McKenna v. Beesley ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 8/6/21
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    BLAKE MCKENNA,                             D077189
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.                                  (Super. Ct. No. 37-2018-
    00009594-CU-PA-CTL)
    LANCE BEESLEY et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEALS from judgments of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Gregory W. Pollack, Judge. Judgments and orders reversed.
    Ritter & Associates, Dwight F. Ritter, Karen L. Albence; Williams
    Iagmin and Jon R. Williams for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Friedenthal, Heffernan & Brown and Jay D. Brown for Defendant and
    Respondent Lance Beesley.
    Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani and Don Willenburg for Defendant
    and Respondent Smoothreads, Inc.
    I.
    INTRODUCTION
    The California Supreme Court has explained that the tort of negligent
    entrustment of a motor vehicle and the tort of negligent hiring of a person to
    drive a vehicle are both premised on the “[a]wareness [by the defendant],
    constructive or actual, that a person is unfit or incompetent to drive.” (Diaz
    v. Carcamo (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 1148
    , 1157 (Diaz).) In this appeal, we consider
    two issues related to the scope of the constructive knowledge element of these
    torts.
    First, we consider the effect of the Legislature’s enactment of Vehicle
    Code section 14604, 1 on the common law tort of negligent entrustment of a
    motor vehicle. Section 14604 requires an owner of a motor vehicle “to make a
    reasonable effort or inquiry to determine whether [a] prospective driver
    possesses a valid driver’s license before allowing him or her to operate the
    owner’s vehicle.” We conclude that a jury may find that an owner who
    breaches its section 14604 duty and permits an unlicensed driver to drive the
    owner’s vehicle had constructive knowledge of the driver’s incompetence to
    drive.
    We also consider whether a person may be held liable for the common
    law tort of negligent hiring when the person hires another and allows the
    hiree to drive a vehicle under the hirer’s control without making a reasonable
    effort or inquiry to determine whether the hiree has an appropriate driver’s
    license, and the hiree in fact lacks such license. (See § 14606, subd. (a) [“A
    person shall not . . . hire . . . any person to drive a motor vehicle owned by
    1     Unless otherwise specified, all subsequent statutory references are to
    the Vehicle Code.
    2
    him or her or under his or her control upon the highways unless that person
    is licensed for the appropriate class of vehicle to be driven”].) Under these
    circumstances, we conclude that a jury may find that the hirer had
    constructive knowledge of the hiree’s incompetence to drive. 2
    II.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. The complaint
    In February 2018, Blake McKenna filed a form complaint against
    Lance Beesley and Smoothreads, Inc. (Smoothreads). 3 McKenna checked
    boxes on the form complaint indicating that he was bringing causes of action
    for “Motor Vehicle,” and “General Negligence.” McKenna also checked a box
    indicating that he was bringing causes of action styled as “Negligence Per Se,
    [and] Negligent Entrustment.”
    In an attachment to the complaint, McKenna alleged that on August 4,
    2017, he was a pedestrian lawfully crossing the street when he was struck by
    a vehicle driven by Ann Rogers. McKenna alleged that Rogers’s vehicle
    struck him due to the negligence of “Doe 1,” (i.e., Ronald Wells) 4 who had
    2     We emphasize that we do not hold that an owner or hirer’s failure to
    make a reasonable effort or inquiry into the driver’s or hiree’s licensure
    status, in and of itself, establishes civil liability, or even actionable
    negligence. Rather, we hold only that such evidence provides a sufficient
    basis for a jury to find that the plaintiff has proven the constructive
    knowledge element of these torts.
    3     McKenna also sued Ann Rogers, another driver involved in the accident
    that forms the basis for his action. Rogers is not a party to this appeal.
    McKenna’s complaint also named several Doe defendants.
    4     As we explain in parts II.B and II.C, post, it is undisputed that Beesley
    hired Wells to perform work on Beesley’s home and permitted Wells to drive
    the vehicle that was involved in the accident. We refer to “Doe 1” as Wells,
    3
    “negligently [run] a red light.” Specifically, McKenna alleged that Wells
    negligently drove his vehicle through a red light, striking Rogers’s vehicle,
    and that Rogers’s vehicle in turn struck McKenna. 5 McKenna alleged that
    he suffered severe bodily injuries as a result of the accident.
    McKenna also alleged that Wells was driving a vehicle owned by
    Beesley and Smoothreads. 6 McKenna further alleged that Beesley and
    Smoothreads knew or should have known that, due to Wells’s past driving
    experience and/or lack of driving experience, Wells was a negligent driver
    who created a risk of harm to persons and property and that Beesley and
    Smoothreads nevertheless knowingly entrusted Wells with the use of the
    vehicle involved in the accident. 7
    because the parties assumed for purposes of the proceedings relevant to this
    appeal, that Wells was the driver identified as “Doe 1” in McKenna’s
    complaint.
    5      McKenna’s complaint also alleged that Wells violated several Vehicle
    Code provisions, including a provision pertaining to a driver’s responsibilities
    after an accident. As Beesley summarizes in his brief, “[T]he driver of
    [Smoothreads’s vehicle (assumed to be Wells for purposes of this appeal),]
    exited the vehicle, surveyed the damage, and then fled on foot.”
    6     In a separate attachment to the form complaint, McKenna checked
    boxes indicating that: Wells was an operator of a motor vehicle; Beesley and
    Smoothreads employed Wells; Beesley and Smoothreads owned the vehicle
    and permitted it to be operated by Wells; Beesley and Smoothreads entrusted
    the vehicle to Wells; and Wells was an agent of Beesley and Smoothreads. It
    is undisputed that, in fact, Smoothreads, and not Beesley, owned the vehicle.
    (See pt. II.B and C, post.)
    7     Specifically, McKenna alleged, “[McKenna] is informed and believes
    that [Beesley and Smoothreads] knowingly and/or negligently entrusted their
    insured truck to [Wells] . . . an incompetent driver, whom they knew or
    should have known was incompetent to drive and [Beesley and Smoothreads
    4
    B. Smoothreads’s motion for summary adjudication
    Smoothreads filed a motion for summary adjudication in May 2019 in
    which it sought a determination that McKenna could not prevail on a claim of
    negligent entrustment against it, among other arguments. 8 In a supporting
    brief, Smoothreads explained that, for purposes of its motion, it assumed that
    Smoothreads, through Beesley, had granted Wells permission to drive the
    vehicle that was involved in the accident. 9 However, Smoothreads contended
    that it was entitled to summary adjudication of McKenna’s negligent
    entrustment claim against it because there was no “evidence . . . to
    demonstrate that Smoothreads . . . had any actual or constructive knowledge
    that the vehicle operator was an incompetent, reckless or inexperienced
    driver.”
    Smoothreads argued in relevant part:
    “The sole officer and shareholder of Smoothreads is . . .
    Beesley. [Citation.] Beesley hired Wells to perform some
    various home construction projects at the Beesley home.
    [Citation.] Wells represented that he had an active
    California contractor’s license and around 40 years of
    experience in the industry. [Citation.] In fact, when Wells
    arrived at the Beesley home, Wells was driving his own
    vehicle. [Citation.] These undisputed facts demonstrate
    that Smoothreads, by and through Beesley, had absolutely
    no reason to suspect any level of driving incompetence or
    unfitness on the part of Wells. Beesley understood that
    Wells was an experienced contractor, with an active
    contractor’s license, and Wells arrived driving his own
    are] thus liable for the injuries that resulted to . . . McKenna from the
    collision . . . .”
    8      Smoothreads argued that its liability to McKenna, if any, should be
    limited to $15,000 pursuant to section 17151. (See fn. 14, post.)
    9     Smoothreads also acknowledged that it was “the owner of a vehicle
    involved in the accident.”
    5
    vehicle. Nothing about that situation puts Smoothreads ‘on
    notice’ of any incompetence or unfitness with respect to
    Wells[’s] driving ability.
    “Similarly, [McKenna] cannot show any actual knowledge
    of unfitness. Wells never informed Beesley of any history
    with bipolar disorder [citation], never informed him of any
    history of alcohol problems [citation], never informed him of
    any history of DUI arrests [citation], never informed him of
    any arrests in his driving history [citation], and never
    informed him that he did not have a driver’s license.[ 10]
    [Citation.] Simply stated, Smoothreads, by and through
    Beesley, lacked the required actual knowledge in order for
    [McKenna] to prevail on a negligent entrustment theory.
    Given this lack of knowledge, either actual or constructive,
    about any level of unfitness or incompetence with respect to
    Wells, Smoothreads, by and through Beesley, had
    absolutely no ‘duty to inquire’ any further. Instead,
    Smoothreads was ‘entitled to rely on [Wells] to discharge
    [his] responsibilities with reasonable care.’ ” 11
    C. Beesley’s motion for summary judgment
    Beesley filed a motion for summary judgment in May 2019, presenting
    an argument similar to Smoothreads’s argument in its motion for summary
    adjudication. In a supporting brief, Beesley stated that he is the chief
    executive officer of Smoothreads and acknowledged that Smoothreads was
    10    In his opposition, McKenna presented evidence that, at the time of the
    accident, Wells did not have a valid driver’s license or auto insurance. In
    addition, McKenna presented evidence that Wells’s driving history included
    three suspensions for three separate convictions of driving under the
    influence. In addition, McKenna lodged excerpts of Wells’s deposition in
    which Wells stated that he suffered from bipolar disorder and that he had
    “trouble with alcohol.”
