Plаintiff and appellant filed a complaint on December 3, 1963, based upon a notice of claim made to the County of Kern dated July 5, 1962. This claim set forth that while appellant’s husband was a mental patient in the Kern County Hospital the hospital did, through its agents and representatives, negligently, cаrelessly and neglectfully operate the said hospital to allow the spouse to be placed in a room with another individual who was also a mental in-patient in the same hospital and so conducted their duties and obligations to the said spouse so that he was murdered and killed by the аcts of the said mental in-patient. The claim further alleged that the hospital failed to maintain proper care or control of the said mental in-patient and failed to provide proper guards or safety procedures to prevent harm coming to the deceased sрouse; and that said death was proximately caused by the negligence and neglect of said hospital.
The complaint filed by the plaintiff alleged a cause of action in negligence as the total and proximate cause which contributed to the death of the spouse. Therеafter plaintiff and appellant noticed a motion to file a first amended complaint consisting of two causes of action, the first being identical with the original, and the second purporting to allege a breach of contract and warranty on the part of the hospital which resulted in the death of plaintiff’s spouse. The second cause of action also incorporated paragraph XII of the first cause of action which reads as follows: ‘ ‘ That the aforesaid defendant, its agents, servants and employees, failed to maintain the proper cаre and control of the aforesaid Willie Walker, a patient in said defendant’s hospital, and further did fail to provide proper guards or safety procedures to prevent harm coming to the decedent, John Harvey Moxon, and thereby the decedent, John Harvey Moxon, was killed and murdеred by the mental patient, Willie Walker, through the negligence, carelessness and recklessness of the defendant, its agents, servants and employees, which was the total and proximate cause, and wholly contributed to the death of decedent. ’ ’
*395 The motion to file a first amended complaint was denied by the court and thereafter the respondent made its motion for judgment on the pleadings that a cause of action was not stated and that the complaint is barred by the provisions of Civil Code section 22.3, Government Code sections 854, 854.2, 854.4 and 854.8.
The trial court granted judgment on the plеadings in favor of the defendant and respondent from which appellant appeals.
The appellant has raised the issues: Is Government Code section 854 et seq., constitutional and retroactive to destroy and deprive a litigant of a cause of action occurring after the
Muskopf
decision
(Muskopf
v.
Corning Hospital Dist.,
The appellant’s argument is that the decedent was killed in the respondent’s institution during the time that the action was suspended as a result of the moratorium specified in Civil Code section 22.3 (now repealed). In the
Muskopf
case,
supra,
the doctrine of sovereign immunity was abrogated. In
Corning Hospital Dist.
v.
Superior Court,
“Moreover, construing the legislation as merely suspending causes of action, rather than destroying them, is a less drastic retroactive application of seсtion 1 insofar as it governs ‘matters arising prior to its effective date. ’ A statute shall not be construed to be retroactive unless expressly so declared (Civ. Code, § 3), and in keeping with this rule a statute should be given the least retroactive effect that its language reasonably permits.
< <
“It follows from what we have said that the statute does not destroy plaintiffs’ cause of action but merely suspends it.”
Appellant contends that causes of action arising after September 15, 1961, were not destroyed, but only suspended. (See
Bell
v.
City of Palos Verdes Estates,
*396
The respondent relies on
Hayes
v.
State of California,
Government Code section 854.8, as enacted in 1963, provides that a public entity is nоt liable for an injury proximately caused by any person committed or admitted to a mental institution.
Appellant’s alleged cause of action arose while the moratorium legislation was in effect. This legislation contemplated the 1963 legislation when it provided as follows:
“Sec. 4. (a) On or аfter the 91st day after the final adjournment of the 1963 Regular Session of the Legislature, an action may be brought and maintained in the manner prescribed by law on any cause of action which arose on or after February 27, 1961 and before the 91st day after the final adjournment of the 1963 Regular Session, and uрon which an action was harred during that period by the provisions of this act, if and only if hoth of the following conditions are met: (1) a claim based on such cause of action has been filed with the appropriate governmental body in the manner and within the time prescribed for the filing of such clаims in Division 3.5 (commencing with Section 600) of Title 1 of the Government Code, and (2) the bringing of the action was barred solely by the provisions of this act and is not barred by any other provision of law enacted subsequent to the enactment of this act.” (Stats. 1961, ch. 1404, §4; Civ. Code, § 22.3.)
A further discussion of this subject is found in
Shakespeare
v.
City of Pasadena,
We have concluded that appellant’s claim is barred by virtue of Civil Code section 22.3 and the 1963 act, and in particular, Government Code section 854.8.
*397
Appellant also claims that there was a breach of warranty for the rendition of personal services or breach of contract for care of the decedent which resulted in his wrongful death under Code of Civil Procedure section 377. A cause of action for death did not exist in common law but is purely statutory.
(Bond
v.
United Railroads,
“The right of action for wrongful deаth is unqualifiedly a matter of statutory provision and is completely within the jurisdiction of the Legislature to grant, to withhold, or to restrict as it sees fit.”
