A judgment for damages in the sum of $1250 was obtained by Florence Wilson against Lee J. Miller on account of personal injuries received by her through the negligent operation of an automobile by Miller, and on appeal the judgment was affirmed.
(Wilson
v.
Miller,
1 Cal. App. (2d) 514 [
The appeal was taken on the judgment roll, and two main points are urged for reversal. Neither of them is related to any of the fоur defenses urged at the trial. They are in substance, first, that the right acquired by an injured party under the statute to sue on the indemnity poliсy is not assignable; and secondly, that in any event the purported assignment is legally insufficient to transfer to plaintiff any of the rights inuring to the injured party under the policy.
So far as the record shows, no demurrer was interposed to the complaint, nor were either of the points now urged by appellant for reversal made an issue before the trial court by way of answer. Assuming that said points may be raised for the first time on appeal, we find no merit therein.
*16
It was definitely held by the Supreme Court in the ease of
Malmgren
v.
Southwestern Automobile Ins. Co.,
Applying the foregoing legal principles to the facts of the present case, we have this situation: Upon the happening of the accidеnt a contractual relation was created by the. statute between Florence Wilson, as the injured party, and Miller’s insurance carrier, which gave her a cause of action against the insurance carrier on the policy issued to Miller, upon securing the judgment against him; “This cause of action was property” (Pigg v. International Indemnity Co., supra), and therefore, as the owner of such property she doubtless had the legal right to assign and transfer the same to another.
In further support of the above conclusion may bе cited the case of
Roth
v.
General Casualty & Surety Co.,
106 N. J. L. 516 [
Appellant has cited cases from New York, claiming that they sustain its contention that the right to sue on the policy is not assignable. Evidently, however, as pointed out in
Bachman
v.
Independence Indemnity Co.,
The remaining points urged on this branch of the cаse are merely incidental to the main ones already discussed, and are likewise without merit. One of them is that the assignee acquired no rights under the assignment because it was made pending the appeal from the judgment. It is well settled, however, that an assignment of a judgment may be made at any time after its entry in the trial court; and since the present action on the policy was not commenced by the assignee until several months after the affirmance of the judgment on appeal, it was in no way affected by the appeal.
Nor in our opinion are the terms of the written assignment under which the present action is sought to be maintained legally insufficient to transfer to plaintiff the right to sue on the indemnity policy. It covers not only the assignment of the judgmеnt “and all sums of money that may be had or obtained by means of said judgment”, but in terms it appoints plaintiff as assignee and attorney to take “all lawful ways and means for the recovery of the money due or to become due on said judgment.”
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P. J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
*18 A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on September 26, 1938.
