Arellano v. City of San Diego CA4/1 ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 4/18/22 Arellano v. City of San Diego CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    RAUL ARELLANO,                                                     D078442
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.                                                        (Super. Ct. No.
    37-2016-00016908-CU-PO-CTL)
    CITY OF SAN DIEGO et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Ronald L. Styn, Judge. Affirmed.
    Raul Arellano, in pro. per., for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Mara Woodworth Elliot, City Attorney and Tyler Louis Krentz, Deputy
    City Attorney, for Defendant and Respondent, City of San Diego.
    Dean Gazzo Roistacher and Lee H. Roistacher, Joseph Michael
    Radachonski for Defendant and Respondent, City of El Cajon.
    Lonnie Eldridge, County Counsel and Joshua Michael Heinlein, Senior
    Deputy Counsel, for Defendant and Respondent, County of San Diego.
    Plaintiff and appellant Raul Arellano, a self-represented litigant who is
    incarcerated in state prison, appeals from a judgment entered after the trial
    court sustained without leave to amend demurrers by defendants and
    respondents City of San Diego (San Diego), City of El Cajon (El Cajon) and
    County of San Diego (County) to Arellano’s operative second amended
    complaint.1 The court ruled Arellano failed to allege compliance with claims
    presentation requirements of the Government Claims Act (at times the Act;
    Gov. Code,2 § 810 et seq.), and that he had not demonstrated the so-called
    “prison-delivery rule” extended to those requirements. It entered judgment
    in defendants’ favor. Arellano challenges the court’s ruling, and asserts the
    court made other errors. We reject his challenge to the order sustaining the
    demurrers without leave to amend, and hold he has forfeited his remaining
    arguments. We affirm the judgment.3
    1     Arellano filed two second amended complaints, one in December 2018
    and one in September 2019. The lower court considered the latter filing the
    operative pleading and permitted County and San Diego to refile demurrers
    to that pleading.
    2     Undesignated statutory references are to the Government Code.
    3      At the same time that Arrellano requested oral argument in this
    matter, he asserted that as of October 26, 2021, he had not received
    respondents’ brief and sought clarification about it. Defendants’ proof of
    service of their combined respondents’ brief indicates the brief was served
    October 21, 2021, by U.S. mail on Arrellano at RJ Donovan Correctional
    Facility, where Arrellano confirmed he has been housed since about 2013.
    Arrellano appeared for oral argument and this court gave him the
    opportunity to make his points. It was incumbent on Arrellano to seek relief
    if he had not received the combined respondents’ brief, and he forfeited any
    objection that he assertedly lacked notice of defendants’ arguments by
    proceeding in this manner.
    2
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    When reviewing a judgment entered on a demurrer sustained without
    leave to amend, the appellate court usually assumes the truth of properly
    pleaded facts alleged in the plaintiff’s operative complaint. (Mathews v.
    Becerra (2019) 
    8 Cal.5th 756
    , 768; Roy Allan Slurry Seal, Inc. v. American
    Asphalt South, Inc. (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 505
    , 512.) Here, Arellano’s operative
    second amended complaint mainly consists of arguments and legal
    conclusions, making it difficult to cull material factual allegations. That
    pleading incorporated Arellano’s first amended complaint, so we view those
    allegations as well. Arellano does not acknowledge or set out the pertinent
    standard of review, and there is no indication in his brief that he has
    summarized the material allegations of his pleadings. The general
    background facts of the incident are ultimately not dispositive on our review
    of defendants’ demurrers.4
    Arellano’s original May 2016 lawsuit alleged he suffered personal
    injuries at the hands of law enforcement officers during his November 2010
    arrest and while in county jail, causing him to suffer seizures and emotional
    distress. Defendants filed demurrers, including on grounds Arellano did not
    state viable causes of action against them under the Act as government
    entities, and failed to allege compliance with the claims presentation
    4      The People ask this court to take judicial notice of federal court
    pleadings, orders and a docket, and recount the procedural history of
    Arellano’s lawsuits in federal and state court, including this action’s removal
    to and remand from federal court. They argue the materials are relevant to
    their statute of limitations and claim/issue preclusion arguments. Because
    we need not reach these arguments, we deny the request as unnecessary to
    our decision. (See San Diego City Firefighters, Local 145 v. Bd. of Admin. of
    San Diego City Employees Ret. Sys. (2012) 
    206 Cal.App.4th 594
    , 600, fn. 3,
    citing Jordache Enterprises, Inc. v. Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 739
    , 748, fn. 6.)