    11   In the omitted citations, Smoothreads cited to facts contained in its
    separate statement of undisputed material facts, filed concurrently with its
    motion.
    6
    the owner of a vehicle involved in the accident. However, Beesley stated that
    Wells was “never employed by [Smoothreads] and never performed work of
    any kind for [Smoothreads].” Beesley did acknowledge that Beesley had
    “used Mr. Wells for various . . . handyman jobs at his residence.”
    Beesley maintained that he could not be liable for negligent
    entrustment because, even assuming that Wells was the operator of the
    Smoothreads vehicle involved in the accident and that Beesley gave Wells
    permission to drive the vehicle, “Beesley had no knowledge that Mr. Wells
    was incompetent [to] drive the subject vehicle.” Specifically, Beesley argued,
    “At no time was [Beesley] aware that . . . Wells did not have a valid driver’s
    license, or that he had a history of alcohol-related driving incidents.” Beesley
    also stated, “Wells never told Mr. Beesley [t]hat he was in any way
    incompetent to operate a vehicle.”
    D. McKenna’s oppositions
    In his oppositions to Beesley’s and Smoothreads’s motions, McKenna
    argued that “Beesley, president [and chief executive officer] of Smoothreads,
    negligently hired, supervised, or retained . . . Wells, and knew or should have
    known that . . . Wells was incompetent or unfit to drive [Smoothreads’s
    vehicle].” 12 (Boldface & underscore omitted.) McKenna argued in part:
    “Beesley negligently hired, negligently supervised, and
    negligently retained . . . Wells. [Citation.] . . . Wells did not
    have a valid driver’s license, nor auto insurance coverage.
    [Citation.] Also, Wells[’s] driving history included [three]
    suspensions for [three] separate [driving under the
    influence] criminal convictions. . . . Beesley, [president],
    and [chief executive officer] of Smoothreads, did not ask
    Wells, his employee, whether he had a valid driver’s
    12    Although McKenna filed separate oppositions to the two motions, the
    oppositions were identical in many respects, including the language quoted in
    the text.
    7
    license. [Citation.] Beesley did not ask Wells, his
    employee, before Wells drove, or after, whether he had auto
    insurance coverage. [Citation.]
    “Beesley did not ask Wells before he drove, or after, about
    Wells[’s] driving history or verify Wells[’s] driving history
    in the State of California which contained multiple
    suspensions, including [three driving under the influence]
    criminal convictions. [Citation.] Wells worked at Beesley’s
    home throughout the months of June, July and August of
    2017. [Citation.] Beesley had multiple opportunities while
    working to ask Wells if he had a valid driver’s license and,
    if not, any driving restrictions or suspensions. [Citation.]
    As a matter of fact, the State of California would not license
    Wells as a competent driver and suspended him from
    driving on [three] occasions. The State of California knew
    and treated Wells as an incompetent driver. Beesley knew
    or should have known that Wells was being negligently
    supervised, negligently retained, and incompetent to drive
    [Smoothreads’s vehicle]. [Citation.]” 13
    E. The trial court’s order granting Smoothreads’s motion for summary
    adjudication and granting Beesley’s motion for summary judgment
    After Smoothreads and Beesley filed replies to McKenna’s oppositions,
    the trial court held a hearing on the motions. The court subsequently entered
    an order on September 6, 2019 granting both Smoothreads’s motion for
    summary adjudication and Beesley’s motion for summary judgment. The
    trial court reasoned in part:
    “Neither Beesley nor Smoothreads had any actual
    knowledge of any facts that would have placed either on
    notice of Wells’[s] lack of licensure or otherwise unfitness to
    13    In the omitted citations, McKenna also cited to facts contained in his
    separate statements of undisputed material facts, filed concurrently with his
    oppositions. In particular, as noted in footnote 10, ante, McKenna presented
    evidence of Wells’s incompetency to drive a motor vehicle, including Wells’s
    lack of a valid driver’s license.
    8
    operate a motor vehicle. See Richards v. Stanley (1954)
    
    43 Cal.2d 60
    , 63 [(Richards)] (‘[l]t has generally been held
    that the owner of an automobile is under no duty to persons
    who may be injured by its use to keep it out of the hands of
    a third person in the absence of facts putting the owner on
    notice that the third person is incompetent to handle it.’).
    Accordingly, neither Beesley nor Smoothreads had a legal
    duty to conduct any investigation or make any inquiry
    regarding Wells’[s] fitness to operate a motor vehicle.
    “The question whether a legal duty exists is to be resolved
    by the court, not a jury. [Citation.] ‘Duty, being a question
    of law, is particularly amenable to resolution by summary
    judgment.’ [Citation.]
    “McKenna cites no persuasive legal authority to the effect
    that an owner entrusting his vehicle to a third party faces
    liability for negligent entrustment when, not knowing any
    facts to put him on notice of the third party’s unfitness,
    simply fails to conduct an investigation to determine
    fitness. This would create a new legal duty in California,
    and this court is not inclined to make new law. . . .
    “Finally, McKenna’s reliance upon [section] 14606 is
    misplaced. In Dodge Center v. Superior Court (1988)
    
    199 Cal.App.3d 332
    , 338 [(Dodge Center)], the court stated:
    “ [‘]Section 14606, like the common law cause of action for
    entrustment, requires a showing of knowledge of the
    incapacitating condition which under the statute is lack of a
    license. In the absence of such knowledge there is no
    duty to inquire. [Emphasis added.][’] ”
    F. The trial court’s judgments
    The trial court entered a judgment in favor of Beesley on the basis of its
    summary judgment order on October 30, 2019. On February 28, 2020, the
    trial court entered a judgment in favor of Smoothreads. The trial court’s
    February 28 judgment states in relevant part:
    9
    “On or about September 6, 2019, the Court granted
    [Smoothreads’s] Motion for Summary Adjudication, ruling
    that Smoothreads’[s] liability, if any, to [McKenna] for his
    causes of action of General Negligence and Motor Vehicle
    Negligence was limited to $15,000 pursuant to the
    permissive use statute ([§] 17151). [McKenna] has since
    waived his right to collect under a permissive use claim.” 14
    G. The appeals
    In December 2019, McKenna timely filed an appeal from the October
    30, 2019 judgment in favor of Beesley, and in March 2020, McKenna timely
    filed an appeal from the February 28, 2020 judgment in favor of
    Smoothreads.
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    The trial court erred in granting Smoothreads’s motion for summary
    adjudication and Beesley’s motion for summary judgment
    McKenna contends that the trial court erred in granting Smoothreads’s
    motion for summary adjudication and Beesley’s motion for summary
    judgment. Specifically, McKenna claims that a reasonable jury could find
    14    Section 17150 provides, “Every owner of a motor vehicle is liable and
    responsible for death or injury to person or property resulting from a
    negligent or wrongful act or omission in the operation of the motor vehicle, in
    the business of the owner or otherwise, by any person using or operating the
    same with the permission, express or implied, of the owner.” However, an
    owner’s liability under section 17150 is limited to $15,000 per person in any
    one accident. (See § 17151). A common law cause of action for “negligent
    entrustment is an independent tort” that may be brought separately from a
    section 17150 cause of action. (Bayer-Bel v. Litovsky (2008) 
    159 Cal.App.4th 396
    , 400.)
    Smoothreads states in its brief, “As the parties have stipulated,
    [McKenna] is entitled to $15,000 pursuant to . . . section 17151, and
    Smoothreads has already paid this amount. [McKenna] can only be entitled
    to more if he has a valid claim for negligent entrustment.”
    10
    Smoothreads liable for negligent entrustment and Beesley liable for negligent
    hiring.
    We first provide an overview of the relevant legal principles, before
    addressing in detail McKenna’s claims as to each defendant.
    A. The law governing summary adjudication and summary judgment
    “ ‘Summary judgment and summary adjudication provide courts with a
    mechanism to cut through the parties’ pleadings in order to determine
    whether, despite their allegations, trial is in fact necessary to resolve their
    dispute. [Citations.] A defendant moving for summary judgment or
    summary adjudication may demonstrate that the plaintiff’s cause of action
    has no merit by showing that (1) one or more elements of the cause of action
    cannot be established, or (2) there is a complete defense to that cause of
    action.’ ” (Camacho v. Target Corp. (2018) 
    24 Cal.App.5th 291
    , 296
    (Camacho).)
    A party is entitled to summary adjudication of a cause of action if there
    is no triable issue of material fact and the party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law on that cause of action. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (f)(1),
    (2).) A trial court shall grant summary judgment if “all the papers submitted
    show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the
    moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law,” (id., subd. (c)),
    with respect to the entire “action.” (Id., subd. (a).)
    “ ‘On appeal, the reviewing court makes “ ‘an independent assessment
    of the correctness of the trial court’s ruling [regarding summary adjudication
    or summary judgment], applying the same legal standard as the trial court in
    determining whether there are any genuine issues of material fact or
    whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’ ” ’
    11
    [Citation.] Our task is to determine whether a triable issue of material fact
    exists.” (Camacho, supra, 24 Cal.App.5th at p. 297.)
