A judgment of dismissal was entered after the demurrer of defendant Kern County was sustained without leave to amend, in a wrongful death action based upon section 400 of the Vehicle Code and arising from the alleged negligence of the county and its agents and servants in the operation of a motоr vehicle.
The chief controversy presented by this appeal is the sufficiency of the claim filed by plaintiffs with Kern County under the claim statutes. Plaintiffs allege that the accident resulting in the death occurred on September 24, 1940, and that on March 24, 1941, they presented to the county a claim rеading in part as follows: “Claim op Geneva Dillard, *274 Widow op Henry Dillard, Deceased, and Arley Dillard, a Minor Child op Henry Dillard, Deceased : Damages suffered by claimants, Geneva Dillard, widow of Henry Dillard, Deceased and Arley Dillard, a minor child of Henry Dillard, Deceased, as a result of the negligеnce of the County of Kern and the State Department of Forestry, State of California, through their agents and servants causing truck operated by said County of Kern and the California State Department of Forestry, to collide with automobile in which claimants’ husband and Father, Henry Dillard, deceased, was riding, to-wit: On September 24, 1940, at approximately the hour of 8:00 o’clock P. M. at the intersection of the Edison Highway and Weedpatch Eoad, Kern County, State of California: Death of Husband and Father of claimants and loss of his support, society and comfort . . . $30,000.00.” The claim was rejected on its merits, no notice being given of any deficiency in its form.
In 1931 two claim statutes were passed. (Stats. 1931, p. 2475, Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 5149; Stats. 1931, p. 2476, Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 5150.) The first act (Stats. 1931, p. 2475) requires the filing of a claim with the specified agency where any person has been injured or any property damaged by reason of the dangerous or defective condition of the property of any of the public agencies therein designated. That statute does not apply where the liability of the public agency is predicated upon the negligence of an officer or employeе and the doctrine of
respondeat superior,
as differentiated from the situation where the liability is based upon negligence in connection with the dangerous or defective condition of the public agency’s property. Specifically, it does not apply to the liability of a public agency based uрon the negligence of an officer or employee in the operation of a motor vehicle under section 400 of the Vehicle Code.
(Raynor
v.
City of Arcata,
The second act (Stats. 1931, p. 2476) likewise provides for the filing of claims in certain instances. But that statute, even as amended in 1937 (Stats. 1937, p. 585), apрlies only to actions against officers or employees of the public agency and not to actions against the public agency.
(Redlands etc. School Dist.
v.
Superior Court,
In the instant case the appeal is from a judgment after an order sustaining the demurrer of defendant Kern County and it does not appear that the negligence arose out of the dangerous or defective condition of public property, hence neither of the 1931 claim statutes applies.
Section 4075 of the Political Code is applicable to claims of the character involved in the instant case.
(Artukovich
v.
Astendorf,
Cases involving the claim statutes (Stats. 1931, pp. 2475, 2476) stating that the public agency cannot be estopped to assert the insufficiency of the claim are not in point because those statutes do not contain a waiver clause as appears in section 4075 of the Political Code. (See
Cooper
v.
County of Butte,
The objection to the claim in the instant case goes only to the sufficiency of the itemization of the facts. The claim states the time and place of the accident. The nature and extent of the injury is the death of the husband and father, respectively, of plaintiffs, causing loss of “support, protection, society, and comfort.” The cause of the accident is given as negligenсe in the operation of a truck. It is stated that the negligence was that of the defendant county and the State Department of Forestry through their agents and servants. If defendant required further details or an amplification of those stated, it should have requested them.
There is a further ground for hоlding the claim sufficient. With reference to claim statutes, it is the general rule that substantial compliance will suffice.
(Ridge
v.
Boulder Creek etc. School Dist.,
The instant claim substantially complied with the statute. The details as to the nature of the claim clearly appear. It is a claim for wrongful death arising out of a collision rеsulting from negligence in the operation of a truck. The time and place of the collision are precisely stated. The extent and amount of the injury or damage claimed is clearly set forth. The extent of the injury was the death of the husband and father of the claimants, and the damage is in the amount of $30,000 for loss of support, society and comfort. For a wrongful death the damages recoverable are such as “under all the circumstances of the ease, may be just.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 377.) Such an allegation of damages, even when stated in a complaint in an action for wrongful death, would be sufficient.
(Waterbury
v.
Elysian Spring Water Co.,
Section 4075 does not require that the claimant must give his address, such as is true in some other claim statutes. Nor may it be said that such requirement is necessarily included in the phrase “all other details necessary” for the consideration of the merits of the clаim. Sufficient facts constituting substantial compliance are set forth for investigation and consideration of the claim.
The chief contention of defendant is that there was lack of compliance with the requirement that there be stated the “public officers or employees alleged to be at fault.” It will be recalled that the claim states the death was caused by the negligence of Kern County and the State Department of Forestry “through their agents and servants” in the operation of a truck. The statute does not require that the officers or employees bе named or that their duties or official capacity be described. If the purpose of the statute is to enable the county to make an investigation and determine the claim on the merits, there is substantial compliance when it is advised that the negligence of its agents and servants caused the injury without further describing them. The employer, defendant county, is more apt to know the names and capacities of its employees. It was informed that a truck *279 operated at a precise time and place caused the injury. It could readily ascertain from its superior рosition the particular employee who was involved. Ordinarily, in pleading the negligence of defendant employer, based upon respondeat superior, the plaintiff need not allege the name of the employee because of the superior position of the employer. (See 45 Corpus Juris, 1089-1090; 3 C.J.S., Agеncy, sec. 312; 19 C.J.S., Corporations, see. 1334.)
The authorities cited by defendant (see Hall v. City of Los Angeles, supra; 9 Cal.Jur. 10-yr. Supp., Public Officers, sec. 190) are not contrary to the foregoing views because they involved a failure to file any claim, or a claim which completely omitted one of the required elements.
There is no merit in the contention that the complaint is uncertain in that it cannot be ascertained therefrom which of the defendants was operating the truck at the time of the collision. The demurrer here involved was to the second amended complaint, at which time the defendants named were Kern County and Kern County Fire Department. The other defendants were sued by fictitious names. The complaint charges all the defendants and their agents and servants with having negligently operated, driven and managed the truck. Liberality in pleading compels the conclusion that the demurrer should not have been sustained. Defendants were in a superior position to know the matters concerning which the uncertainty is charged. (See authorities cited, supra.) In any event, justice requires that plaintiff be permitted to amend his complaint if by doing so he can state a cause of action.
The verification on the claim is sufficiеnt. As it appears in the record it reads, after the introductory words: “That this is a just and correct claim and demand against the State of California and State Department of Forestry; that she has had the matters above recited, read to her and that the same is true of her own knowledge.” Defendant Kern County is not mentioned. However, plaintiffs assert, and defendant does not deny, that the copy of the claim attached to their complaint omitted a statement in the original claim as in fact filed with the county reading: “That this is a true claim and demand against the County of Kern. . . .” In any evеnt, the verification on the copy of the claim attached to the complaint is clearly sufficient. The first clause thereof may be disregarded, leaving the last clause which *280 contains all the elements of a verification, that is, a sworn statement that the facts stated are true.
The judgment is reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., and Schauer, J., concurred.
