Tate v. Canonica

180 Cal. App. 2d 898, 5 Cal. Rptr. 28, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 1960
DocketCiv. 18690
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 180 Cal. App. 2d 898 (Tate v. Canonica) 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
Tate v. Canonica, 180 Cal. App. 2d 898, 5 Cal. Rptr. 28, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

*900 DUNIWAY, J.

Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment against them entered after an order sustaining a demurrer to their complaint without leave to amend.

The Question Presented

Can a cause of action be predicated upon either the intentional or the negligent infliction of mental distress, which culminates in the suicide of the victim?

The Complaint

Plaintiffs are respectively the widow and children of Justin S. Tate, deceased. The first count alleges that defendants “intentionally made threats, statements and accusations against said deceased for the purpose of harassing, embarrassing, and humiliating him in the presence of friends, relatives and business associates ’ ’; that due thereto deceased became “physically and mentally disturbed'’ and as a direct result committed suicide. The second count charges that the making of the threats, statements and accusations was negligently done. Por the loss of the society, comfort, protection and support of the husband and father, plaintiffs ask damages of $496,000 and punitive damages of $25,000. Defendants demurred generally and specially. The order sustaining the demurrer does not show upon what grounds it was sustained. While the complaint is clearly uncertain and ambiguous and thereby subject to the special demurrer, the main question is whether the complaint states or can state a cause of action.

Does the Complaint State a Cause op Action ?

It is not alleged that the acts complained of were done for the purpose of causing deceased to commit suicide, but it is stated that they were committed for the purpose of harassing, embarrassing and humiliating deceased, and caused him to become physically and mentally disturbed, as a result of which deceased took his life.

1. The Parties’ Contentions.

Beyond advising us that no reported California ease has passed upon the questions presented, appellant’s brief is of no help to us. If appellants’ counsel was aware of any authority on the questions elsewhere, he has not troubled to call it to our attention. Counsel’s duty to assist the court includes a duty to study and to discuss the available authorities, both in California and, at least where there are none in California, in other jurisdictions. We would have more con *901 fidence in the completeness and sufficiency of our own research if counsel had performed this duty. We have had some help from defendants’ counsel, and have been materially assisted by a very full note appearing in 11 A.L.R.2d at page 751.

Plaintiffs’ counsel argues “that with the many advances in the field of psychiatry, sufficient proof medically and factually can be produced to prove the allegations of the complaint,” and “that proximate cause is always a question of fact.” With the first proposition, we do not quarrel; the second is clearly wrong, else no nonsuit, directed verdict, or judgment notwithstanding the verdict would ever be granted in a case involving the question “is cause A the proximate cause of result B. ” Proximate cause is legal cause, as distinguished from the layman’s notion of actual cause, and is always, in the first instance, a question of law. (Prosser, Torts, 2d ed., ch. 9, § 47, p. 252; §50, p. 281; Rest., Torts, § 453; Prosser, “Proximate Cause in California 38 Cal. L. R. 369, 419-420; Stasulat v. Pacific Gas & Elec. Co., 8 Cal. 2d 631, 638 [67 P.2d 678]; cf. McEvoy v. American Pool Corp., 32 Cal.2d 295, 298-299 [195 P.2d 783].) It becomes a question of fact when conflicting inferences or conclusions can be drawn from the evidence within the area of proximate cause as legally defined.

Defendants’ counsel takes the fiat position that suicide is always an independent intervening cause", (thus breaking the chain of legal causation in every case, and absolving the actors, in this case the defendants, from responsibility. We do not agree, although the earlier cases seem to support defendants’ position.

2. Suicide in the Early Common Law.

At common law, suicide was a felony. Blaekstone states the rule with his usual elegance as follows (4 Blackstone’s Commentaries, (1778), 8th ed., eh. 14, p. 189): “SELF-MURDER, the pretended heroism, but real cowardice, of the Stoic philosophers, who destroyed themselves to avoid those ills which they had not the fortitude to endure, though the attempting it seems to be countenanced by the civil law, yet was punished by the Athenian law with cutting off the hand, which committed the desperate deed. And also, the law of England wisely and religiously considers, that no man hath a power to destroy life, but by commission from God, the author of it: and, as the suicide is guilty of a double offense; one spiritual, in invading the prerogative of the Almighty, *902 and rushing into his immediate presence uncalled for; the other temporal, against the king, who hath an interest in the preservation of all his subjects; the law has therefore ranked this among the highest crimes, making it a peculiar species of felony, a felony committed on one’s self. And this admits of accessories before the fact, as well as other felonies; for if one persuades another to kill himself, and he does so, the adviser is guilty of murder. . . . The party must be of years of discretion, and in his senses, else it is no crime. But this excuse ought not to be restrained to that length, to which our coroner’s juries are apt to carry it, viz. that the very act of suicide is an evidence of insanity; as if every man, who acts contrary to reason, had no reason at all: for the same argument would prove every other criminal non compos, as well "as the self-murderer. The law very rationally judges, that every melancholy or hypochondriac fit does not deprive a man of the capacity of discerning right from wrong; which is necessary, as was observed in a former chapter, to form a legal excuse. And therefore if a real lunatic kills himself in a lucid interval, he is a felo de se as much as another man.

‘ ‘ But now the question follows, what punishment can human laws inflict on one who has withdrawn himself from their reach 1 They can only act upon what he has left behind him, his reputation and fortune: on the former by an ignominious burial in the highway, with a stake driven through his body; on the latter, by a forfeiture of all his goods and chattels to the king: hoping that his care for either his own reputation, or the welfare of his family, would be some motive to restrain him from so desperate and wicked an act.”

Pollock and Maitland (2 History of English Law, 2d ed., p. 488) place the rule on much more mundane grounds: “As to suicide Braeton seems to have had many doubts, and at one time he was for giving the name felo de se only to a criminal who killed himself in order to escape a worse fate. We think that the practice of exacting a forfeiture of goods in every case in which a sane man put an end to his own life was one that grew up gradually, and that thus the phrase felonía de se gained an ampler scope.”

Holdsworth agrees with Pollock and Maitland.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

BOURNE v. VALDES, M.D.
141 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 30 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2025)
Elie v. Los Angeles Unified School Dist. CA2/2
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Wickersham v. Ford Motor Co.
194 F. Supp. 3d 434 (D. South Carolina, 2016)
Ferraro v. Glendale Unified School Dist. CA2/4
California Court of Appeal, 2016
Turcios v. The DeBruler Company
2015 IL 117962 (Illinois Supreme Court, 2015)
Turcios v. DeBruler Co.
2014 IL App (2d) 130331 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2014)
Turcios v. The DeBruler Company
2014 IL App (2d) 130331 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2014)
Ash v. North American Title Co.
223 Cal. App. 4th 1258 (California Court of Appeal, 2014)
Walsh v. Tehachapi Unified School District
997 F. Supp. 2d 1071 (E.D. California, 2014)
Alameda County Management Employees Ass'n v. Superior Court
195 Cal. App. 4th 325 (California Court of Appeal, 2011)
Corales v. Bennett
Ninth Circuit, 2009
Bank of New York v. Fremont General Corp.
523 F.3d 902 (Ninth Circuit, 2008)
Moore v. Western Forge Corp.
192 P.3d 427 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2007)
Corales v. Bennett
488 F. Supp. 2d 975 (C.D. California, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 Cal. App. 2d 898, 5 Cal. Rptr. 28, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-canonica-calctapp-1960.