O'Callaghan v. Bode

24 P. 269, 84 Cal. 489, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 828
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1890
DocketNo. 12852
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 24 P. 269 (O'Callaghan v. Bode) 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
O'Callaghan v. Bode, 24 P. 269, 84 Cal. 489, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 828 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Gibson, C.

This was an action against the owners of a warehouse to recover damages for the death of one Francis J. O’Callaghan, which is alleged to have been [492]*492caused by the negligence of the defendants. The plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment, and the defendants appeal.

The general features of the case are as follows: The warehouse was oblong in form, and had a wide door and passage at one end, and a small door and passage at the other. These two passages were parallel with each other, and at right angles to the length of the building. Between them was a large room or space, in which bales of merchandise, etc., were so piled as to leave a passage or “gangway” connecting the two passages above mentioned. The office was on the passage-way leading from the small door. On the morning of the accident the employees were engaged in throwing bales of bags from the top of the pile into the gangway. The deceased was in the habit of coming to the building to deliver a publication called the Guide. He usually entered by the main entrance (the large door), came down the gangway to the passage leading to the small door, and put up the Guide in a room adjoining the office. On the day of the accident, however, he entered by the small door, put up his paper in the usual place, and started to go out through the gangway to the main entrance. The men engaged in throwing down bales into the gangway did not see him until it was too late. He was struck by a bale weighing between six and seven hundred pounds, and almost instantly killed.

The main position of the appellants on the merits is, that there was no negligence on the part of the defendants, or if there was, that there was contributory negligence on the part of the deceased.

We think that the evidence shows that the defendants were guilty of negligence. The gangway was a place through which persons having business at the warehouse were accustomed to pass. It was the mode of reaching the office from the passage-way at the main entrance. It was the way “that everybody, strangers as well as [493]*493others, in the employ of Bode & Haslett, used in going to the office.” And it was the usual route of the deceased in his regular visits to the place where he was in the habit of putting up the Guide. The throwing of heavy bales into such a gangway made it a place of danger. It was a case in which precautions were necessary. Especially is this true under the circumstances of the case. According to the foreman (who was in the employ of the defendants at the time of the trial), “ It was not possible for the man standing up there on the top of the bales to see from his position where the bales would land when they came down. He knew they would land in the passage-way. That was the only place for them to land, down below there. He could not see where they were going to hit.” The employees of the defendants seemed to have felt that some precautions were necessary; for a lookout was stationed at the main entrance. This was well enough for that entrance. But some precaution should have been taken for the other entrance. The only thing done to the latter entrance, however, was to throw down a couple of bales near that end of the passage. These, however, did not block the whole of the passage, but left room for a man to pass by them. And we think that such a partial obstruction of such a place would not be a sufficient warning to persons who were in the habit of using the passage. It would have been a very simple matter to have drawn a rope across that end of the gangway, or to have posted a notice of danger there, or even to have stationed a lookout there, as was done at the other entrance. The want of such a precaution, under the circumstances, seems to us to have been negligence. And the fact that other warehousemen were in the habit of acting similarly does not excuse the defendants.

The deceased was not guilty of contributory negligence. He came to the warehouse upon a matter of business. It is true that he was in the habit of entering by the main entrance. But the other, though furnished with a [494]*494lock, was kept unlocked; and though it was not much resorted to, it was sometimes used by the employees, and occasionally by teamsters. The fact that the deceased used it on the day of the accident admits of the inference that he knew about it; and there is no pretense that either he or any one else was forbidden to use it, or notified that it was dangerous to do so. We see nothing in the evidence to show that the entrance by the small door constituted negligence on his part. Being in the building, and having put up the Guide as usual, it was perfectly natural and proper for him to attempt to go out. through the gangway. That was the passage which he and others ordinarily used; and, as above stated, its partial obstruction by a couple of bales was not a sufficient indication that it was dangerous.

Nor was he guilty of negligence in failing to appreciate the situation when the employees shouted to him. These shouts were just as the bale was toppling over, and after the man on the top of the pile had lost control of it. The deceased evidently heard the shouts, but did not know just what to make of them. “He made a kind of look. He still walked just as fast as he could; he came right under the bale, making a kind of look up, so fast as he could run.” The interval between the shouts and the time the huge mass came bounding down the passage could not have been great; and we do not think that, under the circumstances, an ordinarily prudent and self-possessed man could be expected to do any better.

Quite a number of other points are made which will be briefly noticed.

It is contended that the demurrer to the complaint should have been sustained.

The action was brought by the mother of the deceased, and his brother and sisters. The counsel for the appellants says that “the complaint discloses that the plaintiff Catherine O’Callaghan, mother of the decedent, is his sole heir,” and argues that the other plaintiffs did not [495]*495have legal capacity to sue. But the demurrer is not drawn so as to present that question. It says that the plaintiffs” have not legal capacity to sue. And as it is admitted that one of them had capacity to sue, this ground of demurrer was too broad, and was properly overruled.

It is also said that there was a misjoinder of parties plaintiff, and a misjoinder of causes of action. These points, like the foregoing, are based upon the alleged want of right in the plaintiffs other than the mother of the deceased, but the demurrer does not specify wherein the alleged misjoinders existed. It is not sufficient for a demurrer on either of these grounds to simply follow the language of the statute.

As the deceased left neither wife, issue, nor father surviving him, his mother is his sole heir, under section 1386, subdivision 2, of the Civil Code. The complaint shows these facts, and also that the deceased was killed through the negligence of defendants, by which his mother was damnified. This being so, the demurrer, upon the general ground that the complaint does not state facts sufficient -to constitute a cause of action, was properly overruled, because a general demurrer is not sustainable if the complaint states a cause of action in favor of any one of several plaintiffs.

It is contended that there were errors in rulings upon evidence.

It is objected that the judge was absent from the courtroom during a portion of the trial.

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Bluebook (online)
24 P. 269, 84 Cal. 489, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocallaghan-v-bode-cal-1890.