Appeal by plaintiff from a judgment of dismissal entered pursuant to an order sustaining a demurrer of defendant city of Whittier to the complaint without leave to amend in an action for damages for injury to property.
The complaint alleged these facts:
The city of Whittier maintained, managed, and operated a rubbish disposal dump within the city near Savage Canyon for its use, convenience, and benefit, and that of its residents.
Plaintiff was the owner of property on Turnbull Canyon Road in Puente which was improved with bearing avocado trees, a sprinkler system, fences, and tree props. On June 22, 1949, there was fruit on the trees.
Defendant, over a period of years and particularly on June 21 and 22, 1949, when a high wind was blowing, maintained the rubbish disposal dump in a dangerous condition, permitting the continued burning of rubbish therein, under all weather conditions, without supervision. The dangerous condition was known to defendant for a long period of time prior to June 21 and 22, 1949. Defendant neglected to take any measures to remedy the condition. (The specific allegations are set forth in the margin. 1 )
*613 On June 22, 1949, a fire started in the rubbish disposal dump and spread through and over surrounding property to plaintiff’s property, burned and destroyed 248 avocado trees, full grown and bearing, and the crops thereon, damaged the sprinkler system and fence posts, and destroyed 750 tree props, to her damage in the sum of $21,130.97. The fire loss and damage was a proximate result “of the negligent failure and neglect to remedy the dangerous and defectivе condition” of the rubbish disposal dump.
On September 16, 1949, plaintiff filed with the clerk and city council of defendant a written claim for damages. A copy of the claim is made a part of the complaint.
The question for decision is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the city of Whittier. The controlling statutes in effect on June 22, 1949—the Public Liability Act of 1923 and The Claims Act of 1931—in pertinent part read: “Counties, municipalities and school districts shall be liable for injuries to persons and property resulting from the dangerous or defective condition of public streets, highways, buildings, grounds, works and property in all cases where the governing or managing board of such county, municipality, school district, or other board, officer or person having authority to remedy such condition, had knowledge or notice of the defective or dangerous condition of any such street, highway, building, grounds, works or property and failed or neglected, for a reasonable time after acquiring such knowledge or receiving such notice, to remedy such condition or failed аnd neglected for a reasonable *614 time after acquiring such knowledge or receiving such notice to take such action as may be reasonably necessary to protect the public against such dangerous or defective condition.” (Stats. 1923, ch. 328, § 2, p. 675.) 2 “Whenever it is claimed that any person has been injured or any property damaged as a result of the dangerous or defective condition of any public street, highway, building, park, grounds, works or property, a verified claim for damages shall be presented in writing and filed with the clerk or secretary of the legislative body of the municipality, county, city and county, or school district, as the case may be, within ninety days after such accident has occurred. Such claim shall specify the name and address of the claimant, the date and place of the accident and the extent of the injuries or damages received.” (Stats. 1931, ch. 1167, § 1, p. 2475.) The 1923 and 1931 statutes are now embodied in sections 53050-53056 of the Government Code.
Defendant states that plaintiff’s property was located several miles from the dump. We are unable to asсertain the distance from examination of maps. For the purpose of this opinion only, we will assume that defendant’s statement is correct.
Defendant argues that the maintenance, in a dangerous condition, of a rubbish disposal dump, where rubbish is burned, cannot give a right of action to a property owner whose property, several miles away from the dump, is damaged by a fire from the dump whiсh ignited grass and brush and spread to plaintiff’s property; that what is meant by “dangerous or defective condition” is that it “is dangerous to persons who might be expected to come in contact with the defective or dangerous condition or to property which might reasonably be expected to be injured thereby”; that there must be a close relation between the dangerous condition and the property damaged.
The Public Liability Act of 1923 imposed on a muni ci
*615
pality liability for injury or damage resulting from a dangerous condition of property. If the officers or employees of the municipality had actual or imputed knowledge or notice of the dangerous condition and neglected to remedy it within a reasonable time after knowledge or notice, or neglected for a reasonable time after acquiring such knowledge or receiving such notice to take such action as might be reasonably necessary to protect the public against such dangerous condition, liability ensued.
(Fackrell
v.
City of San Diego,
In
George
v.
