Plaintiff Hope DiCampli-Mintz brought this action alleging that she suffered injuries as a result of negligent medical treatment by two physicians working for the County of Santa Clara (County) at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center (Valley Medical). County moved for summary judgment on the ground that plaintiff's delivery of a notice of claim to the Risk Management Department at Valley Medical did not comply with the requirements of Government Code section 915
On April 4, 2006, defendants Bao-Thuong Bui and Abraham Sklar performed a hysterectomy on plaintiff at Valley Medical, a hospital owned and operated by County. According to a later operative report, she complained in the recovery room of cramps in her left leg, which appeared bluish and cold to the touch. Emergency tomography disclosed that her "left iliac artery" was "completely interrupted." She was "urgently" returned to surgery, where it "immediately became apparent that the left external iliac artery was tied and divided, as was the left iliac vein."
Some months later, in mid-2006, plaintiff went to Valley Medical's emergency department because she "was in a great deal of pain." On this occasion an emergency room physician told her that blood vessels had been damaged
By April 2007, plaintiff had engaged an attorney. He prepared a letter for transmission to Valley Medical, Bui, and Sklar, giving "notice, in accordance with Section 364 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that Hope DiCampli-Mintz will file suit against you for damages resulting from the personal injury of Hope DiCampli-Mintz." The letter stated that defendants "negligently performed a laparoscopic assisted vaginal hysterectomy so as to lacerate the inferior epigastric artery which was clamped and tied off resulting in the stoppage of major blood flow to the left leg. Thereafter, rather than repairing the blood flow to the left leg, Dr. Sklar and Dr. Bui simply closed the incision which was part of the vaginal hysterectomy and returned Hope DiCampli-Mintz to the recovery room." The letter contained a request that the recipient "forward ... [it] to your insurance carrier and have them contact the undersigned at their earliest convenience." County conceded for purposes of summary judgment that so far as content is concerned, the letter satisfied the requirements of the Government Claims Act and "constitute[d] a tort claim." (See Phillips v. Desert Hospital Dist. (1989) 49 Cal.3d 699, 701-702 [263 Cal.Rptr. 119, 780 P.2d 349].)
Plaintiff's attorney delivered three copies of this letter on April 3, 2007, addressed to Bui, Sklar, and the Risk Management Department, to "Cynthia Lopez of the Medical Staffing Office in the Administration Building, 751 South Bascom Avenue, San Jose, California, on April 3, 2007, at 2:50 P.M., for delivery to each of the individually named parties." He sent three additional copies, similarly addressed, by certified mail; these were received by Valley Medical's "mail services department" on April 6, 2007. On that day, plaintiff's attorney received a recorded telephone message from David Schoendaler, who County concedes was "a liability claims adjustor working for the County Risk Management Department." On April 23, 2007, Schoendaler and plaintiff's attorney spoke by telephone. According to the latter, "Mr. S[c]hoendaler noted receipt of the Notice of Intention; verbally opined that service on Santa Clara Valley Medical required a tort claim which was late; verbally questioned whether a tort claim was required as to Dr. Sklar and Dr. Bui and indicated that he would look into that; stated that Ms. DiCampli-Mintz had an interesting case; made note of Plaintiff's obesity and said a theory of defense was that Plaintiff placed herself at risk with her obesity; and finally advised that Dave Rollo would be the attorney handling the defense for Santa Clara County. Mr. Schoendaler never mentioned that the Notice of Intention was presented to the wrong party." Plaintiff never received written notice that her claim was untimely or otherwise deficient.
On August 29, 2007, county counsel filed an answer in the name of "Defendant, County of Santa Clara ..., for itself and its Santa Clara Valley Medical Center."
On November 7, 2008, County filed a motion for summary judgment "based on Plaintiff's failure to present a timely Government Tort Claim to the County pursuant to Government Code section 915." County asserted that plaintiff's delivery and mailing of the claim to the Risk Management Department and the two doctors did not satisfy the requirements of the act. County also asserted that the claim was untimely, but as will appear below, this was not a logically independent ground for the motion.
