*419 Opinion
The Director of the Department of Motor Vehicles appeals from judgment granting peremptory writ of mandate commanding him to set aside an order suspending respondent’s driving privilege under section 16070, Vehicle Code 1 for failure to establish proof of financial responsibility.
The facts are not in dispute. In January 1975 respondent was involved in a motor vehicle accident in which he suffered bodily injury. An accident report was made and revealed that respondent did not possess automobile liability insurance; he did not otherwise demonstrate financial responsibility, 2 then or since. Upon receiving information of these facts the Department of Motor Vehicles ordered respondent to obtain *420 and/or show proof of financial responsibility. Upon his failure to do so, respondent received notice of suspension of his driving privilege. At respondent’s request an administrative hearing was held, and suspension was stayed pending the outcome of the hearing. The referee found that respondent had been in a motor vehicle accident which did not result in property damage in an amount greater than $250 but in which respondent had suffered bodily injury; and that respondent had not established proof of financial responsibility. 3 Respondent’s driving privilege was suspended.
Respondent thereupon petitioned for writ of mandate herein, contending, inter alia, that the equal protection provisions of the state and federal Constitutions prohibit the suspension of an uninsured motorist’s license without a prior showing of fault on his part. The trial court concluded that this contention would be correct if the Financial Responsibility Law (Veh. Code, § 16000 et seq.) applied to respondent in the circumstances, but construed the law to require proof of financial responsibility “when a driver involved in an accident causes bodily injuiy or death or the requisite amount of property damage to another person.”
Appellant considers the issue to be whether the Financial Responsibility Law requires proof of financial responsibility when a driver involved in an accident causes injury to himself. Respondent focuses on whether the law constitutionally can require proof of financial responsibility of a driver involved in an accident without some showing of fault on his part.
The former California financial responsibility laws created a fault-based scheme.
(Orr
v.
Superior Court,
In 1974, the Legislature repealed the old Vehicle Code division 7, chapter 1, and enacted the present sections 16000 to 16075. (Stats. 1974, ch. 1409, §§ 7, 8.) The Legislature left no doubt that fault was no longer to be at issue when the question of the financial responsibility of a driver involved in a motor vehicle accident arose: “The Legislature finds that as a result of the difficulty of ascertaining a likelihood of fault in connection with vehicle operation, the number of financially irresponsible motor vehicle owners and operators has increased dramatically. The Legislature further finds that such fault determinations, and the costs associated therewith, do not further the purpose of the financial responsibility laws. Therefore, the Legislature declares that it is the policy of this state that those owning or operating motor vehicles on the streets or highways of this state shall be financially capable of providing monetary protection to those suffering injury to their person or property by reason of the ownership or use of such vehicles without regard to the negligence, liability, carelessness, or culpability of the owners or operators thereof, and further, that such capability shall be deemed a concurrent responsibility of such motor vehicle ownership or operation. The Legislature further *422 declares that it is the public policy of this state that those owning or operating motor vehicles on the streets or highways thereof shall evidence such financial capability by the methods specified in this act.” (Stats. 1974, ch. 1409, § 1.) (Italics added.) 5
Respondent would have us hold that the Legislature impermissibly excluded fault as an issue at the presuspension hearing. Essentially his argument is that by requiring proof of financial responsibility from those drivers involved in accidents but not from those not so involved creates a classificatory scheme which bears no rational relationship to the purpose of the legislation. But respondent’s position is premised on too narrow an appreciation of the Financial Responsibility Law. The law does not require that only negligent drivers be financially responsible; rather, it requires that “Every driver of, and owner of, a motor vehicle shall, at all times, maintain in force one of the forms of financial responsibility specified in Section 16021.” 6 (§ 16020.) It is true that only those drivers involved in accidents of the kind described in section 16000 must prove financial responsibility, but involvement in the accident does not create the obligation to be financially responsible, it merely provides the occasion for demonstrating that a preexisting obligation has been satisfied. Thus respondent misstates the purpose of the law as being to assure that “negligent drivers, i.e., those likely to cause future accidents are financially responsible.” Instead the assurance is that all drivers, negligent or not, are financially responsible. 7
*423
While one’s driving privilege is an “important interest”
(Bell
v.
Burson,
In some sense a person may rightly complain that it is unfair for him to have to establish proof of financial responsibility while others, not
*424
involved in an accident, do not. In the same sense it might be unfair to audit the tax return of one person and not of another (Int. Rev. Code of 1954, § 7602; see
United States
v.
Powell
(1964)
Turning to the issue framed by appellant, we initially note that there does not appear to be any reason why the Legislature could not have required proof of financial responsibility where the requisite amount of property damage or bodily injuiy was sustained by the very individual whose driving privilege is at issue. Some states have expressly provided for such a result. The further question, however, is whether the financial responsibility law does so provide.
The section refers to a motor vehicle accident resulting in “damage to the property of
any
one person ... or in bodily injury or in the death of any person.” (Italics added.) (§ 16070, subd. (a), Veh. Code.) Obviously the Department of Motor Vehicles construes this language literally to include bodily injury to any person involved in the accident, rather than to any person other than the driver whose driving privilege is at issue. Even were this construction not entitled to great weight
(Holloway
v.
