peterson v. San Francisco Community College Dist.
    (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 799
    , 813 (Peterson) [public “can reasonably
    expect that the premises will be free from physical defects and
    that [public] school authorities will also exercise reasonable
    care to keep the campus free from conditions which increase
    the risk of crime”]; Gray v. America West Airlines, Inc. (1989)
    
    209 Cal.App.3d 76
    , 86 [“foreseeable third party conduct combined
    with some particular feature of the public property may create
    a dangerous condition of public property”].)
    Moncur is instructive. One of the plaintiffs in Moncur
    was severely injured when a bomb that had been placed in
    a coin-operated locker exploded in a Los Angeles International
    Airport terminal. (Moncur, supra, 68 Cal.App.3d at p. 121.)
    The plaintiff sought to hold the City liable under Government
    Code section 835 on the theory that the locker’s location outside
    the security perimeter constituted a dangerous condition that
    increased the risk a terrorist would hide a bomb and foreseeably
    harm the public. (Moncur, at pp. 121–122, 124.) The Moncur
    court rejected the contention, observing “the airport building was
    16
    not itself a dangerous or defective piece of public property.”
    (Id. at p. 124.) “The danger was created by the act of [a terrorist]
    placing the bomb on the property,” and the locker’s location
    did nothing to increase the “dogged but irrational determination
    of the perpetrators” of terrorism. (Ibid.; see also Zelig, 
    supra,
    27 Cal.4th at p. 1137 [physical condition of courthouse did
    not increase or intensify risk that plaintiff would be assaulted;
    regardless of protective alterations that could have been made,
    “the risk of injury to [victim] at the hands of her ex-husband
    was at least as great outside the courthouse”].)
    Like the locker and airport terminal in Moncur, the City’s
    sidewalks are not defective or dangerous pieces of public property
    simply because third parties may improperly use them in a way
    that could cause harm to others. As the operative complaint’s
    allegations admit, the dangerous condition at issue is not a
    physical defect of the property, but the public’s alleged lack of
    knowledge about “where to park [Bird] scooters.” The absence of
    sidewalk markings designating scooter parking zones did nothing
    to increase or contribute to the risk of harm posed by this alleged
    lack of knowledge, which, like the threat of terrorism at issue
    in Moncur, allegedly existed regardless of any physical condition
    of the public property. (See Moncur, supra, 68 Cal.App.3d at
    pp. 123–124.) Absent a physical condition that “increased or
    intensified” the risk of harm from third-party misconduct, the
    City cannot be held liable under Government Code section 835
    for failing to make protective alterations to the property. (Zelig,
    
    supra,
     27 Cal.4th at p. 1137; cf. Ducey v. Argo Sales Co. (1979) 
    25 Cal.3d 707
    , 711–713 [where physical location and characteristics
    of “four-lane limited-access highway” led to “ ‘unusually high’ ”
    rate of cross-median accidents, state could be held liable for
    17
    failing to install median barrier]; Peterson, supra, 36 Cal.3d at
    pp. 812, 815 [complaint sufficiently alleged dangerous condition
    where “thick and untrimmed foliage and trees around the
    parking lot and stairway permitted the assailant to perpetrate
    his crime”]; but see Swaner v. City of Santa Monica (1984) 
    150 Cal.App.3d 789
    , 808 [holding public entity could be liable for
    failing to erect a barrier between highway and beach to protect
    beachgoers from foreseeable third-party misconduct]; Rodriguez
    v. Inglewood Unified School Dist. (1986) 
    186 Cal.App.3d 707
    ,
    719–720 [recognizing Swaner is limited to “its unique facts”
    and rejecting public entity liability where proposed protective
    measures did not address “the physical condition of the property,”
    but rather “ ‘the condition of persons on that property’ ”].)
    4.     Bird Owed Plaintiffs the General Duty to Use
    Ordinary Care in the Management of Its Property
    “To establish a cause of action for negligence, the plaintiff
    must show that the ‘defendant had a duty to use due care, that
    he breached that duty, and that the breach was the proximate or
    legal cause of the resulting injury.’ ” (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th
    at p. 213.) In reviewing the dismissal of plaintiffs’ negligence
    claims against Bird, the primary question for our determination
    is whether Bird owed a duty to Hacala arising out of (1) the
    company’s deployment of Bird scooters onto public streets
    and sidewalks and (2) Bird’s entrustment of its scooters to
    individuals who rented the scooters through the Bird app.4
    4     We use the term “negligence claims” to refer collectively
    to Hacala’s negligence claim, her husband’s loss of consortium
    claim, and her daughter’s negligent infliction of emotional
    distress claim against Bird, all of which are premised on the
    injury Hacala suffered due to Bird’s alleged breach of a legal duty
    18
    The determination of whether a legal duty exists is primarily a
    question of law. (Weirum v. RKO General, Inc. (1975) 
    15 Cal.3d 40
    , 46 (Weirum).)
    As codified in section 1714, the general rule governing duty
    in California is that “[e]veryone is responsible . . . for an injury
    occasioned to another by his or her want of ordinary care or
    skill in the management of his or her property or person.” (Id.,
    subd. (a); Cabral v. Ralphs Grocery Co. (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 764
    , 771
    (Cabral); Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at pp. 213–214.) Section 1714
    “establishes the default rule that each person has a duty ‘to
    exercise, in his or her activities, reasonable care for the safety
    of others.’ ” (Brown, at p. 214, italics added, quoting Cabral, at
    p. 768.) “While the question whether one owes a duty to another
    must be decided on a case-by-case basis, every case is governed
    by the rule of general application that all persons are required
    to use ordinary care to prevent others from being injured as
    the result of their conduct.” (Weirum, supra, 15 Cal.3d at p. 46,
    italics added, fn. omitted.) As our Supreme Court has repeatedly
    emphasized, “in the absence of a statutory provision establishing
    an exception to the general rule of Civil Code section 1714,
    courts should create one only where ‘clearly supported by public
    of care. (See LeFiell Manufacturing Co. v. Superior Court (2012)
    
    55 Cal.4th 275
    , 285 [“ ‘A cause of action for loss of consortium is,
    by its nature, dependent on the existence of a cause of action for
    tortious injury to a spouse.’ ”]; Burgess v. Superior Court (1992)
    
    2 Cal.4th 1064
    , 1073 [“bystander liability is premised upon a
    defendant’s violation of a duty not to negligently cause emotional
    distress to people who observe conduct which causes harm to
    another”].)
    19
    policy.’ ”5 (Cabral, at p. 771, citing Rowland, supra, 69 Cal.2d
    at p. 112.)
    Notwithstanding the foregoing, Bird contends this rule
    of general application does not apply to plaintiffs’ negligence
    claims because, in Bird’s telling, Hacala did not suffer her alleged
    injuries as a result of the company’s conduct. Instead, Bird
    maintains Hacala’s injuries were caused by the conduct of an
    unidentified third party who, without any urging from Bird, left a
    Bird scooter behind a trash can in violation of the City’s parking
    standards. Framed in this way, Bird argues plaintiffs’ claims are
    governed by a different set of rules that applies when a defendant
    “did not contribute to the risk that the plaintiff would suffer the
    harm alleged.” (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 214.) When those
    conditions obtain, our law recognizes “[a] defendant cannot be
    held liable in negligence for harms it did not cause unless there
    are special circumstances—such as a special relationship to
    the parties—that give the defendant a special obligation to offer
    protection or assistance.” (Id. at p. 220.) Because Bird had no
    control over the third party who left Bird’s scooter in a hazardous
    location, and thus no special relationship with that individual,
    Bird argues it cannot be charged with a duty to protect Hacala
    from that third party’s conduct. (See Regents of University of
    California v. Superior Court (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 607
    , 621 (Regents)
    [special relationship exists where one party is dependent and
    “the other has superior control over the means of protection”].)
    Bird’s characterization of plaintiffs’ negligence claims is not
    consistent with a fair and reasonable reading of the complaint’s
    5     We discuss the Rowland public policy considerations in the
    next section of this opinion.
