Sawaya v. DeCou

140 P.2d 98, 60 Cal. App. 2d 146, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 498
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 6, 1943
DocketCiv. 13998
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 140 P.2d 98 (Sawaya v. DeCou) 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
Sawaya v. DeCou, 140 P.2d 98, 60 Cal. App. 2d 146, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 498 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This action was commenced by Amelia Sawaya, a minor, by her guardian ad litem, George A. Sawaya, to recover damages for injuries sustained by her when the automobile in which she was riding struck a mound of excavated dirt and macadam on Cahuenga Boulevard, in the city of Los Angeles. By her complaint plaintiff alleged that for the purpose of making sewer connections between defendant DeCou’s property and the city’s main sewer line, “defendants excavated or caused to be excavated and dug, a large and deep hole in the middle of Cahuenga Boulevard and in the course of said digging and excavating threw up and piled upon the middle of said boulevard a large mound of dirt, rocks and macadam . . . the said dangerous condition *147 of said street or boulevard was known by defendants Bronson DeCou and Homer Toberman on said date of March 29th, 1941"; that defendants negligently suffered said excavation and dirt to remain unguarded and unlighted and without proper signals on the street, and as a proximate consequence thereof plaintiff was injured. Joined as defendants with the executrix of the will of Bronson DeCou, owner of the property where the sewer connections were being made, were the building contractor, Homer Toberman, and the sewer contractor, Andrew Jayieh. By his answer defendant DeCou denied that he excavated the street or piled the dirt thereon; denied negligence and the injuries to plaintiff, and alleged that Andrew Jayieh was an independent sewer contractor who had agreed to make the connection according to plans and specifications approved by the Engineering Department of the City of Los Angeles, and that if Andrew Jayieh was at all negligent, DeCou was not liable therefor. A jury trial was had and a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $500 was returned against Andrew Jayieh and defendant executrix who was substituted as a defendant in the place and stead of her deceased husband. The jury found in favor of the contractor, Homer Toberman. Said executrix, Elsie DeCou, alone appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial, assigning as error the giving of certain instructions by the trial court.

Briefly the facts are that on October 15, 1940, Bronson DeCou entered into a contract with Homer Toberman, a licensed building contractor for the erection of some units of a motel on the property of DeCou which had been purchased by him from C. E. Toberman Company, a corporation. The contractor, Homer Toberman, son of C. E. Toberman, had no official connection with the corporation of which the latter was president, but at times acted as a part-time employee thereof. The record discloses that application to the city of Los Angeles for a permit to excavate the public street for installation of the sewer connections was made through a letter written by C. E. Toberman, president of C. E. Toberman Company, under date of October 4, 1940. The required $56 fee for said permit was paid by C. E. Toberman and a bond was furnished by the C. E. Toberman Company. C. E. Toberman testified that Bronson DeCou reimbursed him for the $56. Homer Toberman picked up the permit from the office of the Engineering Department of the City of Los An *148 geles and signed therefor as follows: “C. B. Toberman Company, by Homer Toberman.”

On January 18, 1941, Andrew Jayich, a licensed sewer contractor, entered into a contract with C. B. Toberman Company to install the sewer under the above mentioned permit and connect with the main sewer line that extended out in the center of Cahuenga Boulevard. Jayich testified that he had a contract with Mr. C. E. Toberman, and that “Mr. C. E. Toberman gave me a payroll every week, that I didn’t have no money, and so when I take the job I told him I didn’t want the job, and he says he will give me—he will help me pay as I go along, and that was that”; and that he didn’t see Mr. DeCou until after the accident here in question. But defendant DeCou, by way of separate and affirmative defense alleged: ‘ ‘ That on or about November 6, 1940, said defendant obtained the approval of the Engineering Department of the City of Los Angeles to plans and specifications for a sewer in Cahuenga Boulevard; that thereafter said defendant accepted a bid from one Andrew Jayich, sewer contractor, to construct a sewer according to said plans and specifications for the sum of $640.00; that said Jayich thereupon constructed said sewer; that said Jayich is not an employee of defendant Bronson DeCou but at all times herein mentioned was an independent contractor and acted under and pursuant to the contract for sewer construction alleged in paragraph I of this separate and affirmative defense.”

Homer Toberman testified, under section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that he was a licensed general building contractor and that he was not an official or stockholder of C. E. Toberman Company, but only a part-time employee. That in October, 1940, he started building operations on Mr. DeCou’s property, which work was completed some time in April, 1941. Homer Toberman also testified that he entered into a contract with The Advance Plumbing Company to install the plumbing and fixtures but that this work only extended to the property line and that the sewer was to be brought into the curb by others.

Upon this appeal it is not denied by appellant that the excavation and the mounds of dirt resultant therefrom were not signed or marked with signals or warning devices as required by the city of Los Angeles in granting the permit to excavate, nor is respondent’s contention, that the obstructions on the highway were improperly and ineffectively lighted, challenged.

*149 Appellant’s main ground for reversal is the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury that unless the owner himself takes out the permit to excavate, he can not be held liable for negligent acts of his independent contractor, and that the duty to use ordinary care in so excavating is imposed upon the person to whom the permit is issued; that the mere fact of ownership does not render the defendant DeCou liable if he employs an independent contractor and does not have the full and unqualified right to control and direct said independent contractor in the construction of the sewer; or if defendant DeCou employed the general contractor as an independent contractor, he, the defendant owner would not be liable for acts of negligence of said general contractor, or if said general contractor employed a sub-contractor, the negligence of said sub-contractor could not be imputed to said owner; or that negligence on the part of the independent contractor could not be imputed to said owner; that defendant DeCou was not bound to anticipate negligence on the part of the contractors; that there was no evidence that either Andrew Jayich and/or Homer Toberman was an agent, servant or employee of Bronson DeCou.

In these contentions appellant can not be sustained. The case of Robbins v. Hercules Gasoline Co., 80 Cal.App. 271 [251 P. 697], (hearing denied by the Supreme Court) presents a factual situation quite similar to the one existing in the case at bar. In the cited case, speaking of the application of the doctrine of respondeat superior,

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Bluebook (online)
140 P.2d 98, 60 Cal. App. 2d 146, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawaya-v-decou-calctapp-1943.