    3
    requirement of the Act. The trial court agreed with these arguments and
    sustained the demurrers, granting Arellano 60 days leave to amend.
    Arellano eventually filed a document entitled “serving 3 defendants with 2nd
    Amended Complaint dated Dec 14, 2018” as well as a Judicial Council form
    pleading and handwritten attachment labeled as a second amended
    complaint. The court deemed that September 2019 pleading as Arellano’s
    operative second amended complaint.
    Arellano’s operative second amended complaint purported to set forth
    causes of action for assault and battery, negligent supervision and retention,
    intentional infliction of emotional distress, excessive force, gross negligence,
    and violation of the Bane Act (Civ. Code, § 52.1) based in part on allegations
    that officers used deadly force to arrest him. Arellano alleged he complied
    with Government Claims Act requirements by submitting his claim within
    six months of the incident, addressing it to the public agencies’ principal
    offices, and giving his notice of claim to another inmate who gave it to an
    officer who collects the mail to be sent out.
    Defendants again filed demurrers, on grounds, among others, that
    Arellano failed to file a claim as required by the Act. The trial court
    sustained the demurrers, ruling the operative complaint did not allege facts
    sufficient to establish compliance with the Act: “[T]he second amended
    complaint alleges only that plaintiff gave an envelope containing his claim to
    an officer at the county jail. The second amended complaint acknowledges
    that it is unknown if the City of El Cajon, or any of the other public entities,
    received Plaintiff’s claim. Absent from the second amended complaint are the
    requisite allegations that, either the claim was delivered or mailed to any of
    the recipients designated in [section] 915[, subdivision] (a), or the claim was
    actually received by the City of El Cajon, City of San Diego and County of
    4
    San Diego as allowed for under [section] 915[, subdivision] (e)(1). Without
    such allegations, the court finds the second amended complaint fails to allege
    facts sufficient to establish compliance with the claims presentation
    requirements of the California Tort Claims Act.”
    DISCUSSION
    I. Standard of Review and Settled Principles of Appellate Review
    “ ‘In reviewing an order sustaining a demurrer, we examine the
    operative complaint de novo to determine whether it alleges facts sufficient to
    state a cause of action under any legal theory.’ [Citation.] ‘ “ ‘ “We treat the
    demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded, but not
    contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law. . . . We also consider
    matters which may be judicially noticed.” . . . Further, we give the complaint
    a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and its parts in their
    context.’ ” ’ ” (Mathews v. Becerra, supra, 8 Cal.5th at p. 768.) Our primary
    task is to determine whether the facts alleged provide the basis for a cause of
    action against defendants under any theory. (Alliance Mortgage Co. v.
    Rothwell (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 1226
    , 1232; Foster v. Sexton (2021) 
    61 Cal.App.5th 998
    , 1019.)
    “Although we review the complaint de novo, ‘ “[t]he plaintiff has the
    burden of showing that the facts pleaded are sufficient to establish every
    element of the cause of action and overcoming all of the legal grounds on
    which the trial court sustained the demurrer, and if the defendant negates
    any essential element, we will affirm the order sustaining the demurrer as to
    the cause of action. [Citation.] We will affirm if there is any ground on which
    the demurrer can properly be sustained, whether or not the trial court relied
    on proper grounds or the defendant asserted a proper ground in the trial
    court proceedings.” ’ [Citation.] It is the trial court’s ruling we review, not its
    5
    reasoning or rationale.” (Kahan v. City of Richmond (2019) 
    35 Cal.App.5th 721
    , 730.)
