Plaintiffs appeal from an adverse judgment rendered after a nonjury trial in an action for declaratory relief.
Plaintiff Linda Hall desired to purchase a Ford Thunderbird automobile of which the Bank of America, hereafter called the Bank, was legal owner and one Robert E. Ditsch, registered owner. On May 23, 1961, Mrs. Hall applied to the Bank for an approval of her credit to the end of financing her purchase of the ear. On May 26, 1961, Ditsch gave Mrs. Hall physical possession of the Thunderbird and on May 29, 1961, the parties entered into a written agreement under the terms of which Ditsch transferred to her all of his equitable interest in the automobile. On the same day, May 29, Ditsch executed a power of attorney in favor of the Bank empowering the latter to execute in his name any certificate of ownership necessary to transfer any registration of said vehicle. The Bank did not use this power of attorney until June 2, *11 1961, after it had approved Mrs. Hall’s credit at which time the Bank signed Ditsch’s name at the place designated on the certificate of ownership (“pink slip”) for release of ownership by the registered owner. On the same day, June 2, 1961, Mrs. Hall affixed her signature to the certificate of ownership at the place designated for application for transfer by new registered owner. The Bank remained the legal owner. The certificate properly executed was thereupon transmitted to the Department of Motor Vehicles.
In the meantime, on May 30, 1961, four days after she took possession of the car, Mrs. Hall while driving the Thunderbird became involved in an accident as a result of which said automobile was damaged to the extent of $349.26. On such date, Mrs. Hall was insured under a “family combination automobile policy” issued to her by plaintiffs The Canadian Indemnity Company and The Canadian Fire Insurance Company (hereafter collectively called “Canadian”) and covering her Oldsmobile. The policy provided that Canadian would “pay for loss caused by collision to the owned automobile or to a non-owned automobile” on a so-called $100 deductible basis. In an “other insurance” clause, it also provided that “the insurance with respect to a temporary substitute automobile or non-owned automobile shall be excess insurance over any other valid and collectible insurance.” (Italics added.)
Ditsch also was insured at the time of the accident by defendant Motors Insurance Corporation, hereafter called Motors. This policy covered the Thunderbird and, among other things, provided for collision coverage on a $50 deductible basis. It was cancelled effective June 23,1961.
Mrs. Hall paid the $349.26 for the repairs to the Thunderbird. She and Canadian thereupon commenced the instant action. As disclosed by the pleadings and the pretrial conference order, plaintiffs’ position is briefly this: Ditsch owned the Thunderbird at the time of the accident. At such time he had collision coverage for the car afforded by Motors. Mrs. Hall was an additional insured under the Motors’ policy as a driver with Ditsch’s express permission. Defendant Motors’ position is that Ditsch was not the owner at the time of the accident and that consequently it was not liable under its policy to pay the damages.
The trial court found, so far as is here pertinent, that neither policy was cancelled until after May 30, 1961, the date of the accident; that Ditsch sold the Thunderbird to *12 Mrs. Hall on May 29, 1961 “in compliance with the pertinent provisions of the Vehicle Code”; that the car was damaged to the extent of $349.26 while being operated by Mrs. Hall; and concluded that the policy issued by Motors “did not cover the automobile, or any operator thereof, after May 29, 1961. ’ ’ Judgment was rendered for defendant for costs.
Basically the question which we face is this: Was Ditsch the owner of the Thunderbird at the time of the accident? Plaintiffs contend that he was because he had not complied with the provisions of sections 5600 and 5602 of the Vehicle Code.
1
It is argued that while Ditsch delivered possession of the vehicle to Mrs. Hall, he had neither endorsed and delivered the certificate of ownership nor notified the Department of Motor Vehicles prior to the occurrence of the accident. The facts underlying this argument are not disputed. On May 26, 1961, Ditsch delivered possession of the car to
*13
Mrs. Hall. On May 29, 1961, he signed a document purporting to transfer his equity therein to her. Although he also executed on May 29 a power of attorney authorizing the Bank to endorse the certificate of ownership, such transferor’s endorsement was not made and Mrs. Hall’s signature as transferee was not affixed until June 2, 1961. It is beyond contradiction that prior to the occurrence of the accident on May 30, 1961, neither of the requirements prescribed by section 5600 of the Vehicle Code had been fulfilled and no transfer of title pursuant to such section effectuated.