    B. Substantive law
    1. The torts of negligent entrustment and negligent hiring
    a. Negligent entrustment
    “California is one of several states [that] recognizes the liability of an
    automobile owner who has entrusted a car to an incompetent, reckless, or
    inexperienced driver” (italics omitted) through the tort of negligent
    entrustment. (Allen v. Toledo (1980) 
    109 Cal.App.3d 415
    , 420.)
    In Ghezavat v. Harris (2019) 
    40 Cal.App.5th 555
    , 559, the court
    outlined the tort of negligent entrustment, where the object entrusted is a
    motor vehicle:
    “Negligent entrustment is a common law liability doctrine,
    which arises in numerous factual contexts. [Citation.] In
    cases involving negligent entrustment of a vehicle, liability
    ‘ “is imposed on [a] vehicle owner or permitter because of
    his own independent negligence and not the negligence of
    the driver.” ’ [Citations.] ‘ “Liability for the negligence of
    the incompetent driver to whom an automobile is entrusted
    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.” ’ [Citation.];
    accord, Rest.2nd Torts, § 308 [‘It is negligence to permit a
    third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which
    is under the control of the actor, if the actor knows or
    should know that such person intends or is likely to use the
    thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner
    as to create an unreasonable risk of harm to others’].)”
    CACI No. 724 outlines the elements of the tort of negligent
    entrustment of a motor vehicle:
    12
    “1. That [name of driver] was negligent in operating the
    vehicle;
    “2. That [name of defendant] [owned the vehicle operated
    by [name of driver]/had possession of the vehicle operated
    by [name of driver] with the owner’s permission];
    “3. That [name of defendant] knew, or should have known,
    that [name of driver] was incompetent or unfit to drive the
    vehicle;
    “4. That [name of defendant] permitted [name of driver] to
    drive the vehicle; and
    “5. That [name of driver]’s incompetence or unfitness to
    drive was a substantial factor in causing harm to [name of
    plaintiff].” 15
    b. Negligent hiring
    “California case law recognizes the theory that an employer can be
    liable to a third person for negligently hiring, supervising, or retaining an
    unfit employee.[ 16] [Citation.] Liability is based upon the facts that the
    15    (See Jeld-Wen, Inc. v. Superior Court (2005) 
    131 Cal.App.4th 853
    , 864
    [noting that CACI No. 724 outlines elements of negligent entrustment of
    motor vehicle claim].)
    16     California law also provides that a person “who negligently fails to
    employ a competent and careful contractor may be liable for injuries caused
    by the contractor’s failure to exercise due care.” (Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v.
    Superior Court (1992) 
    4 Cal.App.4th 544
    , 549, disapproved on other grounds
    by Camargo v. Tjaarda Dairy (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 1235
    , italics added.) In
    Camargo, the Supreme Court concluded that “an employee of an independent
    contractor [is barred] from bringing a negligent hiring action against the
    hirer of the contractor.” (Camargo, 
    supra, at p. 1238
    , italics added [noting
    that section 411 of the Restatement Second of Torts provides that “[a]n
    employer is subject to liability for physical harm to third persons caused by
    his failure to exercise reasonable care to employ a competent and careful
    13
    employer knew or should have known that hiring the employee created a
    particular risk or hazard and that particular harm materializes.” (Doe v.
    Capital Cities (1996) 
    50 Cal.App.4th 1038
    , 1054.)
    “A claim that an employer was negligent in hiring or retaining an
    employee-driver rarely differs in substance from a claim that an employer
    was negligent in entrusting a vehicle to the employee. Awareness,
    constructive or actual, that a person is unfit or incompetent to drive underlies
    a claim that an employer was negligent in hiring or retaining that person as
    a driver. (See Judicial Council of Cal. Civ. Jury Instns. (2010) CACI
    No. 426.)[ 17] That same awareness underlies a claim for negligent
    contractor,” (Camargo, at p. 1241) but concluding that “an employee of a
    contractor should be barred from seeking recovery from the hirer under the
    theory of negligent hiring set forth in section 411,” (id. at p. 1244, italics
    added)].) It is undisputed that McKenna is not an employee of Beesley, and
    thus Camargo has no relevance to this case.
    17    CACI No. 426 (2010 ed.) provided:
    “[Name of plaintiff] claims that [he/she] was harmed by
    [name of employee] and that [name of employer defendant]
    is responsible for that harm because [name of employer
    defendant] negligently [hired/ supervised/ [or] retained]
    [name of employee]. To establish this claim, [name of
    plaintiff] must prove all of the following:
    “1. That [name of employee] was [unfit/ [or] incompetent] to
    perform the work for which [he/she] was hired;
    “2. That [name of employer defendant] knew or should have
    known that [name of employee] was [unfit/ [or]
    incompetent] and that this [unfitness/ [or] incompetence]
    created a particular risk to others;
    “3. That [name of employee]’s [unfitness/ [or] incompetence]
    harmed [name of plaintiff]; and
    14
    entrustment. (See CACI No. 724.) In a typical case . . . the two claims are
    functionally identical.” (Diaz, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 1157.)
    2. The relationship of the common law to statutory law in this context
    In determining the scope of common law tort duties pertaining to those
    who allow unlicensed or unfit drivers to drive a vehicle, California courts
    have long looked to statutory law. (See, e.g., Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co.
    v. Montes-Harris (2006) 
    40 Cal.4th 151
    , 161 (Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co.)
    [“As courts [considering common law claims for negligent entrustment] have
    long recognized, the statutory provisions addressing vehicle use by
    unlicensed drivers represent a legislatively expressed public policy to provide
    protection to members of the public upon the streets and highways”];
    Richards, supra, 43 Cal.2d at p. 63 [noting the relevance of statutory law in
    determining “the scope of the duty of the owner of an automobile to control
    his property for the protection of persons on the public streets”]; Osborn v.
    Hertz Corp. (1988) 
    205 Cal.App.3d 703
    , 709 (Osborn) [observing that a
    statute “prohibits a rental car agency from renting to unlicensed drivers,” and
    concluding that “[a] rental car agency may therefore be liable for negligently
    entrusting a car to an unlicensed driver”]; Dodge Center, supra,
    199 Cal.App.3d at pp. 338–342 [discussing California statutory law
    pertaining to unlicensed drivers in determining whether a seller of a motor
    vehicle has a “statutory or common law duty to investigate a buyer’s driver’s
    license” (id. at p. 336)]; Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Abdullah (1979)
    
    94 Cal.App.3d 81
    , 92 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.) [in considering
    negligent entrustment of a vehicle cause of action, stating, “[t]wo sections of
    the Vehicle Code are pertinent . . . in suggesting the standard of care
    “4. That [name of employer defendant]’s negligence in
    [hiring/ supervising/ [or] retaining] [name of employee] was
    a substantial factor in causing [name of plaintiff]’s harm.”
    15
    required”]; Owens v. Carmichael’s U-Drive Autos, Inc. (1931) 
    116 Cal.App. 348
    , 352 (Owens) [stating that “violation of the statute [pertaining to
    entrusting a car to an unlicensed person] is material,” in determining liability
    for negligent entrustment of vehicle claim].)
    3. Relevant statutes
    The Vehicle Code contains two statutes pertaining to unlicensed
    drivers that are relevant to our determination of the scope of the defendants’
    duties in this case.
    Section 14604, subdivision (a) provides:
    “No owner of a motor vehicle may knowingly allow another
    person to drive the vehicle upon a highway unless the
    owner determines that the person possesses a valid driver’s
    license that authorizes the person to operate the vehicle.
    For the purposes of this section, an owner is required only
    to make a reasonable effort or inquiry to determine
    whether the prospective driver possesses a valid driver’s
    license before allowing him or her to operate the owner’s
    vehicle. An owner is not required to inquire of the
    department whether the prospective driver possesses a
    valid driver’s license.”
    Section 14606, subdivision (a) provides:
    “A person shall not employ, hire, knowingly permit, or
    authorize any person to drive a motor vehicle owned by him
    or her or under his or her control upon the highways unless
    that person is licensed for the appropriate class of vehicle
    to be driven.”
    C. The trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of
    Smoothreads on McKenna’s negligent entrustment cause of action
    McKenna argues that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a
    matter of law in favor of Smoothreads on his negligent entrustment cause of
    action. McKenna contends, “In light of the [defendants’] legal duty to inquire
    16
    into whether Wells had a valid driver’s license, a reasonable jury could find
    Smoothreads liable for negligent entrustment.” (Boldface & some
    capitalization omitted). Specifically, McKenna contends that a jury could
    reasonably find that Smoothreads breached its duty to determine whether
    Wells had a valid driver’s license and could rely on this finding in
    determining that Smoothreads had constructive knowledge that Wells was
    incompetent or unfit to drive. Thus, McKenna maintains that the trial court
    erred in granting judgment as a matter of law for Smoothreads on McKenna’s
    negligent entrustment cause of action on the ground that McKenna would be
    unable to establish the constructive knowledge element of that cause of
    action.
