Plaintiff sued for damages on a complaint alleging that he had placed his fifteen months old son in the city and county hospital for hospitalization and medical care as a paying patient, that the hospital was operated by the city and county of San Francisco in its proprietary capacity, that, because of defendants’ negligent lack of supervision, the child fell from its crib causing his death. A general demurrer to the complaint was sustained without leave to amend.
The appeal presents the single issue whether the operation of the hospital under the charter of the consolidated city and county is a governmental or a proprietary function. The parties concede that, under the rule of
Calkins
v.
Newton,
The consolidation of the city and county of San Francisco is authorized by section 7 of article XI of the Constitution reading: ‘ ‘ City and county governments may be merged and consolidated into one municipal government, with one set of officers. ...” Note that the governmental product thus created becomes “one municipal government.” Under section 8 of the same article a consolidated city and county may frame a charter “for its own government.” By section 8% a charter framed under the previous section is permitted to provide for the manner of election or appointment, and the terms of office, of the “several county and municipal officers
*755
and employees.” Though this section does not designate the manner in which the duties of the several county and municipal officers shall be prescribed, section 6 of the same article does authorize a municipal charter to provide for the performance by county officers of certain municipal functions under certain circumstances. And the same section declares that such municipal charters shall prevail over general laws “in respect to municipal affairs.” Viewed in its political relations the governmental structure becomes both a county and a municipal corporation and the functions performed by its officers in each instance determine whether it is to be viewed as a city or a county.
San Francisco
v.
Collins,
Assuming that the city and county, acting under the city’s power to make “local, police, sanitary” regulations (art. XI, § 11) established and maintains the city and county hospital, the functions thus performed would be municipal affairs subject to the control of the municipal charter.
Jardine
v.
City of Pasadena,
The record does not disclose the manner in which the San Francisco city and county hospital was organized or how it is financed or operated. And on this appeal we cannot consider ordinances or local regulations. But the complaint alleges that the “municipal corporation” operates the hospital “in a proprietary capacity.” The appellant argues that this is sufficient to carry the pleading beyond the general demurrer. Respondents argue that it is a mere conclusion of law. Ordinarily this would be true. But here, because of the unusual status of the two governmental agencies, the manner of operation of the hospital becomes a mixed question of law and fact. There is no controversy over this—the operation of a city hospital is a municipal affair finding direct authority *756 in the Constitution. When a chartered city accepts the grant of power and establishes a hospital for the health and public welfare of the community it has two courses to follow—it may maintain a hospital for the indigent alone, or it may maintain one in competition with private hospitals in the same community, charging fees for both medical care and hospitalization. If the latter course is followed patients need not be restricted to the indigent members of the community but they could be accepted without regard to legal residence and would be charged fees in competition with the private hospitals. If this course is followed a city would be operating the hospital in a proprietary capacity as to paying patients just as it operates its street railways, water, gas and electric facilities, and other utilities for the benefit of the community at large. Hence the allegation in the complaint that the “municipal corporation” was operating the hospital “in a proprietary capacity” and that plaintiff’s son was admitted “as a paying patient” is sufficient, against a general demurrer, to raise the issue that, notwithstanding the dual capacity of the consolidated city and county government, this particular hospital was operated as a municipal affair incident to the municipal status of the city and county.
The case is thus distinguished from
Calkins
v.
Newton,
This relation was recognized by the Supreme Court in the early case of
Bloom
v.
San Francisco,
The latter ease involved the operation of a municipal auditorium. The opinion listed as similar municipal activities a city owned electric plant,
Davoust
v.
City of Alameda,
The Sanders case states that receipt of revenue from the activities is not the essential factor which makes them proprietary. The determining factor is whether the activities “are essentially governmental in character.” If we must accept as settled law the ruling in Calkins v. Newton (supra) and Griffin v. County of Colusa (supra) that, in the operation of a county hospital, the county is acting merely as an agent of the state under a delegation of the state’s governmental duty to care for the indigent the rule does not apply to a municipal corporation which on its own choice and initiative has elected to maintain and operate a hospital for paying patients. These questions are factual and cannot be disposed of on demurrer. Cases may arise in the operation of the city hospital in which no liability would attach. But on the other hand, proof of the proprietary character of the particular functions would fix the liability.
The allegations of the complaint, though not as comprehensive as they might have been, present a ease closely akin to those cases involving the question of the liability in tort of a charitable hospital receiving paying patients. A county or municipal hospital maintained solely for the care of the indigent members of the community and without charge would seem to enjoy the same status, so far as that liability is concerned, as a strictly charitable hospital. The rule of non-liability of such institutions to paying patients has been effectively rejected in this state in
Silva
v.
Providence Hospital of Oakland,
*758 The complaint is sufficient to tender the issue that the consolidated city and county of San Francisco has elected to operate the San Francisco hospital “in a proprietary capacity” and we must hold that it states a cause of action requiring an answer.
Judgment reversed.
Goodell, J., and Dooling, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 19, 1947, and respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 17,1947.
