Hansen v. Vallejo Electric Light Etc. Co.

188 P. 999, 182 Cal. 492, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 577
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1920
DocketSac. No. 2780.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 188 P. 999 (Hansen v. Vallejo Electric Light Etc. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Vallejo Electric Light Etc. Co., 188 P. 999, 182 Cal. 492, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 577 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, C. J.

—This action was brought to recover from defendant the sum of $2,665 because of its failure to furnish to plaintiff electricity for use in his dwelling-house in the city of Vallejo. Upon the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, on the ground that the action was barred by the provisions of subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and judgment was entered accordingly. This is an appeal from such judgment.

This action was commenced March 20, 1915. On the trial it was made to appear that the plaintiff on April 15, 1913, made demand upon defendant to furnish him with electricity for lighting his house, No. 221 Louisiana Street, in Vallejo, which house was within one hundred feet of a direct and primary wire of the company, and that defendant declined to do so unless plaintiff signed an application containing certain conditions which it was subsequently held by the railroad commission it had no right to impose; that plaintiff refused to sign this application, and that defendant to and including September 30, 1914, failed to comply with the demand.

Upon an examination of the record we are satisfied that in view of the pleadings this action must be held to be one solely for the statutory recovery allowed by section 629 of the Civil Code, and that no recovery whatever was sought other than such recovery as was authorized by the terms of that section.

Section 629 of the Civil Code, which was in force at all times mentioned in the complaint and until repealed in *495 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 169), provided substantially that a gas or electric light corporation must supply gas or electricity to any building or premises distant not more than one hundred feet from any main, or direct or primary wire, of the corporation, “upon the application in writing of the owner or occupant,” and payment of all money due from him. It further provided: “If, for the space of ten days after such application, the corporation refuses or neglects to supply the gas or electricity required, it must pay to the applicant the sum of fifty dollars as liquidated damages, and five dollars per day as liquidated damages for every day such refusal or neglect continues thereafter.” [1] We are satisfied that this provision must be held to impose a “penalty” for noncompliance, notwithstanding the use of the words “liquidated damages.” It has heretofore consistently been accepted by this court and the district courts of appeal as so doing, without, however, any question having been raised to the contrary. (See Capital Gas Co. v. Young, 109 Cal. 140, [29 L. R. A. 463, 41 Pac. 869]; Baker v. San Francisco etc. Co., 141 Cal. 710, [75 Pac. 342]; Thompson v. San Francisco etc. Co., 18 Cal. App. 30, [121 Pac. 937]; Id., 20 Cal. App. 142, [128 Pac. 347]; Id., 34 Cal. App. 699, [168 Pac. 390].) We can see no doubt of the correctness of this view. Unquestionably it provides for a recovery for a wrong or injury suffered without any reference whatever to the question of acttial damage. The recovery is had even though it be conceded that there was no actual damage whatever. Likewise, the recovery is limited to the amount specified, even though in a particular case it could be shown beyond question what the actual damage was and that such actual damage exceeded the statutory amounts many times over and ran to a very large amount. In County of Los Angeles v. Ballerino, 99 Cal. 593, 596, [32 Pac. 581, 34 Pac. 329], the statutory penalty referred to by subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure was declared to include “one which an individual is allowed to recover against a wrongdoer, as a satisfaction for the wrong or injury suffered, and without reference to the actual damage sustained.” The provision here clearly falls within this description. The use of the term “as liquidated damages” does not preclude such a view. The same words are used in section 589 of the Civil Code, with relation to the right *496 of a stockholder of a mining corporation to recover a specified sum from the corporation in the event of the denial of certain rights, and this court construed the provision conferring such right oi recovery as one imposing a' penalty. (See Symmes v. Sierra Nevada Min. Co., 171 Cal. 427, [153 Pac. 710].) The term “as liquidated damages” in the connection in which it is used and in view of the character of the imposition cannot fairly be construed as meaning or intended to mean anything other than a penalty or forfeiture. Certainly the provision may not fairly be construed as an attempt on the part of the legislature to merely establish a' rule as to the measure of actual damages in such cases, in view of the fact that the specified recovery is authorized without any reference whatever to the question of actual damage. Much reliance is placed by learned counsel for appellant upon the fact that prior to the adoption of the codes the statutes on this subject used the words “shall forfeit and pay” the designated sums, without the words “as liquidated damages,” and that when the codes were adopted in 1872 the section covering the' matter was written in its present form, providing that the corporation “must pay to the applicant” the designated sums “as liquidated damages.” Just why the code commissioners and the legislature thus changed the phraseology we do not know, but we do not think the change altered the meaning or furnishes evidence of any intention to accomplish such an alteration as is claimed to have been effected thereby.

As we have already noted, the nonsuit was granted on the ground that the action was barred by subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. By the terms of that provision “an action upon a statute for a penalty or forfeiture, when the action is given to an individual, or to an individual and the state, except when the statute imposing it prescribes a different limitation,” must be brought within one year from the time the right of action accrues. Plaintiff’s demand for electricity having been made on April 15, 1913, a right of action based thereon accrued upon the lapsing of ten days thereafter without compliance with his demand, viz., on April 26, 1913, and this action was not commenced until March 20, 1915, nearly two years thereafter. It is practically conceded that the initial amount of $50 fixed by section 629 of the Civil Code, together with the *497 five dollars per diem for all days prior to March 20, 1914, are barred if this be an action for a penalty or forfeiture imposed by statute within the meaning of subdivision 1 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. But it is claimed by appellant that in any event the action is not barred as to the five dollars per diem for the time beginning March 20, 1914, and ending September 30, 1914. [2] We are satisfied that this claim must be upheld. [3]

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 999, 182 Cal. 492, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-vallejo-electric-light-etc-co-cal-1920.