Opinion
Pеtitioners Anderson-Cottonwood Disposal Service (Anderson) and Mission Insurance Company (Mission) seek annulment of an order of respondent Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board (board) denying reconsideration of an award in favor of Victor Webb. We affirm the order of the board.
Facts
On March 5, 1975, Webb, employed by Anderson, was working as a mechanic on the tilt cab of a truck. While bent over the moving shaft of the motor, straddling the front wheel, the cab descended. He lost his footing and wаs injured when the truck rolled over him. He received temporary disability indemnity benefits and medical expenses from Mission.
Webb filed a civil action on two theories of liability, negligence and strict products liability, naming as defendants the manufacturer and seller of the truck. Mission intervened, seeking recovery of the temporary disability benefits and medical expenses it had paid.
On December 2, 1977, Webb obtained a jury verdict in the amount of $55,000. The jury returned special verdicts, finding for Webb on both theories of liability. On the negligence theory, they apportioned the degree of negligence at 10 percent for the third party defendants, 25 percent for Webb and 65 percent for Anderson. A judgment was entered on the products liability claim for thе whole sum of damages. The judgment was satisfied by payment by the third parties of $34,566.07 to Webb and approximately $17,000 to Mission.
In 1978, Webb filed an application for adjudication of claim seeking further workers’ compensation benefits. Mission answered clаiming a credit against further liability in the amount of the remaining civil recovery. Webb disputed the credit on the basis of cases (Witt v. Jackson (1961)
Discussion
I
Petitioners contend they are entitled to a full credit for the net amount of Webb’s third party recovery. They say their responsibility for the injury was adjudicated in the third party action; that “recovery [there] was based principally on a strict products liability theоry, which does not take ordinary contributory negligence into account.” Alternatively, they claim the board should not have relied upon the jury finding of employer negligence. We affirm the order of the board.
II
Labor Code section 3861 generally permits a credit against workers’ compensation benefits of the portion of an employee’s third party award which has not been applied to reimburse the employer. (§ 3861.) In Witt v. Jackson, supra,
Associated Construction & Engineering Co. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeals Bd., supra, 22 Cal.3d 829, modified Witt v. Jackson by application of the comparative negligence principles of Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975)
Here, the board relied on comparative negligence principles to defeat the claim of credit. Petitioners complain that such principles do not apply to products liability and that Ruiz v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co., supra,
Ruiz held that an employer was not a joint tortfeasor in a products liability action by virtue of its failure to discover the product defect.
The board properly declined to apply Ruiz for it is no longer the law. Ruiz was eviscerated by the decision in Daly v. General Motors Corp. (1978)
Petitioners can prevail only if Ruiz is binding upon the board by virtue of the judgment in the third party action. This tenders an issue of collateral estoppel.
Mission intervened in the third party action. Judgment was entered for the full amount of damages against the third parties, despite a jury finding of Anderson’s negligence. Beсause Ruiz was the law at the time of the decision, we infer that the employer’s negligence was not with knowledge of the product defect. It follows that such a determination was necessary to the judgment. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 1911.) The question arises whether the board may redetermine such negligence or utilize the jury finding to impose liability for purposes of Labor Code section 3861.
Collateral estoppel operates between judicial and board determinations. Roe described the relationship of court to agency as “a statutory-decisional system in which both trial court and workmen’s compensation agency are bound to accept the other’s prior adjudication of employer negligence but freе to adjudicate the issue if it is yet unsettled.” (Roe v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd., supra,
The general rule is that “[w]hen an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential to the judgment, the determination is conclusive in a subsequent action between the parties, whether on the same or a different claim.” (Rest.2d Judgments, § 27, p. 250; see also Code Civ. Proc., § 1911; Smith v. Smith (1981)
Freed from the constraints of collateral estoppel the board was empowered to apply the law aрplicable at the time of the administrative determination. That law is to be found in Daly v. General Motors Corp., discussed supra. Daly retroactively requires application of comparative negligence principles to products liability claims which have not been finally adjudicated. (20 Cal.3d at pp. 743-744.)
IV
Petitioners alternatively contend the board erred in utilizing the jury finding of negligence in the third party action to calculate the аmount of the third party award attributable to Anderson’s degree of fault. We would agree with the contention but for their failure to preserve the issue. The board should have independently determined their share of fault if put in issue. Petitioners correctly observe that the comparative degree of negligence of the parties is not equivalent to the comparative degree of fault. It is the latter parameter that should have governed the calculation of the offsеt required before petitioners were entitled to a credit.
The function of the request for rehearing is to give the board an opportunity to rectify errors made by the workers’ compensation judge. (See generally, U.S. Auto Stores v. Workmen’s Comp. App. Bd. (1971)
The decision of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board is affirmed.
Puglia, P. J., and Evans, J., concurred.
Notes
It distinguished negligenсe premised upon discovery of the defect and the product’s subsequent unreasonable use. The court said that such negligence was not at issue in the case.
We assume arguendo the identical issue of employer negligence was presented in Webb’s civil action and the board proceedings. (See Jackson v. City of Sacramento (1981)
Ruiz also contravenes a public policy principle applicable to the determination of an employer’s entitlement to credit. A negligent employer should not profit from its own wrong. The principle has a sound pragmatic basis. Refusal to allow reimbursement to negligent employers places pressure on the compensation insurance industry and the еmployer community to work to reduce the hazards of the workplace. This spur to reduce accidents is one of the underlying principles of the workers’ compensation insurance system. (See 2 Hanna, Cal. Law of Employee Injuries аnd Workmen’s Compensation (1982) § 1.05, p. 1-27.)
The jury verdicts in this case predated Daly v. General Motors Corp., supra,
This result works no injustice. Since the judicial proceеdings were conducted when Ruiz was good law, petitioners received the full amount of their lien from the third party, which also paid Webb’s damages without any offset for petitioners’ contributory negligence. As has been aptly observed, “[wjhen the emрloyer/carrier then goes before the appeals board protesting the employee's double recovery, one asks: ‘What’s Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba, that he should weep for her?’ If the employer’s negligence contributed to the accident, the double recovery was gained not from him but from the third party, who [could] not claim a deduction for employer negligence." (Italics added.) (Roe v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd. (1974)
