Opinion
Appellant’s husband, an employee of the Green Valley Disposal Company, Inc., was injured, allegedly due to the negligent operation and maintenance of the garbage truck on which he was working. He suffered disabling injuries, and appellant, in this action, sought damages for loss of consortium. Her complaint was dismissed following the sustaining of a general demurrer. *
Until the decision of the Supreme Court in
Rodriguez
v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
(1974)
*612
Plaintiff, in the instant case, argues that the Supreme Court’s recognition of a cause of action in the wife allows her to pursue this cause of action against an employer where the injury to the husband is compensable under workers’ compensation. The Third District of the Court of Appeal has decided not. “The question is not whether Mrs. Williams’ loss of consortium is compensable, but whether it may be pursued by means of a damage action in the courts of general jurisdiction. Labor Code section 3600 . . . declares that where the conditions of compensation exist, the employer’s liability to pay compensation is in lieu of liability ‘to any person.’ This broad provision bars Mrs. Williams’ attempt to fasten liability for tort damages on the employer.
(Gillespie
v.
Northridge Hosp. Foundation,
Plaintiff argues that
Williams,
the case upon which the trial court relied in sustaining the general demurrer, was wrongly decided. To adopt her position, this court would not only have to disagree with the court’s conclusion in
Williams
but would have to disagree with the Second District’s decision in
Gillespie
v.
Northridge Hosp. Foundation, supra,
Both
Williams
an'!
despie
decided the issue before them on the basis of an interpret
... ,u
of the California statute which refers to liability “to any person.”
Gillespie
points out that even under statutes more general than California’s, the more recent cases have reasoned “that the workmen’s compensation law was intended to provide a complete and all inclusive scheme for recovery from an employer for industrial injuries” and have barred the wife’s action for loss of consortium. (
This view of legislative intent was voiced as early as 1927 where the court held the workmen’s compensation law barred a suit by parents of a deceased employee. To the argument that, since the act gave them no compensation it had no reference to them, the court answered in part: “Also, section 6a [predecessor of Labor Code section 3600] states that liability for the compensation provided by the act shall be in lieu ‘of any other liability whatsoever to any person.’ We think this declaration of the legislature is not to be regarded in the narrow sense argued by appellants
*613
as excluding other liability than to the employee and his dependents alone, but in the broader view of the exclusion of liability on the part of the employer to any person whatsoever by reason of the injury accruing to the employee whether such person be a dependent or nondependent.”
(Treat
v.
Los Angeles Gas etc. Corp.
(1927)
This is still the basic position of the courts in other jurisdictions which have considered the rights of persons other than the employee to pursue causes of action against the employer where the damages resulted from injuries for which compensation has been paid to the employee pursuant to workers’ compensation. (See, e.g.,
Fritzson
v.
City of Manhattan
(1974)
The judgment is affirmed.
Draper, P. 1, and Scott, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 2, 1976.
Notes
PlaintifF’s notice of appeal filed on November 5, 1975,- states that the appeal is from “the order and judgment entered herein vacating the court’s order of July 24, 1975 and sustaining defendant’s general demurrer,” a nonappealable order. The superior court file reveals that judgment of dismissal was entered November 6, 1975. Under these circumstances, we construe the appeal as being from the judgment of dismissal and treat it as having been filed after the entry of the dismissal. (See
Vesely
v.
Sager
(1971)
