Tansavatdi v. City of Rancho Palos Verdes
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Relying on its holding in Cameron v. State of California, 7.Cal.3d 318 (1972), the Supreme Court held that design immunity does not categorically preclude failure to warn claims that involve a discretionarily-approved element of a roadway and declined to overrule its prior precedent.
At issue was whether design immunity is limited to claims alleging that a public entity created a dangerous roadway condition through a defective design or whether the statutory defense of design immunity also extends to claims alleging that a public entity failed to warn of a design element that resulted in a dangerous roadway condition. The Supreme Court held (1) the effect of Cameron is that, while Cal. Gov. Code 830.6 shields public entities from liability for injuries stemming from the design of a roadway's physical features, they nonetheless have a duty to warn of known dangers the roadway presents to the public; and (2) this Court declines the invitation of City of Rancho Palo Verdes to overrule Cameron.
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