In opposition to the motion, plaintiff argued that she had substantially complied with the act by delivering the claim to the Risk Management Department, which was the county department most directly involved with the processing and defense of tort claims against County. Plaintiff requested judicial notice of four Web pages in County's own Web domain describing the function of the Risk Management Department and its staff. One of these indicated that the department comprised four divisions, including "Insurance/Claims," which "is responsible for preventing, eliminating, reducing, or transferring the County risks where ever possible and for properly
The trial court granted summary judgment by a written order stating that (1) County made a sufficient showing of noncompliance with the claims statute, and (2) plaintiff's proofs in opposition were ineffectual to avoid summary judgment because they "d[id] not raise a reasonable inference that her claim was actually received by the clerk, secretary, auditor or board of the local public entity within the time prescribed for presentation thereof," and were "insufficient to establish waiver and/or equitable estoppel." A judgment duly followed, from which plaintiff took this timely appeal.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) Because this test raises only questions of law, we review the trial court's ruling on summary judgment independently, without the deference that would be accorded to factual determinations on conflicting evidence. (Denevi v. LGCC, LLC (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 1211, 1217 [18 Cal.Rptr.3d 276]; see Carlino v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist. (1992) 10 Cal.App.4th 1526, 1532, fn. 6 [13 Cal.Rptr.2d 437] [whether actions of plaintiff's attorney amounted to filing of a claim was "an ultimate legal issue in this matter, and not a factual one"].)
Here County sought to establish that there was no material triable issue of fact on its affirmative defense of noncompliance with the Government Claims Act; that the defense was conclusively established in its favor; and that therefore it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. It contended that there was no triable issue of fact because the evidence concerning plaintiff's
The first premise appears to be correct; there was no triable issue of fact concerning plaintiff's compliance vel non with the Government Claims Act. Her efforts to comply were established without contradiction and the only question was their legal sufficiency to satisfy the statutory requirements. However County injected a degree of confusion by repeatedly asserting that plaintiff failed to present a claim "within six months after Plaintiff's cause of action accrued." Plaintiff seized upon these statements to assert that there was a triable issue concerning "when Plaintiff's cause of action accrued." We assume that this is true. However, despite County's repeated assertions on this point, its motion was not premised on, and made no attempt to establish, that plaintiff's attempt to comply was too late. Rather the theory of the motion was that plaintiff had never complied with the Tort Claims Act. Indeed, defendant conceded for purposes of the motion that plaintiff's cause of action might have accrued "as late as October 25, 2006," when a doctor "allegedly asked Plaintiff if she had sought an attorney regarding the VMC Surgery." If that is true, then plaintiff's attempted presentation of her claim, on April 3, 2007, came within six months of accrual. Therefore the sole material question is whether this attempt was sufficient to satisfy the statute. If not, then it was certainly true that plaintiff had not complied with the act "within six months," for she had never complied with the act. But if her attempt to comply was sufficient, then she certainly had complied with the act, and in a timely fashion, under the facts conceded by defendant. Nor has County ever claimed that it was entitled to judgment on the ground that plaintiff's cause of action had accrued more than six months prior to April 3, 2007.
Plaintiff also failed to identify a triable issue of fact by positing the question "whether the Santa Clara County Risk Management Department (which has duties involving review, investigation, adjustment, evaluation and settlement of liability claims against Santa Clara County) waived any defenses based on insufficiencies of content, timeliness or issues of presentment of Plaintiff's claim where that Department timely received Plaintiff's tort claim ... but never gave ... notice to Plaintiff of any insufficiencies as to content, timeliness or service on the wrong party." This is not a "question of fact," as plaintiff would have it, but a question of law, i.e., whether service of a claim on a county's risk management department satisfies, or should be deemed under the doctrine of substantial compliance to satisfy, the claim requirements of the act, when the risk management department acknowledges receipt, informs the claimant that the matter has been assigned to a named attorney, and alludes to substantive and procedural defenses to the claim without mentioning any defect in its presentment.
The defect here, which formed the basis for the order granting summary judgment, was that plaintiff failed to deliver her notice of claim to one of the persons designated in section 915, i.e., the "clerk, secretary, auditor" of County, or to mail the notice to one of these designated recipients or to County's "governing body at its principal office." (§ 915, subd. (a)(2).) Nor, according to County, was her claim "actually received" by any of the specified recipients. (§ 915, subd. (e)(1).) Instead plaintiff delivered her claim to the Risk Management Department at Valley Medical, where it was manifestly received by a claims adjuster, who contacted plaintiff's counsel, acknowledged receipt of the claim, named a deputy city attorney to whom the case had been assigned, and ruminated about potential defenses to the claim.
