Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered after defendant’s demurrer to an amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend on the ground that the statute of limitations barred the action. We reverse.
On December 4, 1972, plaintiff Marasco filed suit against Frank Penegar and Does I through XX for wrongful death caused by an automobile accident. The complaint alleged that on December 14, 1971, Penegar was the driver of a car whose registered owners were Does I through X, and that Russell, plaintiff’s decedent, was a passenger in an automobile driven by substituted defendant Rose Ann Wadsworth. The complaint further alleged that “. .. defendants and each of them so *85 negligently and carelessly drove, operated, maintained, controlled and entrusted their vehicle as to collide with the rear of the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding[,] . . . forcing it to collide with the vehicle ahead of it . .. [and] ... as a direct and proximate result of the hereinabove described conduct, plaintiff’s decedent Maude E. Russell received injuries resulting in her death. ...”
More than one year after the accident, on August 28, 1973, following our decision holding unconstitutional Vehicle Code section 17158, the guest statute
(Brown
v.
Merlo
(1973)
The question before us is whether the amendment substituting Wadsworth as a named defendant relates back to the filing date of the original complaint, thereby defeating the bar of the statute of limitations. Defendant argues that the amendment naming her as defendant cannot relate back to the original complaint where the statute of limitations otherwise has run, where the original complaint failed to state a cause of action against her as a fictitiously named defendant, and where the only ground for bringing her in as a new defendant is a change in decisional law. Our examination of the record reveals that the amended complaint does relate back to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations and that defendant Wadsworth was properly substituted.
In
Smeltzley
v.
Nicholson Mfg. Co.
(1977)
Here plaintiff named Wadsworth, driver of the vehicle in which plaintiff’s decedent was killed, as a defendant five months after our decision in
Brown
v.
Merlo
(1973)
Defendant’s contention that the initial allegations did not state a cause of action against her so that she can be substituted as a named defendant, presents a situation like that in
Barnes
v.
Wilson
(1974)
*87 In the instant case, plaintiff’s original complaint alleges in paragraph I, that defendants Does I-XX were being sued by such fictitious names; in paragraph III, that defendants Does I-X were the registered owners of the vehicle driven by defendant Penegar; and in paragraphs VI and VII, that decedent Maude E. Russell was a passenger in the car driven by Wadsworth, and “... [a]t said time and place the defendants and each of them so negligently and carelessly, drove ... [so] as to collide with the rear of the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding .. . [such that] ... as a direct and proximate result... plaintiff’s decedent. .. received injuries resulting in her death. ...”
We note that the original complaint did not single out and specifically charge the driver of the vehicle in which the decedent was riding with negligence, while the third amended complaint charges that driver, defendant Wadsworth, as well as the other defendants with causing the collision and the consequent death. The substitution and change in the statement of theory was permissible. We held in
Austin
that suing Massachusetts Bonding by its fictitious name in the original complaint would not be held to defeat a substitution as well as a change of theory which would have been acceptable if defendant had been sued originally by its true name
(Austin, supra,
56 Cal.2d p. 602). Like the plaintiff in
Barnes
v.
Wilson, supra,
The original complaint attempts to state a claim against all the defendants, whether sued by true or fictitious names.
(Hollister Canning Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1972)
Finally, defendant, citing
Scherer
v.
Mark
(1976)
In Scherer, a pre-Smeltzley case, the court did not permit a plaintiff-patient to add a cause of action against her doctor for misdiagnosis where all the basic facts were before plaintiff at the time of filing the original complaint. Scherer is not in point here where plaintiff seeks to assert against defendant a new theory of liability, recognized by this court for the first time after the original complaint was filed, as a result of this court’s declaring the guest statute unconstitutional in Brown v. Merlo.
The court in
Barnes, supra,
*89 We conclude, therefore, that the trial court was in error when it sustained the demurrer to the amended complaint and entered judgment thereon. As we have indicated in this opinion, the action of the trial court contravenes the clear statement of law as expressed by Smeltzley and the other cases cited herein affirming the policy favoring liberality in the amendment of pleadings to encourage litigating causes on their merits.
The judgment is reversed with directions to overrule the demurrer and allow time for defendant to answer.
Bird, C. J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Clark, J., Richardson, J., and Newman, J., concurred.
Notes
Paragraph VII of the third amended complaint alleges: “That on or about December 14, 1971, at or about 6:25 p.m. thereof, the decedent Maude E. Russell was riding as a passenger in an automobile being driven by defendant Rose Ann Wadsworth in a northerly direction on the Harbor Freeway in the vicinity of the Del Amo Boulevard offramp, located in the County of Los Angeles, State of California. At said time and place, the defendants, and each of them, so negligently and carelessly drove, operated, maintained and controlled their respective vehicles as to cause a collision, proximately causing the death of Maude E. Russell.”
