This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant after its demurrer had been sustained to the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, the latter declining to further amend. The first amended complaint allegеd in substance that at some date prior to October 11, 1913, the plaintiff Margaret A. Harding had entered into a contract with the defendant, a corporation operating a hospital and carrying оn therein “the general business of furnishing medicines and medical and surgical treatment, ambulance and hospital care to the sick and injured,” by the terms of which contract said corporation agreеd to furnish to the said plaintiff medical and surgical treatment “when the same may be rendered necessary by any acci *521 dental injury or in sickness or disease”; that on the eleventh day of October, 1913, the said рlaintiff suffered a fracture of certain bones of her left leg at the knee joint, which rendered it necessary for her to have medical and surgical treatment under the terms of said contract; and thаt on or about said last-named day the defendant undertook the treatment of said plaintiff for said injury and did, through its chief surgeon, render and furnish all surgical and medical treatment received by said plaintiff therefоr; that the said chief surgeon of defendant was incompetent by reason of a lack of skill and experience to give plaintiff and to her said injury the medical and surgical treatment necessary and proper therefor, and that in treating said plaintiff for said injury the said chief surgeon of defendant wholly failed and neglected to use and exercise reasonable and ordinary care, diligencе, and skill in reducing the fracture of said limb and in treating the same, and carelessly, negligently, improperly, and unskillfully set the bones thereof, and negligently, carelessly, and unskillfully failed and omitted to use and employ the nеcessary, ordinary, proper, and approved methods in the reduction and treatment of said fracture; and negligently, carelessly, and unskillfully failed and omitted to remedy and correct the defeсts resulting from said negligent, careless, and unskillful reduction and treatment, at a time when said defects could reasonably have been corrected and remedied by the exercise of ordinary carе, skill, and diligence, although he well knew that said defects existed. By reason whereof, and solely on account of defendant’s failure to furnish a competent and skilled surgeon to treat plaintiff for said injury as aforesaid and the aforesaid negligent, careless, and unskillful treatment of said injury by the aforesaid chief surgeon of said defendant, said plaintiff’s left leg has become and is short, weak, crooked, аnd deformed and the usual and proper use thereof permanently impaired, and said plaintiff rendered permanently lame, crippled, and deformed to her damage in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, for which sum the plaintiffs prayed judgment in their favor and for their costs.
This action was commenced on April 12, 1915. The defendant demurred to the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint upon the usual grounds, and also uрon the ground that the plaintiffs’ cause of action as set forth therein was barred by *522 the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The court sustained the defendant’s demurrer upon this lаtter ground and thereafter entered judgment in defendant’s favor, upon the plaintiffs’ refusal to further amend. The sole question presented upon this appeal is as to whether or not the plaintiffs’ cause of action, as above set forth, is barred by the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The chapter of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to the periods prescribed for the commencement of actions other than for the recovery of real property contains the above section and subdivision, which reads in part as follows:
“Sec. 340. Within one year. ...
“3. An action for libel, slаnder, assault, battery, false imprisonment, seduction or for injury to or for the death of one caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another.”
The appellants herein contend that the cause of action set forth in their complaint is one arising out of the breach of the plaintiff Margaret A. Harding’s contract with the defendant, such breach consisting in its failure to furnish adequate and competent surgical treatment for her injured limb, and hence that her cause of action being one for the breach of a written contract, does not come within the scope or effect of subdivision 3 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Notwithstanding the elaboration with which the plaintiffs have undertaken to set forth the terms and provisions of their said contract, we are of the opinion that the
gravamen
of this action consists in the alleged negligent acts of the chief surgeon of the defendant, consisting in his unskillful setting of the said plaintiff’s injured limb, by reason solely of which the plaintiff’s alleged injury and damage arose. No distinсtion in principle can be discovered between this cas.e and the case of
Basler
v.
Sacramento etc. Ry. Co., 166
Cal. 33, [
*524
pressed in the contract and for the violation of which the contract of employment furnishes no rule or 'standard for the estimation of damages; nor is the action grounded upon the contract, but upon the duties springing from the relation created by it, nаmely, that of employer and employee, and under the old system of pleading was always classed as an action
ex delicto.”
In the recent case of
Marty
v.
Somers,
The judgment is affirmed.
Sloss, J., Shaw, J., Victor E. Shaw, J., pro tern., Wilbur, J., Melvin, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