    On appeal, a judgment or an order is presumed to be correct, and
    Arellano as the party challenging the judgment must affirmatively show
    error. (E.g., Ketchum v. Moses (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 1122
    , 1140-1141; In re
    Marriage of Arceneaux (1990) 
    51 Cal.3d 1130
    , 1133; Denham v. Superior
    Court (1970) 
    2 Cal.3d 557
    , 564.) To meet this burden, he must provide cogent
    legal argument in support of his claims of error with citation to legal
    authority. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.204(a)(1)(B); Sims v. Department of
    Corrections & Rehabilitation (2013) 
    216 Cal.App.4th 1059
    , 1081.) Absent
    these required matters, the point is forfeited. (Sims, at p. 1081; People v.
    Stanley (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 764
    , 793.)
    II. Compliance with Government Claims Act
    California's Government Claims Act authorizes limited liability for
    injuries suffered as a result of the acts or omissions of public entities or their
    employees. (§§ 815.2, 815.6.) A person seeking to maintain an action against
    a public entity must comply with a written claims procedure as a condition
    precedent. (J.J. v. County of San Diego (2014) 
    223 Cal.App.4th 1214
    , 1219.)
    “Generally speaking, no suit for money or damages may be brought against a
    public entity on a cause of action for which a claim is required to be presented
    until a written claim has been presented to the public entity and has been
    acted upon by the board, or has been deemed to have been rejected by the
    board.” (Munoz v. State of California (1995) 
    33 Cal.App.4th 1767
    , 1776;
    § 945.4.)
    A claim for personal injury against a government entity “shall be
    presented as provided in Article 2 (commencing with Section 915) not later
    than six months after the accrual of the cause of action.” (§ 911.2, subd. (a);
    6
    City of Stockton v. Superior Court (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 730
    , 737-738; Andrews v.
    Metropolitan Transit System (2022) 
    74 Cal.App.5th 597
    , 604-605.) Section
    915 requires a claim to be delivered to, mailed to, or actually received by the
    “clerk, secretary or auditor [of the public entity]” or to the “governing body at
    its principal office” within the allotted time. (§ 915, subds. (a), (e); DiCampli-
    Mintz v. County of Santa Clara (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 983
    , 990 (DiCampli-Mintz);
    Del Real v. City of Riverside (2002) 
    95 Cal.App.4th 761
    , 770.) That section
    “reflects the Legislature’s intent to precisely identify those who may receive
    claims on behalf of a local public entity.” (DiCampli-Mintz, at p. 992.) If a
    claim is misdirected but actually received by a statutorily designated
    recipient, it will satisfy the presentation requirement. (Ibid.) But “[i]f an
    appropriate public employee or board never receives the claim, an
    undelivered or misdirected claim fails to comply with the statute.” (Ibid.)
    Addressing a claim to the wrong entity will not constitute substantial
    compliance with the Act. (Johnson v. San Diego Unified School Dist. (1990)
    
    217 Cal.App.3d 692
    , 697-698; accord, Willis v. City of Carlsbad (2020) 
    48 Cal.App.5th 1104
    , 1123, fn. 11; Santee v. Santa Clara County Office of
    Education (1990) 
    220 Cal.App.3d 702
    , 714 [late claim application filed with
    county board of supervisors did not constitute substantial compliance for
    claim required to be filed with county office of education, a separate
    unrelated entity].)
