Harmon v. M. H. Sherman Co.

85 P.2d 205, 29 Cal. App. 2d 580
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1938
DocketCiv. 11585
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 85 P.2d 205 (Harmon v. M. H. Sherman Co.) 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
Harmon v. M. H. Sherman Co., 85 P.2d 205, 29 Cal. App. 2d 580 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

*582 YORK, P. J.

The respondent Juanita Harmon, a-pianist, was employed' as an entertainer by defendant Alex McDonald at his cafe known as the “Dog House” located in the city of Hermosa Beach, California, and on the evening of August 4, 1934, while using a toilet in the washroom of said cafe, she attempted to flush the bowl thereof and was’severely burned by an ascending stream of scalding water and steam which poured into the said toilet bowl and upon the person of said respondent. Thereafter, she brought the instant action for damages for the injuries so sustained by her through the alleged negligence of the defendants. Defendant McDonald failed to appear and answer and his default was duly entered by the clerk of the court. A nonsuit was granted as to the Sherman Land Company and the motion of defendant Hermosa Beach Land and Water Company to reopen the case for further evidence and argument was denied. Judgment was entered on May 18, 1937, against the defaulting defendant McDonald for the sum of $16,703.50, and against the defendant Hermosa Beach Land and Water Company, a corporation, for the same amount. The said corporation alone prosecutes this appeal from the judgment, as well as from the order by which its motion for a new trial was denied.

It is shown by the record herein that appellant corporation was the owner and lessor of the premises where the “Dog House” cafe was located, and that defendant McDonald was the lessee thereof, under a written lease dated June 6, 1934, said lessee paying as rental to the said lessor 7% per cent of the gross receipts from the restaurant business which it was provided in the lease should be conducted upon the said premises.

The toilet in question abutted a partition separating the kitchen from the dining room and bar of the said cafe, and was located in a small room approximately 4x6 feet near the end of the bar, its entrance being sheltered by a screen. This toilet fixture had been installed by appellant as owner and was so installed before the lease of the premises was made to defendant McDonald, and was the only toilet provided or available for use upon the said leased premises.

In order to provide hot water necessary in the conduct of his business, defendant McDonald installed a gas heater in a small alcove in the kitchen. The toilet and the water *583 heater were located in different rooms but were served by water pipes entering the same wall from opposite sides, and at or near the same general location in the said wall which separated the kitchen from the dining room and the bar.

The respondent alleged and proved in her ease in chief, and the court found as a fact, that there had been in effect since April 22, 1913, a plumbing ordinance No. 217 in the city of Hermosa Beach, and which was in effect at the time of the installation of the toilet fixture and also at the time of the injury, said ordinance providing, among other things, as follows:

“Section 11. . . . First: No water closet shall be put into or upon any property, house or building except those flushed by a tank containing no less than four (4) gallons of water. Plunger closets, Philadelphia hoppers, pan closets or any other closets, where the supply to the bowl is direct from the street service or building supply are prohibited in all cases and where such exist, shall be removed and replaced with water tank closets.”

The amended complaint alleged that defendants installed and maintained said toilet in direct violation of the plumbing ordinance, supra. Upon this particular issue, the court found as follows:

The court finds that the type of toilet installed and maintained in the defendant corporation’s premises was in violation of the city ordinance then in effect hereinbefore referred to and was in violation of said ordinance when installed by the defendant corporation.
11 The court further finds from the evidence that said toilet was of the type and kind prohibited from being maintained in any building in the city of Hermosa, both at the time of installation and at the time of the injury to the plaintiff.
‘ ‘ The court further finds that the water supply to the toilet bowl was direct from the building water supply and there was not a flushing tank between the toilet bowl and the main building water supply.
“The evidence shows and the court finds that instead of getting water from the flushing tank (of not less than four gallons of water as provided by the ordinance) into the toilet bowl when the plaintiff tripped the lever there flowed and rushed steam and super heated water and scalding water di *584 rectly from the building water supply. This was supplied in great quantities, instantaneously and with pressure directly into the toilet bowl and upon the plaintiff. ’5

Because there was a conflict in the testimony of the experts, who testified as to plumbing and plumbing fixtures and particularly with reference to the operation of a flush tank toilet, the court made the following finding:

“In this connection the court must say that there is substantial evidence to the effect that with a flush tank toilet common in use and type complying with the plumbing ordinance in question, it is possible that the plaintiff might or probably could have been burned. On the other hand, it is beyond any question of doubt and a certainty that she was burned and seriously so with the flush valve type. The court is of the opinion from the evidence and must find that it is probable that she could have been burned and scalded with a tank type toilet under similar conditions; this finding has some limitations shown by the evidence being that she could not have been burned as badly, or in the degree in which the evidence shows she was burned in this case. And further it is equally probable and possible that she may not have been burned at all.” (Italics added.)

Respondent also contended that the defendants installed and maintained the gas water heater upon the premises in violation of the same plumbing ordinance, which provides:

1 ‘ Section 14. Every gas heater used or intended to be used for the heating of water or otherwise, except small portable stoves, shall be provided with a vent pipe not less than three inches in diameter extending to the open air.”

As to this issue, the court found if any such violation occurred, it was occasioned alone and solely by the act of the defendant McDonald installing said heater without a permit or an inspection, and in not having it installed by a licensed plumber.

In accordance with said findings of fact the court concluded as a matter of law, “that the toilet did not have a flush tank containing no less than four gallons of water and that the water supply came directly from the building supply to the bowl of the toilet, that applying the general rules of law of construction applicable to the plumbing ordinance involved herein, that the conduct of the defendant corporation *585

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 P.2d 205, 29 Cal. App. 2d 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-m-h-sherman-co-calctapp-1938.