    1. An owner of a motor vehicle has a duty to make a reasonable effort
    or inquiry to determine whether a prospective driver has a valid
    driver’s license before allowing the prospective driver to operate the
    owner’s vehicle; an owner who breaches this duty, and permits an
    unlicensed driver to drive the owner’s vehicle, may be found to have
    constructive knowledge of the driver’s incompetence to drive for
    purposes of a claim for negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle
    a. Negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle
    In California, “ ‘one who places or entrusts his [or her] motor vehicle in
    the hands of one whom he [or she] knows, or from the circumstances is
    charged with knowing, is incompetent or unfit to drive, may be held liable for
    an injury inflicted by the use made thereof by that driver, provided the
    plaintiff can establish that the injury complained of was proximately caused
    by the driver’s disqualification, incompetency, inexperience or
    recklessness. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] Under the theory of “negligent entrustment,”
    liability is imposed on [the] vehicle owner or permitter because of his [or her]
    own independent negligence and not the negligence of the driver, in the event
    plaintiff can prove that the injury or death resulting therefrom was
    17
    proximately caused by the driver’s incompetency.” (Syah v. Johnson (1966)
    
    247 Cal.App.2d 534
    , 539 (Syah).)
    However, at common law, “[i]n the absence of . . . a statute . . . it has
    generally been held that the owner of an automobile is under no duty to
    persons who may be injured by its use to keep it out of the hands of a third
    person in the absence of facts putting the owner on notice that the third
    person is incompetent to handle it.” (Richards, supra, 43 Cal.2d at p. 63,
    italics added.) The tort of negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle ordinarily
    required “demonstration of actual knowledge of facts showing or suggesting
    the driver’s incompetence.” (Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 341,
    italics added.)
    California statutory law has long provided that a factfinder may find
    that an owner should have known of the prospective driver’s incompetence if
    the owner knows that the prospective driver is not appropriately licensed. In
    Owens, supra, 
    116 Cal.App. 348
    , the Court of Appeal considered whether a
    person injured by an unlicensed driver could maintain a cause of action for
    negligent entrustment against the owner of the vehicle. Citing a predecessor
    statute to section 14606, the Owens court concluded that the injured person
    could make out a prima facie case against the owner, given evidence that the
    owner knew that the driver was unlicensed, reasoning in part:
    “[Former section 76 of the California Vehicle Act 18] now
    requires the examination of all persons applying for
    18    Former section 76 of the California Vehicle Act provided:
    “Unlawful to employ unlicensed chauffeur. No person shall
    employ for hire as a chauffeur of a motor vehicle, any
    person not licensed as in this act provided. No person shall
    authorize or knowingly permit a motor vehicle owned by
    18
    licenses, and an operator’s license is no longer merely a
    means of identification but is in effect a certificate
    evidencing the fact that the holder had demonstrated his
    competency. Under these circumstances, we believe that
    the violation of the statute is material. [Citations.] The
    distinction between violations of statutes which are
    designed for the protection of the public and violations of
    statutes which have no such purpose is pointed out in
    Austin v. Rochester Folding Box Co., 
    111 Misc. 292
    . In our
    opinion, where an examination is required to test the
    competency of the applicant before the issuance of an
    operator’s license and it is provided by statute that no
    person shall knowingly permit his motor vehicle to be
    driven by an unlicensed person, a showing of a violation of
    the statute by the owner makes out a prima facie case
    against him in favor of a person who has sustained injury
    through the negligence of such unlicensed driver. (Correira
    v. Liu, 
    28 Haw., 145
    .) As is said in the concurring opinion
    in that case at page 154, ‘The fact that Miller was
    unlicensed is evidence prima facie in the eyes of the law
    that Miller was incompetent and that Correira committed a
    breach of his common–law duty not to entrust his car to a
    driver who was known by him to be incompetent or who,
    under the circumstances, should have been known by him
    to be incompetent and was sufficient to put Correira upon
    inquiry as to Miller’s competency or incompetency.’ ”
    (Owens, supra, 116 Cal.App. at pp. 351–352, some italics
    omitted.)
    The importance of statutory law in determining the scope of a common
    law liability for negligent entrustment was also apparent in both Dodge
    Center, supra, 
    199 Cal.App.3d 332
     and Osborn, supra, 
    205 Cal.App.3d 703
    .
    In Dodge Center, the Court of Appeal concluded that a seller of a motor
    vehicle could not be held liable for negligent entrustment by plaintiffs who
    him or under his control, to be driven by any person who
    has no legal right to do so or in violation of the provisions of
    this act.” (Stats. 1923, ch. 266, § 76.)
    19
    were injured in a motor vehicle accident with the unlicensed purchaser of the
    vehicle. (Dodge Center, supra, at pp. 335, 342.) The Dodge Center court
    reasoned that the sellers “owed no legal duty” to plaintiffs “to inquire into
    [the purchaser’s] driving record before selling him a vehicle.” (Id. at p. 342.)
    The Dodge Center court noted that section 14608 “imposes . . . a duty [of
    inquiry] on one who rents a motor vehicle, requiring inspection of the driver’s
    license of the person to whom the vehicle is to be rented and comparison of
    the signature on the license with that of the person seeking to rent.” (Id. at
    pp. 338–339.) In contrast, the Dodge Center court noted, “no statute imposes
    on such a retailer a duty to inquire as to the purchaser’s license status.” (Id.
    at p. 338.) The Dodge Court reasoned that, “the Legislature could readily
    have imposed a duty of inquiry upon motor vehicle sellers, as it did, for
    example, upon those who rent motor vehicles, in section 14608.” (Id. at
    p. 342.)
    Just a few months later in Osborn, the Court of Appeal succinctly
    stated that a rental car agency’s violation of section 14608 could subject the
    agency to common law liability for negligent entrustment:
    “[S]ection 14608 prohibits a rental car agency from renting
    to unlicensed drivers. . . . A rental car agency may
    therefore be liable for negligently entrusting a car to an
    unlicensed driver.” (Osborn, supra, 205 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 709.)
    20
    b. Section 14604 19
    In 1994, approximately six years after the Court of Appeal decisions in
    Dodge Center and Osborn, the Legislature enacted section 14604,
    subdivision (a), which specifically imposed a duty of inquiry on all owners of
    motor vehicles who permissively allow another to drive their vehicles to
    determine that the permissive driver has a valid driver’s license. (Stats.
    1994, ch. 1221, § 14.) As noted in part III.B.3, ante, section 14604,
    subdivision (a) prohibits an “owner of a motor vehicle,” from “knowingly
    allow[ing] another person to drive the vehicle . . . unless the owner determines
    19     While McKenna raises the applicability of section 14604 on appeal, his
    trial counsel failed to cite section 14604, subdivision (a) in the trial court.
    However, we may consider the statute’s applicability to this case for the first
    time on appeal for the following reasons.
    First, McKenna’s opposition to Smoothreads’s motion for summary
    judgment did present the argument that Smoothreads had a duty to inquire
    as to Wells’s license status. (Compare with Noe v. Superior Court (2015)
    
    237 Cal.App.4th 316
    , 335–336 (Noe) [“We generally will not consider an
    argument ‘raised in an appeal from a grant of summary judgment . . . if it
    was not raised below and requires consideration of new factual questions’ ”)
    Further, even if it could be said that McKenna is presenting a new
    issue on appeal, a court reviewing a summary judgment “may . . . consider a
    newly[-]raised issue ‘when [it] involves purely a legal question which rests on
    an uncontraverted record which could not have been altered by the
    presentation of additional evidence.’ ” (Noe, supra, at p. 336, italics added.)
    “The existence of a legal duty is a question of law for the court” (John B. v.
    Superior Court (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 1177
    , 1188), as is the interpretation of
    section 14604 (see, e.g., Goodman v. Lozano (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 1327
    , 1332
    [“the issue here involves the interpretation of a statute, a question of law”]),
    and defendants present no argument that our analysis of either issue could
    have been altered by the presentation of additional evidence.
    Finally, defendants do not argue in their briefing that McKenna
    forfeited reliance on section 14604, subdivision (a) by failing to cite the
    statute in the trial court. Under these circumstances, we conclude that it is
    appropriate to consider the applicability of section 14604, subdivision (a) to
    McKenna’s claim.
    21
    that the person possesses a valid driver’s license that authorizes the person to
    operate the vehicle.” (Italics added.) The statute further specifies that the
    owner is required “to make a reasonable effort or inquiry to determine
    whether the prospective driver possesses a valid driver’s license before
    allowing him or her to operate the owner’s vehicle.” (Ibid., italics added.)
    Thus, section 14604, subdivision (a) expressly provides that an owner has a
    legal duty to make a “reasonable effort or inquiry,” into a prospective driver’s
    license status before allowing the prospective driver to operate the owner’s
    vehicle. 20
    Case law discussing section 14604 describes an owner’s duty in a
    manner consistent with its text. (See Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co., supra,
    40 Cal.4th at p. 161 [“section 14604 prohibits an owner of a motor vehicle
    from knowingly allowing another person to drive its vehicle without first
    determining that the person possesses a valid and appropriate driver’s
    license”]; Smith v. Santa Rosa Police Dept. (2002) 
    97 Cal.App.4th 546
    , 563
    20    Section 14604, subdivision (b) provides:
    “A rental company is deemed to be in compliance with
    subdivision (a) if the company rents the vehicle in
    accordance with Sections 14608 and 14609.”