In Jamison v. State of California (1973) 31 Cal.App.3d 513 [107 Cal.Rptr. 496] (Jamison), the court held that a plaintiff substantially complied with the statute by delivering a claim to the state department whose employee was alleged to have negligently injured the plaintiff. The trial court had granted judgment on the pleadings because the notice should have been served on the State Board of Control (now the California Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board; see Stats. 2000, ch. 1016, § 1, p. 7441). The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that service upon "any responsible official" of the defendant entity "is sufficient if the party served has the duty to notify the statutory agent." (Jamison, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d at p. 517.) The notice there had been served on "an officer or employee of the exact state agency which allegedly was responsible for the tort." (Id. at p. 518.) Under those circumstances, the court opined, "it was incumbent upon the officer or employee served to forward the claim immediately" to the proper body, and "the party served had a duty to do so." (Ibid.) Although the record was silent as to "actual receipt" of the notice, the court concluded, "it should have been" received. (Ibid.)
The Jamison court acknowledged that most extant decisions on the question of substantial compliance involved defects in "the integrity of the claim itself—the form of the claim—as distinguished from the method of its presentment—the filing." (Jamison, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d at p. 516.) The court also acknowledged two cases in which presentment to a person not designated in the statute was held not to comply with the claim requirement. (Ibid., citing Redwood v. State of California (1960) 177 Cal.App.2d 501, 504 [2 Cal.Rptr. 174] and Jackson v. Board of Education (1967) 250 Cal.App.2d 856,
The Jamison court found a second example of substantially compliant presentment in Insolo v. Imperial Irr. Dist. (1956) 147 Cal.App.2d 172 [305 P.2d 176]. That was an action arising from a nuisance, in which the trial court entered a nonsuit on the ground that the plaintiff had not complied with
Courts in other jurisdictions have found substantial compliance with claims statutes, despite defective presentment, where the recipient is directly involved in the handling or defense of claims against the defendant entity. Two of these decisions were cited in Jamison, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d at page 517. In Galbreath v. City of Indianapolis (1970) 253 Ind. 472 [255 N.E.2d 225], the plaintiff had failed to serve a notice on the city mayor or clerk, as the statute required, but instead gave it to the city's legal department, with whom her husband thereafter exchanged a series of communications. The Indiana Supreme Court rejected a proposed distinction, for substantial compliance purposes, "between compliance with the statute as it relates to the form and content of the notice itself and compliance as it relates to notice to the proper officials." (Id., 255 N.E.2d at pp. 228-229.) The court noted that the duties of the city attorney included managing all litigation and reporting to the mayor. (Id. at p. 229.) He was thus "the mayor's agent under the notice statute." (Id. at p. 229.) Similarly, in Stone v. District of Columbia (D.C.Cir. 1956) 99 U.S. App.D.C. 32 [237 F.2d 28, 29-30], the court concluded that notice to the District of Columbia's corporate counsel substantially complied with a statute requiring notice to the district's commissioners: "`To insist that the notice must be addressed to the Commissioners, and to rule out as insufficient a notice addressed to their Counsel, to whom Congress has delegated the responsibility for defending the District against suit, seems to us most unreasonable. Congress could hardly have intended that failure to observe such an idle formality should cause a claimant to be denied his day in court...."'
These holdings have been followed in the jurisdictions where they were rendered. (See Shehyn v. District of Columbia (D.C. 1978) 392 A.2d 1008 [notice requirement satisfied by letter copied to assistant district counsel, together with other communications with affected public officials]; Coghill v. Badger (Ind.Ct.App. 1981) 418 N.E.2d 1201, 1206, fn. 3 [but for fatal defects in substance, notice served on agency's claims adjuster would presumably have constituted substantial compliance; adjuster "appear[ed] to qualify as an agent" of the agency].) Meanwhile courts in at least two other jurisdictions have reached similar results. In Webb v. Highway Division of Oregon State Dept. of Transportation (1982) 293 Or. 645 [652 P.2d 783, 784], the Oregon
Nor does Jamison stand alone among modern California cases in finding substantial compliance despite a defect in the presentment of a claim. In Elias, supra, 68 Cal.App.3d 70, the plaintiff was injured by an allegedly dangerous condition on what he thought was a county road. He duly served notice on the county, but the road turned out to be owned by a local flood control district. The court reasoned that although the district was a separate entity from the county, the county board of supervisors and all county officers were "ex officio the board of supervisors and officers of the District and as such [we]re empowered to perform the same duties for the District as they perform for the county." (Id. at p. 75.) The board also had the duty to "review and act upon all claims whether they be addressed to the county or to the District." (Ibid.) Therefore the claim was "deemed to have been presented to the board of supervisors as the governing body of the District." (Ibid.) To similar effect is Carlino v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist., supra, 10 Cal.App.4th 1526, 1533-1535, which held that the plaintiff stated a prima facie case of substantial compliance by alleging that the county board of supervisors, on which a notice of claim was served, was the proper body for delivery of a claim against a flood control district.
