San Joaquin Grocery Co. v. Trewhitt

252 P. 332, 80 Cal. App. 371, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 20, 1926
DocketDocket No. 5617.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 252 P. 332 (San Joaquin Grocery Co. v. Trewhitt) 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
San Joaquin Grocery Co. v. Trewhitt, 252 P. 332, 80 Cal. App. 371, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 52 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff commenced an action against the defendants to recover a judgment for damages. The defendants answered and a trial was had in the lower court before the court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and a judgment was entered thereon. The defendants moved for a new trial on all the statutory grounds; the motion was denied. There *372 after the defendants appealed from the judgment under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The appellants present several points, each of which they claim would support a reversal, but in the view that we take of the record it will be unnecessary to consider anything except the claim that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict and that the trial court erred in refusing to give one of the instructions requested by the appellants. We will take those points up in the order stated, but before doing so it is necessary to make a statement of facts.

The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in conducting a grocery store in the city of Fresno. It also maintains a warehouse, which is located on Fulton Street a short distance south of Los Angeles Street. Back of the warehouse on the eastern side is an alley. The plaintiff’s holding includes lots 18 to 26. The property on the northerly side of the warehouse and bounded by Fulton Street, Los Angeles Street, the alley, and by plaintiff’s warehouse, was purchased by Ben Tyre. The Tyre holding includes lots 27 to 32. When Mr. Tyre purchased his lots some of them were occupied by dwellings. He proceeded to wreck the dwellings, to level up the ground, and to construct a building covering his holding. Some of the dwellings had cellars. Those cellars were filled up and the grounds were scraped so as to make the surface level. In this behalf, in its complaint, the plaintiff alleges: “That on or about the 12th day of February, 1923, the defendants, their employees, agents and servants, leveled, scraped and checked by means of levees all of said Lots 27, 28, 29, 30, 31 and 32 of said Block 202, to a depth of about eight inches, and made numerous excavations on the said lots to a depth of about six feet, for the construction of certain concrete piers, particularly near the common boundary of said Lots 26 and 27 and along the easterly boundary line of said Lot 27; that in the course of said leveling, scraping, excavating and construction the defendants, their employees, agents and servants, with gross carelessness and negligence caused and permitted large quantities of water to be poured and to pour onto said Lots 27, 28, 29, 30, 31 and 32 and into the said excavations and to flood the same. That on or about the 12th day of February, 1923, by reason of said gross carelessness and negligence on the part of said defend *373 ants, their employees, agents and servants, the said water accumulated along the wall of the said building of said plaintiff on said Lot 26 near the said common boundary line of said Lots 26 and 27, and the said water drained, seeped and percolated into the said basement of plaintiff and, without any fault or lack of care on the part of the plaintiff, the said water flowed into, upon and around the goods which this plaintiff then owned and had there stored, and injured, damaged and completely destroyed and rendered valueless large quantities of same, all. to the great injury and damage of this plaintiff in the sum of One Thousand ($1000.00) Dollars.” The defendants denied the allegations contained in said paragraph and on the trial it transpired that the Tyre lots were graded, filled, and scraped; that after the same had been leveled checks were made so that each lot was surrounded with a check and thereafter water was run onto each lot for the purpose of causing the dirt to settle; and thereafter certain holes were dug for the purpose of putting in piers to obtain a support on which to rest the roof. Along the northern boundary of the plaintiff’s property a trench was dug and a foundation of concrete was placed in the trench; and thereafter the dirt was thrown up against the concrete foundation so constructed. At the end of that wall, and at every twenty feet, a pier was set down on a level with the bottom of the plaintiff’s wall and later the soil was replaced around the piers and settled with water. That process had been completed two weeks before February 12, 1923. After Friday, February 9, 1923, the defendants were not on the job. The brick-masons were there doing the brick work. When the foundation was ready brick-masons came forward and proceeded to lay brick walls on top of the concrete foundation. In doing their work the brick-masons let water through a hose to make mortar ' and wet the brick. On Monday, February 12, 1923, .the southerly wall of the Tyre building had progressed to the point where it was about nine feet in height above its foundation. That was the result of two and a half days’ work by the brick-masons. Some of the witnesses testified that the running of water to settle the soil stopped on Wednesday, February 7th; however, Mr. Peterson, the general manager of the plaintiff, testified that he was about the new building on Thursday, *374 Friday, and Saturday, that is, February 8th, 9th, and 10th, and to use his language, “It is my impression, and as far as my memory serves me, I believe there was (water spread about the property), in fact, I am quite sure.” On Sunday, February 11th, between 8:05 A. M. and 12:50 P. M., there was a rain of .39 of an inch. Several witnesses testified that on Saturday afternoon they saw water running out of a three-quarter inch hose at a point on the Tyre property twenty feet north of the plaintiff’s building and fifty feet west of the alley. There was further testimony that said stream of water was still flowing Monday morning, February 12, 1923. Witnesses testified that between 8 o’clock Monday morning and noon of that day they went down into the basement of the plaintiff’s store and there they saw, at a point about fifty feet west of the alley, water coming through the north wall of plaintiff’s building, and that there was in the neighborhood of two and a half inches of water on the floor of the basement. No witness testified to any fact or facts showing where the water had come from which percolated through the north wall. Mr. Peterson testified that his building had a roof of such nature that the rain falling thereon would run tu drains which emptied on the Fulton Street side. The evidence is without conflict that the work' done on the Tyre property before the brick-masons commenced to lay brick was done by the defendants under an independent contract and that the brick work was done by Paul Kindler, an independent contractor.

There is evidence in the record that when the foundation wall for the Tyre building was being constructed along the north line of the plaintiff’s property that the soil was excavated up against the north wall of the plaintiff’s property and to a depth of about three feet. A strip of land four and one-half inches in width along the north side of said wall was on the plaintiff’s side of the property line. There is no evidence that the soil in the territory four and one-half inches wide was of any peculiar quality or that it was impervious to water. Neither is there any evidence in the record that the four and one-half inches of soil was not afterward put in place or that it was improperly put in place.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 332, 80 Cal. App. 371, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-joaquin-grocery-co-v-trewhitt-calctapp-1926.