EXPRESSIONS AT RANCHO NIGUEL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
AHMANSON DEVELOPMENTS, INC., Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent;
Monier, Inc., Cross-defendant and Appellant.
Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division One.
*897 Gordon & Rees, William J. Peters; William A. Robles Law Offices, Robles & Castles and William Anthony Robles, San Francisco, for Cross-Defendant and Appellant.
Grady & Dicks and Michael D. Dicks, San Diego, for Plaintiff and Respondent Expressions at Rancho Niguel Association.
Green & Adams, Philip W. Green and Gary D. Grant, Irvine, for Defendant, Cross-complainant and Respondent Ahmanson Developments, Inc.
*896 McINTYRE, J.
Where a defendant who is strictly liable for a plaintiffs injury settles with the plaintiff and with various other joint tortfeasors and then pursues an equitable indemnity claim against a nonsettling joint tortfeasor, is the nonsettlor jointly and severally liable for the amount paid by the defendant to the plaintiff? In this case we answer this question in the negative, based on the conclusion that joint and several liability principles do not apply in apportioning losses from an indivisible injury among joint tortfeasors, and reverse the judgment of the trial court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Expressions at Rancho Niguel Association (the Association), the homeowners association for a 266-unit residential project in Laguna Niguel, filed a construction defect action against the owner of the project (Ahmanson Developments, Inc.), the developer of the project (McKellar Communities/McKellar Development of La Jolla) and various others. The Association alleged a broad spectrum of defects at the project, including roof leaks resulting from inadequate flashing, membrane application and substructure. Ahmanson filed a cross-complaint for indemnity against a number of project subcontractors, including Monier, Inc., which manufactured the roof tiles used at the project.
The Association's cost of repair expert, California Building & Consulting, Inc., prepared a report estimating the total cost of repair for all of the deficiencies claimed by the Association at over $15 million, including roofing repair costs of $2,258,150. McKellar's cost of repair expert, Melhorn Construction Consulting, estimated that the total cost of repair was less than $4 million, which included $264,783 in roofing repair costs.
Ahmanson and McKellar entered into a settlement with the Association for $3,131,750, of which McKellar paid $2.45 million and Ahmanson paid $681,750, plus an assignment of proceeds of settlements Ahmanson and McKellar reached with various subcontractors. McKellar assigned its claims against the remaining subcontractors to Ahmanson and the Association (collectively, the respondents), which agreed to pursue jointly claims against the remaining subcontractors and design professionals involved in the project. In connection with the settlement, the parties allocated 10.2 percent of the settlement proceeds to roofing damages.
The respondents thereafter entered into settlements with all of the remaining project subcontractors except Monier. They received $154,577 in settlement funds from the other roofing subcontractors on the project.
The respondents' indemnity claims against Monier proceeded to a bench trial. Monier argued that the respondents were entitled to recover only that portion of the amount paid to the Association for roofing damages that were attributable to its work. The respondents, on the other hand, argued that Monier was jointly and severally liable to them for all of the roofing damages and, in accordance with Code of Civil Procedure section 877, subdivision (a), it was required to pay the full amount of the settlement proceeds allocated to *898 roofing damages, offset by payments received from the other roofing subcontractors.
The court agreed with the respondents' argument that Monier's liability for the roofing damages was joint and several. It found that $343,553 of Ahmanson's and McKellar's settlement with the Association reflected roofing damages and that Monier was liable for this amount less the $154,577 paid by the other roofing subcontractors. It thus awarded the respondents $188,976 plus costs and attorney fees. Monier appeals.