    20
    allegations. (See Blank, supra, 39 Cal.3d at p. 318.) While the
    complaint admits that third-party conduct played an essential
    role in the set of circumstances that resulted in plaintiffs’
    injuries, the complaint plainly does not concede, as Bird’s
    argument necessarily implies, that third-party conduct was
    the sole cause of the alleged harm. (Cf. Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th
    at p. 214 [General duty under § 1714 applies to all cases, except
    when the defendant “did not contribute to the risk that the
    plaintiff would suffer the harm alleged.” (Italics added.)].) On
    the contrary, a fair reading of the complaint confirms it alleges
    sufficient facts that, if proven, would support a finding that
    Bird’s conduct—specifically, Bird’s “management of [its]
    property” (§ 1714, subd. (a))—contributed to the risk of harm
    that resulted in plaintiffs’ injuries. (See Brown, at p. 215, fn. 7
    [“Regardless of whether there is a basis for recognizing an
    affirmative duty, the no-duty-to-protect rule will not relieve
    the defendant of an otherwise applicable duty to exercise
    reasonable care when, by its own conduct, the defendant has
    increased the risk of harm to the plaintiff.”].)
    The complaint alleges Bird “controlled, operated,
    unlocked, and rented each electric motorized scooter through a
    downloadable app” that allowed Bird “to monitor and locate [its]
    scooters and to determine if [its] scooters [were] properly parked
    and out of the pedestrian right-of-way.” Notwithstanding these
    capabilities, Bird allegedly “failed to locate and remove scooters
    that [were] parked in violation of the requirements set forth [in
    the] Permit, [including] those parked within 25 feet of a single
    pedestrian ramp,” like the scooter that injured Hacala. The
    complaint alleges Bird knew that without proper instruction its
    customers and agents were likely to leave scooters on sidewalks
    21
    in a manner that posed a tripping hazard to pedestrians. Despite
    this knowledge and Bird’s ability to restrict access to its scooters
    through the Bird app, Bird entrusted its scooters to these
    individuals, but allegedly “failed to communicate with . . . and
    educate [them] to park scooters only in areas designated by the
    CITY.” Finally, the complaint alleges Bird “knew that unless
    [its] scooter[s] had ‘always-on front and back lights’ . . . the
    scooter[s] would not be visible to pedestrians at night.” But
    again, despite this knowledge, Bird allegedly “failed to install
    ‘always-on front and back lights that are visible from a distance
    of at least 300 feet’ on its scooters . . . as required by its Permit.”6
    6      “When a demurrer is sustained, we determine whether the
    complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,”
    and “give the complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it
    as a whole and its parts in their context.” (Blank, supra, 39
    Cal.3d at p. 318, italics added.) Notwithstanding these “long-
    settled rules” (ibid.), our dissenting colleague focuses instead
    on “plaintiffs’ briefs” to conclude the demurrer was properly
    sustained, without addressing the factual allegations of the
    complaint that we have quoted above. (Dis. opn. post, at pp. 1–3.)
    While we acknowledge plaintiffs’ appellate briefs will win no
    awards for clarity, we are obliged to point out that the opening
    brief succinctly articulates plaintiffs’ principal claim of error:
    “Civil Code section 1714[,] [subdivision] (a) plainly imposes a
    duty of care on every person in the management of their property.
    Bird’s failure to remove the subject scooter from where it was
    illegally parked next to the trash can is a breach of that duty.
    The factual questions posed by the trial court as to how long the
    scooter had been parked there and whether Bird had sufficient
    time to remove it, are beyond the court’s proper scope in ruling
    [on] the demurrer.” (Footnote omitted.) In any event, consistent
    with long-settled rules governing our review when a demurrer
    is sustained, we have focused on the complaint’s allegations
    22
    Because the foregoing allegations ground plaintiffs’
    negligence claims upon Bird’s conduct (and not solely the conduct
    of a third party), this is not a case that requires a special
    relationship to find Bird had a duty to prevent injuries allegedly
    occasioned by Bird’s “want of ordinary care or skill in the
    management of [its] property”—namely, the Bird scooter that
    injured Hacala. (§ 1714, subd. (a); see Weirum, supra, 15 Cal.3d
    at p. 48 [rule that “absent a special relationship, an actor is
    under no duty to control the conduct of third parties . . . has no
    application if the plaintiff’s complaint, as here, is grounded upon
    an affirmative act of defendant which created an undue risk
    of harm”]; Kesner v. Superior Court (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 1132
    ,
    1163 (Kesner) [“Although we have held that the existence of a
    relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant is one basis
    for finding liability premised on the conduct of a third party
    [citations], we have never held that such a relationship is a
    prerequisite to finding that a defendant had a duty to prevent
    injuries due to its own conduct or possessory control.” (Italics
    added.)].)
    We emphasize that our holding today is limited to a legal
    determination that Bird owed plaintiffs the general duty codified
    in section 1714 to use ordinary care in the management of
    its property. While the complaint necessarily makes factual
    allegations about what specific conduct by Bird allegedly
    breached that duty, our legal determination that Bird owed a
    duty to plaintiffs under section 1714 must be made “on a more
    general basis suitable to the formulation of a legal rule.” (Cabral,
    and have no trouble “discern[ing] a cause of action” from them,
    as discussed above. (Dis. opn. post, at p. 1.)
    23
    supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 773.) We consider plaintiffs’ breach
    allegations only to determine whether Bird’s general duty
    broadly encompasses the category of negligent conduct alleged,
    but we leave for the trier of fact to determine, based on the
    evidence, whether any specific conduct constitutes a breach
    of Bird’s duty to exercise ordinary care in the management of
    its property and whether that breach caused plaintiffs’ alleged
    injuries. (Id. at pp. 769, 774.)
    Cabral is instructive. In that case, a truck driver working
    for Ralphs Grocery Company (Ralphs) stopped his tractor-trailer
    rig alongside an interstate highway to have a snack. (Cabral,
    supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 768.) The plaintiff’s husband, driving his
    pickup truck home from work, veered suddenly off the freeway
    and collided at high speed with the rear of the stopped trailer,
    resulting in his death. A jury found both the decedent and the
    truck driver negligent, awarding damages to the plaintiff based
    on the trucker’s comparative fault, but the Court of Appeal
    reversed the judgment, holding Ralphs owed no legal duty to
    avoid a collision between a negligent driver and the company’s
    stopped truck. (Ibid.) Our Supreme Court disagreed, concluding
    the general duty to exercise reasonable care for the safety of
    others under section 1714 applied to “the operation of a motor
    vehicle” and thus broadly encompassed the truck driver’s conduct
    “in choosing whether, where and how to stop on the side of the
    road.” (Cabral, at pp. 768, 774) In reaching that conclusion,
    the court clarified that the “legal decision” that a defendant
    owes a plaintiff a legal duty “is to be made on a more general
    basis suitable to the formulation of a legal rule,” in contrast to
    “the fact-specific question of whether or not the defendant acted
    24
    reasonably under the circumstances,” which is reserved for
    the trier of fact. (Id. at p. 773.) Our high court explained:
    “On the duty question that is presented here,
    the factual details of the accident are not of
    central importance. That [the truck driver]
    parked 16 feet from the outermost traffic lane,
    rather than six feet or 26 feet; that parking
    for emergencies was permitted in the dirt area
    he chose; that [the decedent] likely left the
    highway because he fell asleep or because of
    some unknown adverse health event, rather
    than from distraction or even intoxication—
    none of these are critical to whether [the truck
    driver] owed [the decedent] a duty of ordinary
    care. These facts may have been important
    to the jury’s determinations of negligence,
    causation and comparative fault, but on duty
    California law looks to the entire ‘category of
    negligent conduct,’ not to particular parties
    in a narrowly defined set of circumstances.
    [Citations.] To base a duty ruling on the
    detailed facts of a case risks usurping the jury’s
    proper function of deciding what reasonable
    prudence dictates under those particular
    circumstances.”7 (Id. at p. 774.)
    7      Coffee v. McDonnell-Douglas Corporation (1972) 
    8 Cal.3d 551
     (Coffee) (see dis. opn. post, at pp. 4–5) similarly recognizes,
    “ ‘ “[D]uty” is a question of whether the defendant is under
    any obligation for the benefit of the particular plaintiff; and
    in negligence cases, the duty is always the same, to conform
    25
    For our present purposes, it does not matter whether
    the Bird scooter that injured Hacala had been sitting behind a
    trash can for only a few seconds or several days, because all we
    recognize at this juncture is that the default duty of care under
    section 1714 broadly encompasses Bird’s obligation to remove
    or relocate its property when a Bird scooter is in a location where
    it poses a risk of harm to others.8 To hold otherwise would be
    to the legal standard of reasonable conduct in the light of the
    apparent risk. What the defendant must do, or must not do,
    is a question of the standard of conduct required to satisfy the
    duty.’ ” (Coffee, at p. 559, fn. 8, italics added.) In other words,
    while a defendant’s duty is always the same, what standard of
    conduct is required to satisfy that duty—i.e., “what reasonable
    prudence dictates under those particular circumstances”—is
    a separate question to be determined by the jury in assessing
    whether the defendant has breached the generally applicable
    duty. (Cabral, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 774.)