    “With certain exceptions (§ 905), the timely filing of a written
    government claim is an element that a plaintiff is required to prove in order
    to prevail on his or her cause of action. [Citation.] Thus, a complaint failing
    to allege facts demonstrating timely presentation of a claim or that such
    presentation was excused is subject to a general demurrer for not stating
    facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” (Willis v. City of Carlsbad,
    7
    supra, 48 Cal.App.5th at p. 1119, citing DiCampli-Mintz, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 990; see also State of California v. Superior Court (Bodde) (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 1234
    , 1239-1240; Foster v. Sexton, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1021-
    1022.) “Despite other administrative remedies that may be available,
    prisoners have an independent ‘obligation to comply with the Government
    Claims Act.’ ” (Foster v. Sexton, at p. 1022.)
    “Public policy supports the ‘strict application’ [citation] of the claims
    presentation requirements: ‘ “Requiring a [claimant] . . . to first present a
    claim to the entity, before seeking redress in court, affords the entity an
    opportunity to promptly remedy the condition giving rise to the injury, thus
    minimizing the risk of similar harm to others. [Citations.] [It] also permits
    the public entity to investigate while tangible evidence is still available,
    memories are fresh, and witnesses can be located. [Citations.] Fresh notice
    of a claim permits early assessment by the public entity, allows its governing
    board to settle meritorious disputes without incurring the added cost of
    litigation, and gives it time to engage in appropriate budgetary planning.
    [Citations.] The notice requirement . . . thus is based on a recognition of the
    special status of public entities, according them greater protections than
    nonpublic entity defendants, because . . . public entities . . . will incur costs
    that must ultimately be borne by the taxpayers.” ’ ” (Willis v. City of
    Carlsbad, supra, 48 Cal.App.5th at p. 1120, quoting DiCampli-Mintz, supra,
    55 Cal.4th at p. 991.)
    Arellano’s handwritten appellate brief suffers from procedural and
    substantive deficiencies. However, attempting to understand his argument
    as best we can, it appears he asserts the superior court tentatively agreed he
    sufficiently alleged facts showing compliance with the Act, then reversed
    itself in its final ruling. He argues his second amended complaint’s
    8
    allegations “should be sufficient to satisfy . . . [§ 915, subdivision (a)(2)],
    which says that the requisite is satisfy [sic] if I mail the claim to the public
    entity’s clerk.” (Some capitalization omitted.) Arellano states he gave his
    mail to a jail officer because that officer “acted as the mailman and such is
    the procedure to mail stuff out from county jail.” Arellano further contends
    that he was unaware defendants never received his claim until they filed
    their demurrers, and sections 910.8 and 911.3 required defendants to give
    him notice and let him refile his claim to correct the defects. He maintains
    that if they did not do so, they cannot argue he failed to “exhaust [his]
    [g]overnment [c]laims,” citing Sykora v. State Department of State Hospitals
    (2014) 
    225 Cal.App.4th 1530
    .
    In his second amended complaint, Arellano checked a Judicial Council
    form box that he “complied with applicable claim statutes.” He handwrote on
    the form that he “complied because persuant [sic] to . . . [section] 915[,
    subdivision] (a), I submitted my claim to each named public entity . . . within
    6 months after incident” and “sent it to the address to it’s [sic] principal
    office, to it’s [sic] clerk, etc.” Arellano wrote: “In my presence the officer in
    County jail, where I was incarserated [sic], took the envelope to send mail to
    public entities.” He wrote the “mailbox rule applies to tort claims.”
    Elsewhere, Arellano’s pleading states: “I submitted my claim to each
    entity through mail. I gave my mail to another inmate who knew how to get
    the procedure done. Me and inmate gave it to an officer who collects the mail
    to be sent out. This occurred while I was in prison. The address sent was the
    principals [sic] office of their public entity.
    “(1) County of San Diego (2) City of San Diego office (3) El Cajon City office
    1600 Pacific Hwy.
    San Diego, CA
    92101” (Some capitalization omitted.)
    9
    Arellano wrote: “I never received any denial notices. And it’s unclear if
    my mail ever made it to it’s destiny [sic] but I submitted my claim timely
    (within 6 months of incident). And according to Moore v. Twomey (2004) 
    120 Cal.App.4th 910
    [,] a prison state tort complaint is timely filed if it is
    delivered to prison officials for mailing on or before the filing due date[.]”