2
The above evidence is not in conflict and not reasonably susceptible of conflicting inferences. Since the only reasonable inference therefrom is that the statutory requirements were not complied with, the trial court’s finding that a sale was made “in compliance with the pertinent provisions of the Vehicle Code” is unwarranted and not binding on this court.
(Hicks
v.
Reis
(1943)
Nevertheless although section 5600 had not been complied with, there was an actual sale of the car as between the vendor (Ditsch) and the vendee (Mrs. Hall). The provisions of the Vehicle Code relating to the registration of title and ownership, including those requirements prescribed by section 5600, “were enacted in the interest of the public welfare to protect innocent purchasers and afford identification of vehicles and persons responsible in cases of accident and injury.”
(Henry
v.
General Forming, Ltd.
(1948)
It is clear that Mrs. Hall, the plaintiff in the instant action, does not fall within the class of persons for the protection of whom the above statute was designed. She makes no claim that she has been defrauded as an innocent purchaser from Ditsch. Nor does her involvement in an accident bring her under the protection afforded by the statute. The primary purpose of the statute is to afford relief to third persons who suffer damage as a result of the driver’s negligence and not to the driver who is himself responsible for the accident.
There is a close analogy between the instant case and
Venne
v.
Standard Accident Ins. Co., supra,
The appellate court held that while by delivering possession of the car, the endorsed certificate of ownership and the registration card to the vendee, the vendor complied "with former section 178 (now § 5602, see footnote 1, ante) and relieved herself of potential civil liability, there was nevertheless under the clear facts of the ease no effective transfer of title prior to the accident because former section 186 (now § 5600) had not been complied with.
However the court went on to declare: “While we are of the opinion that 178, subdivision (a) (1) compliance is not sufficient to transfer title under California’s motor vehicle registration laws, it seems equally clear that, as between Celeste and Raymond, there was an actual sale of the vehicle and therefore it would be unrealistic to hold that Raymond was a permissive user of the automobile involved in the accident. The ‘ omnibus clause’ extends coverage to the non owner operator only if he has the permission of the owner to use the vehicle. Once the sale was made, Celeste had no permission to give or withhold; Raymond had an absolute right to possess and operate the subject automobile. Celeste could not prevent her vendee from using the vehicle nor could she legally reacquire possession herself without Raymond’s consent. Since Raymond had the automobile plus the ownership and registration certificates he was at liberty to sell or otherwise deal with the automobile in any manner he desired. Under such circumstances, to argue that Raymond had the express or implied permission of Celeste to use the automobile would be to ignore the realities of the legal relationship between a vendor and vendee. This we may not do.” (P. 246.) The court reversed the judgment with directions to enter a judgment for Standard.
We apprehend the rationale of Venne to be this: Where the vendor has no liability to third persons damaged by the negligent operation of the vehicle by the vendee, there may be an actual sale of the vehicle as between the vendor and vendee even though the transfer requirements of section 5600 have not been fulfilled. Such a holding that the vendee is not a permissive user of the vehicle neither offends the underlying policy of the registration statute (§ 5600) nor *16 frustrates the purpose of the owner’s liability statutes. (§ 17150 et seq.)
Contrary to plaintiffs’ claim, Venne is not distinguishable from the case at hand upon the ground that in Venne the endorsed certificate of ownership and the certificate of registration were delivered to the vendee before the accident. The analogy between the two eases rests on the principal contention to both. In both cases, it was urged that because the requirements of section 5600 had not been met, the vendor remained the owner of the vehicle and the vendor’s insurance covered the vendee as a permissive user. In Venne, since compliance with section 5602 eliminated any liability of the vendor to third persons, noncompliance with section 5600 did not preclude recognition of an actual sale as between the parties or compel the conclusion that the vendor remained the owner of the vehicle. In the instant case, since there was never any liability to third persons, noneompliance with section 5600 should not force us to reach a different result.
Plaintiffs contend that the instant case should be governed by the decision of this court in
Harbor Ins. Co.
v.
Paulson
(1955)
The crucial question therefore which we face in the case before us is not whether the provisions of section 5600 were complied with (that they were not makes no difference here) but whether as between the parties a sale occurred prior to the accident so that at the time of the accident Mrs. Hall rather than Ditsch was the owner of the Thunderbird. The trial court answered this question in the affirmative. It found “ [t]hat Robert Ditsch sold a certain automobile to Linda Hall on May 29, 1961, in compliance with the pertinent provisions of the Vehicle Code.” It is true, as we have already explained, that the last part of the finding referring to compliance with the Vehicle Code cannot be justified in the light of the uncontradicted evidence. The balance of the finding however is not subject to attack.