    8       We emphasize again that plaintiffs’ negligence claims
    are grounded on Bird’s conduct in managing its property. Thus,
    it is of no consequence that the scooter may have been left in
    a hazardous location by a Bird agent, customer, or some other
    third party acting negligently. As our Supreme Court recently
    reaffirmed, “ ‘[i]f the third party’s misconduct is among the
    risks making the defendant’s conduct negligent, then ordinarily
    plaintiff’s harm will be within the defendant’s scope of liability’ ”
    under section 1714. (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 219, fn. 8;
    accord, Kesner, 
    supra,
     1 Cal.5th at p. 1149.) The risk that
    third parties would negligently leave Bird scooters in hazardous
    locations is plainly among the perils that would make it negligent
    for Bird to deploy its dock-less scooters on public streets without
    exercising reasonable care to locate and retrieve abandoned
    scooters when they pose a danger to the public.
    26
    tantamount to declaring Bird bears no legal responsibility to
    retrieve or remove its property, even under the most egregious
    set of conceivable circumstances, such as when a scooter lies
    abandoned for long stretches on a public sidewalk in an especially
    dangerous and conspicuous location. (See, e.g., Cabral, 
    supra,
    51 Cal.4th at p. 768.)9 The critical point is that “[t]he duty
    of reasonable care is the same under all [conceivable]
    circumstances; what varies with the specific facts of the case is
    whether the defendant has breached that duty.” (Id. at p. 784;
    accord, Coffee, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 559, fn. 8.) That question “is
    generally one to be decided by the jury, not the court.” (Cabral,
    at p. 768.) Thus, having determined the duty of ordinary care
    applies, we leave factual issues—such as how long the particular
    Bird scooter sat behind a trash can before Hacala tripped over it,
    whether Bird exercised ordinary care to identify and remove the
    scooter within that period of time, and the comparative fault of
    9      The Cabral court similarly observed that were it “to
    recognize the categorical exemption from the duty of ordinary
    care Ralphs seeks, no liability could be imposed even when a
    driver unjustifiably stops his or her vehicle alongside the freeway
    in particularly dangerous circumstances.” (Cabral, 
    supra,
    51 Cal.4th at p. 768.) Revisiting that observation later in its
    opinion, our high court asked, “under what circumstances [would
    Ralphs] have us recognize a duty of ordinary care in stopping
    alongside a freeway, if not in these.” (Id. at p. 784.) We might
    similarly ask, if Bird has no duty to retrieve a Bird scooter that
    lies abandoned in a dangerous location, then who does? The
    answer should be obvious. The unresolved questions, which
    can only be answered by the evidence developed in this case,
    are whether Bird exercised ordinary care to retrieve its scooter
    before Hacala tripped over it and, if not, whether doing so would
    have made any difference. (See ibid.)
    27
    the actors involved—for the trier of fact’s determination to be
    resolved in light of the specific circumstances proven by the
    evidence. (See id. at p. 769 [“The general duty of ordinary care
    being applicable, it was for the jury to determine whether the
    [defendant] breached that duty, whether [the plaintiff or a third
    party] was also negligent, whose negligence caused the [injury],
    and how to allocate comparative fault between the parties.”].)
    Similarly, at this point we recognize only that Bird’s
    general duty of care under section 1714 encompasses an
    obligation not to entrust its scooters to individuals who Bird
    knows or should know are likely to leave scooters in hazardous
    locations where they will pose an unreasonable risk of harm
    to others. (See Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Abdullah
    (1979) 
    94 Cal.App.3d 81
    , 90–92 [general duty under § 1714
    encompasses obligation to exercise ordinary care in entrusting
    one’s vehicle to another]; Ghezavat v. Harris (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 555
    , 559 [negligent entrustment liability “ ‘ “does
    not arise out of the relationship of the parties, but from the act of
    entrustment of the motor vehicle, with permission to operate the
    same, to one whose incompetency, inexperience, or recklessness
    is known or should have been known by the owner” ’ ”]; accord,
    Rest.2d Torts, § 308.) We make no judgment at this stage about
    whether Bird in fact had reason to know a particular individual
    was likely to abandon the subject scooter in a dangerous location,
    whether Bird exercised ordinary care (e.g., through instructions,
    notices, warnings, or some other means on its app or otherwise)
    to ensure the individual was competent to park the scooter in
    a safe location, or whether a failure to exercise such care was
    in fact a substantial factor in causing plaintiffs’ alleged injuries.
    Issues of this sort, as distinct from the general legal question
    28
    of whether a duty exists, are for the trier of fact to determine
    based on the evidence developed in this case. (See Cabral, 
    supra,
    51 Cal.4th at pp. 769, 773–774.)
    The same is true of our conclusion that Bird’s general
    duty under section 1714 encompasses an obligation to ensure
    its scooters are sufficiently conspicuous so as not to become
    unreasonable tripping hazards to pedestrians on public
    sidewalks. What constitutes ordinary care under the
    circumstances (e.g., employing always-on lights, reflectors,
    bright colors, etc.) and whether Bird’s alleged failure to exercise
    such care was a substantial factor in causing plaintiffs’ injuries
    are, again, factual questions that are reserved for the trier of
    fact’s determination based on the evidence.10
    10    Addressing plaintiffs’ specific allegation that the subject
    scooter did not have always-on lights as required under the
    Permit, Bird suggests this “would not have made a difference in
    the subject incident because Hacala alleges that she ‘never saw
    the scooter before tripping over it.’ ” We of course understand
    plaintiffs’ allegation to be that the absence of always-on lights
    at night was the reason Hacala “ ‘never saw the scooter before
    tripping over it.’ ” Setting that aside, whether Bird indeed
    needed to install always-on lights to exercise due care in the
    management of its property and whether Bird’s failure to do so
    “made a difference” (i.e., was a substantial factor in causing
    plaintiffs’ injury) are factual questions distinct from our legal
    determination that Bird owed a duty under section 1714 to
    ensure its scooters were sufficiently conspicuous so as not
    to become unreasonable tripping hazards for pedestrians
    on the sidewalks where Bird deployed its scooters.
    We emphasize plaintiffs do not pursue, and we do not
    endorse, a negligence per se claim here—this is not a case
    where the Permit supplies the necessary standard of care or
    where a violation of the Permit constitutes per se negligence.
    29
    Bird contends it owed no duty to plaintiffs under the
    circumstances of this case because, in its telling, all that has
    been alleged is “nonfeasance” related to its failure to take action
    to remedy or prevent the bad acts of the unidentified third party
    who left Bird’s scooter behind a trash can. Drawing on the
    distinction between misfeasance—where the defendant has
    affirmatively created a peril—and nonfeasance—where the
    defendant has merely failed to act to protect or rescue the
    plaintiff from a preexisting peril—Bird contends a defendant can
    be charged with misfeasance related to third-party misconduct
    only when “ ‘the third-party conduct “was a necessary component
    of the defendant’s conduct at issue.” ’ ” While we have already
    discussed how Bird’s related argument about the absence of
    a special relationship ignores allegations that Bird’s conduct
    contributed to the risk of harm, there are other problems
    with this misfeasance/nonfeasance contention that warrant
    consideration.
    To begin, our Supreme Court in Brown recently expressed
    disapproval of arguments employing this distinction, explaining,
    “Although our precedents have sometimes referred to the
    distinction between ‘misfeasance’ and ‘nonfeasance,’ we now
    understand this terminology to be imprecise and prone to
    misinterpretation.” (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 215, fn. 6; see
    also id. at p. 227, fn. 3 (conc. opn. of Cuéllar, J.) [“our reference
    today to the confused and confusing ‘misfeasance’/‘nonfeasance’
    (Cf. dis. opn. post, at p. 7, fn. 4.) Rather, the trier of fact must
    determine “what reasonable prudence dictates under [the]
    particular circumstances” and whether Bird’s conduct satisfied
    or breached that standard of care. (Cabral, supra, 51 Cal.4th
    at p. 783; see also id. at pp. 769, 773–774.)
    30
    distinction is just an acknowledgement of a now outmoded
    oddity”].) As our high court clarified, “ ‘[t]he proper question
    is not whether an actor’s failure to exercise reasonable care
    entails the commission or omission of a specific act.’ [Citation.]
