This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant City and County of San Francisco entered after its demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint had been sustained without *106 leave to amend. The complaint is one for personal injuries alleged to have been suffered by appellant on December 5, 1943, by being struck by a bus negligently operated by respondent’s employee.
The complaint alleges the presenting of a verified claim for such injuries to the controller on May 31, 1944. The San Francisco charter in section 87 requires such claims to be presented to the controller “within sixty days after the occurrence from which it is claimed the damages have arisen.”
In explanation of his failure to comply with the sixty-day time provision of this section the plaintiff alleged in his complaint :
“That plaintiff failed to file said claim against said City and County of San Francisco, with the Controller of said City and County, within sixty days as required by law, for the reason that plaintiff was wholly incapacitated mentally by reason of the above described injuries suffered by him, until the date upon which said claim was actually filed as herein-above set forth.”
The question is squarely presented whether a plaintiff who is rendered mentally incapable of filing a claim within the time specified in the charter by the same injury which is the basis of his cause of action is nevertheless barred although he actually files his claim as soón as he regains the mental ability to do so.
That he is barred under such circumstances was expressly held in
Johnson
v.
City of Glendale,
Prior to the latter decision it had been established by an unbroken line of authority in this state that the time limits fixed in claim provisions of the character here in question were not subject to any exception, however harsh their operation might be in the particular case. In
Farrell
v.
County of Placer, supra,
this harsh rule was relaxed, the court holding that the counties defendant in that ease could be estopped by the representations of their agent from insisting on the filing of a claim within the time limit fixed by the law. The court said in that case (
“Although it has been repeatedly held that compliance with the appropriate claim statute is mandatory and an essen *107 tial requisite to plaintiff’s cause of action, nevertheless the time element with respect to the filing of the claim is essentially procedural in nature (citing cases) and is analogous to a statute of limitation. (Citing cases.) It has been intimated by some authorities that the claim statute is the measure of the power of the governmental agency in paying the tort claims involved, and hence any deviation from that procedure cannot be dispensed with by waiver, estoppel, or otherwise. That conclusion, at least with respect to the time of filing the claim, is not supported by the statute or reason.”
There is a divergence of authority in other jurisdictions as to whether a plaintiff is execused from compliance with the time provision of a claim statute by the fact that as a result of the very tort for which he seeks recovery he was rendered mentally or physically incapable of filing the claim within the required time. (See notes in
Thus in
Green
v.
Village of Port Jervis, supra,,
In
Terrell
v.
City of Washington, supra,
“But the jury have found, under proper instructions, that by reason of his injuries, which affected him both mentally and physically, the plaintiff was unable, during that period, to transact ordinary business or to present his claim, and that he did so within a reasonable time after he was restored sufficiently to do so. This, we think, excused the delay. ... It may very properly be said that it would, in truth, shock the sense of justice and right if this provision was construed so as to hold the notice of the plaintiff’s claim insufficient under the circumstances. It is an accepted maxim that the law does not seek to compel that to be done which is impossible. It cannot reasonably be presumed that the intention of the Legislature, in enacting this charter, would lead to any such unjust conclusion. ...”
More tersely the court said in
City of Tyler
v.
Ingram, supra,
“To hold that a city may, upon adopting such a charter provision, wrongfully injure a person to the degree of rendering the victim powerless to comply with its terms, and then avoid liability by invoking such charter provision in bar of the right to sue, would constitute a complete denial and abrogation of the claimant’s right of recourse to the courts.”
We might also quote the dry remark of Mr. Justice Butler in his concurring opinion in
City and County of Denver
v.
Taylor,
“To adopt the strict rule, which we should decline to do, would be equivalent to offering this suggestion to municipalities : If you are negligent on any occasion, see to it that your negligence is sufficiently gross to insure the complete physical and mental disability of the victim; for by doing so, you will avoid the necessity of paying damages, which you would be required to pay if the victim were left in possession of his faculties.”
Respondent argues that this case is not to be governed by
Farrell
v.
County of Placer, supra,
We have reached the conclusion that the reasoning of the Supreme Court in the Farrell case justifies us in refusing to follow
Johnson
v.
City of Glendale,
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer.
Nourse, P. J., and Goodell, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 20,1946. Edmonds, J., and Spence, J., voted for a hearing.