    (Some capitalization and punctuation omitted.)
    “Ordinarily, a pleading ‘is sufficient if it alleges ultimate rather than
    evidentiary facts’ constituting the cause of action. [Citation.] ‘ “It has been
    consistently held that ‘ “a plaintiff is required only to set forth the essential
    facts of his case with reasonable precision and with particularity sufficient to
    acquaint a defendant with the nature, source and extent of his cause of
    action.” ’ ” ’ ” (Foster v. Sexton, supra, 61 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1019-1020.)
    Consistent with this theory, appellate courts have held “[a] plaintiff may
    allege compliance with the claims requirements by including a general
    allegation that he or she timely complied with the claims statute.” (Gong v.
    City of Rosemead (2014) 
    226 Cal.App.4th 363
    , 374; Perez v. Golden Empire
    Transit Dist. (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 1228
    , 1237 [plaintiff’s allegation that
    she “filed a timely claim complying with the required claims statute” and
    complied “with the requirements of the government tort claim statute”
    sufficed against a demurrer].) The Fifth District Court of Appeal has held
    that a checked box on a Judicial Council form suffices. (Esparza v. Kaweah
    Delta Dist. Hospital (2016) 
    3 Cal.App.5th 547
    , 554-555 [following Perez and
    holding general allegation of compliance with Act was not contradicted by
    allegation plaintiff served the claim on defendant on or at a specific date].)
    But it is also long settled that specific allegations will control over general
    ones. (Orange County Water Dist. v. Sabic Innovative Plastics US, LLC
    (2017) 
    14 Cal.App.5th 343
    , 397-398; Medical Marijuana, Inc. v.
    10
    ProjectCBD.com (2016) 
    6 Cal.App.5th 602
    , 619; Gentry v. eBay, Inc. (2002) 
    99 Cal.App.4th 816
    , 827; Perez, at p. 1237; Esparza, at p. 552.) Consequently, if
    specific allegations contradict Arellano’s general allegation of compliance, we
    may conclude the demurrer was properly sustained without leave to amend.
    (Accord, Perez, at p. 1237.)
    According to defendants, Arellano’s more specific allegations—his
    specification of how and where he mailed the claims—demonstrate
    noncompliance with the Act because they show he did not mail his claim to
    the requisite person (the clerk, secretary, auditor or governing body) and did
    not even include addresses for San Diego or El Cajon, establishing he never
    mailed the claim in the first place. Defendants further argue that because
    Arellano alleges he does not know whether his mail arrived, he cannot
    truthfully allege his misdirected claims were actually received by the
    appropriate persons.
    We agree with defendants. Even liberally construing Arellano’s
    allegations and drawing all permissible inferences favorable to him as we
    must (Candalore v. Tinder, Inc. (2018) 
    19 Cal.App.5th 1138
    , 1143; Perez v.
