Opinion
Plaintiff Clovis Ready Mix Company appeals after order of the court dismissing its complaint and order of the court granting defendant Aetna’s motion for partial summary judgment on the cross-complaint as to the question of liability.
*279 The questions raised on this appeal are stated by Aetna to be as follows: (1) Did the trial court err in ruling that Clovis’ complaint is barred by the terms of Code of Civil Procedure section 43 9 1 ; and (2) did the court err in granting partial summary judgment on the liability issue of Aetna’s cross-complaint against Clovis.
Facts
The complaint filed in this action recites that a Peterbilt two-axle tractor and double trailers belonging to plaintiff Clovis collided with a two-axle tractor and double trailers belonging to defendant Aetna on or about January 26, 1966. Clovis further alleged that the defendants “so negligently entrusted, manager [szc], maintained, drove and operated their said motor vehicle” that the accident occurred. The complaint concluded asking damages in the sum of $7,761.99 for reasonable cost of repairs, tow charges and deprivation of use.
Aetna filed its answer raising an affirmative defense to the effect that a prior lawsuit involving the same parties and accident had been previously filed in the Superior Court of Fresno County. That lawsuit had been dismissed and a dismissal with prejudice as to all defendants had been filed. The answer further alleged that Clovis had to assert in the earlier lawsuit any claims it might have against Aetna under the terms of Code of Civil Procedure section 439.
Aetna filed a cross-complaint for damages to its vehicle, and then Aetna filed a motion to dismiss Clovis’ complaint and for partial summary judgment on its cross-complaint. The motion to dismiss was based on the groqnd that Clovis’ complaint was barred pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 439; the motion for summary judgment was made on the ground that the negligence of Clovis Ready Mix and its employee and the lack of negligence (contributory negligence) on the part of Aetna’s employee, Douglas Wood (and therefore Aetna), has been established conclusively by virtue of collateral estoppel. The motions were made on the basis of the declarations submitted with the records and documents in Fresno Superior Court action No. 132202.
The declaration of Richard C. Mallery recited that he had been retained by Douglas Wood to prosecute his claim for personal injuries against Clovis Ready Mix and its driver, Bobby Obenosky, arising out of the truck *280 collision on January 26, 1966; Obenosky and Clovis appeared in this action and filed an answer to the complaint; no counterclaim and no cross-complaint were filed by either Obenosky or Clovis; shortly after instigation of the lawsuit, it was settled by payment to Wood and his wife of the sum of $17,800 by Clovis and Obenosky. Thereafter, Mallery caused to be filed in the Fresno County personal injury action a request for entry of dismissal with prejudice as to all named defendants. The entry of dismissal with prejudice was duly made.
The “Release of All Claims” executed by Wood and his wife contained a clause reciting: “It is understood and agreed that this settlement is the compromise of a doubtful and disputed claim, and that the payment made is not to be construed as an admission of liability on the part of the party or parties hereby released, and that said releasees deny liability therefor and intend merely to avoid litigation and buy their peace.”
Douglas Wood, driver of Aetna’s vehicle, filed a declaration to the effect he was an employee of Aetna; he was hauling a load of freight for Aetna in Kern County on January 26, 1966; he collided with a truck owned by Clovis and driven by Bobby Obenosky; he sustained injuries; a personal injury action on his behalf against Clovis and Obenosky was filed and thereafter settled for the sum of $17,800.
Preliminarily, counsel for the respective parties have now come to the realization that this appeal is premature. This realization conforms to the court’s conclusion that Clovis’ appeal is in part from the order of the court granting Aetna’s partial summary judgment on the issue of liability. Code of Civil Procedure section 437c provides specifically that: “If it appear that such defense applies only to a part of the plaintiif’s claim, or that a good cause of action does not exist as to a part of the plaintiff’s claim, or that any part of a claim is admitted or any part of a defense is conceded, the court shall, by order, so declare, and the claim or defense shall be deemed established as to so much thereof as is by such order declared and the cause of action may be severed accordingly, and the action may proceed as to the issues remaining between the parties. No judgment shall be entered prior to the termination of such action . . . .’’It therefore appears that the propriety of the trial' court’s action granting the partial summary judgment on the cross-complaint may only be considered on an appeal from the final judgment which has yet to be rendered in this case. “Where trial is bifurcated and only the issue of damages remains to be tried, appeal from the first part of judgment is premature.”
(Swaffield
v.
Universal Ecsco Corp.
(1969)
*281
Secondly, Clovis’ appeal from the order of the trial court directing dismissal of its complaint is also premature. “[A]n appeal will be dismissed where a purported final judgment is rendered on a complaint without adjudicating the issues raised by a cross-complaint. ” (6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Appeal, § 46, p. 4060.) The authorities clearly hold that an action in which cross-complaint or counterclaim is also filed is not one wherein a multiplicity of final judgments may result.
(Sjoberg
v.
Hastorf
(1948)
Therefore, it is concluded that Clovis’ purported appeals from the order of the trial court that its complaint be dismissed and from the order of the trial court granting partial summary judgment to Aetna should be dismissed, unless such a disposition is unwarranted under all of the circumstances.
