Plаintiff Bank of America as executor of the last will and testament of Francesco Cerruti, deceased, appeals from judgment in favor of defendant Department of Mental Hygiene of the State of California after demurrer to complaint sustained without leave to amend.
Questions Presented
1. May the court on the hearing of the demurrer take judicial notice of the decreе settling first and final account and of distribution in Francesco’s estate ?
2. If so, is the decree res judicata of the subject matter of this action ?
3. The effect of the dismissal with prejudice of the prior action.
4. Does a cause of action lie for recovery of money paid to the state under a statute held prior to payment to be constitutional but subsequently declared to be unconstitutional ?
5. Does section 905.2 of the Government Code apply?
6. Applicability of
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Kirchner
(1964)
Record
This being a judgment based upon the sustaining of a demurrer to the complaint without leave to amend, the facts stated in the complaint must be accepted as true. Plaintiff is the executor of the last will of Francesco Cerruti, who died in 1961. His daughter, Albina, was committed to Napa State Hospital in 1954 as a mentally ill person. In August, 1962, defendant department, pursuant to section 6650 of Welfare and Institutions Code, brought an action in San Francisco Superior Court against plaintiff to recover $8,069.48 for Albina’s care. Judgment of dismissal in favor of the bank was appealed and in
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Bank of America
(1963)
1. Judicial Notice of the Probate Decree.
Defendant contends that that decree is res judicata of the subject matter of the complaint herein.
On February 19, 1964, the decree settling the first and final account of plaintiff herein and decree of final distribution in Francesco’s estate was entered. The executor’s payment in settlement of the defendant’s claim was approved therein.
At one time there was a wide split in the сases as to the use of judicial notice when ruling upon a demurrer where the judgment did not appear on the face of the complaint. (See, for example,
Pike
v.
Archibald
(1953)
The trial court having had the right to take judicial notice of said decree and having done so, we turn to the question:
*582 2. Is the decree res judicata of the subject matter of this action ?
“A former judgment operates as a bar against a second action upon the same cause, but in a later action upon a different claim or cause of action, it operates as an estoppel or conclusive adjudication as to such issues in the second action as were actually litigated and determined in the first action.”
(Zaragosa
v.
Craven
(1949)
The decree adjudged, in effect, that the claim of the department was a proper charge against the estate and its payment a proper one. “A decree of distribution which has become final is as cоnclusive and final as any other judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction. ...”
(Estate of Bodger
(1955)
“
[T]he application of the principle of res judicata in a given case depends upon an affirmative answer to these three questions: Was the issue decided in the prior adjudication identical with the one presented in the subsequent litigation? Was there a final judgment on the merits? Wаs the party against whom the principle is invoked a party or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication ?
(Bernhard
v.
Bank of America,
The issue decided by the decree is identical with the one presented in the case at bench, namely, the validity of the department’s claim against Francesco’s estate for Albina’s care. The decree was a final judgment on the merits. The executor had the authority to make the settlement, even without a prior authorization from the court. (See
Estate of Lucas
(1943)
The party against whom the res judicata principle is *583 invoked in the case at bench, Francesco’s estate, is the same party as the one in the prior adjudication.
3. Dismissal With Prejudice.
Somewhat akin to the fact that the decree in Francesco’s estate is res judicata in this action, is the situation with reference to the effect of the dismissal with prejudice of the action brought by defendant against plaintiff on its claim. On December 10, 1963, there was filed in that action “Dismissal With Prejudice” signed by counsel for both parties. This recited in pertinent part “the above-entitled action having been compromised and settled, thе same is hereby dismissed with prejudice. ’ ’
It is well settled that a dismissal with prejudice by consent or stipulation of the parties, after compromise or settlement of the suit where the dismissal is intended to operate as a retraxit and end the litigation, is a bar to a subsequent suit. (See
Sears
v.
De Mota (1958) 157
Cal.App.2d 216, 220 [
Plaintiff contends that the above rule does not apply to a situation where the judgment is obtained under a statute which has been declared constitutional but thereafter is declared unconstitutional. It cites four cases in support of its contention, none of which are in point. One is
Olivera
v.
Grace
(1942)
The second case is
Stetson & Co.
v.
Goldsmith
(1858)
The third case is
Miller
v.
Hall
(1854)
The fourth case is
Cobbs
v.
Coleman
(1855)
All of those cases dealt with matters of procedure and not with a judgment on the merits obtained by stipulation of the parties.
4. No Cause of Action.
The settlement reached by the parties under which the action brought against the estate was settled and that action dismissed was in reliance upon
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
McGilvery
(1958)
The rule appears clear in California that a judgment which was contrary to the Constitution because it was based upon a statute later held invalid, is-nevertheless res judicata in a subsequent suit.
(Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co.
v.
McConnell
(1955)
*586
In
County of Los Angeles
v.
Faus
(1957)
In
Cooley
v.
County of Calaveras
(1898)
Campbell
v.
Rainey
(1932)
Plaintiff contends that the exception to the general rule concerning the declaration as unconstitutional of a statute previously declared to be constitutional only applies to cases involving contracts. However, in
Campbell,
the trial court found that the payment of the stockholder’s assessment was made under compulsion and that, therefore, the ruling that the statute by virtue of whose provisions the assessment was levied was unconstitutional should be applied retroactively. In reversing the trial court on this point, the court said, “The rule is well established that when resort to judicial proceedings is required to enforce collection of a tax or assessment the payment of such tax or assessment is not deemed made under cоmpulsion and an action for its recovery will not lie.” (
In
Wingerter
v.
City & County of San Francisco
(1901)
5. Section 905.2 of Government Code Does Not Apply.
Plaintiff seems to contend that section 905.2 in itself provides plaintiff with a cause of action.
*588 That section provides, in pertinent part, for presentation of. “all claims for money or damages against the State ... (d) Por which settlement is not otherwise provided for by statute, or constitutional provision.” This contention is answered by section 905.8: “Nothing in this part imposes liability upon a public entity unless such liability otherwise exists.” As we show herein, no liability exists upon the part of defendant to return the moneys paid by the estate in compromise of the state’s claim then considered valid.
Plaintiff contends that. Kirchner should be аpplied retroactively to allow a return of the estate’s money on an unjust enrichment theory. However, it must be remembered that this is not an action brought by the state to collect a claim for care which was legal at the time presented and as to which the court is being asked to enforce the claim after the determina-, tion that the claim is no longer legal, but is an action for return of moneys paid in compromise at a time when the claim was still legal.
In view of the above cited decisions, the unjust enrichment theory does not apply to the situation in the instant case.
6. Applicability of Kirchner.
Throughout this opinion we have assumed that the ruling in
Kirchner
would apply to the facts of this case.
Kirchner
held, in effect, that a statute which required certain relatives to pay for the care of a mentally ill person who has an estate of his own is unconstitutionаl as violative of the equal protection clause, because of lack of reasonable basis for the classification of the persons liable. It may very well be that the rule in
Kirchner
only applies where the mentally ill person has estate of his own. For the reasons that the record in the instant ease fails to disclose whether or not Albina has estate and that, even assuming that
Kirchner
applies to the facts here, plaintiff, because of the probate decree, the dismissal with prejudice, and the rule of
Campbell
and the other cases hereinbefore cited, has no cause of action, we deem it unnecessary to determine the applicability of
Kirchner.
See
County of Alameda
v.
Kaiser
(1965)
Judgment affirmed..
Draper, P. J., and Salsman, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 18, 1967. Peters, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
