Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining demurrer without leave to amend.
Question Presented
Is the county estopped to claim noncompliance with the claims statute?
Becord
Under the well known rule, this court, in testing the sufficiency of the complaint, must assume that all the facts therein alleged are true. The complaint alleges that plaintiff is a county fire protection district of the county of Contra Costa, organized under section 14400 et seq., Health and Safety Code, and governed by the board of fire commissioners appointed by the board of supervisors; that prior to the happening of the flood damage the defendants Frederiekson and Watson Company, a corporation, et al., and the county of Contra Costa were engaged in the construction and reconstruction of Orinda By-Pass; that defendant company was maintaining the highway and the channel of San Pablo Creek in a dangerous and defective condition in that the highway blocked the flow of water in the creek. The damage resulted when waters were thereby diverted from the channel onto plaintiff’s property on three specified dates, inundating it with debris and mud and causing damage in the amount of $12,500. Additionally, properties of plaintiff’s employees were damaged in the sum of $708.54. These employees assigned to plaintiff their claims. 1 Claims were filed with the *591 board of supervisors. The time of filing will be discussed later. The county demurred generally.
Estoppel 2
Defendant contends that plaintiff’s failure to file a claim against the county within 90 days of the floods as required by section 53052, Government Code, is fatal. Plaintiff contends that the circumstances of this case bring it within the rule of
Dettamanti
v.
Lompoc Union School Dist.,
The complaint alleges that within 90 days of the happening of the damage plaintiff reported the damage to the board of supervisors and the district attorney who was plaintiff’s legal counsel as well as counsel for the county, but the board and the district attorney advised plaintiff that the responsibility lay with the contractor, and took no action against the contractor. The latter maintains that the county alone is at fault. May 13, 1958, the board of supervisors authorized plaintiff to proceed independently of the district attorney. July 28, verified claims were filed with the board, which denied them. The claims were filed within 90 days of the board’s authorization to proceed without the district attorney but some six months after the first damage occurred
*592
and approximately three and a half months after the last damage occurred. Section 26520, Government Code, provides: “When required and without fee, the district attorney shall give his opinion in writing to county and district officers on matters relating to the duties of their respective offices.” Whether or not the district attorney is the attorney for the district generally, as plaintiff contends, or, as defendant contends, is merely required to advise the district officers when called upon, is immaterial. He is the district’s attorney at least to the extent of advising when, as here, called upon. Certainly advising the officers whether or not the district had a legal claim for damages done to the property of the district is required by the section. The district had a right to rely on his advice. He was also the attorney for the county, and while mistaken in his interpretation of the law, he unintentionally caused the district to believe that it had no cause of action against the county. According to the complaint the board of supervisors gave the district the same advice. It was thereby lulled by the two agencies upon which it had a right to rely into nonaction. The situation is somewhat analogous to that in
Farrell
v.
County of Placer, supra,
Dettamanti
v.
Lompoc Union School Dist., supra,
The complaint stated a cause of action against the county. The demurrer was erroneously sustained. The judgment is reversed.
Tobriner, J., and Foley, J. pro tem., * concurred. .
Notes
The answer of defendants Frederiekson & Watson Co. et al. alleged that the damage was solely the county’s responsibility. Said defendants are not parties to this appeal.
The county in the trial court, and originally in its brief in this court, contended that the district had no capacity to sue as it was not a legal entity separate from the county and had no legal capacity to sue the county. In
Johnson
v.
Fontana County Fire Protection Dist.
(1940),
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