City of Los Angeles,
If the dangerous condition is the proximate сause of the injury or damage, liability ensues. (Bosqui v. San Bernardino,2 Cal.2d 747 , 760, 761 [43 P.2d 547 ]; Lorraine v. City of Los Angeles,55 Cal.App.2d 27 , 30 [130 P.2d 140 ].) “ Proximate cause” means that the injury or damage was the natural and probable consequence of the wrongful or negligent act or omission and the ability on the part of a person of ordinary intelligence reasonably to have foreseen or anticipated the harmful consequence of his act or omission. (Chutuk v. Southern Counties Gas Co.,21 Cal.2d 372 , 380 [132 P.2d 193 ]; Weck v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist.,80 Cal.App.2d 182 , 189 [181 P.2d 935 ]; Johnson v. Union Furniture Co.,31 Cal.App.2d 234 , 238 [87 P.2d 917 ].)
The precise consequence of a wrongful act or omission
*616
need not have been foreseeable. The question is not whether defendant did foresee, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have foreseen, the identical consequence that happened, in order that its act or omission be a proximate cause of the injury or damage. The question is whether it was reasonably foreseeable that injury or damage would likely occur. Defendant’s duty is measured by the standard of foreseeability of injury or damage to the eyes of a reasonably prudent person having regard for the accompanying circumstances.
(Werkman
v.
Howard Zink Corp.,
Though an act or оmission be removed from the injury and damage by intermediate causes or effects, yet if, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any superseding cause, it produces that injury or damage, and if without it the injury would not have happened, it is a proximate cause of such injury or damage. Proximity in point of time or space is no part of the definition. That is of no imрortance except as it may afford evidence for or against proximity of causation.
(Hyer
v.
Inter-Insurance Exchange,
In collecting garbage, trash and other refuse, hauling it to its dumping ground and disposing of it by fire, defendant was exercising a governmental function which was not completed until the ashes were disposed of.
(Pittam
v.
City of Riverside,
It is not necessary for a plaintiff to show, in order to recover for damage caused by a fire, that the fire was directly communicated to the property consumed; there may be a recovery where the fire burned across intervening lands before reaching the property damaged for which recovery is sought, if there was no superseding cause between the originаl wrong and the loss complained of. Time, distance, and the fact that the fire burned over intervening tracts of land, do not affect the question of defendant’s liability except insofar as they relate to the probability of a superseding cause and the unforeseeability to an intelligent person that injury or
*618
damage would accrue as the result of the act or omission causing the fire. Generally, a fire, however far it may go, is one continuous fire—the same fire—and is the proximate cause of all the injuries and damage it may produce in its destructive march, whether it goes to abutting property or several miles. (22 Am.Jur. 625, §47;
Irelan-Yuba etc. Min. Co.
v.
Pacific G. & E. Co.,
Miller
v.
City of Palo Alto,
We hold, therefore, that liability is not, as a matter of law, dependent upon proximity of the damaged property to the dangerous condition, but is dependent upon the dangerous condition being a proximate cause of the damage, and that the question is one of fact.
Defendant asserts that the vеrification of the claim is insufficient in that “It nowhere purports to contain a statement over the signature of Edith E. Osborn that she swears to anything. She merely states certain things. The statement does not purport to follow the requirements of the Code Sections as to an affidavit of verification. ’ ’ The verifiea
*619
tion is set out in the margin.
4
The fact that the opening statement of the affidavit does not state that plaintiff was first duly sworn is not fatal where, as here, it appears that the affidavit was “subscribed” by plaintiff and was “sworn to” before the notary whose signature is affixed. Defendant does not refer us to the code sections, the requirements of which it asserts plaintiff failed to follow. The statute involved here provides merely that the claim be verified. (Stats. 1931, ch. 1167, § 1, p. 2475.) No particular form of verification is prescribed.
(Cf.
Pol. Code, § 4076, where a prescribed form of verification is provided for claims filed against a county.) A verification is an affidavit of the truth of the matters stated. (Code Civ. Proc., §§446, 2009; Pol. Code, §4076;
McCaffey C. Co.
v.