    Rather, it is ‘whether the actor’s entire conduct created a risk
    of harm.’ ” (Id. at p. 215, fn. 6, quoting Rest.3d Torts, Liability
    for Physical and Emotional Harm (2012) § 37, com. c, p. 3.)
    Thus, for example, “a failure to employ an automobile’s brakes
    or a failure to warn about a latent danger in one’s product is not
    a case of nonfeasance . . . , because in these cases the entirety of
    the actor’s conduct (driving an automobile or selling a product)
    created a risk of harm.” (Rest.3d Torts, supra, § 37, com. c, p. 3.)
    Similarly, here, Bird’s entire conduct (deploying dock-less
    scooters onto public streets) created the risk that those scooters
    could become hazards for pedestrians and others unless Bird
    took affirmative measures to prevent this harm.
    Extending this logic to circumstances involving third-party
    conduct, our high court further clarified, “ ‘If the third party’s
    misconduct is among the risks making the defendant’s conduct
    negligent, then ordinarily plaintiff’s harm will be within the
    defendant’s scope of liability.’ ” (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at
    p. 219, fn. 8; see also Kesner, 
    supra,
     1 Cal.5th at p. 1149 [“Where
    there is a logical causal connection between the defendant’s
    negligent conduct and the intervening negligence of a third
    party . . . , . . . we have found both a duty and liability.”].) As
    we have already noted (see fn. 7, ante), the risk that third parties
    would negligently leave Bird scooters in hazardous locations is
    plainly among the perils that would make it negligent for Bird
    to deploy its dock-less scooters onto public streets without having
    reasonable measures in place to ensure its customers and agents
    31
    park them safely or to retrieve abandoned scooters when they
    pose a danger to the public. (See, e.g., Palma v. U.S. Industrial
    Fasteners, Inc. (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 171
    , 183–184 [defendant’s
    “duty . . . to use due care in the maintenance or operation of
    that automobile” encompassed decision to leave large commercial
    truck unguarded and unlocked overnight in high crime industrial
    area thus increasing risk it could be harmfully misused by a
    third party]; see Brown, at p. 219, fn. 8 [explaining “the focus
    of the duty inquiry in [Palma and similar cases] is not on the
    defendant’s duty to protect the victim from the conduct of a
    third party, but instead on the defendant’s general duty under
    section 1714 to exercise due care in his or her own conduct”].)
    Notwithstanding our Supreme Court’s clarifying
    observations in Brown, Bird relies upon a recent decision from
    our colleagues in Division One to argue it can be charged with
    actionable “misfeasance” only if “a third party ‘parking the
    scooter next to the trash can, in a prohibited area’ is a necessary
    component” of Bird’s conduct. (See Jane Doe No. 1 v. Uber
    Technologies, Inc. (2022) 
    79 Cal.App.5th 410
    , 427 (Uber).)
    The argument is unpersuasive.
    In Uber, the plaintiffs alleged they were abducted and
    sexually assaulted by assailants who lured the plaintiffs into
    their vehicles by obtaining decals from the Uber ridesharing
    provider’s website and affixing the decals to their vehicles
    so as to appear to be authorized Uber drivers. (Uber, supra, 79
    Cal.App.5th at pp. 416–417.) In an attempt to show “misfeasance
    by the Uber entities to establish a duty to protect,” the plaintiffs
    argued Uber’s “safety-focused marketing and concealment of
    sexual assaults,” coupled with its “deficient matching system”
    and easily obtainable “Uber decals,” created the risk of the
    32
    assailants posing as authorized drivers. (Id. at p. 426.) The
    appellate court held that although it was foreseeable criminals
    might use the existence of a ridesharing business model
    to attack potential victims, the alleged scheme was “ ‘not
    “a necessary component” of’ the Uber business model” such
    that Uber could be charged with “ ‘stimulat[ing] the criminal
    conduct’ ” that ultimately harmed the plaintiffs. (Id. at p. 427.)11
    There are substantive distinctions between this case and
    Uber that compel a different result. The most obvious is, here,
    plaintiffs were allegedly harmed by Bird’s failure to exercise due
    care in the management of its property—a risk of harm created
    11      The Uber court cited Sakiyama v. AMF Bowling Centers,
    Inc. (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 398
     as authority for the rule that
    a third party’s “crime must be a ‘necessary component’ of the
    [defendant’s] actions in order for the [defendant] to be held liable,
    absent a special relationship between the parties.” (Uber, supra,
    79 Cal.App.5th at p. 415, quoting Sakiyama, at p. 408.) However,
    the Sakiyama court made its observations in the context of
    assessing the foreseeability component of the Rowland analysis—
    in other words, as part of an assessment of whether an
    “exception” to the general duty of care should be made for
    “ ‘public policy’ ” reasons. (Cabral, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 771;
    see Sakiyama, at p. 407 [“Before we discuss the other Rowland
    factors, . . . we must dispose of appellants’ . . . contention that
    satisfaction of the foreseeability element herein equates with
    a duty of care.”].) Because the court “must consult the factors
    described in Rowland” only after first determining “there exists
    . . . an affirmative duty” (Brown, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 209),
    we are not convinced that the rule announced in Sakiyama
    is relevant to the first step of the duty inquiry. (Cf. Uber,
    at p. 420 [“The first step in the Brown analysis is dispositive
    in this case.”].)
    33
    when Bird affirmatively deployed its scooters onto public streets
    —whereas in Uber, the plaintiffs were not harmed by Uber’s
    property, but rather by third parties exploiting the mere
    existence of ridesharing services to accomplish their criminal
    acts. (See Uber, supra, 79 Cal.App.5th at pp. 427–429.) Unlike
    the claim in Uber, plaintiffs’ negligence claims are not premised
    on a “duty to protect” plaintiffs from third-party misconduct that
    Bird “ ‘stimulate[d].’ ” (Id. at pp. 427–428.) On the contrary,
    Bird is charged with liability for its own alleged misconduct in
    deploying its dock-less scooters on public streets, while allegedly
    failing to exercise ordinary care to ensure Bird scooters do not
    become an unreasonable hazard to pedestrians and others who
    use those same public thoroughfares. We need not find third-
    party misconduct was a necessary component of Bird’s business
    to conclude Bird owed plaintiffs and others a duty to exercise
    “ordinary care or skill in the management of [its] property.”
    (§ 1714, subd. (a).)
    Having concluded the general duty of ordinary care
    applies, we now consider whether public policy clearly justifies
    a categorical exception to the default duty of ordinary care
    for operators of dock-less scooter rental businesses like Bird.
    (See Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at pp. 771–772; Rowland, supra,
    69 Cal.2d at pp. 112–113.)
    5.     Public Policy Does Not Clearly Support an
    Exception to the General Duty of Care for Bird’s
    Alleged Conduct
    Having determined the general duty of care set forth in
    section 1714 applies, we ask next whether a balancing of the
    public policy factors identified in Rowland—most crucially, the
    foreseeability of harm to the plaintiff, the extent of the burden
    34
    to the defendant, and the overall policy of preventing future
    harm—justifies creating an exception immunizing a dock-less
    scooter rental business like Bird from potential liability for
    negligently managing its property. (See Rowland, supra,
    69 Cal.2d at pp. 112–113; Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 781;
    Castaneda v. Olsher (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 1205
    , 1213 (Castaneda).)
    In conducting this balancing, we are guided and bound by the
    directive, reaffirmed time and again by our high court, that “in
    the absence of a statutory provision establishing an exception to
    the general rule of Civil Code section 1714, courts should create
    one only where ‘clearly supported by public policy.’ ” (Cabral,
    at p. 771, citing Rowland, at p. 112, John B. v. Superior Court
    (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 1177
    , 1191, and Merrill v. Navegar, Inc. (2001)
    
    26 Cal.4th 465
    , 477.) We conclude an exception is not justified.12
    12    Our dissenting colleague acknowledges that, “[l]ike
    the majority, I agree that Bird owes a general duty of care in
    the management of its property.” (Dis. opn. post, at p. 4.) Yet,
    despite recognizing the general duty of care applies to Bird’s
    conduct, the dissent does not engage in the second step of
    the prescribed “two-step inquiry” by “consult[ing] the factors
    described in Rowland to determine whether relevant policy
    considerations counsel limiting that duty.” (Brown, supra,
    11 Cal.5th at p. 209; Rowland, supra, 69 Cal.2d at p. 112;
    Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 771; accord, Castaneda,
    
    supra,
     41 Cal.4th at p. 1213.) Accordingly, we have no clear
    understanding of how the dissent reaches the apparent
    conclusion that “an exception to the general rule of Civil Code
    section 1714” is “ ‘clearly supported by public policy’ ” for
    Bird’s alleged conduct. (Cabral, at p. 771.) This is especially
    confounding given, as we discuss below, the apparent policy
    judgment by state and local officials that companies like Bird,
    having deployed dock-less scooters onto public streets and
    35
    As with all duty questions, “the Rowland factors are
    evaluated at a relatively broad level of factual generality.”
