242 P. 902 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *397 An action by appellant to recover damages alleged to have resulted from the negligence of respondents William J. Burton, Edwin F. Williams, and G.B. Alexander Rife, as trustees of the Palo Verde Joint Levee District of Riverside and Imperial Counties, the corporation respondent *398 being surety for each of said trustees on his official bond. A demurrer to the complaint having been sustained appellant declined to amend, whereupon judgment was entered for respondents and the appeal taken therefrom.
The levee district mentioned, in which is situated certain land owned by appellant, has constructed for the protection of the lands therein from the overflow waters of the Colorado River certain levees along and near the west bank thereof, one of such levees being referred to in the complaint as the Standard levee, situated between the river and the land of appellant. The complaint alleges that the natural slope of the lands within the district and the flow of the river are from north to south; that during the month of June, 1921, the levee mentioned was by the action of the waters of the river cut and about fifty feet thereof washed away; that several overflows therefrom followed which passed through the broken levee, none of which, however, reached the land of appellant until the last week in August of that year, when the damage complained of occurred in the manner hereinafter stated. It is further alleged that the trustees negligently failed to repair the broken levee; that between the time of the injury thereto and the damage to appellant's land alleged they negligently caused two dams to be constructed and maintained across a certain borrow-pit, the pit mentioned being a part of the system provided for the protection of the lands within the district and which was, as may be inferred from its description in the complaint, a trench running parallel with and west of the damaged levee; that during the fourth week of August, 1921, the overflow waters of the river passed through the break described and, in the words of the pleader, "the last-mentioned overflow waters, held back from flowing with the natural contour of the land by the two dams constructed across said borrow-pit as hereinafter alleged, backed up and overflowed" the land of appellant, causing damage to certain vines and crops growing thereon. The location of appellant's land with relation to the break in the levee and the dams mentioned is not clear from the complaint. Giving the pleading, however, the construction prescribed by law (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 452; Estate ofWickersham,
It is contended by respondents that under the provisions of the act relating to the liability in damages of the officers of districts for injuries to person or property from defects and dangers in public work, property, etc., approved May 18, 1919 (Stats. 1919, p. 756), the liability of the officers of a levee district depends upon certain facts therein enumerated, and that it is essential to the statement of a cause of action against such officers that these facts, which, according to the act, "shall first appear," be alleged. The material portions of the act mentioned and upon which respondents rely are as follows:
"Section 1. No officer of any district . . . shall be liable for any damage or injury to any . . . property hereafter resulting from the defective or dangerous condition of any public . . . work or property, unless it shall first appear:
"(1) That the injury sustained was the direct and proximate result of such defective or dangerous condition,
"(2) That such officer had notice of such defect or dangerous condition or that such defective or dangerous condition was directly attributable to work done by him, or under his direction, in a negligent, careless or unworkmanlike manner,
"(3) That he had authority and it was his duty to remedy such condition at the expense of the state or of a political subdivision thereof, and that funds for that purpose were immediately available to him, and
"(4) That, within a reasonable time after receiving such notice and being able to remedy such condition he failed so to do or failed to take reasonable steps to give adequate warning of such condition; and then only when it shall further appear that such damage or injury was sustained *400 while such public . . . work or property was being carefully used, and that due care was being used to avoid the danger due to such condition; provided, however, that this act shall not be construed as enlarging the duty or liability of any public officer."
[1] While the provisions of subdivisions (1) and (2) of the section quoted limit recovery against such officers to cases where "the defective or dangerous condition was the direct and proximate" cause of the injury suffered, thus changing the rule of proof which in ordinary negligence cases requires only that the negligent act shall be shown to have been the proximate, though not necessarily the direct, cause of the injury alleged (Goehring v. Rogers,
[3] To hold that it was designed to relieve from liability, unless the facts last enumerated appear, those officers whose negligence was the direct cause of the conditions from which injury to individuals directly resulted would be to extend the rule now applicable to cases of nonfeasance to official misfeasance, and with it the immunities which considerations of justice as well as policy render proper for the protection of those whose duties in the first instance have been properly performed — a construction limiting a just and long-established rule of liability (Dillwood v. Riecks,
[4] The complaint in the instant case having alleged facts from which it fairly appears that the erection of the dams at the place and in the manner described was, aside from the direct averment, negligent; that the act was done under the direction of the trustees, that a dangerous condition was thereby created which was directly attributable to such negligence and from which as an immediate result the injury followed, the pleading was, according to our construction of the statute, in these respects sufficient.
[5] To the facts as alleged in the complaint the further provision of subdivision (4) of the section, requiring that it shall appear that the injury was sustained while the public work or property was being carefully used, clearly has no application, it appearing that the work described, unlike roads, bridges, or works constructed for similar purposes, was not of a character permitting its use by appellant.
It is further alleged by respondents that in actions against public officers the last-mentioned subdivision changes the general rule that contributory negligence, if relied upon as a defense, must be pleaded and proved by the defendant, by requiring a plaintiff to plead and prove that due care had been exercised by him to avoid the danger due to defective or dangerous conditions, while it is contended by appellant that this provision of the statute relates only to care in connection with the use of public work. *402 [6] We are of the opinion that it clearly appears from the language of the statute that it was the intention of the legislature to require the same allegations and proof of the exercise of due care to avoid injury, both in cases where defective public work was being used by the person injured and those wherein the injuries complained of were unconnected with its use by such person. Numerous situations arise where, for purposes temporary or permanent, structures are erected or conditions created which, unless due care be exercised as to the place of erection or the manner of construction, may be the direct cause of injury to individuals who in no proper sense can be said to be using such public work, but whose want of ordinary care is a proximate contributing cause of the injury suffered.
In the case of Ham v. County of Los Angeles,
[7] It being the rule that contributory negligence, if relied upon as a defense, must be pleaded as well as proved, a rule that a plaintiff as a condition to recovery must show affirmatively the absence of contributory negligence reasonably and according to the settled principles of pleading requires the ultimate facts in that connection to be alleged (Allen v. Home Ins. Co.,
[8] In the instant case, it fairly appearing from the allegations that by the acts described and alleged to have been negligent a dangerous condition was created; that neither the danger nor the injury complained of could have been avoided by the exercise of ordinary care by appellant, and that by no act or omission on his part was the damage caused or contributed to, the complaint was sufficient.
We have considered the complaint with reference to respondents' special demurrer, and are satisfied that the allegations are sufficient to meet the objections therein.
For the foregoing reasons it is our conclusion that the order sustaining the demurrer to the complaint was erroneous. The judgment is reversed, with the direction to the trial court to overrule the demurrer.
Tyler, P.J., and Knight, J., concurred. *404
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on December 31, 1925, and a petition by respondents to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 28, 1926.