    Section 14608 provides additional requirements pertaining to those
    who rent motor vehicles to members of the public, including, as noted by the
    courts in Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at pages 338–339 and Osborn,
    supra, 205 Cal.App.3d at page 709, footnote 3, prohibiting the renting of a
    motor vehicle unless “[t]he person renting to another person has inspected
    the driver’s license of the person to whom the vehicle is to be rented and
    compared either the signature thereon with that of the person to whom the
    vehicle is to be rented or the photograph thereon with the person to whom the
    vehicle is to be rented.” (§ 14608, subd. (a)(2).) Section 14609 contains record
    keeping requirements related to the license inspection requirements of
    section 14608.
    22
    (Smith) [describing “the mandate of section 14604 that the registered and
    legal owner of the vehicle must inquire about the license status of the driver
    to whom the owner lends the vehicle” and referring to “section 14604’s duty of
    inquiry” 21 (id. at p. 565)].)
    c. The effect of section 14604 on common law liability for
    negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle
    In considering the effect of the enactment of section 14604,
    subdivision (a) on the common law tort of negligent entrustment, we begin by
    observing that the Philadelphia Indemnity Ins. Co. court noted that “the
    enactment of section 14604 in 1994 was part of an overall legislative effort to
    address the serious public safety danger posed by unlicensed drivers and
    drivers with suspended or revoked licenses.” (Philadelphia Indemnity Ins.
    Co., 
    supra,
     40 Cal.4th at p. 162; Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565
    [section 14604 was part of a legislative effort “aimed at reducing the
    incidence of unlicensed driving and punishing such behavior”].)
    As part of this “overall legislative effort” (Philadelphia Indemnity Ins.
    Co., supra, 40 Cal.4th at p. 162), the Legislature adopted, as statutory law,
    the following findings, detailing these significant public safety dangers:
    “The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
    “(a) Driving a motor vehicle on the public streets and
    highways is a privilege, not a right.
    “(b) Of all drivers involved in fatal accidents, more than
    20 percent are not licensed to drive. A driver with a
    suspended license is four times as likely to be involved in a
    fatal accident as a properly licensed driver.
    21    To be precise, section 14604, subdivision (a) specifies a duty of
    “reasonable effort or inquiry.” However, for purposes of brevity, we employ
    the Smith court’s “duty of inquiry” (Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565)
    shorthand description of the statutory requirement through this opinion.
    23
    “(c) At any given time, it is estimated by the Department of
    Motor Vehicles that of some 20 million driver’s licenses
    issued to Californians, 720,000 are suspended or revoked.
    Furthermore, 1,000,000 persons are estimated to be driving
    without ever having been licensed at all.
    “(d) Over 4,000 persons are killed in traffic accidents in
    California annually, and another 330,000 persons suffer
    injuries.
    “(e) Californians who comply with the law are frequently
    victims of traffic accidents caused by unlicensed drivers.
    These innocent victims suffer considerable pain and
    property loss at the hands of people who flaunt [sic] the
    law. The Department of Motor Vehicles estimates that
    75 percent of all drivers whose driving privilege has been
    withdrawn continue to drive regardless of the law.” 22
    (§ 14607.4)
    In Smith, the court observed that, although section 14604 is a criminal
    statute, 23 the statute could potentially serve as the basis for a negligence
    finding in a civil action:
    22    The findings were enacted pursuant to Statutes 1994, chapter 1133,
    section 11, companion legislation to Statutes 1994, chapter 1221, section 14,
    which enacted section 14604. (See Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 563
    [describing the two statues as “companion pieces of legislation, aimed at
    reducing the harm caused by drivers with suspended, revoked or no
    licenses”].)
    23     Violation of section 14604 is a misdemeanor. Section 40000.11 provides
    in relevant part:
    “A violation of any of the following provisions is a
    misdemeanor, and not an infraction:
    “[¶] . . . [¶]
    “(m) Section 14604, relating to unlawful use of a vehicle.”
    24
    “[S]ection 14604 is a criminal statute. . . . [S]ection 14604
    imposes criminal liability upon an owner who knowingly
    allows another person to drive the owner’s vehicle without
    first determining the driver possesses a valid driver’s
    license. . . . That standard for criminal liability could
    conceivably furnish a basis for a negligence finding in a
    civil action for damages against an owner who did not make
    a reasonable effort to determine whether the prospective
    driver possessed a valid license before allowing the driver to
    operate the owner’s vehicle where injuries were proximately
    caused thereby. (See Evid. Code, § 669[ 24]; see generally
    6 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts §§ 818,
    819, pp. 170–173 [violation of a criminal statute may
    constitute negligence per se].)” (Smith, supra,
    97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565, italics added.) 25
    While we do not consider here whether a violation of section 14604
    constitutes negligence per se, 26 we agree with the opinion in Smith insofar
    24    Evidence Code section 669 outlines the requirements for establishing
    negligence per se.
    25    In Smith, the court considered a question of statutory interpretation
    related to the relationship between section 14604 and section 14602.6, which
    allows for the impounding of a motor vehicle driven by an unlicensed driver
    and provides an owner with a hearing to “ ‘consider any mitigating
    circumstances attendant to[ ] the storage,’ ” (Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 549.) Specifically, the Smith court considered whether section 14602.6
    conditions “the operation of the mitigating circumstances exception to
    situations where the owner has made a reasonable inquiry as to the licensed
    status of the driver before lending the vehicle.” (Smith, supra, at p. 550.)
    While the Smith court’s interpretation of section 14602.6 is not germane to
    the present appeal, the Smith court’s observations as to the relationship
    between section 14604 and a civil action for damages based on negligence, are
    relevant.
    26    “ ‘[T]he doctrine of negligence per se is not a separate cause of action,
    but creates an evidentiary presumption that affects the standard of care in a
    cause of action for negligence,’ ” (Turner v. Seterus, Inc. (2018) 
    27 Cal.App.5th 25
    as it can be interpreted to state that the enactment of section 14604,
    subdivision (a) is relevant in determining the scope of an owner’s duty for
    purposes of a claim of negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle. Just as the
    court in Owens concluded that negligent entrustment liability may be
    premised on a violation of a statutory predecessor to section 14606 (Owens,
    supra, 116 Cal.App. at p. 351), and the Osborn court stated that negligent
    entrustment liability may be premised on a violation of section 14608
    (Osborn, supra, 205 Cal.App.3d at p. 709), we conclude, for reasons explained
    further below, that an owner who violates section 14604 may be liable for
    negligent entrustment.
    It is true, as Smoothreads points out in its brief, that section 14604,
    subdivision (a) establishes an affirmative duty to inquire regarding a
    prospective driver’s license status, while a negligent entrustment claim
    requires either actual or constructive knowledge of a prospective driver’s
    incompetence or lack of fitness to drive. (Compare § 14604, subd. (a) [“No
    owner of a motor vehicle may knowingly allow another person to drive the
    vehicle upon a highway unless the owner determines that the person
    possesses a valid driver’s license that authorizes the person to operate the
    vehicle” (italics added)] with CACI No. 724 [listing as an element of a
    negligent entrustment cause of action “[t]hat [name of defendant] knew, or
    516, 534). McKenna presents no argument on appeal concerning the doctrine
    of negligence per se, and we therefore have no occasion to consider its
    potential applicability in this case.
    We also reject Smoothreads’s characterization of McKenna’s argument
    as “essentially a negligence per se, almost a strict liability, argument.”
    McKenna’s briefing makes clear that his argument is that “(1) constructive
    knowledge of an unlicensed driver puts an owner ‘on inquiry [notice]’ of
    incompetence; and (2) it is for [a] jury to determine under those
    circumstances whether the owner was negligent in permitting the driver to
    operate the vehicle.” (Quoting Syah, supra, 247 Cal.App.2d at p. 545.)
    26
    should have known, that [name of driver] was incompetent or unfit to drive
    the vehicle” (some italics added)].)
    However, a jury that finds that an owner failed to comply with the
    affirmative statutory duty to make a “reasonable effort or inquiry” (§ 14604,
    subd. (a)) into a prospective driver’s license status could reasonably rely on
    that finding in determining that the owner should have known that the
    prospective driver “was incompetent or unfit to drive the vehicle.” 27 (CACI
    No. 724, italics added; see e.g., Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., supra,
    94 Cal.App.3d at p. 92.) As the court in Dodge Center stated, “The fact that
    the driver is unlicensed makes a prima facie case of negligence in allowing
    him to drive the vehicle.” (Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 341,
    fn. 3. [citing cases].)
    In Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., the court considered whether a
    car dealer could be liable for negligent entrustment where the dealer made no
    inquiry into the license status of a prospective customer before allowing the
    prospective customer to test drive a vehicle. After citing former sections
    14606 and 14608, 28 the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. court reasoned:
    27    Or, as McKenna states in his reply brief, “constructive knowledge of no
    license supports constructive knowledge of incompetence.” (Italics omitted.)
    28     The Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. court noted that former section
    14606 provided in relevant part that “ ‘(n)o person shall . . . knowingly permit
    or authorize the driving of a motor vehicle, owned by him or under his
    control, upon the highways by any person unless the person is then licensed
    for the appropriate class of vehicle to be driven,’ ” and that former section
    14608 provided in relevant part, “ ‘(n)o person shall rent a motor vehicle to
    another unless . . . [the] person renting to another person has inspected the
    driver’s license of the person to whom the vehicle is to be rented and
    compared the signature thereon with the signature of such person written in
    his presence.’ ” (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., supra, 94 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 92, quoting former §§ 14606, 14608.)