    (Cabral, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 772.) Thus, with respect to
    foreseeability, our Supreme Court has explained the court’s task
    “ ‘is not to decide whether a particular plaintiff’s injury was
    reasonably foreseeable in light of a particular defendant’s
    conduct, but rather to evaluate more generally whether the
    category of negligent conduct at issue is sufficiently likely
    to result in the kind of harm experienced that liability may
    appropriately be imposed.’ ” (Ibid.) Likewise, in applying the
    other Rowland factors, we must ask “not whether they support
    an exception to the general duty of reasonable care on the facts
    of the particular case before us, but whether carving out an entire
    category of cases from that general duty rule is justified by clear
    considerations of policy.” (Cabral, at p. 772, italics added.)
    As our high court explained, “[b]y making exceptions to Civil
    Code section 1714’s general duty of ordinary care only when
    foreseeability and policy considerations justify a categorical
    no-duty rule, we preserve the crucial distinction between a
    determination that the defendant owed the plaintiff no duty
    of ordinary care, which is for the court to make, and a
    determination that the defendant did not breach the duty
    of ordinary care, which in a jury trial is for the jury to make.”
    (Ibid., italics added.)
    We must also be mindful that “[t]he overall policy of
    preventing future harm is ordinarily served, in tort law, by
    imposing the costs of negligent conduct upon those responsible.”
    sidewalks, shall be under a duty to monitor, locate, and remove
    their property when it poses a risk of harm to the public.
    36
    (Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 781.) Thus, the policy question
    to be answered by balancing the Rowland factors is “whether
    that consideration is outweighed, for a category of negligent
    conduct, by laws or mores indicating approval of the conduct or
    by the undesirable consequences of allowing potential liability.”
    (Cabral, at pp. 781–782.) In conducting the prescribed balancing,
    “[f]oreseeability and the extent of the burden to the defendant
    are ordinarily the crucial considerations, but in a given case one
    or more of the other Rowland factors may be determinative of
    the duty analysis.” (Castaneda, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 1213; see
    Kesner, 
    supra,
     1 Cal.5th at p. 1145 [“The most important factor
    to consider in determining whether to create an exception to the
    general duty to exercise ordinary care articulated by section 1714
    is whether the injury in question was foreseeable.”].)
    Bird tacitly concedes foreseeability in this case, inviting us
    to “assum[e] Hacala’s injury was foreseeable,” but saying nothing
    more about the consideration. Foreseeability notwithstanding,
    Bird argues the “extreme burdens” it would be forced to
    undertake (were this court to decline to immunize its conduct)
    clearly support an exception to the general duty of ordinary
    care for all companies engaged in the dock-less scooter rental
    business. (See Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 772 [the Rowland
    analysis asks whether “foreseeability and policy considerations
    justify a categorical no-duty rule” for an “entire category of
    cases”]; accord, Regents, 
    supra,
     4 Cal.5th at p. 629.) Bird also
    appears to suggest our state and local policymakers have already
    balanced the overall policy of preventing foreseeable harm
    against these burdens and, in “permitt[ing] this exact type of
    business,” those policymakers determined dock-less scooter
    companies should be immune from liability for harm caused
    37
    by their want of ordinary care in the management of dock-less
    scooters. Thus, Bird argues that if this court were to hold Bird
    “owed a duty of care, it would call into question the decisions of
    the branches of government that directly reflect public policy.”
    We agree with Bird that a law or regulation enacted by our
    elected policymakers can be a compelling signpost in determining
    whether there is any state policy that would clearly justify an
    exception to the general duty of ordinary care; however, in this
    case, we find the relevant enactments all counsel strongly against
    recognizing such an exception for dock-less scooter companies
    in the management of their property. (See, e.g., Cabral, 
    supra,
    51 Cal.4th at p. 782 [reviewing state statute that “generally
    prohibits unnecessarily parking or stopping a vehicle ‘upon a
    freeway’ ” to determine “whether there is any state policy, such
    as would clearly justify an exception to the general duty of
    ordinary care, promoting or protecting the activity of parking
    alongside freeways for nonemergency purposes,” and discerning
    “no such state policy”]; cf. Lindstrom v. Hertz Corp. (2000)
    
    81 Cal.App.4th 644
    , 649, 652 [where statute required rental
    car agencies to determine only “whether a potential customer
    possesses a valid driver’s license from the jurisdiction where
    he resides,” public policy supported exception to general duty to
    otherwise ensure licensed British driver was competent to drive
    on California highways before entrusting him with rental car].)
    Bird no doubt concedes foreseeability, at least in part,
    because the Permit it obtained from the City implicitly recognizes
    the harm that could foreseeably befall the public from an
    improperly parked or abandoned dock-less scooter. Thus, the
    Permit establishes parking regulations to safeguard against
    this risk of harm, and directs Bird and other dock-less scooter
    38
    companies to “inform Customers on how to properly park a
    Vehicle.”13
    More to the point, and contrary to the exception that Bird
    advocates, the Permit plainly reflects a policy judgment by local
    authorities that Bird and other dock-less scooter companies
    must take responsibility for the management of their property,
    regardless of the many imaginable ways a dock-less scooter could
    end up in a hazardous location. The Permit requires dock-less
    scooter companies like Bird, among other things, to “ensure their
    Vehicles are not parked in a way that impedes the regular flow
    of travel in the public way”; to “have smart technology equipment
    to identify that a vehicle is upright and properly parked, and
    GPS tracking”; to “remedy inoperable or improperly parked
    vehicles within two hours” between “the hours of 7am and 10pm
    daily”; to “remove electric scooters from the public right-of-way on
    a daily basis”; and to “have a staffed operations center in the City
    and a 24-hour contact person available for emergency removals.”
    Far from clearly supporting an exception to the general duty
    of ordinary care, the Permit reflects a judgment by local
    policymakers that, if companies like Bird deploy dock-less
    scooters on the City’s streets and sidewalks, those companies
    will be under a duty to monitor, locate, and remove their property
    whenever it poses a risk of harm to the public or simply “impedes
    13    State law appears similarly to recognize the foreseeable
    harm to the public posed by improperly parked or abandoned
    motorized scooters. Thus, Vehicle Code section 21235 mandates
    that a motorized scooter operator “shall not” “[l]eave a motorized
    scooter lying on its side on any sidewalk, or park a motorized
    scooter on a sidewalk in any other position, so that there is not
    an adequate path for pedestrian traffic.” (Id., § 21235, subd. (i).)
    39
    the regular flow of travel in the public way.” Critically, these
    local regulations are expressly authorized by state law. (See
    Veh. Code, § 21225 [“This article does not prevent a local
    authority, by ordinance, from regulating the registration of
    motorized scooters and the parking and operation of motorized
    scooters on pedestrian or bicycle facilities and local streets and
    highways, if that regulation is not in conflict with this code.”].)14
    With respect to the overall policy of preventing future harm
    and the prevalence of insurance for the risk involved (Rowland,
    supra, 69 Cal.2d at p. 113), we also note the Permit requires
    a dock-less scooter company like Bird to maintain “insurance
    14     Our dissenting colleague appears to insinuate that
    recognizing Bird’s conduct is subject to the general duty to
    exercise ordinary care in managing its property (or declining
    to recognize an exception to this duty) is somehow inconsistent
    with “the Legislature’s intent ‘to promote the use of alternative
    low-emission or no-emission transportation’ like Bird’s scooters.”
    (Dis. opn. post, at p. 6, quoting Veh. Code, § 21220.) But, as we
    have noted (see fn. 12, ante), the dissent does not engage with
    any of the Rowland factors in reaching this apparent conclusion,
    let alone explain how local regulations requiring motorized
    scooter companies to monitor, locate, and remove their property
    whenever it poses a risk of harm to the public somehow
    undermines the Legislature’s goal of promoting the use of
    low-emission or no-emission transportation. Indeed, given the
    plainly foreseeable risk posed by improperly parked or abandoned
    motorized scooters (see Veh. Code, § 21235, subd. (i)), it is
    difficult to see how the dissent could reach this conclusion after
    consulting the Rowland factors. (See Kesner, 
    supra,
     1 Cal.5th at
    p. 1145 [“The most important factor to consider in determining
    whether to create an exception to the general duty to exercise
    ordinary care articulated by section 1714 is whether the injury
    in question was foreseeable.”].)
