Opinion
Appellant was injured on January 15, 1980, while weight lifting in the California Rehabilitation Center. On April 23, 1980, he presented a claim for damages to the State Board of Control. (Gov. Code, § 905.2 et seq.) By letter dated June 10, 1980, respondent notified appellant of its decision to reject his claim, and alerted him to the six-month period of limitations within which to bring a civil action after rejection of a claim by a governmental entity. (Gov. Code, § 945.6.)
Appellant filed a complaint in superior court on December 11,1980, seeking recovery of personal injury damages from respondent based upon negligence and strict products liability theories. Respondent’s demurrer to the complaint was sustained without leave to amend on the ground that appellant failed to comply with the applicable statute of limitations. This appeal is from the subsequent judgment dismissing the action.
Section 945.6, subdivision (a)(1), of the Government Code establishes the statute of limitations which applies here; it provides that, “(a) . . . any suit brought against a public entity on a cause of action for which a claim is required to be presented in accordance with . . . [section 905.2] . . . must *159 be commenced: . . . not later than six months after the date such notice is . . . deposited in the mail.”
If the notice of rejection was mailed on June 10, 1980, then plaintiff’s complaint, which he filed
six months
and
one day
later, on December 11, 1980, would not comply with the statute of limitations.
(Edgington
v.
County of San Diego
(1981)
But in his complaint, appellant avers that the notice was deposited in the mail “on or about” June 10, 1980, which, he insists, refers to deposit dates after that date. He suggests that any deposit date after June 10 would make the complaint timely, and hence he should be permitted to pursue discovery on this issue.
Respondent rejoins that the complaint must be read as alleging a deposit date of June 10, which renders the action untimely. In support of this position, respondent attached to its demurrer a declaration of the assistant executive secretary of the State Board of Control, which describes the board’s policy of mailing rejection notices on the day they are made.
It is well settled that in testing the validity of a complaint against a demurrer, courts must look exclusively to facts alleged in the complaint, ignoring contrary allegations. On appeal from a judgment entered after sustaining a demurrer, “the complaint [itself is] the only record by which the . . . sufficiency of the facts . . . may be judged.”
(United B. & T. Co.
v.
Fidelity & Deposit Co.
(1928)
Here, while plaintiff’s complaint specifically alleges that the notice was deposited in the mail “on or about” June 10, 1980, the notice itself, dated June 10, 1980, was incorporated into the complaint. The incorporated notice *160 does not, however, specify the critical date on which it was deposited for mailing. Plaintiff would have the phrase “on or about” interpreted as saving his action by encompassing deposit dates after June 10.
Although no case has decided this precise issue, courts have often been called upon to determine whether the allegation “on or about” constitutes compliance with strict time constraints.
In
Boscus
v.
Waldmann
(1916)
Here, the date of
deposit
in the mail is the crucial date, for it triggers the statute of limitations, and a pleading of “on or about” fails to provide the requisite certainty for resolution of the issue. In
Drake
v.
Morris Plan Co.
(1975)
Thus, in
Liptak
v.
Diane Apartments, Inc.
(1980)
Appellant has similarly alleged a deposit date of “on or about” June 10, 1980. The lack of a more specific date is quite likely the result of appellant’s present ignorance concerning that pivotal fact, which, if known at all, is presumptively within respondent’s knowledge. Since appellant’s complaint would be deemed timely filed if the notice had been deposited in the mail even one day after the date affixed to it by respondent, we consider the pleading of “on or about” June 10,1980, sufficient to withstand a general demurrer, as it reveals only that plaintiff’s action
may
be barred by operation of section 945.6. And if it does in fact turn out that the notice was deposited on the same day it was drafted, defendant can easily produce such evidence and request summary disposition of the case—clearly a better means than a demurrer for deciding an issue of this nature. At this stage, we view the question as one of fact, and conclude that it is not subject to
*162
resolution by demurrer.
(Berri
v.
Superior Court
(1955)
Respondent submits that the trial court’s order can be justified by reference to the declaration respondent submitted in support of the demurrer. We disagree.
Subdivision (a) of section 430.30 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “[w]hen any ground for objection to a complaint . . . appears on the face thereof, or from any matter of which the court is required to or may take judicial notice, the objection on that ground may be taken by a demurrer to the pleading” in California case law is consistent. As justification for this rule, the court in
Verreos
v.
City & County of San Francisco
(1976)
Respondent argues that the trial court could properly take judicial notice of the declaration of James E. Burton—which describes the mailing practices of the State Board of Control—citing subdivision (c) of Evidence Code section 452, which permits the court to judicially notice “Official acts of the legislative, executive, and judicial departments of the United States and of any state of the United States.” In accordance with section 452, subdivision (c), matters such as resolutions, reports and other official acts of the state may be judicially noticed for the purpose of ruling upon a demurrer.
(Pan Pacific Properties, Inc.
v.
County of Santa Cruz
(1978)
But the declaration at issue here is not an “official act”; rather, it is merely an individual’s description of the general mailing practice of a government agency, a practice which has not been established as governed by specific agency rules. The declaration does not even recite the declarant’s personal knowledge of the specific date on which the notice to appellant was deposited in the mail. In our view, by no permissible expansion of the scope of section 452, subdivision (c) can the declaration be considered an “official act.”
(Stencel Aero Engineering Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
And even if we were to so characterize the declaration, judicial notice could not be taken of the truth of the matter at issue here: the date of deposit of the notice to plaintiff. The court cannot take judicial notice of self-serving
*163
hearsay allegations—such as would be required to determine the critical date of deposit in the present case—merely because they are part of a document which qualifies for judicial notice.
(Ramsden
v.
Western Union
(1977)
The date of deposit is a question of fact in the case before us which is simply not subject to resolution by demurrer.
(Ramsden
v.
Western Union, supra,
at p. 879.) “It is an elementary rule that the sole function of a demurrer is to test the sufficiency of the challenged pleading. It cannot, properly, be addressed to or based upon evidence or other extrinsic matters.” (Cr
avens
v.
Coghlan
(1957)
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded to the trial court for proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Elkington, Acting P. J., and Breiner, J., * concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