Further militating in plaintiff's favor is the fact that her claim was promptly communicated to the office of County counsel. As previously noted, the court in Peters v. City & County of San Francisco, supra, 41 Cal.2d 419, found it significant that the plaintiff's claim documents "reached the city attorney's office within the time prescribed by the statute for filing claims." (Id. at p. 426.) Such a view is consistent with the duties and functions of the county attorney's office, which include to "defend or prosecute all civil actions and proceedings in which the county or any of its officers is concerned or is a party in his or her official capacity," and generally to defend "any action or proceeding brought against an officer, employee, or servant of the county." (§ 26529, subd. (a).)
It is thus apparent that plaintiff's notice of claim immediately reached the county departments to which it would inevitably have been referred had plaintiff strictly complied with the letter of the statute. Given this fact it is difficult to imagine how her failure to do so could have had any tendency to defeat the statutory purpose. It is of course theoretically possible, if difficult to imagine, that presentment to an entity's claims department might somehow interfere with the entity's investigation, settlement, or defense of a claim. But that is no reason to categorically deny relief based on an absence of strict compliance. It is always open to the defendant entity to show that it has in fact been prejudiced by a departure from the terms of the act, and upon such a showing a claim of substantial compliance must fail. (See Carlino v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist., supra, 10 Cal.App.4th at p. 1534.) No such showing was made or attempted here. Accordingly, plaintiff's delivery and mailing of her claim to County's Risk Management Department constituted substantial compliance with the Government Claims Act.
County cites several cases giving a narrow application to the doctrine of substantial compliance with respect to the presentment of government claims. County particularly emphasizes Del Real v. City of Riverside (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 761,
In Del Real the plaintiff alleged that she had been injured in a collision with a car operated by a police officer employed by the defendant city. Four months after the collision her attorney wrote to the officer requesting information about the accident and any insurance that might cover it. Nine days later the city attorney replied, stating that the officer "was represented by that office" and that all further communication with him should take place through that office. (Del Real, supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at p. 764.) Two days before the anniversary of the collision, the plaintiff filed suit against the city. The trial court granted summary judgment based on noncompliance with the claims statute. As pertinent here, the plaintiff's argument on appeal was that her letter to the police officer constituted substantial compliance with the claims requirement. In rejecting this contention the court had "little doubt that the letter failed to substantially comply with the claims filing requirements." (Id. at p. 769.) Throughout the opinion the court emphasized the letter's grave deficiencies in content. (See ibid. [letter bore "little or no resemblance to a government tort claim"]; id. at p. 770 [letter was "not reasonably interpreted to communicate that Del Real was attempting to file a valid claim," but merely indicated that her attorney was "evaluating the matter"]; ibid. ["questionable" whether letter "was identifiable as a claim"].)
Arguably these deficiencies alone would have sustained the judgment. But the court also found the claim fatally deficient because (1) it "was not directed to the public entity but to [the officer] personally" and (2) there was "no evidence . . . that the letter was actually received by the city clerk, secretary, auditor or governing body . . . ." (Del Real, supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at p. 770.) The plaintiff cited Jamison, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d 513, for a contrary result, but the court disposed of that case in two cryptic sentences: "[W]e have reconsidered our earlier decision in Jamison and, as did the court in Life v. County of Los Angeles [(1991)] 227 Cal.App.3d [894,] 900-901 [278 Cal.Rptr. 196], we find that it is at odds with section 915, subdivision (c) [(see now § 915, subd. (e)(1))]. We therefore decline to follow it." (Del Real, at p. 770.)
The Del Real court did not explain its repudiation of Jamison other than to cite Life v. County of Los Angeles, supra, 227 Cal.App.3d 894 (Life). The court there held that service of a claim on a county's legal department did not constitute substantial compliance in the absence of evidence that the claim was "`actually received by the clerk, secretary, auditor or board of the local public entity . . ., within the time prescribed for presentation thereof.'" (Id. at
We find this approach unsound for three interrelated reasons: (1) Without explanation or analysis, it treats a remedial, permissive provision of the statute as a mandatory limitation on the right granted; (2) it mistakes the fundamental nature of the substantial compliance doctrine and, in defiance of some 80 years of precedent, effectively precludes its operation in the government claims setting; and (3) it posits a plain statutory meaning which proves illusory under scrutiny.