    40
    against claims for injuries to persons or damages to property
    that may arise” from its operations and to indemnify the City for
    any violation of law by the company “or its users, or any bodily
    injury including death or damage to property arising out of or in
    connection with any use, misuse, placement or misplacement . . .
    of [the company’s] device, property or equipment by any person.”
    In granting the Permit to Bird, local policymakers apparently
    made the judgment, consistent with the “overall policy of
    preventing future harm,” that the “costs of [Bird’s] negligent
    conduct” should be borne by Bird, and thus Bird must have
    insurance to guarantee those costs are compensated. (Cabral,
    
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 781.) Regulations of this sort plainly
    do not support a special immunity from the general duty to
    exercise ordinary care in the management of one’s property.
    (Rowland, at p. 112.)
    Bird’s contention that it will be forced to undertake
    “extreme burdens” if we decline to immunize its conduct from
    the general duty of care reflects a material misunderstanding
    of what section 1714 entails. Bird suggests plaintiffs seek to
    require that it “constantly monitor every scooter in the city
    and respond immediately to any illegally or improperly parked
    scooters so as to prevent any potential tripping hazards.” Our
    dissenting colleague erects a similar strawman when he asserts
    “the majority [holds] that this duty requires Bird to retrieve
    scooters that had been improperly parked ‘for only a few seconds’
    or even a few minutes.” (Dis. opn. post, at p. 6.) That hyperbolic
    framing is not at all what plaintiffs allege, what we hold, or what
    section 1714 demands. Rather, the duty we recognize here is
    simply to use ordinary care in monitoring and removing a Bird
    scooter when it poses an unreasonable risk of harm to others.
    41
    (See, e.g., Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 783 [“the duty at issue
    is not one of avoiding all nonemergency freeway stops, but the
    duty to use reasonable care in choosing whether, when and
    where to stop alongside a freeway”].) Whether Bird failed to
    exercise ordinary care—i.e., breached that duty—is, as our
    Supreme Court repeatedly emphasized in Cabral, “to be decided
    by the jury, not the court,” based on “the specific facts of the
    case.” (Id. at p. 784; see also id. at p. 774 [“To base a duty ruling
    on the detailed facts of a case risks usurping the jury’s proper
    function of deciding what reasonable prudence dictates under
    those particular circumstances.”]; see also id. at p. 772
    [discussing “crucial distinction between a determination that
    the defendant owed the plaintiff no duty of ordinary care, which
    is for the court to make, and a determination that the defendant
    did not breach the duty of ordinary care, which in a jury trial
    is for the jury to make”].)
    Our rejection of the exemption Bird seeks does not mean
    that every incident of a pedestrian tripping over a Bird scooter
    can result in negligence liability. On the contrary, whether
    the duty of ordinary care has been breached depends on the
    particular circumstances, including those aggravating or
    mitigating the risk created, and those justifying Bird’s conduct
    in response. Nothing that Bird has argued suggests a jury
    cannot be trusted to weigh these considerations under the
    particular facts of this case, just as juries do in deciding
    negligence generally. (See Cabral, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 783.)15
    15    For this reason, we are not persuaded by the trial court’s
    (or our dissenting colleague’s) suggestion that recognizing a duty
    under section 1714 (or declining to exempt Bird from the general
    duty of care) is equivalent to imposing strict liability on the
    42
    6.    Hacala Alleges Sufficient Facts to Assert a Private
    Action for Public Nuisance to Redress Her Personal
    Injuries
    “ ‘The public nuisance doctrine is aimed at the protection
    and redress of community interests and, at least in theory,
    embodies a kind of collective ideal of civil life which the courts
    have vindicated by equitable remedies since the beginning of
    the 16th century.’ [Citation.] ‘To qualify, and thus be enjoinable,
    the interference [with collective social interests] must be both
    substantial and unreasonable. . . . “ ‘. . . It is an obvious truth
    that each individual in a community must put up with a certain
    dock-less scooter industry. In concluding remarks to its order
    sustaining Bird’s demurrer, the trial court observed that “[a]t
    least part of plaintiff[s’] claim (perhaps on a ‘meta’ basis) is
    that the entire dock-less system of scooter rentals is inherently
    dangerous and that Bird owes a duty not to engage in this
    enterprise at all, or at least that if it is going to engage in this
    business, it must take much stronger affirmative steps to make
    sure that scooters are not ‘parked’ inappropriately.” Our
    dissenting colleague similarly asserts that, from a “commonsense
    perspective,” “the majority suggests that plaintiffs be able to
    recover for injuries on a strict liability basis rather than to be
    limited to claims arising from negligence.” (Dis. opn. post, at
    p. 6.) These comments reflect the very error our Supreme Court
    warned against in Cabral. The duty codified in section 1714 is
    simply one of ordinary care—not strict liability. At the pleading
    stage, we have no evidence of what affirmative steps Bird has
    taken, nor are we or the trial court in a position to judge whether
    Bird must take “much stronger” affirmative steps to satisfy the
    duty of ordinary care. “That question, as discussed earlier, is
    generally one to be decided by the jury, not the court.” (Cabral,
    supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 784.)
    43
    amount of annoyance, inconvenience and interference and must
    take a certain amount of risk in order that all may get on
    together.’ ” ’ ” (Birke v. Oakwood Worldwide (2009) 
    169 Cal.App.4th 1540
    , 1547 (Birke), quoting People ex rel. Gallo v.
    Acuna (1997) 
    14 Cal.4th 1090
    , 1103, 1105.)
    Section 3479 defines a “nuisance” as “[a]nything which is
    injurious to health, . . . or is indecent or offensive to the senses,
    or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere
    with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property.” Section
    3480 defines a “public nuisance” as a nuisance “which affects
    at the same time an entire community or neighborhood, or any
    considerable number of persons, although the extent of the
    annoyance or damage inflicted upon individuals may be unequal.”
    Under section 3493, “[a] private person may maintain an action
    for a public nuisance, if it is specially injurious to himself [or
    herself], but not otherwise.”
    In support of Hacala’s public nuisance claim against Bird,
    the operative complaint alleges Bird deployed its dock-less
    scooters on public sidewalks and, through its negligence, allowed
    the scooters to be parked and to remain in locations that violated
    the City’s parking standards as set forth in the Permit, thus
    “creating a nuisance that affects a considerable number of people
    by creating tripping hazards.” As a “proximate result” of Bird’s
    “statutory violations and maintenance of the nuisance,” the
    complaint alleges Hacala “sustained physical injury” and other
    personal damages.
    Bird contends the foregoing allegations are insufficient
    to allege either the existence of a public nuisance or Hacala’s
    44
    standing to maintain a private action.16 With respect to the
    existence of a nuisance, Bird maintains its electric scooter
    operation “cannot constitute a per se public nuisance,” because
    the “operation is expressly permitted in Los Angeles.” The
    argument has no merit.
    The law is settled that “ ‘[a] statutory sanction cannot
    be pleaded in justification of acts which by the general rules
    of law constitute a nuisance, unless the acts complained of are
    authorized by the express terms of the statute under which
    the justification is made, or by the plainest and most necessary
    implication from the powers expressly conferred, so that it can
    be fairly stated that the legislature contemplated the doing of
    the very act which occasions the injury.’ ” (Hassell v. City and
    County of San Francisco (1938) 
    11 Cal.2d 168
    , 171; Varjabedian
    v. City of Madera (1977) 
    20 Cal.3d 285
    , 291; Bright v. East Side
    Mosquito Abatement District (1959) 
    168 Cal.App.2d 7
    , 11.) The
    complaint alleges Bird has created a public nuisance by allowing
    its scooters to remain in locations that violate the Permit,
    thus blocking pedestrian walkways and interfering with the
    comfortable enjoyment of life of a considerable number of people.
    (See §§ 3479, 3480.) The allegation is sufficient to establish the
    existence of a public nuisance. (See Phillips v. City of Pasadena
    (1945) 
    27 Cal.2d 104
    , 106 (Phillips) [“Anything which unlawfully
    obstructs the free passage or use in the customary manner of
    a public street is a nuisance,” and a “municipality may be held
    16    Bird also contends Hacala’s public nuisance claim fails
    because, like her negligence claim, it requires the existence of a
    legal duty. (See Melton v. Boustred (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 521
    ,
    542.) As we have determined Bird owes Hacala a legal duty,
    we reject this objection to her public nuisance claim.