    27
    “Taken together, these sections attempt to ensure that only
    licensed drivers will operate vehicles on the streets and
    highways in this state; the protected class are members of
    the public using those streets and highways. We think it
    clear that ‘ordinary care and skill’ on the part of a used car
    dealer requires inquiry of persons wishing to test drive the
    dealer’s cars as to whether or not they are validly licensed
    drivers. Those persons who cannot produce a valid license
    to operate such automobiles test drive at the dealer’s peril.”
    (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., supra, 94 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 92.)
    Similarly, in this case, section 14604 reflects a further legislative effort
    to reduce the public safety dangers posed by unlicensed drivers, by requiring
    all owners of motor vehicles to exercise “reasonable effort or inquiry”
    (§ 14604, subd. (a)) into a prospective driver’s license status before allowing
    the prospective driver to drive the owner’s vehicle. (See Philadelphia
    Indemnity Ins. Co., supra, 40 Cal.4th at p. 161.) An owner who allows its
    vehicle to be driven without fulfilling his duty allows the unlicensed driver to
    drive the vehicle at the owner’s peril.
    Thus, given the enactment of “section 14604’s duty of inquiry” (Smith,
    supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565), 29 the Dodge Center court’s statement that,
    29     We are not persuaded by Smoothreads’s argument, quoting Dodge
    Center and citing Richards, that “[t]o impose a ‘duty of inquiry,’ where there
    was no actual knowledge of unfitness, would ‘not only be without precedent’
    but ‘would also violate the general principle that it may be presumed that
    every person will obey the law.’ ” As the Smith court made clear, it is the
    Legislature that imposed the “duty of inquiry” (Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 565) that we apply here, and section 14604 provides the legal
    “precedent,” that was lacking in Dodge Center, supra, at 199 Cal.App.3d at
    page 342. As noted, section 14604 was enacted six years after Dodge Center
    was decided.
    Further, while the Richards court stated that “[o]rdinarily . . . there is
    no duty to control the conduct of a third person so as to prevent him from
    causing harm to another” (Richards, supra, 43 Cal.2d at p. 65, italics added),
    28
    under California law, “there can be no liability [for negligent entrustment]
    unless permission to drive is given to one known to be unlicensed,” is no
    longer correct. 30 (Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 339; citing
    Johnson v. Casetta (1961) 
    197 Cal.App.2d 272
    , 274 [sellers of motor vehicle
    could not be liable for negligent entrustment because sellers had no
    knowledge purchaser was “an inexperienced, incompetent and unlicensed
    driver,” and “in the absence of any such knowledge, they had no legal duty or
    obligation to inquire”].)
    We therefore conclude that a jury may reasonably find that an owner of
    a vehicle had constructive knowledge that a prospective driver was
    incompetent or unfit to drive if there is evidence from which the jury could
    reasonably find that the owner breached its section 14604 duty to inquire as
    to a prospective driver’s license status and allowed an unlicensed driver to
    the Richards court repeatedly emphasized that this was true only “[i]n the
    absence of . . . a statute,” establishing such duty. (Id. at p. 63, italics added;
    see id. at p. 65 [“[i]n the absence of [a] statute”]; id. at p. 67 [“in the absence
    of [a] statute”].) In this case, there is such a statute—section 14604.
    30     In fact, in our view, the Dodge Center Court’s statement as to the
    requirement of actual knowledge on the part of the owner was not entirely
    correct at the time it was made. As noted in the text, in Hartford Accident &
    Indemnity Co., the Court of Appeal concluded that a cause of action at
    common law for negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle had been properly
    stated against a car dealer who permitted an unlicensed driver to test drive a
    vehicle premised on the dealer’s breach of the duty to inquire as to the
    driver’s license status. (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., supra,
    94 Cal.App.3d at p. 92.) The Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. court
    specifically stated that “no one [from the dealership] asked [the driver] if he
    possessed a valid driver’s license,” (id. at p. 87) and there is nothing in the
    opinion suggesting that the dealer knew the driver was unlicensed.
    Accordingly, we are unpersuaded by Smoothreads’s argument, citing Dodge
    Center, that an “unbroken line of authority requiring actual knowledge,” of a
    driver’s lack of a license is required in order for a plaintiff to prevail on a
    claim for negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle.
    29
    drive the owner’s vehicle. We further conclude that a defendant/owner fails
    to meet its summary adjudication burden of establishing that a plaintiff
    cannot establish the constructive knowledge element of a negligent
    entrustment of a motor vehicle claim, 31 where there is evidence from which a
    jury could reasonably find that an owner of a vehicle breached its section
    14604 duty and allowed an unlicensed driver to drive its vehicle.
    For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that there is such
    evidence in this case.
    2. The trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in
    favor or Smoothreads on the ground that McKenna would be unable
    to establish the constructive knowledge element of his negligent
    entrustment cause of action
    With respect to the evidence from which a reasonable jury could find
    that Smoothreads breached its section 14604 duty as the owner of a vehicle 32
    to “make a reasonable effort or inquiry to determine whether the prospective
    driver possesses a valid driver’s license before allowing him . . . to operate the
    owner’s vehicle” (§ 14064, subd. (a)), McKenna presented evidence that
    Beesley 33 did not ask Wells whether he had a valid driver’s license before
    permitting Wells to drive Smoothreads’s vehicle. Specifically, McKenna
    lodged Wells’s deposition testimony in which Wells was asked, “Did [Beesley]
    31    As discussed in part III.A, ante, for “purposes of motions for summary
    judgment and summary adjudication . . . [a] defendant . . . has met his or her
    burden of showing that a cause of action has no merit if the party has shown
    that one or more elements of the cause of action . . . cannot be
    established . . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p); see Camacho, supra,
    24 Cal.App.5th at p. 296 [summarizing summary judgment burdens].)
    32    It is undisputed that Smoothreads owned the vehicle in question.
    33    Smoothreads does not dispute that Beesley acted on its behalf.
    30
    ever request any driving information from you about whether you had DUI
    convictions, whether you had a suspended license or whether you even had a
    valid license?” Wells responded, “No.” McKenna lodged another portion of
    Wells’s deposition, during which the following colloquy occurred:
    “Q: Did you tell the Beesleys you didn’t have a driver’s
    license?
    “A: They never asked.
    “Q: Did you tell them?
    “A: I didn’t tell them because they never asked.”
    Based on this testimony, a reasonable jury could find that
    Smoothreads 34 failed to make “a reasonable effort or inquiry to determine
    whether [Wells] possesse[d] a valid driver’s license before allowing him . . . to
    operate [Smoothreads’s] vehicle.” (§ 14604, subd. (a).)
    Smoothreads’s argument to the contrary is not persuasive.
    Smoothreads argues:
    “If someone drives their car to your house one day, and
    asks to borrow your car the next, you do not have reason to
    suspect they are unlicensed or an unfit driver. Even less if
    that someone is an adult whose job (here, contractor)
    is commonly understood to require use of a vehicle.”
    Section 14604, subdivision (a) does not condition its applicability on
    instances in which an owner has “reason to suspect,” that a prospective
    driver does not have a license. Rather, as recounted throughout this opinion,
    the statute mandates, without qualification, that the owner “make a
    reasonable effort or inquiry,” into the prospective driver’s license status
    34     Smoothreads does not contend that someone other than Beesley acted
    on its behalf with respect to the Smoothreads’s vehicle in determining Wells’s
    license status or competency to drive.
    31
    before allowing the prospective driver to use the owner’s vehicle. (§ 14604,
    subd. (a).) In light of the evidence discussed above, we conclude that a jury
    could reasonably find that Smoothreads did not satisfy its duty to make “a
    reasonable effort or inquiry,” to determine whether Wells had a valid driver’s
    license before allowing Wells to drive Smoothreads’s vehicle. 35
    With respect to whether there is evidence that Smoothreads allowed an
    unlicensed driver to drive its vehicle, Smoothreads conceded for purposes of
    its summary adjudication motion that it permitted Wells to drive its vehicle
    that was involved in the accident, and it is undisputed that Wells did not
    possess a valid driver’s license at the time of the accident.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the jury could reasonably find that
    Smoothreads had constructive knowledge that Wells was incompetent or
    unfit to drive and that Smoothreads allowed an unlicensed driver to drive its
    vehicle. We therefore further conclude that the trial court erred in granting
    judgment as a matter of law because Smoothreads did not demonstrate that
    McKenna would be unable to establish the constructive knowledge element of
    his negligent entrustment cause of action against it. 36
    35   Stated differently, Smoothreads did not establish that McKenna would
    be unable to prove that Smoothreads breached its duty under section 14604.
    36    McKenna and Smoothreads both make arguments pertaining to a
    separate element of McKenna’s negligent entrustment claim against
    Smoothreads, i.e., whether Wells’s incompetence or unfitness to drive was a
    substantial factor in causing harm to McKenna (i.e., proximate cause
    element). For example, McKenna argues, “[A] reasonable jury could find that
    Smoothreads’[s] breach of its duty to inquire into Wells’ licensure status was
    the ‘but for’ cause of the collision.” Smoothreads argues, “The accident was
    not caused by Wells’s lack of a license.”