The gist of the substantial compliance doctrine is that in appropriate cases courts will look beyond the terms of a statute to consult its underlying purpose, particularly where strict adherence will result in the loss of important rights. By requiring a plaintiff to bring his or her compliance squarely within the terms of the governing statute, without regard to its purpose, the court in Life effectively held the doctrine of substantial compliance inapplicable to the presentment of government claims. By doing so, it repudiated not only Jamison but at least 80 years of California precedent, not to mention the sister-state authorities discussed above.
The decision in Life was followed, and its misconceptions echoed, in Munoz, supra, 33 Cal.App.4th 1767, 1776, where an application to present a late claim was mailed to a correctional institution rather than the State Board of Control. The claim was ultimately received by the State Board of Control, but beyond the deadline for presentation. The court held it fatally defective, stating, "Substantial compliance under Government Code section 915, subdivision (c) demands the misdirected claim be `actually received' by the appropriate person or board within the time prescribed for presentation thereof." (Id. at p. 1780, italics added, citing Life, supra, 227 Cal.App.3d at pp. 900-901.) The court made no attempt to reconcile this reasoning with its statement earlier in the opinion that "[t]he old doctrine of strict and literal compliance, with its attendant harsh and unfair results, has disappeared from California law." (Id. at p. 1778, citing Cruise v. City & County of San
Defendant also cites Westcon Construction Corp. v. County of Sacramento (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 183 [61 Cal.Rptr.3d 89] (Westcon), in which a contractor was held not to have substantially complied with the statute by giving materials, later cited as a claim, to a city engineer. But the court there did not purport to rely on a rigid reading of the statute. Instead it found "no evidence" to support the contractor's assertions that the engineer had notified the board of supervisors of the claim, or that he was a "responsible officer of the County" such that he could be expected to do so. (Id. at pp. 201-202.) The court did not repudiate Jamison, but distinguished it and Elias on the ground that the claims in those cases had been "served on the proper officer of the wrong agency, but an agency nevertheless closely related to the correct agency." (Ibid.) The court rejected the idea that simply presenting a claim to the government employee with whom the plaintiff was most directly involved would be sufficient: "As is often the case, the individual known to the claimant may be the very person who committed the wrongdoing that is the subject of the claim. This may be the last person who would want to pass a claim on to his or her employer. Thus, giving notice to a subordinate employee may not assure that the public entity has an opportunity to review the claim before suit is filed." (Id. at pp. 200-201.) The evidence there did not show that the responsible agency had received actual notice. (Id. at p. 201.) The court also emphasized that the claim sounded in contract, observing that "those who do business with public entities must know the ground rules," and that "[t]he contractor may not sit on its rights until memories become stale or witnesses disappear." (Id. at p. 203.) The claimant there had not only failed to adhere to the requirements of the claims act but had failed to act appropriately until "long after the dust had settled," by which time it was "simply too late to reopen the matter." (Ibid.)
The Westcon decision states a valid criticism of the holding in Jamison—without, however, repudiating the basic principle the Jamison court sought to apply. The Jamison decision invites an interpretation under which the presentment of a claim to any public servant associated with the underlying subject matter is enough to substantially comply with the statute. But as noted in Westcon, such a worker may well be "the last person who would want to pass a claim on to his or her employer," since he or his coworkers may be expressly or implicitly charged with fault in the matter. For this reason we have little doubt that if plaintiff had only communicated his claims to the two individual defendants here, it could not be viewed as substantial compliance without evidence that they actually and in fact communicated those claims,
Thus, while Jamison may indeed be open to criticism, none of the reasons for that criticism are present here. Equally if not more open to criticism is the categorical treatment adopted in Life, Munoz, and Del Real, which tortures statutory language into an unrecognizable form and effectively reads the settled doctrine of substantial compliance out of California law, at least as applied in the present setting. If Jamison stated too broad a rule by suggesting that notice to any employee associated with an actionable incident constitutes notice sufficient to satisfy the act, so too did Del Real, Life, and Munoz go too far by suggesting that the claim must in every case be placed in the hands of one of the designated recipients. Here, the claim was placed in the hands of an employee and department whose very function was to evaluate and manage claims brought against County. Plaintiff's departure from the prescribed procedure merely eliminated the preliminary step of placing the claim in the hands of a higher level county functionary. To accept County's argument would mark an unmistakable return to "[t]he old doctrine of strict and literal compliance, with its attendant harsh and unfair results." (Munoz, supra, 33 Cal.App.4th at p. 1778.) We will not willingly contribute to such a return.
