Opinion
In this case, which appears to be one of first impression, we are called upon to determine whether the State of California’s (State) demand for equitable indemnity against the City of Ontario (City) is barred by the State’s failure to precede its lawsuit by the filing of a claim pursuant to the Government Tort Claims Act. (Gov. Code, § 810 et seq.) 1 The State argues that section 905, subdivision (i), specifically exempts claims by the *897 State from the general requirements. The City responds that section 935 permits it to override this exemption by enactment, and that it has in fact done so. We agree with the City, and find that the trial court erred in overruling its demurrer to the State’s complaint.
The factual and procedural background of the matter may be quickly recited. On January 16, 1991, the State filed a complaint for indemnity against the City, alleging that third party plaintiffs had recovered a judgment against the State based on flood damage, and that it had paid the judgment on February 20, 1990. The State further alleged that the damages suffered by the plaintiffs in that action were due in whole or in part to acts or omissions of defendant City.
The City successfully demurred to this original complaint, which included causes of action sounding in nuisance and inverse condemnation, and alleged a dangerous condition of public property. (See § 835.) The State then filed a first amended complaint which set forth one simple cause of action for equitable indemnity.
The City again demurred, arguing that the State’s demand was barred because it had not filed a claim. In addition, the City argued that the complaint was barred by the statute of limitations in that the State’s claim had accrued no later than May 11, 1984. 2 The State responded by asserting that it was not subject to the claims filing procedures, and the trial court evidently agreed. The City promptly sought extraordinary relief, asking this court to direct the trial court to sustain its demurrer without leave to amend. We issued an alternative writ of mandate and set the matter for hearing.
Discussion
First, we find that extraordinary review is appropriate. We do not routinely afford plenary review to orders with respect to pleadings. (See
*898
Babb
v.
Superior Court
(1971)
The general rule under the Tort Claims Act is that any party with a claim for money or damages against a public entity must first file a claim directly with that entity; only if that claim is denied or rejected may the claimant file a lawsuit. (§§ 905, 945.4;
Fisher
v.
Pickens
(1990)
Thus, under section 905, the State’s claim against the City could be pressed directly through litigation, without the precedent filing of a claim. The same is true of the other categories of claims described in that statute.
However, section 935 specifically empowers local public entities to establish their own policies and procedures for the presentation of those claims against them which are excepted by section 905. “Claims against a local public entity for money or damages which are excepted by Section 905 from Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 900) and Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 910) of this part, and which are not governed by any other statutes or regulations expressly relating thereto, shall be governed by the procedure prescribed in any charter, ordinance, or regulation adopted by the local public entity.” The statute then expressly permits the local public entity to establish a claim requirement, so long as the procedures are similar to, and not more restrictive than, those established by the Tort Claims Act with respect to claims not exempted by section 905.
*899 In connection with its demurrer to the amended complaint, the City presented a copy of Ordinance No. 3-2.02, which expressly refers to the authority granted by section 935. 5 The ordinance provides in part that “[p]ursuant to the authority contained in Section 935 of the Government Code of the State, the following claims procedures are established for those claims against the City for money or damages not now governed by State or local laws.” Subdivision (a) deals with employee claims; subdivision (b), governing “contract and other claims,” reads in part “. . . notwithstanding the exemptions set forth in Section 905 of the Government Code of the State, all claims against the City for damages or money, when a procedure for processing such claims is not otherwise provided by State or local laws, shall be presented within the time limitations and in the manner prescribed by Sections 910 through 915.2 of the Government Code of the State. Such claims shall further be subject to the provisions of Section 945.4 of the Government Code of the State relating to the prohibition of suits in the absence of the presentation of claims and action thereon by the Council." (Italics supplied.)
The clear intent and effect of this ordinance is to take advantage of the power granted by section 935, and to make claims otherwise exempted by section 905 subject to the City’s claims procedures (which happen to be based on those applicable to all claims not exempted by section 905). As the State’s claim against the City is exempted by section 905, it seems plain, at first blush, that the ordinance requires the State to present a claim as a prerequisite to filing suit.
The State does not seriously contest this facial reading of the ordinance, but takes the position that section 935 simply does not authorize a local public entity to compel the State to submit to any claims procedure.
We begin by agreeing with the State that municipal liability for torts is a matter of state concern, and thus may not be regulated by local ordinances inconsistent with state law as established by the Tort Claims Act.
(Societa per Azioni de Navigazione Italia
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1982) 31
*900
Cal.3d 446, 463 [
We also have no quarrel with the proposition that the City could not impose regulations upon the State which contradicted or exceeded those to which the State consented to subject itself. Thus, in
Hall
v.
City of Taft
(1956) 47 Cal.2d
177
[
But, of course, section 905 does not stand alone; it is modified by section 935. In our view section 935 does constitute express consent to the imposition of the specified requirements.
As the City points out, the latter section’s effect has been recognized in the context of other categories of claims which otherwise would be exempted by section 905. In
Calvao
v.
Superior Court
(1988)
However, the State insists nevertheless that section 935 does not apply to claims by the State exempted by section 905, subdivision (i). Insofar as the State relies on the position that the basic purpose of section 935 was to allow local public entities to prescribe claims procedures for miscellaneous claims, but to do so within a consistent framework, we do not disagree. But when the State leaps from this point to the conclusion that section 935 applies only selectively to the exemptions in section 905, we decline to follow.