Counsel for the respective parties, at oral argument, have noted that this accident happened in 1966 and that the appeal has been pending since February 1970. They, furthermore, explain that their respective briefs have discussed fully the merit of their respective contentions, and that they would prefer to waive any jurisdictional defects here (see
Lopes
v.
Capital Co.
(1961)
Upon being informed by the court that the jurisdictional defect could not be waived, counsel for the respective parties stipulated at oral argument that we “treat the appeal, the record and the briefs as a petition for a writ.” We are mindful of our limitations insofar as advisory decisions are concerned, but we are also impressed with our duty to see that justice is administered in a practical fashion with the least possible delay. Insofar as this case is concerned, we are not able to take the same measures as in
Shepardson
v.
McLellan
(1963)
*282
We are aided also by the recent (May 10, 1971) opinion of Justice Mosk in
Vasquez
v.
Superior Court,
We hold that the trial court erred in each ruling.. The cause of action asserted by Clovis against Aetna was not barred by the terms of section 439 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the doctrine of collateral estoppel did not justify the court’s conclusion that the dismissal of the Wood action was res judicata on the issue of liability.
At the outset we note that an independent act of negligence is alleged by plaintiff against defendant, and that there is a factual dispute in the record as to Wood’s status as an employee of Aetna. These facts support the conclusion that the defendant’s motion for summary judgment was not well taken.
(Louie Queriolo Trucking, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Respondent’s reliance on
Louie Queriolo Trucking, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The court there noted that a purported judgment had been entered on the issue of liability, but that said judgment was a nullity. It then noted that: “ ‘Before the doctrine of res judicata can apply or be invoked, there must be a subsisting judgment or final order’ ” (id. at p. 200), and held that this requirement was satisfied by the judgment of dismissal, with prejudice, on payment of a consideration, operating as a retraxit.
Rothtrock
v.
Ohio Farmers Ins. Co., supra,
Ghiringhelli
v.
Riboni
(1950)
Counsel for Aetna place reliance upon
Datta
v.
Staab
(1959)
In essence, the question here is: Can the settlement effected between Clovis and Wood, on the one hand, with Clovis’ liability to Wood expressly disclaimed, in an action to which Wood’s employer was not a party, adjudicate, first, that insofar as Wood’s employer is concerned the releasee (Clovis) was responsible for the accident; second, that even though independent negligence of the employer is alleged, Clovis may not avail itself of the defense of contributory negligence in resisting the cross-complaint; and finally, is the only thing left for determination the issue of the employer’s damages?
*284
If
Datta
v.
Staab
tends to so hold, we conclude that its holding must be deemed to be no longer the law in the face of the ruling in
Sylvester
v.
Soulsburg
(1967)
Sylvester
v.
Soulsburg, supra,
cited by appellant, is authority for the rule that before there may be collateral estoppel there must be, inter alia, identity of parties. In effect, by the settlement between plaintiff and Wood, the only parties precluded from asserting any claims arising out of the transaction (the accident) were those persons and parties litigant in the action “ ‘or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication?’ ’’ (
Privity of one with another contemplates one deriving a right from or enjoying a benefit with another, a mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property. (See Black’s Law Diet. (4th ed. 1951).) Here, Wood’s rights were entirely independent of those of his employer, and vice versa. Neither had any right or power to affect the rights of the other.
Moreover, another element of the rule of the
Bernhard
case,
supra,
for the applicability of the doctrine of res judicata “(applicable equally to a plea of collateral estoppel as held in
Saunders
v.
New Capital for Small Businesses, Inc.
[1964]
Public policy as it applies to the administration of justice encourages the settlement of disputes without litigation, or by settlement of litigation prior to trial. To construe the facts here to have an effect of determining rights not within the contemplation of the parties to the settlement not only is inconsistent with the law but is contrary to such policy.
What we have observed is pointed up in 4 Witkin, California Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Judgment, section 209, page 3348, where it is stated: “If the parties expressly exclude a particular issue from consideration, or the court expressly refrains from determining it, no collateral estoppel results. [Citations.]”
*285
The precise situation here is comparable to the problem presented in
Taylor
v.
Hawkinson
(1957)
Counsel, in their briefs and in oral argument, have pointed out:
(a) That Wood was inadvertently named a defendant in plaintiff’s amended complaint, but he was not served. Defendant Wood moved to dismiss. Counsel agree he should be dismissed as such party defendant; and
(b) Wood was named as a cross-complainant with Aetna in its title to the cross-complaint, but no relief is sought for him. Counsel agree he should be dismissed as a cross-complainant.
Accordingly, it is our conclusion that:
1. Wood should be dismissed as a party defendant and cross-complainant, and a final judgment as to him in this action is proper, he having no further interest in asserting a claim or defending against plaintiff’s claim.
2. The purported orders or judgments appealed from should be and they are hereby ordered vacated and set aside.
3. The trial court should be and is hereby ordered to deny the motions of defendant and cross-complainant Aetna for dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint and partial summary judgment on the cross-complaint on the issue of liability of Clovis.
*286 4. The trial court should proceed to try the issues of liability and damages.
5. Each side should bear its own costs of appeal.
Friedman, Acting P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Code of Civil Procedure section 439 reads as follows: “If the defendant omits to set up a counterclaim upon a cause arising out of the transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, neither he nor his assignee can afterwards maintain an action against the plaintiff therefor.”
