Frace v. Long Beach City High School District

137 P.2d 60, 58 Cal. App. 2d 566, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 12, 1943
DocketCiv. 13800
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 137 P.2d 60 (Frace v. Long Beach City High School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frace v. Long Beach City High School District, 137 P.2d 60, 58 Cal. App. 2d 566, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 79 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

SHAW, J. pro tem.

Plaintiff was injured by the explosion of chemicals with which he was attempting to perform an experiment, and in this action seeks to recover damages for the injuries so received. A demurrer to his amended complaint was sustained with leave to amend, he did not amend, and he appeals from the ensuing judgment.

Since plaintiff declined to amend his complaint, we do not consider the possibility that any defects in it could be cured by amendment, but presume that the pleader has stated his case as strongly as it can be stated in his favor. (Royal Ins. Co. v. Mazzei, (1942) 50 Cal.App.2d 549, 555 [123 P.2d 586].) While the complaint should be liberally construed, with a view to substantial justice between the parties (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 452), that rule “does not, however, permit the insertion, by construction, of averments which are neither directly made nor within the fair import of those which are set forth. On the contrary, facts necessary to a cause of action but not alleged must be taken as having no existence.” (21 Cal.Jur. 54; Feldesman v. McGovern, (1941) 44 Cal.App.2d 566, 571 [112 P.2d 645] ; Estrin v. Superior Court, (1939) 14 Cal.2d 670, 677 [96 P.2d 340].)

From the amended complaint the following facts appear. The defendant district conducted a high school, consisting of several buildings, in one of which there was a small chemical *569 supply room. In this room chemicals, some of which would, upon admixture, burn and explode, were stored for the use of chemistry students in performing laboratory tests and experiments. The defendant Lewarton was employed by defendant district as janitor and custodian and as such had the care and custody of this supply room and the keys thereto. On several occasions, shortly before plaintiff was injured, Lewarton unlocked this supply room and permitted two high school students, named Murphy and McNanamy, to enter this room, and to remain there and leave without their being under observation, all of which was contrary to the rules of the school. These two students, although not authorized so to do, took from the storeroom potassium chlorate and phosphorus and kept these chemicals in the garage at the home of McNanamy, where plaintiff watched the other two boys experiment with them without injury. Plaintiff thereupon asked McNanamy if he could use the chemicals for an experiment, McNanamy gave plaintiff small quantities of them, plaintiff mixed them in a container and shook them, and from the resulting explosion received the injuries for which he sues. Plaintiff was, at the time, a boy of seventeen, and it is alleged that “by reason of their immature age, inexperience and lack of knowledge of chemicals neither the said McNanamy nor the plaintiff knew that use of said chemicals by them was dangerous and hazardous or would cause an explosion or that the use of said chemicals by plaintiff was likely to injure person or property.”

It is obvious that the facts thus far set forth are not sufficient to impose any liability on the defendants. They show merely that unauthorized persons took, in legal effect stole, some chemicals from defendant’s storeroom, and that plaintiff, obtaining possession of some of these chemicals, was injured by reason of his unwitting mishandling of them. Responsibility for such results does not attach to the owner whose property is wrongfully taken. Indeed, we do not understand plaintiff to contend otherwise. He points to certain additional allegations and contends that they avoid the conclusion just stated, and that defendants may be held here by the joint operation of the rule fastening liability in certain cases upon one who permits children to play with an attractive but dangerous device (the rule of the “turn-table cases”) and the other rule holding a negligent actor liable for the results of his negligence even though the independent act of another *570 intervenes between his negligence and the results, where that intervening act is one which he ought, in reason, to have anticipated. The allegations thus pointed out are these: “That at all times herein mentioned the defendants and each of them knew: that the use of said chemicals by students, except under the personal supervision and direction of one skilled in the science of chemistry, was apt to cause injury to person and property; that said supply room and the chemicals therein was an attraction and allurement to the students of the high school; and that if given an opportunity some of said students would steal chemicals therefrom for the performance of their own and unsupervised tests and experiments thereby exposing themselves and others to serious personal injury.”

The rule regarding an independent intervening cause on which plaintiff relies is thus stated in Hale v. Pacific Tel. & Tel. Co., (1919) 42 Cal.App. 55, 58 [183 P. 280], one of the cases cited by him: “. . . where the original negligence of a defendant is followed by an independent act of a third person which results in a direct injury to a plaintiff, the negligence of such defendant may, nevertheless, constitute the proximate cause thereof if, in the ordinary and natural course of events, the defendant should have known the intervening act was likely to happen; but if the intervening act constituting the immediate cause of the injury was one which it was not incumbent upon the defendant to have anticipated as reasonably likely to happen, then, since the chain of causation is broken, he owes no duty to the plaintiff to anticipate such further acts, and the original negligence cannot be said to be the proximate cause of the final injury. ’ ’

The negligence of which defendants were guilty, ac- • cording to plaintiff’s argument, is that with the knowledge depicted in the allegation last quoted, they permitted Murphy (whom we so name in spite of the curtailment of his surname in the allegation next to be quoted) and McNanamy to take the chemicals from the storeroom, or at least made it possible for them to do so. To appraise this argument we must examine more closely the allegations regarding the taking. They are that Lewarton “negligently and in violation of his duties as such custodian, permitted two students of said high school, to wit, Robert Murph and Ralph McNanamy to take certain chemicals from said supply room, in that with knowledge that said students were not authorized by any teacher or other *571 agent or employee of his codefendants, to enter said chemical supply room or to take chemicals therefrom; he unlocked said supply room for said students and permitted them to remain therein and leave therefrom unobserved by himself or any other agent or employee of his codefendants; all of which was in violation of the rules and regulations of said high school and of his duties as such custodian.

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Bluebook (online)
137 P.2d 60, 58 Cal. App. 2d 566, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frace-v-long-beach-city-high-school-district-calctapp-1943.