(Norman
v.
Murphy,
The portion of the Act contained in Code of Civil Procedure section 377 under discussion, reads as follows: “When the death of a person not being a minor, or when the death of a minor person who leaves surviving him either a husband or wife or child or children or father or mother, is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs or personal representatives may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death, ...”
Whilе the statute of limitations is a period of two years for an action brought on an oral contract (Code Civ. Proc., § 339), it will be noted that under section 340 of that code the limitation for action is one year: “An action . . . for the death of one caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 340, subd. 3.)
It will be noted that by the reference to appellant’s first amended complaint, paragraph XII, the action sets forth a strong cause of action based on the theory of negligence.
The operation of a county hospital is a governmental function аnd not a proprietary function, and in the absence of an enabling act, a county hospital is not liable for negligence even though the patient pays for the services received.
(Latham
v.
Santa Clara County Hospital,
At the oral hearing it was conceded by both parties that the decedent was a patient аt a mental institution at the time he met his death.
In hospitals operated by the county, the hospital must collect from the person an amount to help defray the cost which is not subject to negotiation as in a contract action. (See Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5077.)
In
Tunkl
v.
Regents of University of California,
60 Cal.2d
*398
92, 103 [
The action for wrongful death is purely statutory (55 Cal.Jur.2d, Wrongful Death, §9, p. 402), and lies only for the wrongful act or neglect of another.
In
Willey
v.
Alaska Packers’ Assn.,
On motion for rehearing, the court had the following to say: “Plaintiff has petitioned for a rehearing, evidently believing that in the opinion heretofore rendered I stressed the word ‘wrongfully’ in construing C.C.P. Cal. § 377. That word, however, I used only as one contained in a portion of thе section itself, and did not intend to give it any particular significance. The section applies, as before stated, to cases of death caused by wrongful act or neglect, and in no way to breaches of contract as such.” (P. 939.)
In Prosser on Torts, third edition, section 121, at page 925, the samе proposition is supported: ‘ ‘ The statutes usually provide that the action can be maintained for ‘any wrongful act, neglect or default’ which causes death. They are therefore held to cover intentional, as well as negligent, torts. Strict liability in tort has made its appearance in rеlatively few cases, but there appears to be no reason to doubt that it is included within the death acts. On the other hand, since under the common law contract actions survived in favor of the plaintiff’s representative while tort actions did not, it seems reasonable to suppose that the wrongful death statutes were intended to refer only to torts. Accordingly, there is general agreement that they have no application to any death which results from a pure breach of contract.”
In volume 2, Within, California Procedure (1954) section 473, at page 1460, the rule is laid down as follows: “The ele *399 ments of the cause of action for wrongful death are the tort (negligence or other wrongful act), the resulting death, and the damages, consisting of the pecuniary loss suffered by the heirs. ’ ’
In volume 1, California Jurisprudence 2d, Actions, section 30, at page 628, it is stated: “In general, however, actions based on negligent failurе to perform contractual duties, such as those owing from a hospital or physician to a patient, from an employer to an employee, and from a landlord to a tenant, although containing elements of both contract and tort, are regarded as delictual actions, sinсe negligence is considered the gravamen of the action.”
The early case of
Harding
v.
Liberty Hospital Corp.,
“The appellants herein contend that the cause of action set forth in their complaint is one arising out of the breach of the plaintiff Margaret A. Harding’s contract with the defendant, such breach consisting in its failure to furnish adequate and competent surgical treatment for her injured limb, and hence that her cause of action being one for the breach of a written contract, does not come within the scope or effect of subdivision 3 of section 340 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Notwithstanding the elaboration with which the plaintiffs have undertaken to set forth the terms and provisions of their said contract, we are of the opinion that the gravamen of this action consists in the alleged negligent acts of the chiеf surgeon of the defendant, consisting in his unskillful setting of the said plaintiff’s injured limb, by reason solely of which the plaintiff’s alleged injury and damage arose.” (See Rubino v. Utah Canning Co.,123 Cal.App.2d 18 , 24 [266 P.2d 163 ].)
Volume 1 of Witkin, California Procedure (1954) section 42, at page 537, sets forth the rule as follows: “Thus, a good pleading, properly alleging a contract сause of action, may be arbitrarily rejected with the explanation that the ‘gravamen’ of the action is tort.”
“A mere breach of contract is not a wrongful or negligent act within the meaning of the statute and will not support an action for death; the statute has reference only to tоrtious acts.” (25 C.J.S. §23, at p. 1090.)
*400
Contributory negligence is a defense to a death action brought under section 377 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as is noted in
Buckley
v.
Chadwick,
Thus, in fixing the rule that contributory negligence is a defense to a death action brought under Code of Civil Procedure section 377, it is expressly recognized that the section contemplates liability based on a tortious wrong and not on a contract.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conley, P. J., and Stone, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 26, 1965.