The trial court in effect found: first, that a sale of the vehicle by Ditsch to Mrs. Hall occurred on May 29, 1961; and secondly that such sale was in compliance with the provisions of the Vehicle Code. Findings of fact must be liberally construed to support the judgment.
(Johndrow
v.
Thomas
(1947)
It is obvious that this finding that a sale had occurred on May 29 is supported by abundant evidence. Ditsch delivered possession of the car to Mrs. Hall on May 26; he executed and delivered to the Bank on May 29 a document transferring all his interest in the ear to Mrs. Hall; on the same day he executed and delivered to the Bank a power of attorney to sign his name to the certificate of ownership. Realistically viewed, the evidence shows that Ditsch had done everything within his power to transfer to Mrs. Hall whatever interest he had in the ear. Prom this evidence we think the trial court could have well determined that the parties intended that the property interest should pass from the vendor to the vendee on May 29 and hence that a sale occurred on that date. (Civ. Code, § 1738, subd. (1).) Since under this finding Ditsch no longer owned the Thunderbird after May 29, the trial court properly concluded that the insurance policy issued to him by defendant did not cover the automobile after such date.
Plaintiffs urge in the alternative that, even though as between the parties Mrs. Hall may have been the owner, the case is not one between her and Ditsch but between her and Motors. It is argued that all doubts must therefore be resolved against Motors, plaintiffs relying on
Exchange Cas.
&
Surety Co.
v.
Scott
(1961)
What we have just said also disposes of plaintiffs’ final claim that as between Canadian and Motors, the coverage of Motors is primary while that of Canadian was excess “over any other valid and collectible insurance.” (Italics added.) The simple answer is that there was no other insurance on the Thunderbird.
The judgment is affirmed.
Bray, P. J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 26, 1964.
Notes
Vehicle Code section 5600 as in effect at the time of the transactions here involved provided as follows: “No transfer of the title or any interest in or to a vehicle registered under this code shall pass, and any attempted transfer shall not be effective, until the parties thereto have fulfilled either of the following requirements:
“(a) The transferor has made proper endorsement and delivery of the certificate of ownership and delivery of the registration card to the transferee as provided in this code and the transferee has delivered to the department or has placed the certificate and card in the United States mail addressed to the department when and as required under this code with the proper transfer fee and thereby makes application for a transfer of registration except as otherwise provided in Sections 5905, 5906, 5907 and 5908.
“ (b) The transferor has delivered to the department or has placed in the United States mail addressed to the department the appropriate documents for the registration or transfer of registration of the vehicle pursuant to the sale or transfer except as provided in Section 5602.” (N.B. §§ 5905-5908 are not pertinent to the issue at hand. Section 5600 was amended in 1963 (Stats. 1963, eh. 1858, § 10).)
Vehicle Code section 5602 provides: “An owner who has made a bona fide sale or transfer of a vehicle and has delivered possession thereof to a purchaser shall not by reason of any of the provisions of this code be deemed the owner of the vehicle so as to be subject to civil liability for the operation of the vehicle thereafter by another when the owner in addition to the foregoing has fulfilled either of the following requirements :
“(a) When he has made proper endorsement and delivery of the certificate of ownership and delivered the certificate of registration as provided in this code.
1 ‘ (b) When he has delivered to the department or has placed in the United States mail, addressed to the department, either the notice as provided in Section 5900 or Section 5901 or appropriate documents for registration of the vehicle pursuant to the sale or transfer.”
We need not consider, as plaintiffs argue, noncompliance with section 5602 also. As pointed out in
Venne
v.
Standard Accident Ins. Co.
(1959),
infra,
The language referred to is as follows: “No transfer of the title or any interest in or to a vehicle registered hereunder shall pass and any attempted transfer shall not be effective unless and until the parties ...” (P. 116.) Section 5600 is the same except for a slight change of language.
Assuming
arguendo
that there is no such express finding, we would have no hesitancy in concluding that such a finding results by necessary implication from the court’s language.
(Richter
v.
Walker
(1951)