    45
    liable for creating or maintaining a nuisance even though a
    governmental activity is involved.”]; Bright, at p. 11 [“While
    respondent district is authorized by statute to abate mosquitoes,
    this power cannot be construed so as to permit the district to
    abate mosquitoes in such a manner as to create a nuisance.”].)
    Bird also contends Hacala lacks standing to assert a
    private claim for public nuisance because she has not alleged she
    “suffered a harm that was different in kind . . . from that suffered
    by the general public.” The contention ignores that Hacala
    alleges she suffered personal injuries due to conduct by Bird
    that constitutes a public nuisance.
    As noted, section 3493 authorizes a “private person” to
    maintain an action for a public nuisance, if the alleged nuisance
    is “specially injurious to [the plaintiff], but not otherwise.” In the
    usual case, “ ‘when the wrongful act is of itself a disturbance or
    obstruction only to the exercise of a common and public right,’ ”
    our state law has long recognized “ ‘the sole remedy is by public
    prosecution,’ ” because “ ‘the act of itself does no wrong to
    individuals distinct from that done to the whole community.’ ”
    (Lind v. City of San Luis Obispo (1895) 
    109 Cal. 340
    , 344, italics
    added.) However, “ ‘when the alleged nuisance would constitute
    a private wrong by injuring property or health, or creating
    personal inconvenience and annoyance, for which an action might
    be maintained in favor of a person injured, it is none the less
    actionable because the wrong is committed in a manner and
    under circumstances which would render the guilty party liable
    to indictment for a common nuisance.’ ” (Ibid.) As our Supreme
    Court recognized in Lind, because an injury “ ‘to the health and
    comfort of an individual[ ] is in its nature special and peculiar
    and does not cause a damage which can properly be said to
    46
    be common or public, however numerous may be the cases of
    similar damage arising from the same cause,’ ” a private person
    is authorized to seek redress for his or her personal injury under
    section 3493. (Lind, at pp. 344–345.)
    Quoting Venuto v. Owens-Corning Fiberglass Corp. (1971)
    
    22 Cal.App.3d 116
     at page 124, Bird argues Hacala cannot
    maintain an action under section 3493 unless her “ ‘damage be
    different in kind, rather than in degree, from that shared by the
    general public.’ ” In Venuto, the plaintiffs alleged the defendant
    used its fiberglass manufacturing plant in a manner that
    constituted a public nuisance in that it severely polluted the
    air, thereby “injuring the health of the citizens of the county.”
    (Venuto, at p. 121.) Predicating their claim of “special damage
    upon personal injury,” the plaintiffs alleged the air pollution
    “aggravate[d] their allergies and respiratory disorders.” (Id. at
    pp. 124–125.) Inferring from the allegations that “the public is
    suffering from a general irritation to the respiratory tract and
    that plaintiffs are suffering a more severe irritation to such
    tract,” the Venuto court reasoned “such allegations merely
    indicate that plaintiffs and the members of the public are
    suffering from the same kind of ailments but that plaintiffs
    are suffering from them to a greater degree.” (Id. at p. 125.)
    The Venuto court thus concluded the plaintiffs could not maintain
    a private action for public nuisance because their alleged injury
    was “not different in kind but only in degree from that shared
    by the general public.” (Ibid.)
    The Venuto holding has been criticized, reasonably in
    our view, for advancing an “incorrect statement of the law” that
    is inconsistent with our Supreme Court’s statements in Lind.
    (Birke, supra, 169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1543, 1550 [holding
    47
    aggravation of asthma and chronic allergies from breathing
    secondhand smoke in apartment complex’s outdoor common area
    sufficient to authorize private action for public nuisance]; accord,
    Rest.2d Torts, § 821C, com. d, p. 96 [“When the public nuisance
    causes personal injury to the plaintiff . . . , the harm is normally
    different in kind from that suffered by other members of the
    public and the tort action may be maintained.”].) Be that as it
    may, even if we accept that a private action requires an alleged
    harm that is “different in kind” as opposed to “degree,” we
    are compelled to find the allegations sufficient here. Fairly
    construing the complaint, it alleges Bird’s conduct has created
    a public nuisance by obstructing public sidewalks and creating
    tripping hazards that the general public must avoid. While that
    alleged inconvenience is plainly sufficient to establish a public
    nuisance (see Phillips, supra, 27 Cal.2d at p. 106), Hacala
    allegedly suffered a different kind of injury—she tripped on
    a Bird scooter and was physically injured. We conclude the
    allegations are sufficient to state a private action for public
    nuisance to redress this personal injury.
    48
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed with respect to all claims against
    defendant Bird Rides, Inc. and affirmed in all other respects.
    The parties shall bear their own costs.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    EGERTON, J.
    I concur:
    EDMON, P. J.
    49
    LAVIN, J., Dissenting:
    After two rounds of demurrers, three complaints, and more
    than 100 pages of appellate briefing, plaintiffs have struggled to
    articulate what legal duty was owed by Bird Rides, Inc. (Bird) to
    plaintiffs, and the nature and scope of that duty. That we
    examine the operative pleading de novo does not mean that
    plaintiffs need only tender their latest complaint and hope we can
    discern a cause of action. On appeal, it is their burden to show
    either that the demurrer was sustained erroneously or that the
    trial court’s denial of leave to amend was an abuse of discretion.
    And although this matter comes to us after a demurrer, it was
    pending for more than a year before the trial court sustained the
    latest demurrer and dismissed the action. Thus, plaintiffs had
    plenty of time to develop the record to allow them to plead facts
    supporting a viable legal theory, and to present clear, logical, and
    convincing arguments supporting their theory. I also note that
    pleading deficiencies generally do not affect a party’s right to
    conduct discovery (Budget Finance Plan v. Superior Court (1973)
    
    34 Cal.App.3d 794
    , 797, 798), and this right (and corresponding
    obligation to respond) is particularly important to a plaintiff in
    need of discovery to amend its complaint (Union Mutual Life Ins.
    Co. v. Superior Court (1978) 
    80 Cal.App.3d 1
    , 12).
    Even giving plaintiffs’ briefs the most generous reading,
    they have not, in my view, advanced coherent and consistent
    legal arguments explaining why the court erred in sustaining the
    demurrer to plaintiff Sara Hacala’s negligence cause of action
    against Bird.1 By way of example, according to their opening
    1In their opening brief, plaintiffs assert, without providing any legal
    authority, that the claims for loss of consortium and negligent
    brief, plaintiffs assert “Bird had a duty to take reasonable care to
    prevent the third party from parking the scooter next to the trash
    can, and in a prohibited area, which created the tripping hazard
    for [plaintiff] Hacala.” Plaintiffs then argue that, as provided in
    Bird’s permit with the City, the scope of Bird’s duty required it to
    remove the improperly parked scooter within two hours between
    7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. Two pages later, however, plaintiffs
    argue that “how long the scooter had been parked there and
    whether Bird had sufficient time to remove it, are beyond the
    court’s proper scope in ruling the [sic] demurrer” and also suggest
    that the “failure to remove the subject scooter from where it was
    illegally parked next to the trash can is a breach of that duty.”
    And although plaintiffs conceded below that the permit issued to
    Bird by the City of Los Angeles does not create a private right of
    action, there is no special relationship between plaintiffs and
    Bird, and that a third party’s conduct is “immaterial,” plaintiffs
    now argue that the permit’s requirements “demonstrated that
    tripping hazards from improper scooter parking [were]
    foreseeable” and the lower court failed to analyze “the special
    relationship” between Bird, the City and/or Bird’s customers
    based on the permit. Of course, plaintiffs never asked the court to
    infliction of emotional distress should be “reinstated because the City
    [of Los Angeles] and Bird owe a duty of care to Mrs. Hacala.” And
    citing Melton v. Boustred (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 521
    , 542, plaintiffs
    contend the public nuisance claim “stands or falls with the
    determination of the negligence” claim. Because the court properly
    sustained the negligence claim against Bird, I don’t address these
    causes of action. I also don’t address plaintiffs’ negligence claim
    against the City because I agree with the majority’s conclusion that the
    City is not liable for plaintiffs’ damages.
