This appeal presents a question in the field of governmental liability for tort. That the law on the general subject, both by legislative and judicial action, is being extended in favor of such liability needs no elaboration. (See the excellent discussion of the subject in
People
v.
Superior Court,
The earliest decision on the subject in this state is
Sherbourne
v.
Yuba County,
Next in point of time comes
Goodall
v.
Brite,
In
Calkins
v.
Newton,
The court concluded that under the statutory provisions governing the operation of county hospitals in California such hospitals cannot legally be operated in a proprietary capacity, saying:
“In view of these decisions we are not inclined to hold that liability for negligence might not exist as against a county if the legislature empowered it to engage in the hospital business. . . . But we do not find such authority in the laws which relate to county hospitals in this state. Here, the operation of the hospital is governmental. . . .
“The imposition of a charge for service is not inconsistent with the exercise of a governmental function. (Citing cases.) Nor is the fact that the county general hospital was operated at a profit controlling. A county is authorized only to furnish hospitalization to those persons within the county who cannot secure it elsewhere. The county can charge only the cost of service. The board of supervisors has not the power, merely by disregarding the limitations in the law, to admit patients who are not entitled to the service or to charge the persons who should have the service an excessive fee. A governmental agency does not incur liability for negligence by doing an act which is ultra vires.” (36 Cal.App.2d 267 -268.)
The same principle was again announced in
Griffin
v.
County of Colusa,
Appellant argues that these eases do not control where *339 the county hospital accepts full-paying patients in competition with private hospitals in the vicinity. This disregards the holdings in Goodall v. Brite, supra, and Calkins v. Newton, supra, that “(a) county is authorized only to furnish hospitalization to those persons . . . who cannot secure it elsewhere. ’ ’
Appellant cites section 203.5, Welfare and Institutions Code, in support of its claim that county hospitals may now accept patients able to pay full rates in competition with private hospitals. That section, adopted in 1947, so far as material, reads:
“The board of supervisors . . . may fix the rates to be charged patients admitted to any county hospital. . . . The board . . . may adjust or compromise hospital charges according to the financial condition of the patient, his estate, or legally responsible relatives. . . .
“Nothing contained in this section shall in any way affect or modify the provisions of Sections 200 to 203, inclusive, of this code, nor ... be construed as an enlargement or modification of existing provisions of law relating to the admissibility of persons to any county hospital(Italics ours.)
The Legislature is presumed to know the decisions of the courts construing the statute which it is amending. (23 Cal.Jur. pp. 795-796.) The italicized language of section 203.5 can have no other purpose than to make clear that the Legislature intended that county hospitals could not move from the governmental to the proprietary field by admitting patients who were in a position to secure the same service in private institutions.
We cannot follow appellant’s arguments that the hospital had ostensible authority to enter the proprietary field by admitting patients able to pay the full rate or that it is estopped to deny that it had that authority. As succinctly said in
Calkins
v.
Newton, supra:
“A governmental agency does not incur liability for negligence by doing an act which is
ultra vires.”
(
Beard
v.
City & County of San Francisco,
*340 Much as we may deplore a rule of law which deprives the indigent, who are least able to bear the loss, along with the wealthy, if they are admitted to a county hospital as patients, of recourse against the county for tortious injuries therein received, an intermediate appellate court must accept the settled law as it finds it. The demurrer was properly sustained to this complaint which counted on tortious injuries received by a patient in a county hospital.
Judgment affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., and Gooclell, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 20, 1951, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 19, 1951. Carter, J., and Schauer, J., voted for a hearing.