    Smoothreads did not move for summary adjudication on the ground
    that McKenna would be unable to prove the proximate cause element of his
    negligent entrustment cause of action. On the contrary, the sole basis on
    32
    D. The trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in favor of
    Beesley on McKenna’s negligent hiring cause of action
    McKenna claims that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a
    matter of law in favor of Beesley on McKenna’s negligent hiring claim.
    Specifically, McKenna argues that the trial court erred in concluding that
    McKenna could not establish that Beesley knew or should have known that
    Wells was unfit or incompetent to drive, as required to prove a negligent
    hiring claim.
    1. The precise nature of the appellate claim at issue
    At the outset, we clarify our understanding of the nature of the
    appellate claim at issue. While McKenna correctly states that a negligent
    hiring claim technically is a “separate cause of action,” from a negligent
    entrustment claim, he notes the close relationship between the two causes of
    action, stating, “In the context of entrusting a vehicle to a hired worker, a
    claim of negligent hiring is generally equivalent to a claim of negligent
    entrustment” (italics omitted). (Citing Diaz, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at p. 1157; see
    
    ibid.
     [negligent hiring and negligent entrustment “claims are functionally
    identical” in this context]; see also 
    ibid.
     [referring to a single “claim against
    the employer—for negligent entrustment, hiring, or retention” (italics
    added)].) Negligent hiring in this context and negligent entrustment of a
    which Smoothreads sought summary adjudication of McKenna’s negligent
    entrustment cause of action was its contention that “[McKenna] [cannot]
    present any triable issue of fact to demonstrate the actual or constructive
    knowledge required to prevail on a negligent entrustment theory.” Further,
    the trial court granted Smoothreads’s motion for summary adjudication solely
    on the constructive knowledge element and did not discuss proximate cause
    in any manner in its ruling. Thus, we have no occasion to consider the
    parties’ contentions as to the proximate cause element of McKenna’s
    negligent entrustment cause of action.
    33
    motor vehicle are both premised on “[a]wareness [by the defendant],
    constructive or actual, that a person is unfit or incompetent to drive.” (Ibid.)
    Thus, we understand McKenna to be arguing that there is a triable
    issue of fact as to whether Beesley may be liable for negligent hiring based on
    Beesley’s allegedly wrongful act of entrusting a vehicle to Wells. 37
    Specifically, McKenna claims that the trial court erred in concluding that
    McKenna would be unable to establish that “Beesley knew or should have
    known (A) that Wells was unfit or incompetent to drive and (B) that this
    unfitness or incompetence created a particular risk to others.” (Quoting
    CACI. No. 426 [outlining the elements of a claim for negligent hiring].) 38
    37     Our understanding of McKenna’s claim is further supported by the fact
    that McKenna does not seek to hold Beesley liable for any allegedly negligent
    act other than Beesley’s alleged negligence in entrusting Wells with a vehicle.
    Further, we analyze Beesley’s liability solely as the hirer and not as the
    person through whom Smoothreads, the owner of the vehicle in question,
    acted.
    38     The close relationship between negligent hiring and negligent
    entrustment theories of liability against Beesley is further supported by the
    fact that neither the allegations of McKenna’s complaint, nor Beesley’s
    motion for summary judgment, nor the trial court’s order granting summary
    judgment draw clear distinctions between negligent hiring and negligent
    entrustment theories of liability with respect to Beesley. (See pt. II.A, C, E,
    ante.) Thus, as we state in the text, we understand McKenna to be arguing
    that Beesley may be liable for negligent hiring based on his act of hiring
    Wells and wrongfully entrusting a vehicle to Wells.
    34
    2. A person who hires another and permits that person to drive a
    vehicle under the hirer’s control has a duty to make a reasonable
    effort or inquiry to determine whether the hiree has a valid driver’s
    license; a hirer who breaches this duty, and who permits an
    unlicensed driver to drive the vehicle, may be found to have
    constructive knowledge of the hiree’s incompetence to drive for
    purposes of a negligent hiring claim
    We are not aware of any authority, and neither party has cited any,
    that addresses whether a person who hires another to drive a vehicle under
    the hirer’s control has a duty to make a reasonable effort or inquiry to
    determine whether the hiree has a valid driver’s license. (See § 14606,
    subd. (a) [“A person shall not employ, hire, knowingly permit, or authorize
    any person to drive a motor vehicle owned by him or her or under his or her
    control upon the highways unless that person is licensed for the appropriate
    class of vehicle to be driven”]; cf. § 14604, subd. (a) [mandating that an owner
    of a vehicle make a “reasonable effort or inquiry” into whether the
    prospective driver possesses a valid driver’s license].) 39 Nor are we aware of
    any authority involving whether a hirer who breaches that duty, and who
    permits an unlicensed driver to drive the vehicle, may be found to have
    constructive knowledge of the hiree’s incompetence to drive for purposes of a
    negligent hiring claim.
    39     We are aware that section 14604 applies, by its terms, to owners, and
    Beesley did not own the vehicle in question. However, Beesley did hire Wells,
    and section 14606 prohibits the hiring of a person to drive a vehicle when the
    hiree lacks a driver’s license, irrespective of whether the hirer has knowledge
    of the hiree’s lack of a driver’s license. Thus, and for reasons we explain in
    more detail in the text, in defining the scope of common law duties with
    reference to the statutory scheme, we conclude that, at a minimum, given
    that the Legislature required owners to make a “reasonable effort or inquiry”
    (§ 14604) into whether a permissive driver has a driver’s license, hirers have
    such a duty of inquiry, as well.
    35
    As we explain below, Dodge Center, the principal case that Beesley and
    the trial court relied on, was never authority as to a hirer’s duty under
    section 14606, and Dodge Center was based on case law that is no longer
    controlling in the wake of the enactment of section 14604, subdivision (a).
    First, Dodge Center considered only whether a seller of motor vehicles could
    be liable pursuant to common or statutory law 40 in light of the portion of
    section 14606, subdivision (a) that prohibits a person from knowingly
    permitting another to drive a vehicle without a driver’s license. (Dodge
    Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 338.) The Dodge Center court did not
    consider the applicability of section 14606, subdivision (a) to one who
    “employ[s] [or] hire[s]” a person to drive. (Ibid., italics added; see Dodge
    Center, supra, at p. 338.) Indeed, the Dodge Center court did not mention the
    “employ, hire” text of section 14606, subdivision (a); the court instead
    repeatedly referred to the requirement that the defendant have “knowingly”
    entrusted a vehicle to an unlicensed driver, a requirement that the
    Legislature did not apply to those who “employ” or “hire” a driver. For
    example, the Dodge Center court stated:
    “[S]ection 14606, subdivision (a) in relevant part provides
    that no person shall ‘knowingly permit or authorize the
    driving of a motor vehicle, owned by him or under his
    control, upon the highways by any person unless the person
    is then licensed for the appropriate class of vehicle to be
    driven.’ This statute (and its predecessors) make a motor
    vehicle owner who knowingly entrusts his vehicle to an
    unlicensed driver liable for a third party’s injuries caused
    by the driver’s negligence.” (Dodge Center, supra, at p. 338,
    italics added.)
    40    The Dodge Center court stated that a cause of action pursuant to
    section 14606 “parallels that at common law for negligent entrustment.”
    (Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 338.)
    36
    Second, Dodge Center lacks persuasive force because the court relied on
    case law requiring that a person have actual knowledge of a prospective
    driver’s lack of a driver’s licensure that predated the enactment of section
    14604, subdivision (a). (See Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d at p. 338
    [“the common law cause of action for entrustment, requires a showing of
    knowledge of the incapacitating condition, which under the statute[ 41] is lack
    of a license. In the absence of such knowledge there is no duty to inquire”
    (italics added)].) We concluded in part III.C, ante, that, in light of the
    enactment of a “duty of inquiry” (Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565) in
    section 14604, subdivision (a), a jury may find the constructive knowledge
    element of a negligent entrustment claim against an owner to be proven
    without proof that the owner had actual knowledge of a prospective driver’s
    license status, in light of the owner’s duty to inquire into the license status. 42
    Indeed, the Dodge Center court suggested the significance of a statute
    imposing such a duty:
    “As Dodge points out, the Legislature could readily have
    imposed a duty of inquiry upon motor vehicle sellers, as it
    did, for example, upon those who rent motor vehicles, in
    section 14608. Sections 14606 and 14608 were enacted
    during the same legislative session as part of the same
    statute. [Citation.] Since that time, section 14606 has
    been amended three times, but no language has been
    41    The Dodge Center court was referring to section 14606, subdivision (a).
    However, as noted in the text, the Dodge Center court did not consider the
    applicability of section 14606, subdivision (a) to one who “employ[s] [or]
    hire[s].” (Ibid.)
    42    As we explained in part III.C, ante, a jury may reasonably find that an
    owner of a vehicle had constructive knowledge that a prospective driver was
    incompetent or unfit to drive if there is evidence from which the jury could
    reasonably find that the owner breached its duty under section 14604 and
    allowed an unlicensed driver to drive its vehicle.