    2
    analyze Bird’s purported “special relationship” with the City or
    its customers. Further, although they expressly used the permit’s
    requirements as a stand-in for the standard of care, on appeal
    they don’t acknowledge that they never alleged, or could have
    alleged, that Bird failed to remove the illegally parked scooter
    within two hours as required by that permit. Given the state of
    plaintiffs’ briefing, I could conclude my analysis here based upon
    plaintiffs’ failure to carry their burden on appeal. Nevertheless, I
    briefly address plaintiffs’ contention that the court erred in
    sustaining Bird’s demurrer.
    As the trial court aptly noted, “stripped to its essentials,
    the real complaint is that Bird’s business model makes it easy for
    a user to rent the scooter and just leave it anywhere, even a place
    where a reasonably careful person could trip over it and get hurt.
    It is the business model itself, more than it is any particular
    action or inaction by Bird, that truly caused the injury.” The
    court’s view is consistent with plaintiffs’ argument in their
    opposition to the demurrer: “[P]arking in the sidewalks is a
    necessary component of Bird’s scooter business. There is no other
    place that users can rent them from.” The majority appears to
    agree with plaintiffs that Bird’s business model is the problem,
    concluding “Bird’s entire conduct (deploying dock-less scooters
    onto public streets) created the risk that those scooters could
    become hazards for pedestrians and others unless Bird took
    affirmative measures to prevent this harm.” The majority also
    contends that it does not matter whether the Bird scooter that
    injured Hacala “had been sitting behind a trash can for only a
    few seconds or several days” because Bird’s general duty of care
    under section Civil Code section 1714 encompasses an obligation
    to remove or relocate its property, requires it not to entrust
    3
    scooters to individuals who will illegally park them, and requires
    Bird to ensure its scooters are “sufficiently conspicuous so as not
    to become unreasonable tripping hazards to pedestrians on public
    sidewalks.” Based on the undisputed facts pleaded by plaintiffs
    and those that are judicially noticeable pursuant to their request,
    as well as plaintiffs’ concessions, Bird was not in a special
    relationship with plaintiffs that would give rise to a duty to
    protect them from a third party improperly parking or moving
    one of Bird’s scooters. Nor does the pleading or judicially
    noticeable facts allege actionable misfeasance or establish that
    Bird’s “entire course of conduct of directing dockless scooters to
    be parked on [City] sidewalks” creates a risk of harm that is
    actionable. I would therefore affirm the judgment in its entirety.
    Like the majority, I agree that Bird owes a general duty of
    care in the management of its property. As the majority
    emphasizes, “Everyone is responsible, not only for the result of
    his or her willful acts, but also for an injury occasioned to another
    by his or her want of ordinary care or skill in the management of
    his or her property or person, except so far as the latter has,
    willfully or by want of ordinary care, brought the injury upon
    himself or herself.” (Civ. Code, § 1714, subd. (a).) But as noted by
    Witkin, “Generalizations like the foregoing are obviously
    inadequate and of little practical value. Much of tort law ‘is an
    attempt to define what counts as a legal wrong in particular
    settings.’ ” (5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (11th ed. 2017) Torts,
    §1, p. 104.) “ ‘[D]uty’ is a question of whether the defendant is
    under any obligation for the benefit of the particular plaintiff;
    and in negligence cases, the duty is always the same, to conform
    to the legal standard of reasonable conduct in the light of the
    apparent risk. What the defendant must do, or must not do, is a
    4
    question of the standard of conduct required to satisfy the duty.”
    (Coffee v. McDonnell-Douglas Corp. (1972) 
    8 Cal.3d 551
    , 559, fn.
    8.) To assess the scope of a duty, a court must “identify the
    specific action or actions the plaintiff claims the defendant had a
    duty to undertake. ‘Only after the scope of the duty under
    consideration is defined may a court meaningfully undertake the
    balancing analysis of the risks and burdens present in a given
    case to determine whether the specific obligations should or
    should not be imposed[.]’ ” (Castaneda v. Olsher (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 1205
    , 1214.) Like the existence of a legal duty, the scope of that
    duty is a question of law for the court. (Merrill v. Navegar, Inc.
    (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 465
    , 477.)2
    2 The issue before us is not whether we should create an exception
    based on public policy to the general duty rule enunciated in Civil Code
    section 1714 under Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d. 108, 112;
    the issue before us is the standard of conduct required to satisfy that
    duty. Further, unlike in Brown v. USA Taekwondo (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 204
    , 209, where the issue before the Supreme Court concerned how
    courts should decide whether a defendant has a legal duty to take
    action to protect a plaintiff from injuries caused by a third party, the
    majority and plaintiffs contend that Bird’s conduct, not that of a third
    party, is the focus of this lawsuit. Further, in Brown the Supreme
    Court established a two-step inquiry to determine whether a defendant
    has a legal duty to take action to protect a plaintiff from injuries
    caused by a third party: “First, the court must determine whether
    there exists a special relationship between the parties or some other
    set of circumstances giving rise to an affirmative duty to protect.
    Second, if so, the court must consult the factors described in Rowland
    to determine whether relevant policy considerations counsel limiting
    that duty.” (Brown, at p. 209, italics added; see also Regents of
    University of California v. Superior Court (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 607
    , 627
    [special relationship doctrine is an exception to the general rule that
    there is no duty to protect others from the conduct of third parties].)
    Here, there is no special relationship between plaintiffs and Bird or
    5
    While Bird has a general duty of care in the management of
    its property, I don’t agree with the majority that this duty
    requires Bird to retrieve scooters that had been improperly
    parked “for only a few seconds” or even a few minutes. From a
    commonsense perspective, the majority’s view has little to
    recommend it. Essentially, the majority suggests that plaintiffs
    be able to recover for injuries on a strict liability basis rather
    than to be limited to claims arising from negligence. If dock-less
    bicycle and scooter companies could be held liable for failing to
    immediately retrieve illegally parked bicycles and scooters, most
    of them, to avoid liability, would simply go out of business.
    Instead, and accepting plaintiffs’ argument that they are
    pursuing the negligence cause of action by relying on the permit
    as a stand-in for the standard of care (see Sierra-Bay Fed. Land
    Bank Assn. v. Superior Court (1991) 
    227 Cal.App.3d 318
    , 333), I
    would frame the scope of Bird’s duty as requiring it to retrieve
    “inoperable or improperly parked [scooters] within two hours” on
    a daily basis “[b]etween the hours of 7am and 10pm daily.”3 My
    view is consistent with the Legislature’s intent “to promote the
    use of alternative low-emission or no-emission transportation”
    like Bird’s scooters. (Veh. Code, § 21220; see also Lugtu v.
    California Highway Patrol (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 703
    , 719 [discussing
    legislative or administrative pronouncements in formulating the
    some other set of circumstances giving rise to an affirmative duty to
    protect.
    3Although Vehicle Code section 21235 prohibits or restricts certain
    acts by the “operator of a motorized scooter,” plaintiffs did not rely on
    this statute for the standard of care. In any event, the statute’s
    prohibitions and restrictions are limited to the actual scooter user or
    operator.
    6
    standard of care].) Indeed, other public policy considerations
    justify the requirement of a more specific standard of care in this
    case. Pursuant to plaintiffs’ request for judicial notice, former
    City Councilmember Joe Buscaino—discussing the City’s scooter
    regulations—explained that “if we’re going to address the traffic
    issue in our city, we need to embrace traffic solutions and live in
    a multi-modal city” by encouraging the use of zero-emission
    scooters for “short-trip transportation.” Like the trial court, I am
    “not prepared to state that the dock-less system of scooter rentals
    is inherently dangerous such that if a scooter is stopped at a
    dangerous location, Bird is essentially or virtually strictly liable.”
    And here there is no allegation, even on information and belief,
    that Bird failed to retrieve the improperly parked scooter within
    two hours after it was parked, abandoned, or moved. Accordingly,
    there is no basis for concluding that Bird caused or contributed to
    Hacala’s injury.4
    LAVIN, J.
    4 Plaintiffs’ additional contention that Bird failed to install or provide
    working safety lights on the scooter makes no sense. In their
    complaint, they allege the scooter did not have “always-on” lights
    visible from at least 300 feet. But the permit only requires the lights to
    stay illuminated for 90 seconds after the scooter is stopped, and there
    is no allegation the scooter was in use or had been parked for less than
    90 seconds when Hacala tripped and was injured. Plaintiffs also did
    not argue below that the permit’s standard of conduct only defined the
    minimum standard. Any suggestion to the contrary on appeal is
    therefore forfeited.
    7