Opinion
This is an appeal by County of Ventura, (Ventura), cross-complainant and appellant, from a summary judgment dismissing its cross-complaint against the City of Camarillo (Camarillo), cross-defendant and respondent.
On November 7, 1974, after dark, plaintiff John Larsen was a passenger in a vehicle operated by Joel Capps, who was driving northbound on Springville Road located in Ventura. Capps had turned right onto Springville Road after exiting the Ventura Freeway. At this point Springville Road ran approximately one mile, and dead-ended in a flood control channel known as Beardsley Creek. The first half mile of Springville Road was within the city limits of Camarillo, and the last half mile was in an unincorporated area of Ventura. At the “T” intersection, where Capp turned onto Springville Road from the freeway, Camarillo had erected a sign that stated “Not A Through Street.” Capp drove his car into Beardsley Creek at the end of Springville Road, injuring Larsen. Larsen sued Ventura, Camarillo, and the City of Oxnard (not involved in this appeal) for negligence. Ventura sued Camarillo by means of a cross-complaint alleging that Camarillo’s negligence was the proximate cause of Larsen’s injuries.
Camarillo filed a motion for summary judgment on both the complaint and cross-complaint, alleging that it had no control over the road for the last half mile and therefore could not be responsible for its dangerous condition. Ventura filed an opposition to the motion, stating that the *1022 complaint alleged that one of the reasons for the accident was the inadequate signing and warning devices. It then stated in its opposition that the sign in question was “in somewhat of a state of disrepair on the date of the alleged accident and unreflectorized.” It also stated that driver Capp testified in his deposition that he did not see the sign but had he seen it, he would not have proceeded down Springville Road. Plaintiff Larsen did not oppose the motion. The court granted Camarillo’s motion, thereby dismissing it as a defendant to Larsen’s action and as a cross-defendant to Ventura’s action.
Ventura then requested that the summary judgment as to it be set aside to enable it to file an amended cross-complaint. This motion was granted and Ventura, relying on
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(2 Civ. No. 49032) (Cal.App.) (vacated
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court,
Camarillo again filed a motion for summary judgment as to Ventura’s amended cross-complaint. Both parties appeared at the hearing through their attorneys. No written opposition to the second motion for summary judgment was filed by Ventura, but Ventura’s counsel contends he informed the court that Ventura incorporated its opposition and points and authorities filed earlier in connection with the first motion. The court again granted the motion of Camarillo, and this appeal followed.
Camarillo argues that the dismissal was proper because the record is devoid of evidence that Camarillo had a duty to maintain the sign in question; the condition of the sign was not a proximate cause of the accident as a matter of law; and the alleged defectiveness of the sign did not create a substantial risk of injury but at most created a minor, trivial or insignificant risk.
The opinion of
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court,
Recent California cases have taken a middle course on the issue of retroactivity and have made the decisions apply to any case in which no final judgment has yet been rendered. (See 6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1977 pocket supp.) § 705A, p. 79 and cases cited.) In
In re Marriage of Brown,
In
American Motorcycle
Justice Tobriner, writing for the majority, explains in detail why the adoption of the doctrine of equitable indemnification between multiple tortfeasors was long overdue. In brief, the seeds for the rule were sown before
Li
v.
Yellow Cab Co.,
13 Cal.3d
*1024
804 [
American Motorcycle
is quiet in respect to its retroactive effect, but it appears to us that the reasoning in
Brown
is apposite here and the law of equitable indemnification should be applied retroactively under the formula enunciated in
Daly.
In our present case, Larsen’s trial has been concluded.
4
Ventura, however, was denied an opportunity to have its cross-complaint litigated because of the summary judgment dismissing Camarillo; therefore, there was no trial as between these two parties. The
Daly
test that retroactivity should not apply after a trial where reversal is on the sole ground that principles of comparative fault were not considered, is inapplicable. If a cause of action against Camarillo has been alleged, Ventura is entitled to a determination by a court on the partial indemnity count of. its cross-complaint. There is precedence for such a bifurcated hearing in
City & County of S.F.
v.
Ho Sing,
The final issue, therefore, is whether a cause of action has been pleaded against Camarillo under the facts of this case. In order to establish the liability of a public entity for a dangerous condition of public
*1025
property under the Tort Claims Act (Gov. Code, § 810 et seq.), a plaintiff must prove that (1) the property was in a dangerous condition at the time of the injury; (2) the injury was proximately caused by the dangerous condition; (3) the dangerous condition created a reasonably foreseeable risk of the kind of injury which occurred; and (4) the public entity had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition a sufficient time prior to the injury to have taken measures to protect against the dangerous condition (see
Ducey
v.
Argo Sales Co.,
The judgment dismissing Ventura’s cross-complaint for partial indemnity is reversed.
Kaus, P. J., and Ashby, J., concurred.
On May 31, 1978, the opinion was modified to read as printed above.
Notes
In most cases, the distinction between indemnification and contribution has, in a practical sense, been eliminated by the A merican Motorcycle opinion.
Other similar terminology used by the courts in defining the negligence of multiple tortfeasors was “primary-secondary” and “direct-indirect.”
The Li opinion also gave the same limited retroactivity to the decisional law of comparative negligence.
A jury awarded Larsen $30,000 against Ventura.
