Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal which, was based upon an order sustaining defendants’ demurrer to plaintiff’s amended complaint without leave to amend. She also appeals from the order of dismissal “whereby the court sustained the demurrer.”
The amended complaint alleged in substance as follows: that defendant, Los Angeles Co-ordinating Committee for Aid to Jewish Refugees was an unincorporated association; that “some short interval prior to the month of June, 1938,” plaintiff ascertained that “said Committee’s personnel, particularly Freeda Mohr and Louis Booth, had assertedly misappropriated the funds” of the said committee; that this knowledge on the part of plaintiff came to the attention of defendants; that defendants thereupon, contriving to suppress disclosures of these matters by plaintiff, “maliciously, wantonly and without legal process or color thereof, and not in the due course of law, and in wanton and reckless disregard of plaintiff’s liberty and constitutional rights,” and “acting *706 under the misrepresentation that plaintiff was being taken to a hospital to rest, proceeded to get the plaintiff, in this surreptitious manner, into a sanitarium,” where she was “locked in,” and “kept against her wishes and remonstrations” for sixteen days and was caused to suffer “a complete nervous breakdown from shock and humiliation”; that after she had procured her release from said “so-called sanitarium,” she caused an investigation to be made respecting the “conduct of the defendants, which had provoked their endeavoring to imprison plaintiff without prior legal process,” and ascertained that defendants had charged plaintiff with the receipt of moneys which she had not received; that said “investigation continued up to the month of October, 1939, at which occasion plaintiff was in the process of initiating an investigation into the acts of the defendants respecting this falsified record setting forth that plaintiff had received moneys which in fact she had not received, when the defendants, contriving to bring about a quashal of her investigation and to render her efforts to expose the same fruitless, again caused the plaintiff to be incarcerated as an alleged insane person, and in order to bring about and accomplish this purpose, defendants, on the 2nd day of November, 1939, caused the plaintiff to be forcibly and illegally arrested and conveyed against her will to the psychopathic ward of the Los Angeles County Hospital; that this latter arrest was procured in the following manner”: that one Greenschpoon, allegedly a physician, appeared in behalf of the other defendants before a judge of the superior court on November 2, 1939, “on an ex parte application,” which falsely alleged that plaintiff was mentally incompetent, notwithstanding that said Greenschpoon had never treated plaintiff or examined her, and upon this false petition the said judge issued a warrant for the apprehension of plaintiff, and she was arrested on said falsely procured process by a police officer and placed in the psychopathic ward of the Los Angeles County Hospital on November 2, 1939, and there imprisoned until a hearing in the superior court was had on November 10, 1939, “at which hearing a finding was had that plaintiff herein was perfectly sane, whereupon she procured her release”; that plaintiff “submits that she was not insane at any time, and that the arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff, as herein alleged,.was caused and secured by the defendants for the reason heretofore alleged, and for no other reason, namely, for the fraudulent purpose of attempting to suppress an exposé of the defalcations of some of the defendants, as hereinbefore alleged, and that the *707 defendants for these purposes, and for no other reason, caused it to be charged that plaintiff was insane, with the intent of making it appear that plaintiff was suffering from delusive beliefs in respect to the matters hereinbefore alleged”; that “the arrests and imprisonment of plaintiff, in the manner aforementioned, were had and made in each instance by the defendants without proper or ordinary care, and without due examination or inquiry or bona fide mental or physical examination with a view to ascertaining whether plaintiff was in fact a sane or insane person, and that the acts on the part of the defendants were a direct and deliberate violation of their duties and obligations to the plaintiff; that these acts were a gross and culpable wrong and a false imprisonment for which defendants are liable to her in damages”; and that plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $15,000, and was entitled to exemplary damages in the sum of $30,000.
