168 P. 348 | Cal. | 1917
The decedent, Anton Bozich, also known as Anton Bozic, while acting in the course of his employment by the defendant on March 25, 1911, received injuries which caused his death within a few days thereafter. Upon the theory that the injuries causing death were due to the negligence of defendant, this action was brought by the of his estate, on behalf of his mother, Helena Bozic, alleged and shown to be his sole heir at law, and alleged to be wholly dependent upon him for subsistence and support, and damaged by his death. When at the trial plaintiff concluded his case, a motion for a nonsuit was made by defendant substantially on the grounds, first, that section 1970 of the Civil Code vests no right of action in a nonresident alien; second, that the statute provides for the recovery for the benefit of dependent parents only, and that the evidence fails to show that Helena Bozic was a dependent parent within the meaning of that section; third, that there was a total insufficiency of the evidence to show any negligence on the part of defendant, etc. The learned judge of the lower court indicated that he thought the third ground not well taken and the first ground, well taken, but granted the motion on the second ground, viz., that there was no sufficient showing of dependency to go to the jury. Judgment was accordingly given that the action be dismissed. We have here an appeal by plaintiff from such judgment.
We are of the opinion that a sufficient case for the jury was made, in so far as the third ground of the motion was concerned, viz., insufficiency of the evidence to show any negligence, etc., on the part of the defendant. It was admitted that one Walter Kirry was the foreman employed to superintend the work being done by deceased at the time of the accident, *349
occupying a position superior to him and empowered to direct him in his work and give him orders in connection therewith, and that deceased was subject to his orders. Deceased and a fellow-workman named Kuharic were engaged in drilling holes for dynamite charges in connection with some blasting that was being done in building a road. On the day before the happening of the accident they had drilled some holes. The evidence tended to show that after they had left work for the night, Kirry charged the same with dynamite and set off the blasts. For some reason all of the dynamite in one hole did not explode. The next morning when the men returned to work the hole was found filled with earth, while the rock around was cracked. There was testimony to the effect that Kirry instructed them to clean out and deepen the hole for the purpose of another blast, telling them that the night before he had put some dynamite in the hole and lit and exploded it — that the dynamite he had placed therein had been exploded — that the explosion was very weak because he had put in too little powder. There was evidence further tending to show that the two men had no reason to doubt the statement that the hole was free of unexploded dynamite. They proceeded to clean out the hole, first with a spoon to remove the loose dirt, and then, because they could accomplish nothing further with the spoon, using a drill, which one held while the other struck it with a hammer. The drill came in contact with the unexploded dynamite and the explosion followed. Accepting this evidence as true, which we must do in considering the merits of the motion for a nonsuit, it appears that Kirry set these men at this dangerous task, not only without warning them of any danger of an explosion, but with the express assurance that there was no such danger because he himself had exploded the dynamite the night before, and that the failure of the blast was due to the fact that he had not put in enough dynamite. Certainly the jury would be warranted in concluding that Kirry was negligent in this matter. His negligence would be the negligence of his employer, the defendant, for in this matter he was the representative of his employer and not a mere fellow-servant. (See Foley v. California Horse Shoe Co.,
As to the second ground of the motion. The case appears to have proceeded to this point upon the theory that the only right in the mother of deceased to damages for the death of her son, although such death was caused by the neglect of his employer, is such right as is given by section 1970 of the Civil Code. That section provides for an action in the cases covered thereby, by the personal representative of the employee, for damages for the benefit, in the absence of wife or children, of "dependent parents" of the employee. It was claimed by defendant and held by the trial court that there was no sufficient showing of dependency on the part of the mother. This was the very point made in the case of Gonsalves v.Petaluma Santa Rosa Ry. Co.,
There can be no doubt that in the matters constituting the basis of plaintiff's claim, Kirry was acting as the representative of his employer. Just as in the Gonsalves case,
The second ground of motion for nonsuit was without merit. That the mother is a nonresident alien is, in our opinion, altogether immaterial. Certainly section
The complaint in this case alleged all the facts essential to the cause of action created by section
In the petition for a hearing in this court after decision by the district court of appeal, it was suggested that the appeal must be dismissed because the mother of deceased is a subject and resident of Austria-Hungary, and hence, it is claimed, a nonresident alien enemy. An alien enemy is one with whose country the United States is at war. (2 Corpus Juris. 1043.) The judgment appealed from was given on June 11, 1914, nearly three years prior to the beginning of our participation as a belligerent in the present war, and of course the record here shows nothing in this behalf. There has, as yet, been no declaration by either nation of a state of war between the United States and Austria-Hungary, our declaration being limited to Germany. We may concede that a state of *353
war may in fact exist between two nations without any official declaration to that effect by either nation. Whether such is the existing situation as between the United States and Austria-Hungary we do not feel called upon to determine on this appeal. Even if we could properly conclude upon the record and the facts of which we can take judicial notice that a state of war does exist between the two governments, and that the mother is a nonresident alien enemy within the meaning of the rule precluding actions and recoveries by or for persons in that class, a dismissal of plaintiff's appeal would not be proper. Those facts would not warrant a forfeiture of the mother's right of action. The rights of a nonresident alien enemy are simply suspended until the cessation of hostilities. (SeeHutchinson v. Brock,
The judgment is reversed.
Sloss, J., Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Henshaw, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.