Thе Department of Mental Hygiene instituted this action to recover from the estate of the mother of a mentally ill person the cost of the latter’s support in a state hospital. Judgment was given the department as prayed for, and defendant appeals.
*629 The material facts are undisputed. From September 11, 1944, to May 6, 1958, the daughter was a resident patient at Camarillo State Hospital; released on the last mentioned date, she was recommitted on October 29, 1959. Celia Black, the incompetent’s mother, died on August 16, 1959. From her estate there is available for distribution to her three children, the incompetent and two brothers, the sum of $5,794.97—the incompetent’s share thus being $1,900 approximately. As authorized by section 6651, Welfare and Institutions Code, the Director of Mental Hygiene determined the rates (the reasonableness of which is not challenged) for the incompetent’s care, support and maintenance as follows: $118 a month from August 17 to December 31, 1955; $122 a month from January 1 to December 31, 1956; $134 a month from January 1 to December 31, 1957; and $156 a month from January 1 to May 6, 1958. None of these charges, totaling $4,255.29, were paid to the department.
The present action was commenced on July 20,1960, within one year from the issuance to defendant of letters of administration.
The mother’s administrator, understandably deeming it his duty, sought to insulate the distributive shares of the inсompetent’s brothers from the claims asserted by the department. Among other affirmative defenses raised in his answer, he alleged that (1) the department’s claim was barred by its failure to present a claim within six months (Prob. Code, § 707); (2) sincе the incompetent was “primarily liable,” the department had no right of recovery against her mother’s -Bátate; and (3) a portion of the claim was barred by the two-year statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proe., § 339). Only (2) and (3) are argued оn this appeal; as for (3), although the inapplicability of section 339 was conceded upon the trial, reliance was placed on other statutes of limitation said to govern the facts at bar.
Section 6650, Welfarе and Institutions Code, fixes the liability for expenses incident to the care and support of incompetents at state hospitals. Thereunder not only are the assets of the incompetent made chargeable for such expenses, but additionally “The husband, wife, father, mother, or children of a mentally ill person . . . and the administrators of their estates, and the estate of such mentally ill person . . . shall be liable for his care, support, and maintenаnce . . . ”; furthermore, “The liability of such persons and estates shall
*630
be a
joint and several
liability. . . .” (Emphasis added.) In
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
McGilvery,
Section 6655 reads in part as follows: “If any person committed to a State mental hospital has sufficient estate for the purpose, the guardian of his estate shall pay for his care, support, maintenance, and necessary expenses at the mental hospital to the extent of the estate.” The same section then еstablishes the procedures to be followed where a guardian of the incompetent has been appointed and collection of its charges is sought by the department. The final paragraph of section 6655 provides: “Payment for the care, support, maintenance, and expenses of person at a State hospital shall not be exacted, however, if there is likelihood of the patient’s recovery or releаse from the hospital and payment will reduce his estate to such an extent that he is likely to become a burden on the community in the event of his discharge from the hospital. If a certificate from the medical superintеndent of the State hospital in which the person is confined as a patient is filed in the office of the county clerk with the papers of the guardianship proceedings of the patient, in which certificate the mediсal superintendent states that the patient is suffering from a chronic form of insanity, and that in his opinion a recovery is beyond reasonable hope and that the *631 patient will in all probability continue to be a charge in а State hospital until death, such certificate shall be prima facie evidence that the patient is not likely to recover or to be released from the hospital, and the guardian shall pay the amount due for his care ...”
Emphasizing certain of the foregoing language that the guardian shall pay for the incompetent's care
“to the extent of the estate,”
appellant quotes from
Estate of Phipps,
The opening paragraph of section 6655 is headed “Payment by Guardian,” while the remaining two paragraphs assume the existence of a guardianship proceeding. No such proceeding was ever instituted for the present incompetent, nor was it incumbent оn the department to do so. 1 Section 6655, contrary to appellant’s suggestion, does not fix the liability of an incompetent in these matters; it serves another function. Estate of Phipps, supra, p. 735: “It is evident that section 6650 determines the obligation. Genеrally the other sections have to do with determining the amount and method of collection.” Thus, section 6652 charges the department with the responsibility of collecting the costs and charges mentioned in section 6650 and provides that it “may take such action as is necessary to effect their collection ...” Among other collection procedures provided for, the department may institute an independent action “against any pеrson, guardian, or *632 relative” liable for the incompetent’s care and maintenance. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §6658.) This, it appears, is precisely what was done at bar. The incompetent’s mother being a person liable for her mаintenance and care (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 6650), there is thus no merit to the first of appellant’s contentions that the personal assets of the incompetent patient must first be exhausted before liability is imposed on responsiblе relatives.
The judgment appealed from was for the cost of the incompetent’s care from August 17, 1955, through May 6, 1958. It is conceded that section 345, Code of Civil Procedure, is applicable, which section provides,
inter
alia, that actions for the recovery of money due on account of the support of patients at state hospitals may be commenced at any time “within four years after the accrual of the same.” Appellant now argues that the four-year period should be computed (back) from the date of the filing of the department’s complaint herein (July 20, 1960) and not from the date of his intestate’s death (August 16, 1959). The point is not well taken. The debt here sought to be enforced is a statutory liability accruing under the provisions of the Welfare and Institutions Code. “It is the general rule that a cause of action accrues when a suit may be maintained thereon, and the statute оf limitation then begins to run.”
(Maguire
v.
Hibernia S. & L. Soc.,
Little need be said with respect to the department’s failure to file a claim (Prob. Code, § 707), since appellant has abandoned the point. However, in
Department of Mental Hygiene
v.
Rosse,
The judgment is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Notes
Section 6660 provides that “If any incompetent person, who has no guardian and who has been committed to the Department of Mental Hygiene ... is the owner of any property, the Department . . .
may
apply to a court of competent jurisdiction for its аppointment as guardian of the estate of such incompetent person. ’ ’ (Emphasis added.) The purpose of this section, it has been said, is to place the state in a position to reimburse itself for the incompetent’s maintenance.
(Estate of Adbale,