Respondents (defendants) assert that the amended complaint is defective in that it does not show a want of probable cause. As above shown, the amended complaint stated that the arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff were caused by defendants for the reasons alleged in the amended complaint, and “for no other reason, namely, for the fraudulent purpose of attempting to suppress an exposé of the defalcations of some of the defendants as hereinbefore alleged, and that the defendants for these purposes, and for no other reason, caused it to be charged that plaintiff was insane.” The allegations of the amended complaint affirmatively limit the cause of the arrest and imprisonment to the one reason alleged, and emphatically exclude all other circumstances as causes or reasons for the arrest and imprisonment of plaintiff. Although the allegations do not include the precise words, “that said acts were committed without probable cause,” the allegations are equivalent to the usual allegation wherein the words, “want of probable cause,” or “without probable cause,” are used, and were allegations sufficient to negative the existence of any probable cause as justification for the acts of defendants in causing the arrest, imprisonment, and prosecution of plaintiff. In 34 Am.Jur., page 772, section 116, it was stated: “It is not necessary to allege a want of probable cause in terms where there is a statement of facts necessarily showing it.” For the purposes of the demurrer, the allegations of the amended complaint are deemed to be true. The facts alleged, being undisputed, present a
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question of law as to whether the undisputed facts show a want of probable cause. (34 Am.Jur. p. 795, sec. 161.) In the malicious prosecution action of
Jaffe
v.
Stone
(1941),
Respondents contend further that the amended complaint fails to allege that defendants are not within the classes of persons excepted from liability, by section 5047 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, in making a petition alleging that a person is mentally ill. Said section 5047 provides in part as follows: “When no relative, friend, or other person can be found in the county who is able and willing to make and file the petition herein provided, any peace officer, probation officer, physician attending the patient or physician attached to a public hospital or institution, if the person is a patient therein, may make and file the petition herein provided. When a petition is filed by any such person, neither the person making or filing the petition, nor his superiors, nor the department, hospital, or institution to which he is attached nor any of its employees, shall be rendered liable thereby either civilly or criminally.” Respondents assert that such contention should not be disposed of by reference to the usual rule that a plaintiff is not required to anticipate defenses. They argue that public policy does not favor malicious prosecution actions in general; and that since a plaintiff is required to plead a want of probable cause in such actions, for the reason such actions are in disfavor, the plaintiff herein should be required to plead that defendants were not within the class of petitioners excepted from liability in said section 5047. As
*709
to the statement that a malicious prosecution action is in disfavor, the court said in the recent ease of
Jaffe
v.
Stone, supra,
In
Jaffe
v.
Stone, supra,
The contention of respondents, that the alleged ca of action based upon the alleged false imprisonment at “s short interval prior to the month of June, 1938” was ba/1 by the statute of limitations, is sustained. The comp'ayo was filed October 3, 1940. In his argument before the ;8n'B counsel for plaintiff stated that he did not allege the ir MO] of 1938 as a cause of action but as a part of the vjS8sa0J the circumstances concerning the arrest of plaintiffT vember 2, 1939. ' ;nb
Defendants’ general demurrer to the original cof. was overruled, and their special demurrer thereto wa^: tained with leave to amend. The amended complaint inc the same allegations, in substance, as those which wer the complaint, and in addition thereto included allegati
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concerning further details as to the manner in which the second arrest, referred to in the complaint, was procured. Although the trial court overruled' a general demurrer to the complaint, it was not precluded thereby (as appellant suggests it was) from making a contrary ruling on the general demurrer to the amended complaint which, as above stated, included the allegations of the complaint.
(Kelly
v.
Liddicoat
(1939),
Respondents have taken exception in this court to the transcript on appeal on the ground that it does not contain a copy of the judgment roll. They referred particularly to the omission of a copy of the judgment, and objected to a consideration of the appeal unless such defect was remedied. After such objection was made, the court granted appellant’s motion to augment the record on appeal by including a copy of the judgment in the transcript, and a copy of said judgment has been filed herein.
It appears that the appeal from the order of dismissal “whereby the court sustained the demurrer” is an appeal from the order' sustaining the demurrer. An order sustaining a demurrer is not an appealable order.
(Ross
v.
O’Brien
(1934),
The appeal from the order of dismissal “whereby the court sustained the demurrer” is dismissed. The judgment of dismissal is reversed.
Shinn, Acting P. J., and Shaw, J. pro tern., concurred.