    Golden Empire Transit Dist., supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1238), we cannot
    infer his claims were properly presented when they do not specify the
    appropriate person to receive the claim and the addresses he placed on the
    claims are incorrect or incomplete. And we agree that having alleged he does
    11
    not know whether his claims reached their destination,5 he cannot now
    contradict himself to allege they were actually received. The circumstances
    here are unlike Perez, in which the appellate court reversed an order
    sustaining a demurrer because it was unable to conclude the plaintiff’s
    specific allegations concerning her claim contradicted her general allegation
    that she had complied with the government tort claims presentation
    requirement. The plaintiff’s amended complaint alleged that a defendant’s
    representative had informed her she had omitted the date of the incident on
    her claim, and she “ ‘subsequently provided the date of the incident to said
    representative, thus complying with the requirements of the government tort
    claim statute.’ ” (Id. at p. 1238.) The defendant argued that inferences from
    those allegations established plaintiff’s claim did not include the date of
    occurrence, and the plaintiff did not present an amendment correcting that
    omission. (Ibid.) Characterizing the argument as one asking the court to
    draw inferences in the defendant’s favor, the appellate court held the specific
    allegation, construed in the plaintiff’s favor, could be interpreted to mean
    5      In his first amended complaint, Arellano alleged: “It’s unknown if
    government claim office did or didn’t received [sic] my claim but I did
    submitted [sic] the claim on time.” He continued: “Either way, I did file I
    just never got a response . . . . I thought that government claim office just
    didn’t respond because it deny me [sic].” (Some capitalization omitted.) In
    sustaining defendants’ demurrers to the first amended complaint the court
    ruled: “[A]bsent are allegations that the claim was delivered or mailed to any
    of the persons set forth in [section] 915[, subdivision] (a), or that the claim
    was actually received by the City as allowed for under [section] 915[,
    subdivision] (e)(1), or that the claim was mailed in compliance with [section]
    915[, subdivision] (f). Without any such allegations the amended complaint
    fails to allege facts sufficient to support compliance with the claims
    presentation requirements of the California Tort Claims Act.” (Some
    capitalization omitted.) The court granted Arellano 60 days leave to amend
    to allege facts establishing compliance with the claims presentation
    requirements of the Act or excuse for noncompliance.
    12
    that the plaintiff provided the date to the representative by amending the
    claim, making the specific allegation consistent with her general allegation of
    compliance with the tort claims presentation procedure. (Id. at pp. 1238-
    1239.)6
    Here, where Arellano includes specific allegations that set out incorrect
    or incomplete addresses for his claim and admits he cannot say whether the
    defendants received them, we cannot reach a favorable interpretation or
    draw inferences in his favor to save the second amended complaint from the
    deficiency. These allegations contradict his general allegation that he
    complied with the Act, and justified sustaining the defendants’ demurrers
    without leave to amend.
    Arellano’s arguments based on the defective claim notice and defense
    waiver provisions of the Act (see §§ 910.8, 911; Phillips v. Desert Hospital
    District (1989) 
    49 Cal.3d 699
    , 707, 709) and Sykora v. State Dept. of State
    Hospitals, supra, 
    225 Cal.App.4th 1530
     do not change our conclusion. A
    document will constitute a “ ‘claim as presented’ triggering sections 910.8,
    911 and 911.3, if it discloses the existence of a ‘claim’ which, if not
    satisfactorily resolved, will result in a lawsuit against the entity. [Citation.]
    A public entity’s receipt of written notice that a claim for monetary damages
    exists and that litigation may ensue places upon the public entity the
    responsibility, and gives it the opportunity, to notify the potential plaintiff
    pursuant to sections 910.8 and 911 of the defects that render the document
    6     Defendants ask us to hold Perez and Esparza are wrongly decided to
    the extent they hold a plaintiff can generally allege compliance with the Act.
    We need not decide the point given our conclusions above. Further, our
    analysis assumes without deciding that the prison delivery rule applies (see
    Silverbrand v. County of Los Angeles (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 106
    , 110 [extending
    rule to civil notices of appeal]) so that the date of mailing was when Arellano
    gave his claim to the prison mail officer.
    13
    insufficient under sections 910 and 910.2 and thus might hamper
    investigation and possible settlement of the claim.” (Phillips, at p. 710,
    italics added.) “Thus, if a public entity receives a document that alerts it to
    the existence of a claim and the possibility of a lawsuit but fails to comply
    substantially with sections 910 and 910.2, the purposes of the [Act] are best
    served by requiring the public entity to notify the claimant of the nature of
    the claim’s insufficiencies or lack of timeliness or else waive, by operation of
    sections 911 and 911.3, its defenses based on those deficiencies.” (Id. at p.
