Plaintiff City of Santa Monica, having been held liable in a personal injury action, sues defendant Royal Indemnity Company to recover the amount it has had to *52 pay out, i.e., $5,130.40 plus expense of defense in the sum of $291.60. The court denied recovery of any sum in excess of $291.60, and plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
The Promenade is a public way within the city of Santa Monica. In January, 1953, the city and Venice Electric Tram Company entered into a written agreement whereby the company was given a concession to operate its trams upon the Promenade for a period of five years. The agreement contains this provision: “Concessionaire will carry liability insurance protecting the City, members of its City Council, boards or commissions, officers, agents and employees while acting as such, in a form approved by the City Attorney in the following amounts: $10,000 property damage and for personal injury $100,000 for any 1 person and $300,000 for any 1 accident.”
Effective August 6, 1952, the Tram Company had obtained from defendant Boyal Indemnity Company an automobile liability policy covering all trams owned or operated by it for the transportation of passengers. The primary coverage reads as follows: ' ‘ Coverage A—Bodily Injury Liability. To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury, sickness or disease, including death at any time resulting therefrom, sustained by any person, caused by accident and arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the automobile.” By endorsement bearing the same date as the policy, August 6, 1952, the coverage was limited to operations in Venice, Sacramento Pair and Presno Pair; “any additional exposures shall be reported to the company and premium determined for same.” By endorsement effective August 7, 1952, the coverage was extended to operations in Santa Monica and the city was added as an additional insured. “In consideration of an additional premium of $500. (B.I. $400. and P.D. $100.) It is hereby understood and agreed the undermentioned policy is amended in the following particulars: (1) Insurance extended to cover operations in the City of Santa Monica. (2) The City of Santa Monica is included as an additional insured.” Another rider of same date says : “ It is hereby understood and agreed that the undermentioned policy is extended to apply in respect of the following additional insured: ‘The City of Santa Monica a municipal corporation and/or members of its City Council Boards or Commissions, and elective appointive officers, agents, servants and employees while acting as such.’ It is further agreed that this extension shall apply only in respect of the operations of Venice Electric Tram Company within *53 the municipal jurisdiction of the City of Santa Monica.” A third endorsement of August 7 reads: “Gross Liability Endorsement. In consideration of the Premium charged, such insurance as is afforded by this policy for bodily injury and for property damage liability shall apply separately for each named insured as though a separate policy were issued to each named insured provided that this endorsement shall not operate to increase the company’s limit of liability for each occurrence as stated herein.”
In July, 1953, two tram passengers named Eesniek were injured when the wheel of the tram passed over a defective manhole of the city. It is stipulated that the Tram Company was not negligent. Eesniek sued it and the city. The company was found not liable and judgment was rendered against the city for $5,130.40, which it ultimately paid. It made demand but the insurance company refused to defend it. The city also demanded that the insurance company pay the judgment and it declined to do so. Having brought this action against the insurer the city, as above indicated, recovered only its costs of defense.
Appellant argues that: “The court must have accepted defendant’s contention that this is a combined automobile policy and it is fundamental that the insurer is not liable for injuries unless proximately caused by the automobile.” It further says that this renders Coverage A meaningless so far as the city is concerned. It emphasizes that “the dispute is over the meaning of the phrase ‘arising out of.’ ” Respondent invokes section 530, Insurance Code: “An insurer is liable for a loss of which a peril insured against was the proximate cause, although a peril not contemplated by the contract may have been a remote cause of the loss; but he is not liable for a loss of which the peril insured against was only a remote cause.”
Respondent also argues that an endorsement naming an additional insured under an existing policy does not extend the terms of the policy or increase the risks thereby covered. Counsel rely upon
Oakland Stadium
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s,
*54
The cardinal rules for construction of an insurance policy are stated in
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Const. Co.,
There is no room for doubt that the accident in question arose out of the use of the automobile. Concerning the pertinent phrase of the policy
Schmidt
v.
Utilities Ins. Co.,
It may be conceded that so far as the Tram Company is concerned the peril insured against is the use of the automobile and the predicate for defendant’s liability to it must be a showing that that peril was a proximate cause of the accident. But a different question is presented with respect to the additional insured, the city of Santa Monica. In reference to it the controlling question is, what was the peril against which the city of Santa Monica was insured and which must operate as the proximate cause of the loss under section 530, Insurance Code. The city was brought under the policy by an endorsement for which the Tram Company paid a premium of $500, and one of defendant’s letters in evidence, which encloses a duplicate policy for the city, suggests that if the city would accept the policy with “their interest eliminated from coverage” the charge would be reduced to the extent of $160. It is a fair inference that that sum of $160 was the charge for insuring the city. Against what risk?
The city is not engaged in operating trams (the subject automobiles). But they do travel over its public way. The mere operation of the vehicle, negligently or carefully, cannot render the city liable for any accident. But its operation over the public street is the event which threatens the city’s pocketbook; the risk is that of liability for some act or omission of *56 the city in relation to its street which concurs with operation of the automobile and creates liability on the city. That is the peril against which the city was insistent upon protection. The concession for operation of trams on its public way did expose it to the hazard of liability to passengers in the event of accident and injury growing out of the operation of the vehicle over a dangerous and defective public way. That is undoubtedly the risk that the endorsement was intended to cover; it is difficult to conceive of any other upon a rational basis. The concurrence of this risk with the operation of the tram was the proximate cause of the accident and injuries. The “Cross Liability Endorsement” above quoted attests this fact. It says that the insurance “shall apply separately for each named insured as though a separate policy were issued to each named insured,”—which means the city of Santa Monica. The rider then adds the proviso “that this endorsement shall not operate to increase the company’s limit of liability for each occurrence as stated herein,”—shall not increase the policy limit. The instrument does not say that it shall not increase the risks which would be covered in the absence of a rider adding another insured. To hold that the risk of liability for the results of a defective street cooperating with operation of the tram to cause an injury,—that that risk was not covered would be to sanction the acceptance of a $160 premium for the issuance of a meaningless policy, one which afforded no protection whatever. We cannot embrace any such concept of justice.
Counsel for respondent went almost that far in their oral argument. They said that the city was given only an assurance of a defense against groundless suits (under Ila of the policy), an obligation which counsel conceded to have been breached ;
1
they also argued that, an unsuccessful defense having been afforded, the insurance company owes no further duty and the additional insured must pay the judgment. Concerning this matter it is said in
Osborne
v.
Security Ins. Co., supra,
*57
Oakland Stadium
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s, supra,
The court’s award to plaintiff of only $291.60, the cost of its defense, is erroneous.
The judgment is reversed with instructions to amend the conclusions to conform to the views herein expressed, and to enter judgment in favor of plaintiff for $5,130.40, plus $291.60.
Fox, Acting P. J., and Kincaid, J. pro tem., * concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied March 19, 1958. Schauer, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
