— The appellant sued the appellee, City of Terre Haute, Indiana, for damages resulting to his automobile when it was negligently struck by á fire truck owned and opеrated by said city and upon which a policy of public liability insurance was in force at the time. Although briefs of counsel do not so show, a search of the rеcord discloses that his complaint alleges no written notice of said accident was served on said city within 60 days from the date thereof, as provided by Burns’ Stаt., §48-8001, and a demurrer to the complaint was sustained for that reason. The appellant refused to plead over and judgment went against him. He bases this appeal on the charge that the court’s ruling on the demurrer was erroneous and contends that when a city’s liability for damages, growing out of an accident of the character described in the complaint, is covered by an insurance policy the 60 day *284 notice, otherwise required by law, is waived and the allegatiоn that none was given is immaterial.
Sec. 48-8001, supra, provides, among other things, that before an action of any kind for damages arising through the negligence of a municipal corporation can be brought written notice of the occurrence complained of shall be served upon the city and that such notice shall set out a brief description of such occurrence, its time, place, condition and cause, and injuries suffered as the result thereof. In construing this stаtute the Supreme Court has said: “It seems well settled by the decisions of this court and other courts, . . ., that giving of said notice is a condition precedent to a right оf action; that facts showing the 'giving of the notice required by said section must, therefore, be alleged in the complaint, or it will be insufficient on demurrer.”
City of Indianapolis
v.
Evans
(1940) ,
These holdings, however, seem to have been made doubtful law by the decision in
Aaron
v.
City of Tipton
(1941) ,
However рlausible such argument may be- we find it unnecessary to determine its validity nor do we deem it necessary to resolve any doubt the Aaron decision casts upon thе rule laid down by the earlier cases. The pleading before us shows on its face, by specific allegation, that a necessary procedural steр, i.e., the giving of statutory notice before suit was brought, was not taken. The situation is analogous to a complaint which shows on its face that the action plеaded is barred by the statute of limitations. Such a complaint is demurrable for want of facts notwithstanding the concept that timely filing is no part of the cause оf action pleaded. 54 C. J. S., Limitations of Actions, §344, and cases cited;
Oolitic Stone Co.
v.
Ridge
(1910),
*286 The appellant says, however, that this general rule has no application to the present complaint because it alleges that the fire truck involved is covered by a policy of insurance which indemnifies the appellee аgainst its liability for the negligence of its employees in the maintenance and operation thereof and therefore the immunity from suit, resulting from a failure to give notice of the occurrence complained of, as required by statute, is not available to the appellee. This contention is based on Burns’ Stat., §39-1819, which provides as follows:
“The state, or any municipal corporation thereof, is hereby empowered to purchase policies of insuranсe insuring the officers, appointees, agents and employees of the state or municipal corporations against loss or damage because of the liability imposed by law upon such officers, appointees, agents and employees for loss or damage resulting from bodily injury to, or death of, оr property damage sustained by, any person or persons, caused by accident and arising out of the ownership, maintenance, hire, or use of any mоtor vehicle owned by the state or such municipal corporation, and any real or other personal property whatsoever, owned, hired, or used by the state or such municipal corporation, in the business of the state or such municipal corporation, and to pay the premiums thereon out of public funds.... No such policy of insurance shall be purchased by or issued or delivered to the state or to any municipal corporation thereof by any insurance carrier unless . . . there shall be contained within such policy a provision that if there arises or may arise a claim, suit or cause of action in relation thereto, such insurance carrier will not set up, as a defense, the immunity of the state or of such municipal corporation, but such insurance carrier shall be permitted to plead and interpose every other defense that would be available to the insured if such insured were a natural pеrson or a " private corporation.”
*287
This statute was enacted in 1941 (Acts 1941, Ch. 52, §2, p. 146) at a time when a municipal corporation was immune from a suit of this character because the maintenance and operation of a fire truck for the protection of the lives and property of its inhabitants and in the intеrest of the general welfare of the community, is the exercise of a governmental function.
City of Ft. Wayne
v.
Hazlett
(1939),
Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in
