This is an appeal from an order denying a petition to vacate the award of an arbitrator. Arbitration was had pursuant to the compulsory provisions of section 11580.2, subdivision (e), Insurance Code, requiring coverage for bodily injury from an uninsured motorist, as well as under the policy issued to petitioner-appellant by respondent company.
Appellant sustained bodily injuries and damage to his car when the vehicle, then being driven by him, was involved in a collision with another car driven by one Brabant, admittedly an uninsured motorist. Thereafter claims were filed by appellant with respondent as well as with another company, Ohio Casualty, which had issued a policy covering damage to appellant’s car. Respondent declined to pay, and the claim went to arbitration. Meantime, before any arbitration hearing could be had, appellant was compensated by Ohio which thereafter as subrogee, but assertedly without appellant’s permission, instituted action in the Los Angeles Municipal Court against Brabant; pursuant to his subrogee’s demand, however, appellant appeared and testified; judgment was rendered in Brabant’s favor on March 21, 1967. At or about the time of the trial of the municipal court action the arbitration proceeding came on for hearing; such action then still pending, respondent at the outset challenged the jurisdiction of the arbitrator by eon- *60 tending that such action was one between the same parties or their privies, thus a bar to the claims asserted by appellant before the arbitrator under the doctrine of collateral estoppel and res judicata. Briefs were filed and evidentiary items presented. Thereafter the arbitrator rendered his decision or “Award” in which he concluded that because of “equitable estoppel” he lacked “jurisdiction” until such time as the judgment in the municipal court action was vacated or eventually decided in appellant’s favor; it was further concluded that in such latter event, appellant was entitled to damages from respondent in the sum of $7,500. 1 The judgment in aspects still adverse to appellant eventually became final. In support of his motion in the superior court to vacate the arbitrator’s award, no new evidence was offered and appellant relied upon the same matters resulting in the adverse ruling by the arbitrator.
There are express statutory rules, characterized by appellant in his closing brief as “primitive,” which specify the grounds for vacating or correcting an arbitrator's award. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1286.2, 1286.6.) In this appellate proceeding the claim for reversal is not predicated upon any of the grounds set forth in these sections; instead, appellant asserts that the doctrine of collateral estoppel may not be applied to the facts at bar and it was reversible error for both the arbitrator and the superior court so to do. He argues that resort to either collateral estoppel or res judicata is foreclosed by respondent’s own contract—coverage IV thereunder being limited to the right of recovery by the insured for “bodily injury”; further that collateral estoppel may not be injected into the controversy because (1) he was not a party to or in privity with a party to the municipal court action, (2) even if it be assumed that he was a party to or in privity with a party to such action, it cannot be ascertained what issues were actually litigated and determined, and (3) the value of applying the doctrine is outweighed by other considerations.
At the outset it should be noted that the issue of collateral estoppel was properly before the arbitrator without objection on appellant’s part—this is conceded in appellant’s opening brief. In such circumstances, even if the arbitrator’s decision was erroenous, it is not subject to judicial review. The conclusiveness of an arbitrator’s award against a claimed error
*61
of law was extensively discussed in
Crofoot
v.
Blair Holdings Corp.,
The sole grounds for vacating or correcting an arbitrator’s award are found in sections 1286.2 and 1286.6, Code of Civil Procedure,
supra,
and a dissatisfied litigant is limited thereto.
(Ulene
v.
Murray Millman of Cal., Inc.,
As stated above, on the record before us the arbitrator erred in deciding that collateral estoppel applied. The pleadings in the municipal court action disclose that the following issues were presented for determination: Brabant’s negligence, proximate cause, appellant’s contributory negligence and his damages, if any. The judgment which followed the non jury:trial was general in nature: “It is adjudged that on the complaint, plaintiff take nothing and that defendant Elmer J.
*63
Brabant recover from Plaintiff Allen C. Durand the sum of $-damages, $-attorney fees, $-interest, together with costs as provided by law in the sum of $............” Findings were not made, it appearing that neither party made a request therefor. As a consequence, it is impossible to identify which one (or more) of the several issues may have been the basis for the judgment above reached. It may have been predicated upon a determination that defendant Brabant was not negligent without any determination respecting the negligence of plaintiff Durand; or, that both defendant and plaintiff were not negligent; or, that both were negligent and that the negligence of each was the proximate cause of the accident. “ To apply the doctrine of estoppel by judgment to an issue in a subsequent action it is not enough that such issue has been
litigated
in a former action; that issue, also, must have been
adjudicated
in the former action.’’ (Italics added;
Stout
v.
Pearson,
In summary, therefore, the arbitrator decided the point which was properly before him even if he did so incorrectly ; right or wrong the parties each agreed to be bound by any award pursuant to the pertinent provisions of their contract. According to California decisions, the mere fact that the arbitrator used unsound reasoning in reaching a conclusion or reached an erroneous conclusion within the scope of arbitration will not invalidate the result.
(Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.
v.
United Rubber Workers,
There is still another reason why appellant is not entitled to prevail. Section 11580.2, subdivision (e) (3), Insurance Code, provides that coverage respecting bodily injury becomes inapplicable when “the insured or his representative shall, without the written consent of the insurer, make any settlement with or prosecute to judgment any action against any person who may be legally liable therefor. ’ ’ In
Travelers
*64
Indem. Co.
v.
Kowalski,
The order is affirmed.
Fourt, Acting P. J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 18, 1969, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 23, 1969.
Notes
The contingent aspect of an award does not invalidate an arbitrator’s determination.
(Goossen
v.
Adair,
Appellant professes considerable unhappiness over
the Jordan
holding which was nevertheless followed in
Esparza
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto Ins.
Co.,