    37
    inserted requiring a seller to examine the purchaser’s
    license. [Citations.]” (Dodge Center, supra, 199 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 342.)
    As discussed in part III.C, ante, six years after Dodge Center was
    decided, with the enactment of section 14604, subdivision (a), the Legislature
    has imposed a “duty of inquiry” (Smith, supra, 97 Cal.App.4th at p. 565) on
    the owner of a vehicle who allows another person to drive the owner’s
    vehicle. 43
    In considering a hirer’s common law duties in this context, we observe
    that section 14606, subdivision (a)’s prohibition 44 on “hir[ing] . . . any person
    to drive a motor vehicle owned by him or her or under his or her control upon
    the highways unless that person is licensed for the appropriate class of
    vehicle to be driven,” contains no requirement that those who “employ” or
    “hire” another (ibid.) have knowledge of the fact that the hiree does not
    possess a valid driver’s license. Rather, section 14606, subdivision (a)
    prohibits, without qualification, hiring a person who lacks an appropriate
    driver’s license. (Ibid. [“A person shall not employ, hire, knowingly permit, or
    authorize any person to drive a motor vehicle owned by him or her or under
    his or her control upon the highways unless that person is licensed for the
    appropriate class of vehicle to be driven” (italics added)].) Thus, a textual
    argument can be made that section 14606, subdivision (a) permits a plaintiff
    43     We have no occasion to consider, and do not consider, the duty of a
    seller of a motor vehicle, if any, to inquire into the licensee status of a
    purchaser of a motor vehicle, in light of the enactment of section 14604,
    subdivision (a).
    44    While section 14606 is a criminal statute, the violation of which is an
    infraction (see § 40000.1), we conclude that the statute is highly relevant in
    determining the scope of common law tort liability for negligent hiring in this
    context. (See pt. III.B.2, ante.)
    38
    bringing a negligent hiring claim to establish that a hirer “knew or should
    have known [(A)] that [the hiree] was unfit or incompetent [to drive and (B)]
    that this unfitness or incompetence created a particular risk to others” (CACI
    No. 426) simply upon proof that the hiree lacked an appropriate driver’s
    license.
    However, we need not reach such a broad holding to decide this case.
    Instead, we need consider only whether McKenna is correct in arguing that
    the “requisite ‘amount of care,’ . . . pertaining to constructive knowledge of
    unlicensed driving,” as to hirers (see § 14606, subd. (a)) is, at a minimum, “co-
    extensive” with that pertaining to owners (see § 14604, subd. (a)). We can
    think of no reason, and Beesley offers none, why a hirer who hires another to
    drive a vehicle has no duty to make a reasonable effort or inquiry into
    whether a prospective hiree is licensed before entrusting the hiree with a
    vehicle, given that an owner must make a reasonable effort or inquiry before
    permitting a person to driver the owner’s car. 45 Instead, we agree with
    McKenna that a person “hiring a worker and entrusting a . . . vehicle to that
    worker is . . . analogous to the statutory framework governing owners who
    45      Beesley does contend that, because the text of section 14604,
    subdivision (a) refers solely to an owner, we should reject McKenna’s
    argument that a hirer’s “duty should be ‘co-extensive’ ” with an owner’s.
    Beesley contends that we should reject McKenna’s argument because,
    according to Beesley, that “is not what the Legislature determined.” We are
    unpersuaded. As noted in the previous paragraph, the text of section 14606,
    subdivision (a) does not contain any knowledge requirement with respect to
    those who “hire . . . [a] person to drive a motor vehicle.” Thus, the text of the
    two statutes (§§ 14604, subd. (a), 14606, subd. (a)) does not support the
    conclusion that the Legislature intended for a hirer of a driver to be subject to
    a less onerous duty of inquiry than an owner who allows another to drive its
    vehicle. As explained in the text, a hirer has, at a minimum, a duty to make
    a reasonable effort or inquiry into whether a hiree with whom they are
    entrusting a vehicle has a license, whether or not the hiree owns the vehicle
    entrusted.
    39
    lend their vehicles to another person.” Thus, we conclude that a hirer has, at
    a minimum, a duty to make a “reasonable effort or inquiry” (§ 14604,
    subd. (a)) into whether the hiree, entrusted with a vehicle, has an
    appropriate driver’s license.
    Finally, for the same reasons we concluded that a jury may find the
    constructive knowledge element of a cause of action for negligent entrustment
    proven by evidence that an owner allowed an unlicensed driver to drive the
    owner’s vehicle without making a reasonable effort or inquiry whether the
    person has a valid license (see pt. III.C, ante), we conclude that a jury may
    find the constructive knowledge element of a cause of action for negligent
    hiring of a driver proven by evidence that a hirer entrusted a vehicle to a
    hiree and: (1) the hirer did not make any “reasonable effort or inquiry”
    (§ 14604, subd. (a)) into whether the hiree had an appropriate driver’s license
    and; (2) the hiree in fact lacked an appropriate driver’s license. 46
    For the reasons discussed in the following section, we conclude that
    there is such evidence in this case.
    3. The trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter of law in
    favor of Beesley on McKenna’s negligent hiring claim on the ground
    that McKenna would be unable to establish the constructive
    knowledge element of his claim
    A reasonable jury could find that Beesley 47 did not make a reasonable
    effort or inquiry into whether Wells had an appropriate driver’s license, based
    46    As noted in part I, ante, both negligent entrustment of a motor vehicle
    and negligent hiring of a driver are based on evidence of “[a]wareness [by the
    defendant], constructive or actual, that a person is unfit or incompetent to
    drive.” (Diaz, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 1157.)
    47    Beesley states in his brief, “it is undisputed that Mr. Beesley did hire
    Mr. Wells to perform handyman work at the Beesley residence . . . .” As
    noted in part II.C, ante, Beesley assumed for purposes of his motion for
    40
    on the evidence discussed in part III.C.2, ante, concerning Beesley’s
    permitting Wells to drive the Smoothreads vehicle without asking Wells
    whether he had a valid driver’s license. Beesley’s argument that “[t]here was
    no reason for Mr. Beesley to suspect that a 57-year old man, who had come to
    do work driving his own vehicle, would be unlicensed, or otherwise unfit to
    operate a pickup truck,” is unpersuasive because, as we explained in rejecting
    Smoothreads’s similar argument, a hirer must make a reasonable effort or
    inquiry into the prospective driver’s license status, irrespective of whether
    the hirer “ha[s] . . . reason to suspect,” that the hiree is unlicensed. As to the
    second requirement, it is undisputed that Wells did not have a driver’s
    license at the time of the accident.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the jury could reasonably find that
    Beesley had constructive knowledge that Wells was incompetent or unfit to
    drive and that Beesley allowed an unlicensed driver to drive a vehicle. We
    therefore conclude that the trial court erred in granting judgment as a matter
    of law in favor of Beesley on McKenna’s negligent hiring claim on the ground
    that McKenna would be unable to establish the constructive knowledge
    element of his claim. 48
    summary judgment that Beesley gave Wells permission to use the vehicle
    involved in the accident and that Wells was the operator at the time of the
    accident.
    48    McKenna and Beesley also both make arguments pertaining to a
    separate element of McKenna’s negligent hiring cause of action, i.e., whether
    Beesley’s negligence in hiring Wells was a substantial factor in causing
    McKenna’s harm. For example, Beesley argues, that “there must also be
    some relationship between the employment and the negligent act for a claim
    of negligent hiring,” and contends that the fact that the accident occurred
    outside of Wells’s scope of employment demonstrates a lack of such evidence.
    McKenna claims that a negligent hiring cause of action may be brought
    against a hirer even where the hiree was acting outside of their scope of
    41
    IV.
    DISPOSITION
    The February 28, 2020 judgment in favor of Smoothreads and the
    September 6, 2019 order granting Smoothreads’s motion for summary
    adjudication are reversed. Smoothreads shall bear costs on appeal with
    respect to McKenna’s appeal from the February 28, 2020 judgment.
    The October 30, 2019 judgment in favor of Beesley and the September
    6, 2019 order granting Beesley’s motion for summary judgment are reversed.
    Beesley shall bear costs on appeal with respect to McKenna’s appeal from the
    October 30, 2019 judgment.
    AARON, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    MCCONNELL, P. J.
    DO, J.
    employment. (Citing J.W. v. Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York,
    Inc. (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 1142
    , 1164–1165.)
    While Beesley raised a scope of employment argument in his motion for
    summary judgment, that argument was directed toward defeating Beesley’s
    potential “respondeat superior liability,” a form of vicarious liability not
    presented by McKenna on appeal. (See J.W. v. Watchtower Bible & Tract
    Society of New York, Inc., supra, at p. 1164 [distinguishing “direct liability”
    for negligent hiring from “respondeat superior,” a form of vicarious liability].)
    Beesley did not move for summary judgment on the ground that McKenna
    would not be able to prove the proximate cause element of his negligent
    hiring cause of action, and the trial court granted Beesley’s motion for
    summary judgment solely on the constructive knowledge element, and did
    not discuss proximate cause in any manner in its ruling. Thus, we have no
    occasion to consider the parties’ contentions as to the proximate cause
    element of McKenna’s negligent hiring cause of action.
    42