The State argues that the legislation was accompanied by a Law Revision Commission report or recommendation, which discussed the necessity of *901 exempting certain “types” of claims from the operation of the Tort Claims Act. It interprets this comment as recognizing the difference in “type” between the contract and tort claims routinely covered by the act, and the less easily described claims which were eventually exempted by section 905. Further, it reasons that section 935 was then intended to permit local public entities to reinstate claims requirements only for these miscellaneous “types” of claims.
The State’s position, as we understand it, is this. Section 905 is primarily concerned with “types” of claims, in the sense that it governs procedures for claims based on miscellaneous legal theories not directly covered by the Tort Claims Act. On the other hand, subdivision (i), exempting “claims by the State” (as well as by other local public entities), includes all claims by a particular claimant, whether otherwise covered by the Tort Claims Act or not. Thus, in the State’s view, subdivision (i) is sui generis within the statute, and “claims by the State” are not to be lumped in with the other “types” of claims when the effect of section 935 is considered.
It is one of the best-established and most sensible rules of the law that courts should not imaginatively construe—or meddlesomely fiddle with —statutes which are clearly written. If “language is . . . clear and unambiguous, there is no need for construction.”
(In re Lance W.
(1985)
In
Courtesy Ambulance Service
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
Sections 905 and 935, read together, are perfectly clear. Section 905 creates exemptions from the state-mandated claims procedure; section 935 *902 permits local public entities to enact their own procedures to cover the exempted claims. Section 935, by its terms, covers all “[cjlaims against a local public entity for money or damages which are excepted by Section 905 . . . It does not incorporate any suggestion whatsoever that it does not apply to claims by the State.
Subdivision (i) exempts not only claims by the State but also those by local public entities and it has been assumed by the commentators that a local public entity may bind other public entities to the claims provisions it establishes pursuant to section 935. (See Cal. Government Tort Liability Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1992) § 6.24, pp. 662-665.) Prior to the enactment of the Tort Claims Act and the exemption of section 935, it was also assumed that the State was required to follow the general claims requirements when seeking to press a demand against a local public entity. (See
State Dept. of Pub. Health
v.
Imperial
(1944)
We must assume that the Legislature knew how to create an exception if it wished to do so; nothing would have been simpler than to insert into the first paragraph of section 935 the proviso that “nothing in this section shall apply to those claims by the State or by a state department or agency.” It did not do so, and the State is now asking us to engage in the most extreme form of judicial rewriting of the statutes.
We are aware that, in applying the “plain meaning” rule, “[lateral construction should not prevail if it is contrary to the legislative intent apparent in the statute.”
(Lungren
v.
Deukmeijian
(1988)
Nor is the result in any way antithetical to the general thrust and purpose of the Tort Claims Act. The purpose of requiring the filing of claims, and of prescribing limited time frames in which such claims may be filed, is to give the public entity the opportunity to investigate the facts while the evidence is fresh, as well as to settle meritorious cases without the need of litigation.
(Powell
v.
City of Long Beach
(1985)
We hold that the State is subject to the claims requirements established by the City, and that its failure to comply with those requirements bars it from proceeding in court on its claim for indemnification.
The alternative writ, having- served its purpose, is discharged. Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the superior court to vacate its order overruling the City’s demurrer, and to enter a new order sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend.
Hollenhorst, Acting P. J., and McDaniel, J., * concurred.
Notes
All subsequent statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise noted.
The origin of this date is not clear. According to the demurrer, the third parties filed their action against the State on December 21, 1983, and the State responded “shortly thereafter.” The City relied on section 901, which provides that a cause of action for equitable indemnity against a public entity accrues when the complaint giving rise to the claim for indemnity is served upon the party later seeking such indemnity. The State relied on the rule that, outside the purview of the claims statutes, a cause of action for indemnity accrues when the indemnitee actually pays a judgment or settlement to a third party. (See
Valley Circle Estates
v.
VTN Consolidated, Inc.
(1983)
As we hold that the State’s action is in fact subject to the claims requirements established by the City, this point is moot. It appears self-evident, however, that if the claims procedures do not apply, the special Tort Claims Act provision with respect to accrual would not apply. We observe that section 901 expressly covers “the purpose of computing the time limits prescribed by Sections 911.2, 911.4, 912, and 945.6 . . . .” It does not purport to change general law.
The most commonly litigated exception concerns the claimant who fails to file a claim within the statutory period, is refused leave by the public entity to file a late claim, and seeks judicial relief from the requirements upon a showing of valid excuse or incapacity. (§§ 911.4, 911.6; § 946.6.)
Both sections 905 and 935 were previously contained in the Government Code as sections 703 and 730, respectively. They obtained their current numbers at the time the California Tort Claims Act was adopted in 1963.
The City requested that the court take judicial notice of the ordinance. While the record does not reflect a ruling on the point, it is apparent that such notice was in fact taken. Although usually confined to the face of the pleadings, a demurrer may be supported by any matter of which the court may take judicial notice. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.30, subd. (a).) County ordinances may be judicially noticed under Evidence Code section 452, subdivision (b) (“[r]egulations and legislative enactments issued by or under the authority of the United States or any public entity in the United States”).
(Longshore
v.
County of Ventura
(1979)
In fact, as noted below, we do not find the legislative history either particularly illuminating or contrary to the construction we adopt.
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fourth District, senior judge status (Gov. Code, § 75028.1), sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
