Opinion
Richard McQuillan, an employee of the Division of Highways of the State of California, was killed while in the course of his employment when he was struck by a Southern Pacific Company train. His widow and minor children (hereinafter “the survivors”) sued the Southern Pacific Company (hereinafter “Southern Pacific”) for damages for wrongful death and recovered a judgment in the sum of $260,000. By special verdict the jury found that McQuillan’s employer, the State of California Department of Public Works (hereinafter “the State”) was negligent and that such negligence was a proximate cause of his death. McQuillan, at the time of his death, was a member of the Public Employees’ Retirement System (hereinafter “the System”) which, by reason of his death, became liable for a basic death benefit pursuant to Government Code section 21361 and survivor allowance pursuant to Government Code section 213 8 2. 1 The System claimed that it was entitled to reimbursement of the sum of $18,101.48 out of the benefits paid to the survivors by means of subrogation against the judgment recovered by them in the wrongful death action and, accordingly, filed a notice of lien in said action. The trial court determined that the System was not entitled to a lien and also ruled that Southern Pacific was not entitled to have deducted from the judg *805 ment against it the said sum of $18,101.48. 2 The System and Southern Pacific have appealed from these orders. 3
Southern Pacific urges that the doctrine articulated in
Witt
v.
Jackson, supra,
We need not extend the
Witt
principle to the instant case for here we have a specific statute which is indicative of the legislative intent and which by its terms contemplates that a negligent employer may not take advantage of the reimbursement remedies provided for in the Government Code. (See
Martin
v.
Board of Administration,
“In construing a statute our concern is to ascertain and to give effect to the legislative intent. [Citations.] In ascertaining the intent articu
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lated in a statute, the court should first turn to the words of the statute to determine the will of the Legislature [citations] and give effect to the statute according to the usual, ordinary import of the language employed in framing it. [Citations.]”
(Noroian
v.
Department of Administration,
Analyzing the subject statute pursuant to the foregoing principles we interpret it to mean that if the injury or death of a member of the System is the proximate consequence of the act of the member’s employer the System may not recover the benefits provided for in section 21451 from a third party whose act may also be the proximate cause of the member’s injury or death.
In the present case the jury found that the separate and distinct acts of Southern Pacific and the State contributed to cause McQuillan’s death and that the act of each was and both were the proximate cause of Mc-Quillan’s death. (See
Thomsen
v.
Rexall Drug & Chemical Co.,
Southern Pacific’s argument that Witt should apply because section 21453 states that the System’s liens are to be handled in the same manner as workmen’s compensation liens is without merit. Section 21453 merely provides that the System may “commence and prosecute actions, file liens, or intervene in court proceedings all in the same manner and to the same extent” provided in the Labor Code and is no more substantive than allowing the System the same procedure as under the workmen’s compensation laws provided for in the Labor Code.
The question remains whether the trial court was correct in not reducing the judgment against Southern Pacific by $18,101.48, the bene
*807
fits paid to the survivors by the System. Both Southern Pacific and the System decry a double recovery by the survivors. They rely on the last sentence of the opinion in
Witt
which states: “Since, however, the injured employee may not be allowed a double recovery, his damages must be reduced by the amount of workmen’s compensation he received.” (
As already pointed out,
Witt
deals with workmen’s compensation benefits and its rationale is not necessarily applicable to the benefits here involved. In any event, the “decision in
Witt
v.
Jackson . . .
was . . . [not] a sweeping interdict against double recovery of all kinds.”
(De Cruz
v.
Reid,
However, while in a tort action it is proper to prove in elimination of a portion of the damages claimed by the plaintiff the amount received from a joint tortfeasor, the amount of damages recoverable by reason of the tort of another is not reduced by the amount of compensation received by the plaintiff from purely collateral sources.
(Helfend
v.
Southern Cal. Rapid Transit Dist.,
In the present case we must consider the State’s relationship to Mc-Quillan. The State was his employer, the provider and operator of a retirement system consisting of retirement compensation and death benefits payable to him as an employee of the State (see Gov. Code, pt. 3, div. 5, § 20000 et seq.) and it was a tortfeasor contributing to his death.
We observe that under the State Employees’ Retirement Laws (§ 20000 et seq.) both the members and the employer make contributions to the fund administered by the System. We note, too, that “The right to pension
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benefits following the death of the employee is a derivative right, an element of the deceased’s compensation earned by the employee by his performance of his duties. [Citations.]”
(Smith
v.
County of Los Angeles,
It is clear from the nature of the retirement system that the contributions by the State to the retirement fund were not contributions made by it as a tortfeasor but resulted from a contractual and statutory obligation completely outside the notions of tort liability. Rather, they fall within the ambit of the cases that hold pension and insurance payments to be collateral sources, which are not intended to benefit a tortfeasor and which do not reduce his liability. (See
Helfend
v.
Southern Cal. Rapid Transit Dist., supra, 2
Cal.3d 1, 9-14;
De Cruz
v.
Reid, supra,
Each of the parties shall bear its costs on appeal.
The orders are affirmed.
Sims, J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated all statutory references are to the Government Code.
The State Compensation Insurance Fund, the workmen’s compensation carrier for the State, filed a claim of lien for $13,540 for workmen’s compensation benefits paid to McQuillan’s survivors. This claim was also denied on the basis that the negligence of the State precluded recovery under
Witt
v.
Jackson,
The plaintiffs in the wrongful death action who are parties to this appeal have not filed any briefs. Pursuant to notification under rule 17(b) of the California Rules of Court we may accept as true the statement of facts in the opening briefs filed by the System and Southern Pacific.
