Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining demurrer without leave to amend.
Questions Presented
1. Does the statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proc., §340, subd. (3)) applicable to the wrongful death statute (Code Civ. Proc., § 377) act as a bar to the right or only to the remedy?
2. If the limitation is merely procedural, were sufficient facts pleaded to toll the statute?
Record
The amended complaint charged all defendants with malpractice in negligently causing the death of plaintiff’s wife. She died July 4, 1952. The action was filed more than one year later, December 4, 1953. * Defendants demurred on the ground that the amended complaint did not state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action “in that it is barred by the statute of limitations.”
1. Bar to Right or Remedy?
Generally, “wrongful death statutes” have been construed as either creating a cause of action new to the common law, or permitting an action to survive which abated at common law. A provision therein limiting the time within which the action may be brought has been held to be technically not a statute of limitations, but a condition of the right to maintain the action, which condition must be strictly complied with. There are many jurisdictions following the same rule
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even where the limitation is in a separate statute. (See
The precise question has not been determined by the California courts although in analogous cases as will hereafter be shown our courts have declined to follow the majority rule. As early as 1907, a federal circuit court in
Gregory
v.
Southern Pac. Co.,
That the California courts do not favor the general rule concerning limitations in statutes granting rights not existing at common law, is shown in
Myers
v.
Stevenson,
It is significant that in the Caravas case,
supra,
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Persuasive on this question is the determination the courts of this state have made that limitations on other rights of action are procedural and not substantive.
(Farrell
v.
County of Placer,
Thus it. is clear that California does not follow the restrictive general rule but the more reasonable and logical one that the limitations on actions for wrongful death are procedural and not substantive.
2. Sufficiency of Pleading.
On the issue of tolling the statute the amended complaint alleges the relationship of doctor and patient between plaintiff’s wife and the defendants other than the hospital, and the relationship of hospital and patient between her and the hospital defendant; that at all times from the commencement of her treatment until her death all defendants falsely assured her and plaintiff and continued thereafter to assure plaintiff that they had correctly diagnosed, treated and cared for her illness, and that her death was unavoidable; that because of decedent’s reliance, in her lifetime, and plaintiff’s reliance on said assurances, plaintiff with due diligence could not have ascertained and did not ascertain defendants’ negligence until on or about December 3, 1953.
The amended complaint is far from being a model of pleading and would be subject to a special demurrer; for example, no statement is given of the circumstances under which plaintiff discovered the alleged negligence. (See
Original Min. & Mill. Co.
v.
Casad,
Plaintiff alleged the professional relationship between defendants and the decedent and her and his reliance on their assurances. As said in
Myers
v.
Stevenson, supra,
The doctor-patient relationship is a fiduciary one and it is incumbent on the doctor to reveal all pertinent information to his patient. The same is true of the hospital-patient relationship. In the event of the death of the patient while under the care of the doctor and the hospital, the spouse has a right to know the cause of death. Withholding information would in a sense amount to misrepresentation. See
Stafford
v.
Shultz,
Augmentation
A motion to augment the record was heretofore granted by us, allowing defendants to file proceedings taken in the superior court to perpetuate testimony including the deposition of Thomas Arthur Taylor, reserving our ruling as to their relevancy. We now find that they are completely irrelevant to the issues before us and may not be considered. The evidence relates to the hospital records and apparently is offered to show that the decedent was a relatively young woman having no history of prior serious illness. Defendants
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desire to argue therefrom that these facts put plaintiff on notice that required him to investigate immediately after her death whether her death might not have been the result of negligence and that because of his failure to investigate immediately the statute was not tolled. Without discussing the merits of this contention we need only point out that in determining the sufficiency of the complaint it alone may be considered. In
Colm
v.
Francis,
It was an abuse of discretion for the trial court to sustain the demurrer without giving plaintiff an opportunity to amend his complaint to set up more clearly the facts required to toll the statute of limitations. (See for such requirements
Original Min. & Mill. Co.
v.
Casad, supra,
The judgment is reversed and the trial court is directed to permit the filing of an amended complaint in accordance with this opinion.
Peters, P, J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
