On February 5, 1960, plaintiff instituted the present action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered on defendant’s premises, assertedly due to the latter’s negligence, on February 5, 1959. Defendant demurred to the complaint, claiming the bar of the action by the one-year statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proc., § 340, subd. 3). The demurrer was sustained with leave to amend; plaintiff having declined to amend, the trial court thereafter filed its order, upon defendant’s application, dismissing the action. On March 28, 1961, a motion to dismiss the present appeal on the ground that such order of dismissal is not appealable was denied.
(Jeffers
v.
Screen Extras Guild, Inc.,
The limitation declared by section 340, Code of Civil Procedure is as follows: “Within one year ... 3. An action for libel, ... or for injury to or for the death of one caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, ...” Respondent contends that the word “within” as contained in the statute means “not longer in time than; before the end or since the beginning of; as, within an hour” (Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2d ed., unabridged, 1939)
;
it is also pointed out that in
French
v.
Powell,
In California we have a general time computation statute: “The time in which any act provided by law is to be done is computed by excluding the first day, and including the last, unless the last day is a holiday, and then it is also excluded. ’ ’ (Code of Civ. Proc., § 12).
1
In
Dingley
v.
McDonald,
The observations of the court in the Ley case, just quoted, are particularly pertinent here; not only do 11 considerations óf public order and security require that the method of computing time be definite and certain, ’ ’ but some measure of uniformity in the law is achieved by adherence to the principles declared in the cited ease. Thus, for years the rule of the first day’s exclusion has been applied in a variety of procedural situations: It is applicable in computing the time for filing notice of appeal
(O’Donnell
v.
City & County of San Francisco,
Furthermore, we note that “the overwhelming weight of authority supports the general rule that in the computation of time prescribed by the statute of limitations, the first day or the day upon which the cause of action accrued is to be excluded.” (
A brief reference is made to
United States
v.
Bussey,
The order is reversed with instructions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer and permit the defendant a reasonable time to answer.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 26, 1961.
Notes
" Various reasons have been advanced as to the basis of the rule excluding the day of the accrual of the cause of action in computing the running of the statute of limitations. One of the grounds most frequently advanced is that the computation of time should be so made as to protect a right and prevent a forfeiture if this can be done without violating a clear intention or a positive statutory provision . . . Still another theory of excluding the day is to treat it as an indivisible point of time only, and to regard any act done in the compass of it as no more referable to any one than to another portion of it. The act and day are considered coextensive, with the result that the act cannot properly be said to pass until the day is passed.” (34 Am.Jur., Limitation of Actions, § 252, p..207.)