    711.) Arellano’s pleading did not trigger these sections because, as stated,
    he cannot allege his claim was presented to a statutorily required recipient
    (§ 915) or received by the appropriate public entity. “[I]t is only a ‘claim as
    presented [that] fails to comply substantially’ that triggers sections 910.8,
    911, and 911.3.” (Id. at p. 707, some italics added.) A misdirected claim
    never received by the appropriate public employee or board does not give rise
    to these notice and defense-waiver provisions.
    In Sykora, the plaintiff’s claim was timely served and it was both
    received and file stamped by the applicable board, but the board rejected it
    because it did not include a $25 filing fee. (Sykora v. State Department of
    State Hospitals, supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1533-1534.) Noting it was
    undisputed that the claim was presented to the board (id. at p. 1536), the
    Court of Appeal reversed a judgment on the pleadings, holding that under
    these circumstances, the Board had a duty to give notice of the claim
    deficiency concerning the fee requirement, and by not doing so, waived any
    defense that the claimant’s claim was insufficient. (Id. at pp. 1536-1538.)
    Sykora is inapplicable here because Arellano cannot allege he presented his
    claim to San Diego, El Cajon or County or that those entities actually
    received it.
    14
    IV. Denial of Leave to Amend
    When, as here, a court sustains a demurrer without leave to amend,
    “we must decide whether there is a reasonable possibility the plaintiff could
    cure the defect with an amendment. [Citation.] If we find that an
    amendment could cure the defect, we conclude that the trial court abused its
    discretion and we reverse; if not, no abuse of discretion has occurred.
    [Citation.] The plaintiff has the burden of proving that an amendment would
    cure the defect.” (Schifando v. City of Los Angeles (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 1074
    ,
    1081.)
    The trial court sustained defendants’ demurrers to Arellano’s second
    amended complaint without leave to amend. This came after defendants
    raised the issue in two prior demurrers, after which the court granted
    Arellano leave to amend to cure the defects in his pleadings.
    Arellano does not meaningfully challenge the ruling denying leave to
    amend on appeal, and thus he does not specify allegations he would add or
    change to correct any defect, or what additional facts he could allege that
    would demonstrate he met the condition precedent of presenting a legally
    sufficient claim under the Act. As stated, it is his burden to affirmatively
    demonstrate how the complaint can be amended and how the amendment
    will cure the deficiencies. (Schifando v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 31 Cal.4th
    at p. 1081; Heritage Pacific Financial, LLC v. Monroy (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 972
    , 994.) He has not done so.
    V. Arellano’s Remaining Contentions
    Arellano sets out three additional grounds for his appeal, none of which
    are supported by reasoned legal argument or authority. He first states he
    filed a default judgment against the “fugitive task force” in September 2015,
    but the superior court “ignored [his] motion . . . .” He asks this court to order
    15
    the superior court to enter a default judgment against the task force for its
    failure to answer his complaint. Arellano next suggests the superior court
    did not address his argument concerning equitable estoppel; he states he
    “would like for superior court to address these ground [sic] and make the
    determination if facts reveal equitable estoppel.” Finally, Arellano states the
    lower court did not address his motion for permission to serve two defendants
    who assertedly participated in the incidents. He apparently asks us to order
    the lower court to allow him to serve the other two defendants. Because he
    makes these conclusory points and assertions without legal argument or
    citation to legal authority (including as to whether he was required to raise
    the latter issue below to preserve it), they are forfeited. (Sims v. Department
    of Corrections & Rehabilitation, supra, 216 Cal.App.4th at p. 1081.) We
    recognize Arellano is representing himself in the matter. But an appellant
    “is not exempt from [appellate] rules because he is representing himself on
    appeal in propria persona. . . . ‘[S]uch a party is to be treated like any other
    party and is entitled to the same, but no greater consideration than other
    litigants and attorneys.’ ” (Nwosu v. Uba (2004) 
    122 Cal.App.4th 1229
    , 1246-
    1247.)
    16
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    O’ROURKE, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    McCONNELL, P. J.
    HALLER, J.
    17