Opinion
The fundamental issue posed by this mandamus proceeding to compel the sustaining of a general demurrer of petitioner, the City of Los Angeles, to the third cаuse of action of the second amended complaint of the real party in interest, Northrop Institute of Technology, is whether the recently enаcted Government Code section 905.1, eliminating the claim-filing requirement as a precondition to the *511 maintenance of an inverse condemnation аction against a public entity, may be applied to a pending inverse condemnation action. We decide that it may for reasons hereafter indicated.
We issued the order to show cause in this case because, according to petitioner, there are 21 other similar cases pending in thе Superior Court of Los Angeles County involving substantial claims of damage from the operation of jet aircraft at the Los Angeles International Airport in which this issue will arise
1
and, therefore, prompt authoritative determination of it is required.
2
(See
Babb
v.
Superior Court,
Facts
Northrop’s nuisance and inverse condemnation claim against the сity was filed May 14, 1973. 3 Its complaint on these grounds was filed June 28, 1973. As subsequently amended Northrop alleged in this complaint, in effect, that under Government Code section 901 its cause of action in inverse condemnation accrued on May 15, 1972 — that is, that the city’s taking sued upon occurred on that date. 4
The actual date of the city’s taking was one of the legal issues scheduled for trial on January 24, 1977. The city expected then, by testimony used with some success in certain prior similаr cases, to prove that the noise, smoke and vibration emanating from the airport became stabilized by at least December 1971 (see
Pierpont Inn, Inc.
v.
State of California,
This trial of legal issues did not, however, take place. The reason for its being postponed was that in November 1976 Northrop moved for permission to amend its complaint further to take immediate advantage оf the enactment of the initially mentioned section 905.1. The trial court granted permission over the opposition of the city.
Northrop then filed its second amended complaint containing, among other things, a new third cause of action. In this cause of action, the date of taking is alleged to be June 29, 1970 — the date Northrop alleged elsewhere in the complaint that jet aircraft started using the new north runway of the airport and a date within the possible stаtutory period of limitations. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 319;
Frustuck
v.
City of Fairfax,
Discussion
The time within which a claim must be presented to or filed with
5
a public entity constitutes a period of limitations like those periods prescribed by statute within which various types of actions must be filed. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 312 et sеq.;
Myers
v.
County of Orange,
The city challenges the applicability of the foregoing decisional law on the ground that this principle applies only to “matters not alreаdy barred” (e.g.
Mudd
v.
McColgan, supra,
In short, it was not еstablished before Januaiy 1, 1977, that the Northrop claim, upon which its cause of action in inverse condemnation rested until that date (see
Illerbrun
v.
Conrad,
Section 905.1 is silent respecting its application to pending litigation. Its legislative history is likewise barren upon this pоint. Under these
*514
circumstances we see no reason why section 905.1 should not have been applied in this case,
8
notwithstanding the fact that the claim phase of this litigation was then long past. As previously stated, at the time that section 905.1 became effective (Jan. 1, 1977), the timeliness of Northrop’s claim had not bеen adjudicated. As a consequence thereof this action by Northrop was then still pending. As a pending action, it became entitled to the protection of this remedial statute. (See
Church
v.
County of Humboldt,
Disposition
The order to show cause is discharged and the petition for writ of mandate is denied.
Ford, P. J., and Allport, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 28, 1977. Richardson, J., was of the opinion that the application should be granted.
Notes
Eighteen of these twenty-one cases have been assigned to the trial judge who made the ruling under attack here.
Northrop has also requested that we take jurisdiction оf this mandamus proceeding for the same reason.
We are not concerned with the nuisance aspect of this case.
It seems obvious that this allegation of the date of taking was dictated by the circumstance that a сlaim of this nature had then to be presented not later than one year after.the accrual of the cause of action. (Gov. Code, § 911.2.)
Governmеnt Code section 911.2 uses the word “presented”; the section at issue, Government Code section 905.1, uses the word “filed.”
The section (Stats. 1976, ch. 96, § 1, p. 155) reads in full:
“No claim is required to be filed to maintain an action against a public entity for taking of. or damage to,- private property pursuant to Section 19 of Articlе I of the California Constitution.
“However, the board shall, in accordance with the provisions of this part, process any claim which is filed against a public entity for the taking of, or damage to, private property pursuant to Section 19 of Article I of the California Constitution.”
The difficulty of determining the date оf taking in inverse condemnation cases was one of the reasons the proponents of section 905.1 gave in urging the elimination of the claim requiremеnt in such cases. (See Statement of Reasons, 1974 Conf., Res. No. 12-1, State Bar of Cal.)
The application was a few days premature, but the city has not chаllenged the use of the statute on that ground and it is clear that all involved were focusing their attention upon the issue as to whether, after January 1, 1977, the effective date of the statute at issue, it could be applied to actions then pending.
