This matter is before the Court on the motions of defendants, Joseph Dale Brown and Leo Franklin Brown, for leave to make Howard Blunt, Jr. a third party defendant in the above causes pursuant to Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The motions in each of the causes raise practically identical issues and for this reason they will be treated jointly.
*328 In this action the plaintiffs, Marjorie E. Blunt and Patricia Blunt by her parent and guardian, Marjorie E. Blunt, seek damages for personal injuries arising out of an automobile accident occurring January 8, 19G3. The plaintiffs were riding as passengers in an automobile owned and operated by Howard Blunt, Jr., which collided with an automobile owned by the defendant, Leo Franklin Brown and driven by defendant, Joseph Dale Brown.
In the proposed third-party complaint, the defendants allege their right to indemnity from Howard Blunt, Jr. for any damages they might be compelled to pay to the plaintiffs, and alternatively, they seek equitable contribution from Howard Blunt, Jr. The defendants contend that the presence of Howard Blunt, Jr., as a third-party defendant, should be required so that the rights and liabilities of the various parties can be disposed of in one action, thereby avoiding multiple suits and duplication of expenses.
Howard Blunt, Jr., in resistance to the motion to bring in third-party defendant, asserts that the defendants can have no indemnity or contribution in the absence of a common liability to the injured plaintiffs. Blunt further asserts that certain releases entered into by himself and the defendants have released him from all claims which the defendants might have against him including the right to seek contribution and indemnity.
The Court will consider Howard Blunt, Jr.’s defenses in the order asserted by him in his resistance. First of all, Blunt contends that because there is no actionable negligence as between the plaintiffs and himself, there is absent an essential element of contribution or indemnity, i. e., common liability. The Court is in agreement with this contention.
Rule 14, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, upon which the defendants premise their motion states that “[A] defendant, as a third-party plaintiff, may cause a summons and complaint to be served upon a person not a party to the action who is or may be liable to him for all or part of the plaintiff’s claim against him.” While Rule 14 provides this. Court with the necessary procedural authorization for the joinder of a third-party defendant who is or may be liable to the movant, the question of whether the movant is entitled to contribution or indemnity is an issue of substantive law governed by the law applicable in the state where the tort occurred. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Chicago R. I. & P. R. Co.,
This then brings us to the heart of the issue now before the Court. Did the present defendants and the proposed third-party defendant have a common liability to the injured plaintiffs? Was there actionable negligence upon which *329 the plaintiffs could rely against either the present defendants or against Blunt ?
The Court finds that several legal principles present in this case are destructive of the necessary common liability. The first of these principles to be regarded is the doctrine of “marital immunity.” The pleadings before the Court reveal that the proposed third-party defendant is the husband of the plaintiff, Marjorie E. Blunt. It was the rule at common law and seemingly still the law in Iowa that a wife cannot maintain a suit or obtain judgment against her husband for damages growing out of a tort committed by him upon her. Aldrich v. Tracy,
The other plaintiff in this action is the daughter of the proposed third-party defendant, Howard Blunt, Jr. Thus, in determining whether there would be actionable negligence, as a basis for contribution, between this injured plaintiff and the proposed third-party defendant, the Court is troubled by the legal question of whether in Iowa an unemaneipat-ed minor child can maintain an action against his parent to recover damages for negligence. It appears that the question has not been determined in Iowa.
1
Cody v. J. A. Dodds & Sons,
Under the Iowa Guest Statute, § 321.494, the liability of an operator of a motor vehicle to a person riding in it as a guest, is limited to damage caused by the driver’s being under the influence of intoxicating liquor or by his reckless operation of the vehicle. Winter v. Moore,
To reiterate, the right to contribution or indemnity arises out of a common lia
*330
bility. Here common liability has been precluded by reason of marital immunity or the guest statute. An injured party plaintiff in the suit from which a right of contribution or indemnity develops must have a cause of action against the party from whom contribution or indemnity is sought. No such cause of action exists on the part of these plaintiffs against the proposed third-party defendant.
2
Chicago R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co.,
In support of their motions the present defendants have strongly relied upon the case of Blackford v. Sioux City Dressed Pork, Inc.,
The distinction between claims for indemnity and contribution is that indemnity requires a shifting of an entire loss from one tortfeasor to another while contribution implies a sharing of the loss. Bolton v. Ziegler,
As a further resistance the proposed third-party defendant alleges the existence of certain releases executed by the present defendants releasing the proposed third-party defendant. In view of what has already been decided, no useful *331 purpose would be served by pursuing this issue. The motion for leave to make Howard Blunt, Jr. a third-party defendant is hereby denied.
Notes
. Por dictum that an unemaneipated minor child would not likely have liability were he to be a proposed third-party defendant see Van Tiger v. Hendricks,
. However, for a case disapproving adherence to the common liability rationale see, Bedell v. Reagan, 29 Auto. Cases 2nd 129 (Maine 1963).