As noted above we have a third objection to the analysis in Life, on which Del Real and Munoz also rest: It depends on the demonstrably false supposition that the language of section 915, subdivision (e)(1) has a plain meaning and clear application. If that were true it might at least support an inference that the Legislature intended it as the complete and exclusive expression of its will, since a strictly literal approach would then have the virtue of simplicity and predictability, whatever injustice it might inflict. But in fact the supposed requirement enforced so rigidly by the court—that the claim be "actually received by the clerk, secretary, auditor or board" of the responsible local government body (§ 915, subd. (e)(1))—is fraught with latent ambiguities and uncertainties of application.
A board of supervisors is conceptually and legally distinct from the county it governs. (See Cal. Const., art. XI, § 1, subd. (b) ["The Legislature shall provide for county powers, an elected county sheriff, an elected district attorney, an elected assessor, and an elected governing body in each county."]; id., art. XI, § 4, subd. (e) [county charter is to provide for "[t]he powers and duties of governing bodies and all other county officers, and for consolidation and segregation of county officers, and for the manner of filling all vacancies occurring therein"]; Gov. Code, §§ 23004, subd. (a) [enumerating powers of county, including to "[s]ue and be sued"], 23011 ["The name of a county designated in this chapter is its corporate name, and it shall be designated thereby in any action or proceeding touching its corporate rights,
Moreover it affirmatively appears that in Santa Clara County, the clerk of the board is not in fact the clerk of the county, since the county has another officer designated "County Clerk-Recorder." (See <http:// www.sccgov.org/portal/site/rec/> [as of May 26, 2011].) The title of this office more nearly conforms to the claims act's description of the designated recipient than does "clerk of the board of supervisors." It is true that, in Santa Clara County, the county clerk does not exercise the function of receiving claims like plaintiff's; rather it is the clerk of the board who is described in public documents as "receiv[ing] and process[ing] . . . Claims against the County." (Santa Clara County Executive Office of Budget and Analysis, County of Santa Clara, FY 2009 County Government Handbook (Jan. 2009), p. 40 (County Government Handbook); cf. id. at pp. 100-101 [duties of County Clerk-Recorder].)
The judgment is reversed.
Premo, J., and Elia, J., concurred.
"(1) Delivering it to the clerk, secretary or auditor thereof.
"(2) Mailing it to the clerk, secretary, auditor, or to the governing body at its principal office. "[¶] ... [¶]
"(e) A claim, amendment or application shall be deemed to have been presented in compliance with this section even though it is not delivered or mailed as provided in this section if, within the time prescribed for presentation thereof, any of the following apply:
"(1) It is actually received by the clerk, secretary, auditor or board of the local public entity."
The Redwood decision is more troubling. There a claim was held fatally deficient for failure to "file[]" it "`with ... the Governor,'" as the statute then required. (Redwood v. State of California, supra, 177 Cal.App.2d at p. 502, quoting former § 1981 (repealed by Stats. 1959, ch. 1715, § 1, p. 4116).) The plaintiff had "served" the claim on two alleged individual tortfeasors and the State Board of Control. (Redwood, at p. 502.) The court acknowledged the potential application of the substantial compliance rule but manifestly rejected its application even if, as the plaintiff argued, "the filing of the claim with the Governor could serve no useful purpose." (Id. at p. 504.) It effectively adopted a rule of strict compliance insofar as the statute identified the person to whom the claim must be presented. It cited cases for the proposition that "where the claims statute provides for the person upon whom the claim is to be served, that service upon another is insufficient." (Id. at pp. 503-504, citing Continental Ins. Co. v. Los Angeles (1928) 92 Cal.App. 585 [268 P. 920], Douglass v. City of Los Angeles (1935) 5 Cal.2d 123 [53 P.2d 353] and Wilkes v. City etc. of San Francisco (1931) 44 Cal.App.2d 393 [112 P.2d 759].) The last of these makes explicit what was implicit in the other two: they rest upon the proposition that the provisions of the claims act "are mandatory and are to be strictly construed." (Wilkes v. City etc. of San Francisco, supra, at p. 397, italics added.) Few if any recent decisions advert to that proposition. At least one case of comparable vintage adopted the opposite view. (See L. A. Brick etc. Co. v. City of Los Angeles (1943) 60 Cal.App.2d 478, 486 [141 P.2d 46] [charter requirement that claim be presented to city prior to suit was "in derogation of common right" and therefore had to be "strictly construed" in favor of plaintiff].)