Plаintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal in an action for damages for personal injuries. Defendant’s general and special demurrer to the first amended complaint had been sustained with leave to amend, but plaintiff elected to stand on his pleading.
The principal question is whether the amended complaint stated a cause of action or, more preсisely, whether plaintiff sufficiently alleged his status as an invitee. On appeal from a judgment entered on demurrer, the allegations of the complaint must be liberally construed with a view to substantial justice between the parties (Code Civ. Proc., § 452),
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the comрlaint must be reasonably interpreted and read as a whole, and any defects therein which do not affect the substantial rights оf the parties should be disregarded. (Code Civ. Proc., § 475; see
Speegle
v.
Board of Fire Underwriters,
The amended complaint alleged that plaintiff, a county employеe, was using heavy excavating equipment on defendant’s property to remove certain trees, roots, and stumps. The trees grew on a right-of-way owned by the county; the roots extended into defendant’s adjoining property. On defendant’s land, a blade on plaintiff’s equipment struck a buried pipeline containing highly combustible fluids. In the resulting explosion, plaintiff was injured. He alleged thаt the proximate cause of the injury was defendant’s negligent failure to advise the county and its employees of the presence of the pipeline or of the dangerous substances it carried.
The amended complaint further alleged thаt defendant and the county “desired and wished” the trees, roots, and stumps to be removed, and that several days before the accident defendant “gave permission” to the county and its employees to enter upon the land for that purpose.
Defendant claims that the complaint shows only that plaintiff was a licensee, “a person whose presence is not invited but merely tolerated.”
(Laidlaw
v.
Perozzi,
But plaintiff here has pleaded more than the “mere permission" present in the Fisher case. He also alleged that defendant “desired and wished" the roots to be removed. “It is the purpose for which a person is upon the premises of another which renders him an invitee rather than a licensee.”
(Popejoy
v.
Hannon,
This allegation is not, as dеfendant contends, a mere conclusion of law. The cases it relies on are readily distinguishable.
Wheeler
v.
Oppenheimer,
Therefore it was defendant’s duty to “use reasonable care to keep his premises in a reasonably safe condition and give warning of latent or concealed perils."
(Pauly
v.
King,
Defendant also interposed a special demurrer on the grounds of uncertainty, ambiguity, and unintelligibility. The specific objections were that it did not appear from the amended complaint how or in what manner plaintiff entered the said premises other than as a licensee, how or in what manner defendant was negligent, or how or in what manner any such negligence сaused injury to plaintiff. But these matters are alleged with sufficient particularity. Even as against a special demurrer, a plаintiff is required only to “set forth in his complaint the essential facts of his case with reasonable precision and with particularity sufficiently specific to acquaint the defendant of the nature, source, and extent of his cause of action.”
(Goldstein
v.
Healy,
The judgment is reversed and the cause rеmanded, with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer and grant a reasonable time within which defendant may answer if so advised.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., and Carter, J., concurred.
MeComb, J., dissented.
Traynor, J., did not participate herein.
