Gallichotte v. California Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n

41 P.2d 349, 4 Cal. App. 2d 503, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 459
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 13, 1935
DocketCiv. 9390
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 349 (Gallichotte v. California Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Gallichotte v. California Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n, 41 P.2d 349, 4 Cal. App. 2d 503, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 459 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

HELD, J., pro tem.

The plaintiff and appellant, the owner of an automobile, certain household furniture, and also of miscellaneous painter’s equipment, supplies and apparatus, insured such property against loss by fire. Subsequently, the insured property was in part destroyed by fire, and the insurers paid to plaintiff the loss thereby occasioned to him. Following sufficient assignments, this action was instituted by plaintiff to recover on behalf of the insurers the amount paid plaintiff under the several policies covering the property destroyed. The plaintiff is the owner of .a lot in the city of San Jose, on which lot was situated a dwelling house, garage and paint shop. The property destroyed by fire was contained in these several buildings. The defendant California Mutual Building & Loan Associa *505 tion, a corporation, at the time of the fire referred to was the owner of a vacant lot situated to the southwest of and adjoining plaintiff’s property. The defendants Howard and Pilgram were employees of the California Mutual Building & Loan Association, and on June 9, 1932, were assigned by their employer to the task of burning the weeds growing on the vacant lot of the defendant association. While these employees were so engaged, a fire was discovered on the adjoining premises of plaintiff, and this fire caused the damage sued for herein.

The complaint here is in two counts. The first charges that defendants negligently set a fire, and negligently allowed it to spread to the premises of plaintiff, with the resultant destruction of plaintiff’s property. The second count pleads an ordinance of the city of San Jose which makes it unlawful to burn “refuse” at any place within the city limits. The definition of “refuse” is sufficiently extensive to cover the grass which was burned by defendants. Defendants admit the setting of the fire by them on the lot of the association and deny the other material allegations of the complaint. The trial court found that at the time of the setting of the fire by defendants, an ordinance in terms as pleaded in the complaint was in full force and effect, and that at said time there was located • on the lot of defendant association a large quantity of dry grass and dry weeds. The court, however, found that the fire started by defendants did not extend or spread to plaintiff’s property. There are also findings that defendants exercised more than ordinary precaution in protecting adjoining property before starting the fire, and in attending the fire to prevent its spread to other property; and also that plaintiff’s property was not burned or damaged or destroyed as the proximate result of the fire started by defendants.

Judgment herein was in favor of defendants. Plaintiff appeals and contends that a finding of lack of negligence on the part of defendants, and the exercise of care by them, is immaterial in view of the admitted fact that defendants violated the ordinance set up in the complaint. The violation of an ordinance is negligence per se. In Alechoff v. Los Angeles Gas & Electric Corp., 84 Cal. App. 33, 39 [257 Pac. 569], it is said: “It is an axiomatic truth, that every person while violating an express statute, is a wrongdoer, and as such is ex necessitate negligent in the eye of the law.” *506 An act which is performed in violation of an ordinance or statute is presumptively an act of negligence, but the presumption is not conclusive and may be rebutted by a showing that the act was justifiable or excusable under the circumstances. Until so rebutted, it is conclusive. (Mora v. Favilla, 186 Cal. 199, 202 [199 Pac. 17]; Rath v. Bankston, 101 Cal. App. 274, 281 [281 Pac. 1081].)

In Berkovitz v. American River Gravel Co., 191 Cal. 195 [215 Pac. 675], there is quoted with approval the following from Shearman & Redfield on Negligence•. “ ‘The only question remaining open on this point is whether conclusive proof of the violation of such a statute or ordinance is also conclusive proof of negligence. Some courts have held that it is, and some that it is not. . . . The violation of such a law, if left without explanation or excuse, is conclusive of negligence, but it may be excused. ... If some good excuse appears, which would be a sufficient defense to an action for the penalty imposed by the law . . . then the law is not really violated. ’ ”

In Berkovitz v. American River Gravel Co., supra, it was held that the fact that a tail-light on a motor truck was burning at a time when the vehicle was three or four blocks distant from the place of the accident, might furnish an excuse for a violation of the statute requiring such light to be burning at all times while the vehicle was on a public highway.

' It is well settled that the fact which will excuse a technical violation of a statute or ordinance must result from causes or things beyond the control of the person charged with the violation. (45 Cor. Jur., p. 731, sec. 121.)

In Kelley v. Anderson, 15 S. D. 107 [87 N. W. 579], it was said: “It being shown by the evidence that the fires were set in one of the months in which fires upon stubble lands are prohibited . . . the evidence . . . tending to prove that there was no negligence on the part of the defendant in setting his straw stacks on fire at that season of the year, in view of the fact that the ground was wet, and in places covered with snow, was inadmissible.”

Evidence of due care on the part of the defendants does not furnish an excuse or justification for the negligence presumed to arise on proof of violation of the ordinance. No attempt was made here on the trial to show any excuse or justification. The violation was a deliberate one, and *507 not the result of a cause beyond the control of defendants. The presumption of negligence is, therefore, conclusive in this case. Negligence of defendants having been established, still they cannot be held liable unless such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury to plaintiff, and the burden of proof in this regard is on plaintiff. As was said in County of Alameda v. Tieslau, 44 Cal. App. 332, 337 [186 Pac. 398, 400] : “By proving the defendants’ negligence without in some way fastening that negligence to the injury, a case is not made out. ’ ’ But as was also said there: ‘ ‘ These rules, however, do not require demonstration of the connection between the proved or admitted negligence and the resultant injury. It is not necessary that an eye-witness be produced to testify directly to the fact.” The rule is expressed in our statutes in section 1826 of the Code of Civil Procedure and applied in Bethlehem Corp. v. Industrial Acc. Com., 181 Cal. 500, 502 [185 Pac. 179, 7 A. L. R 1180],

It is admitted that at about 1 o’clock P. M. on June 9, 1932, respondent employees set fire to a quantity of dry grass situated on the vacant lot of respondent association. There is testimony in the record that a few days previously the grass and weeds in the center of the lot were cut down by a mowing machine, but allowed to remain on the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 349, 4 Cal. App. 2d 503, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallichotte-v-california-mutual-building-loan-assn-calctapp-1935.