Action to recover damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of defendant’s negligence. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff upon which judgment was entered and from which defendant has appealed upon the judgment-roll accompanied by a bill of exceptions.
The facts out of which the accident grew and concerning which there is little controversy in the evidence are as follows: At the time when plaintiff sustained the injury, defendant was engaged in constructing and operating a telephone system in the city of San Diego. For its use as a storeroom for supplies and material required in its construction work, it occupied an uninclosed cottage in the rear of which was a lattice porch with an open space of some four or five feet for entry. Upon this porch was a shelf platform two and one-half to three feet above the floor, and on Saturday, the day preceding the accident, defendant’s employees placed upon this shelf a wooden box wherein, underneath some excelsior packing, was deposited a tin box containing dynamite caps of a high explosive character and dangerous to persons unacquainted with the care and handling thereof. The top of this wooden box was covered by a board, one end of which was flush nailed and the other lightly tacked. Walter Hadley, a boy eight years of age, lived with his parents in a house adjoining defendant’s said storehouse and between which and the Hadley cottage there was no fence. At times Walter and other boys played in a driveway entering the lot along the side of the storehouse, but none of them had ever gone upon the porch. On Sunday, June 6th, all of defendant’s employees being absent therefrom, Walter Hadley entered upon this porch and, seeing the wooden box upon the shelf, pried off the cover, raised up the excelsior packing and, finding the tin box, opened it and took therefrom about twenty of the dynamite caps, of the character and danger in handling which he was wholly ignorant, but thought they could be used in a toy cap pistol which one of his playmates had. On the same day he gave some of these caps to the plaintiff, a boy of the age of seven years, who likewise, by *58 reason of his age and inexperience, was unacquainted with the character thereof, and who placed one of them in a toy pistol and caused it to explode, as a result of which he was seriously and permanently injured. It conclusively appears that Walter knew the nature of his act and the moral turpitude thereof, namely, that he was engaged in the surreptitious taking of property which did not belong to him; in short, that he was engaged in the theft of defendant’s property, which he knew was wrong; and hence his connection with the matter, in so far as it affects plaintiff, must be deemed that of an adult and sui juris.
No purpose could be served in a review of the many authorities cited by counsel from other jurisdictions wherein similar questions have been involved. Suffice it to say that most of them involved features clearly distinguishing them from the instant case and were decided upon principles not applicable to the facts here presented.
Our view of the case as herein expressed renders it unnecessary to consider the error predicated upon the action of the court in overruling defendant’s general demurrer to the complaint. We may say, however, that, in our opinion, the allegation that both plaintiff and Walter Hadley, by reason of their extreme youth, were ignorant of the dangerous character of the dynamite caps, coupled with the allegation that defendant permitted Walter Hadley to go upon the premises and carry therefrom a large number of said dynamite caps, when measured by what is said upon a similar question in
Cahill
v.
E. B. & A. L. Stone & Co.,
The judgment is reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 28, 1919.
All the Justices concurred.
