Opinion
Appellant Conroe C. McGee filed a complaint seeking damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress, alleging in substance that while employed as a foreman at the Stanford University Hospital, he had been the victim of a campaign of harassment designed by his supervisors to deprive him of his job and replace him with a fellow workеr.
Respondents demurred, claiming that the exclusive remedy for these complaints lies in the workers’ compensation law. The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend, and the central issue presented by the appeal is the correctness of that order.
Section 3600 of the Labor Code provides that compensation benefits аre available for “any injury sustained by ... employees arising out of and in the course of employment,” and that such remedies are “in lieu of any other liability whatsoever to any person”; and section 3601 makes such recovery, where entitlement is found, the exclusive remedy for an employee injured within the scope of his employment.
Respondents argument is that the “conditions for compensation” do not exist, since the injuries alleged are psychotraumatic, and not corporeal.
The case seems closely analogous to
Renteria
v.
County of Orange
(1978)
We note that appellants’ contentions include oblique reference to physical harm; but the thrust of the complaint is patently emotional injury, as evidenced, for example, by allegations that appellant, “suffered humiliation, mental anguish, and emotional and physical distress, and has been injured in mind and body.” (First cause of action.)
Cases since
Renteria
v.
County of Orange, supra,
*895
Again, in
Gates
v.
Trans Video Corp.
(1979)
In the case at bench the allеgations of physical injury strike us as mere “makeweight”; no actual claim of disability is made. We therefore think it a case in which, adopting the rationale of the decisions cited, compensation outside the Workers’ Compensation Act ought to be allowed under appropriate circumstances. As was said in
Renteria
v.
County of Orange, supra,
Nothing in оur conclusion conflicts with the policy of the workers’ compensation system, which wisely balances employers’ immunity from liability at law (with all attendant hazards and vagaries) against the detriment of swift and certain payment of
limited
compensation. It is now in fact established that the Workers’ Compensation Act was not intended to preclude certаin actions based upon rare instances of malicious oppression. A recent statement of that recognition is found in our Supreme Court’s decision in
Johns-Manville Products Corp.
v.
Superior Court
(1980)
*896 For the above stated reasons we conclude that since appellant’s actions are not barred by Labor Code sections 3600 and 3601 the trial court erred in sustaining respondents’ demurrer to the complaint on grounds that the matters alleged in the pleadings are cognizable only under the Workers’ Compensation Aсt.
Two other matters remain to be resolved. Respondents contend that the complaint fails to state a cause of action apart from any question of exсlusivity under the Workers’ Compensation Act, and that the demurrer was properly sustained on that ground.
We are in agreement that the complaint before us otherwise falls short of stating a cause of action, at least against defendant Stanford University Hospital. But a demurrer should not be sustained, as here, without leave to amend, where “the defect, .. . may possibly be cured by supplying omitted [and essential] allegations, and the plaintiff has not had a fair opportunity to do so, ...” (3 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Pleading, § 845, p. 2450.) We cannot say that the plaintiff would be unable to state a cause of action under applicable principles.
Finally, respondents insist that, even if the complaint could be amended to еliminate reference to physical harm or disability, and thus bring it within the holding of
Renteria, supra,
that is not permissible here because of the complaint being verified, the rule is that its allegations may nоt be discarded without adequate explanation. (Cf.
Wennerholm
v.
Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med.
(1942)
The reasons for this salutary rule, as well as reasons for certain exceptions to it, are set out in
Callahan
v.
City and County of San Francisco
(1967)
We are able to conceive of a number of reasons why the “offending” language regarding physical injury was included which would support its еxcision now without impugning the credibility of appellants’ cause of action. As earlier noted, physical damage is only lightly traced in the pleadings, without reference tо particulars, while obvious and repeated emphasis is placed upon the aspects of “humiliation,” “anguish” and other forms of purely emotional trauma. Perhaрs even more importantly, no physical disability cognizable by the Workers’ Compensation Act is alleged to have occurred as a result of the alleged injuries.
The cause is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Elkington, Acting P. J., and Grodin, J., concurred.