Purcell,
The judgment is reversed.
Wood, P. J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 21, 1977, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 23, 1977.
Notes
Vehicle Code section 16070, subdivision (a) states: “Whenever a driver involved in an accident described in Section 16000 has failed to establish proof of financial responsibility pursuant to Section 16022, the department shall, if the accident has resulted in damage to the property of any one person in excess of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) or in bodily injury or in the death of any person, suspend the privilege of the driver or owner to drive a motor vehicle, including the driving privilege of a nonresident in this state. The suspension shall become effective not earlier than the 76th day after receipt of the first accident report described in Section 16000 by the department.”
Vehicle Code section 16000 provides: “The driver of every motor vehicle which is in any manner involved in an accident originating from the operation of a motor vehicle on any street or highway which accident has resulted in damage to the property of any one person in excess of two hundred fifty dollars ($250) or in bodily injury or in the death of any person shall within 15 days after the accident, report the accident on a form approved by the department to the office of the department at Sacramento, subject to the provisions of this chapter. A report shall not be required in the event that the motor vehicle involved in the accident was owned or leased by or under the direction of the United States, this state, or any political subdivision of this state or municipality thereof.”
Vehicle Code section 16022 in relevant part states: “Every driver and owner of a motor vehicle involved in an accident described in Section 16000 who fails to prove the existence of financial responsibility as required by Section 16020 at the time of such accident, shall within 60 days after such accident, file with the department, and thereafter maintain for a period of three years, proof of such financial responsibility.”
Respondent concedes that the phrase “any person” as used in section 16000, Vehicle Code to refer to one injured in an automobile accident, encompasses a licensee who is the only person injured. The concession is supported by statutory history. At one time Vehicle Code section 16052 provided that exemption from demonstration of financial responsibility “may be established by filing evidence with the department indicating: (a) That no injury or damage was caused in the accident to the person or property of any one other than the driver or owner of the vehicle, (b) That at the time of the accident the vehicle was parked, unless the vehicle was parked at a place where the parking was at the time of the accident prohibited under some applicable law or ordinance.” Section 16052, as it then read was repealed in 1974. No corresponding exemption is now included in the financial responsibility law.
Proof of financial responsibility may be established as provided in section 16050 et seq.
Vehicle Code section 16075, subdivision (b) states: “The department shall conduct the hearing upon demand of the driver or owner, within 60 days of such demand, to determine the applicability of this chapter to such driver or owner, including a determination of whether: (1) The accident has resulted in property damage of less than two hundred fifty dollars ($250), or bodily injury, or death. (2) The driver or owner has established that proof of financial responsibility, as required by Article 3 (commencing with Section 16050) of this chapter, was in effect at the time of the accident.”
Both of these cases were overruled in
Rios
v.
Cozens,
The statutory plan involved in these cases required, upon involvement in an accident in which there was bodily injury or death of any person or property damage in excess of a certain amount to any one person, and in the absence of an exemption, that security be *421 posted “in a sum which shall be sufficient in the judgment of the department to satisfy any final judgment or judgments ... resulting from such accident” (former § 16020 based on earlier § 420) on pain of suspension of driving privilege.
While respondent contended below that the Financial Responsibility Law is, despite the intention of the Legislature, fault-based, he does not now renew this contention.
Section 16021 states: “Financial responsibility of the driver or owner is established if the driver or owner of the vehicle involved in an accident described in Section 16000 is:
“(a) A self-insurer under the provisions of this division.
“(b) An insured or obligee under a form of insurance or bond which complies with the requirements of this division.
“(c) The United States of America, this state, any municipality or subdivision thereof, or the lawful agent thereof.
“(d) A depositor in compliance with subdivision (a) of Section 16054.2.
“(e) In compliance with the requirements authorized by the department by any other manner which effectuates the purposes of this chapter.”
Respondent makes no effort to distinguish or impeach a long line of
pre-Bell
cases in other jurisdictions upholding the requirement of proof of financial responsibility without respect to the question of fault. (Eg.,
Perez
v.
Tynan
(D.Conn. 1969)
“The fundamental right furnishing a basis for invoking strict scrutiny must be explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the Constitution. [Citation.] Rights held fundamental include privacy [citation], voting [citation], and interstate travel [citation].”
(Adams
v.
Superior Court,
In
Miller
v.
Malloy
(D.Vt. 1972)
Suspect classes include those based on alienage
(Raffaelli
v.
Committee of Bar Examiners, 1
Cal.3d 288, 292 [
People
v.
De La Torre,
257 CaI.App.2d 162 [
Considering that in 1974 there were in California 163,920 motor vehicle accidents involving fatalities or bodily injury, the treating of such accidents as the occasion for examining the financial responsibility of the vehicle drivers involved would yield a not unreasonable sample of the 13,176,000 driving licenses outstanding at the time. . (Cal. Statistical Abstract 1975, pp. 104-105.)
