This action was brought by the surviving widow and children of Walter Anderson who was killed in an automobile accident alleged to have been due to the defective condition of a county road which caused the automobile driven by decedent to skid and then collide with an approaching truck. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleged that claims for damages had been served upon and filed with defendant county “in the manner and form required by law.” This allegation was first admitted by defendant, but subsequently, with leave of court, defendant amended its answer, denying it. By stipulation this defense was first submitted to the trial court for determination, and that court found that the claims were defective in that they failed to specify the addresses of the claimants or any of them, in conformity with section 1 of Act 5149 (2 Deering’s Gen. Laws, p. 1678) and section 53053 of the Government Code.
It is conceded that nowhere in the body of the claims were such addresses stated. However, each page of the claims bore the printed names and addresses of attorneys as follows: “Hawkins & Hawkins, Attorneys at Law, Modesto, California, Phone 3232”; and each claim bore evidence of verification before Lewis N. Hawkins, Notary Public, in Stanislaus County, a member of the firm of Hawkins & Hawkins. Also it was stipulated by the attorneys for the respective parties that Hawkins & Hawkins were the attorneys for plaintiffs and acted as such from the time of the filing of the claims and up to and until the time the complaint was filed.
The sole question for our determination then is whether the claims as filed substantially comply with the statutory requirement that they contain the addresses of the claimants.
In
Stewart
v.
City of Rio Vista,
Here, as the claims all bore the address of attorneys who admittedly were acting for plaintiffs we think that was sufficient to give defendant county information as to where plaintiffs could be found in order for them to make any desired investigation, and constituted a substantial compliance with the statute. There is no showing that defendant was in any way hindered by omission of the addresses of plaintiffs from the body of the claims, and, obviously, seeing that the claims were written upon the professional and customary legal papers' of attorneys, defendant could readily have secured all needed information regarding addresses of plaintiffs by calling Hawkins & Hawkins at the telephone number on such paper, or by writing them at the address given.
In the recent case of
Holm
v.
City of San Diego,
*
(Cal. App.)
On this appeal appellants raise the further point that in
*333
a death case, such as this, no claim of any kind need be filed, wherefore the sufficiency of the one filed becomes unimportant. This contention was not made in the lower court, and generally speaking a contention not so made cannot be considered when made for the first time on appeal.
(MacKenzie
v.
Angle,
The judgment is reversed.
Peek, J., concurred.
Respondent's petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 29, 1950.
Notes
A hearing was granted hy the Supreme Court on Sept. 26, 1949, and the final opinion is reported in