Bank of America,
The complaint contains factual allegations of all the elements essential to a cause of action under the Public Liability Act: (1) facts showing a dangerous condition of public property; (2) actual knowledge of the dangerous condition by persons having authority to remedy the condition; (3) the lapse of a reasonable time after knowledge within which to remedy the condition, or to take such action as might be reasonably necessary to protect the public against the dangerous condition; (4) failure to remedy the dangerous condition; (5) the dangerous condition was a proximate cause of the damage; and (6) presentation of a verified claim within 90 days.
(Arellano
v.
City of Burbank,
In view of our conclusion, it is not necessary to consider plaintiff’s contention that the facts alleged are sufficient to state a cause of action on the theory that the maintenance and operation of the dump constituted a nuisance. (See
Phillips
v.
City of Pasadena,
The judgment is reversed with directions to overrule the demurrer and permit defendant to answer.
Shinn, P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 15, 1951, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court ivas denied June 14, 1951.
Notes
"That said fire and the loss and damage to plaintiff by reason thereof, was a direct and proximate result of the negligent failure and neglect to remedy the dangerous and defective condition of the said Disposal Dump by the defendаnts and each of them, as is more particularly set forth as follows: that the defendants and each of them, and particularly the defendant City op Whittier, and the City Council thereof, maintained said Bubbish Dump in Savage Canyon in the City of Whittier; that the defendants and each of them permitted, allowed and failed to prevent the continual and habitual burning of rubbish over a long period of years, at all hours of the day and night under all weather conditions without adequate or proper eontol or supervision or fire prevention measures; that the defendants and each of them failed to attend or control said Dump while trash and materials were burning; that during said time the defendants and each of them permitted and allowed fires to burn in said dump without emрloyees or other personnel present to control and supervise said burnings; that on or about the 21st and 22nd days of June 1949, the defendants and each of them *613 allowed and permitted fires to burn and continue to burn in said Dump; that on said dates said fire was allowed to continue to burn without supervision or attendance or fire equipment present to control said burning; that а high wind was blowing on said dates at said time and place; that dry and combustible brush materials and scrub undergrowth were allowed by said defendants to remain on adjoining premises immediately adjacent thereto; that the said dangerous, hazardous and defective conditions of said Dump and the portion thereof as aforesaid, were well known to the defendants and each of them long prior to and at the time of the said 21st and 22nd days of June 1949; that said defendants and each of them, failed to take any measures whatsoever to remedy said dangerous and defective operation and condition of said Dump; that as a direct and proximate result of said failure and neglect of the defendants and each of them, as aforesaid, fire spread from said Rubbish Disposal Dump to the premises of the plaintiff herein, and as a direct and proximate result of said spread of fire plaintiff’s premises and property sustained severe damages and destruction as hereinafter set forth.”
The old maxim that the King can do no wrong—immunity of the
sovereign for
the
torts of its
officers and employees, when acting in a governmental capacity—an unjust relic of the dark ages, is rapidly passing into oblivion. (See “Should California Accept Tort Liability?” by Thomas H. Kuchel, State Controller of California, XXV Cal. State Bar J. 146; 22 So.Cal.L.Rev. 78; 34 Yale L.Jour., 1-45, 129-143, 229-258; 35 Yale L.Jour. 150; 36 Yale L.Jour. 1; 56 Yale L.Jour. 534; 30 Harv.L.Rev. 20; 4 IIl.L.Quar. 28; 4 Wyo.L.Jour. 96; 11 Am. Bar Assn.Jour. 495; Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 2671-2680, 60 Stats. 843 as amended;
United States
v.
Yellow Cab Co.,
- U.S. - [
A person who allows a fire kindled or attended by him to escape from his control or to spread to the lands of any person other than the builder of the fire without using every reasonable and proper precaution to prevent the fire from escaping, is guilty of a misdemeanor. (Health & Saf. Code, § 13000.)
“State of California 7 County of Los Angelesí SSl
“The undersigned, under the penalty of perjury states:
“That the above claim and the items as therein set out are true and correct; that no part thereof has been heretofore paid, and that the amount therein is justly due this claimant, and that the same is presented within one year after the last item thereof has accrued.
Edith E. Osborn Edith E. Osborn
“Subscribed and sworn to before me this 15th day of September, 1949. Helen Harden
Notary Public in and for said County and State”