DISCUSSION
1. Introduction
A. Joint and Several Liability Principles
Under the law, a tortfeasor generally is liable for all damages proximately caused by his tortious conduct. (See Civ. Code, § 1714.) Where multiple tortfeasors are responsible for an indivisible injury suffered by the plaintiff, each tortfeasor is jointly and severally liable to the plaintiff for those damages and thus may be held individually liable to the injured plaintiff for the entirety of such damages. (American Motorcycle Assn. v. Superior Court (1978)
B. Equitable Indemnity
The right to indemnity flows from payment of a joint legal obligation on another's behalf. (Civ.Code, § 1432; Western Steamship Lines, Inc. v. San Pedro Peninsula Hospital (1994)
Equitable indemnity principles govern the allocation of loss or damages among multiple tortfeasors whose liability for the underlying injury is joint and several. (American Motorcycle, supra, 20 Cal.3d at pp. 583, 595, 597-598,
*899 2. Do Joint and Several Liability Principles Apply as Among Joint Tortfeasors?
In this case, the parties agree that the court made an implicit finding that the roofing damages constituted an indivisible injury; there is no challenge to that implied finding on appeal. Thus, pursuant to the principles set forth above, Monier would have been jointly and severally liable to the Association for roofing damages at the project. Once Ahmanson and McKellar paid money to settle the Association's claims for roofing damages, each of them was entitled to seek equitable indemnity from Monier.
The question presented on this appeal is whether Ahmanson and McKellar, as settling defendants who are strictly liable for the underlying damages, essentially step into the shoes of the Association and thus are entitled to recover all the amounts they paid for the Association's injuries from other joint tortfeasors whose negligence was a proximate cause of those injuries on a joint and several basis. The respondents each admit that there is no existing authority expressly addressing this point, but posit that American Motorcycle and its progeny support the conclusion that negligent tortfeasors are jointly and severally liable to another defendant whose liability is based on strict liability. They argue that the same policy considerations underlying joint and several liability should apply to protect a "blameless" defendant, whose liability for the indivisible injury is purely vicarious. However, existing case law supports a contrary conclusion.
For example, American Motorcycle held that equitable considerations, based on concepts of comparative fault, apply in allocating losses among joint tortfeasors. In American Motorcycle, the court was faced with the issue of how the recently implemented comparative negligence principles affected California's established common law equitable indemnity doctrine, which involved only the question of whether a loss should be completely shifted from one tortfeasor to another, rather than whether the loss should be shared between them. (American Motorcycle, supra, 20 Cal.3d at pp. 591-598,
Shortly after American Motorcycle, the Supreme Court confirmed that comparative fault principles also apply to apportion liability among tortfeasors where one or more of the responsible parties' liability arose in strict liability rather than negligence. (Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Nest-Kart (1978)
The respondents offer this court's decision in GEM Developers v. Hallcraft Homes of San Diego, Inc., supra,
The respondents also argue that joint and several liability principles rather than the concept of comparative fault should apply in this context to promote settlement. Although we recognize that the application of joint and several liability principles as the respondents suggest would create an additional incentive for joint tortfeasors to settle rather than run the risk of being held liable for the entirety of the amounts paid by a settling defendant to the plaintiff (see generally Bobrow/Thomas & Associates v. Superior Court (1996)
Perhaps based on the absence of any authority applying joint and several liability principles to apportion losses among joint tortfeasors, the respondents also argue that, as a matter of law, a strictly liable defendant is entitled to recover full indemnity from a joint tortfeasor whose negligence is a proximate cause of the underlying injuries. However, although a strictly liable defendant may certainly recover full indemnity from a negligent joint tortfeasor in appropriate circumstances, it is not true that the application of equitable indemnity principles always requires such a result. (Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Nest-Kart, supra,
As the Supreme Court has observed "even when it is clear ... that the [defendant seeking indemnity is] vicariously or derivatively liable for the acts of the settling defendant, that factor alone still provides no assurance that a total shifting of loss is warranted under equitable indemnity principles. To begin with, there are many instances in which a defendant who is vicariously liable for another's acts may also bear some direct responsibility for an accident, either on the basis of its own actionfor example, the negligent hiring of an agentor of its own inactionfor example, the failure to provide adequate supervision of the agent's work. In addition, even when a nonsettling tortfeasor's liability may be wholly vicarious or derivative in nature, it does not invariably follow that equitable considerations will, as a matter of law, always call for the total shifting of loss to the more directly culpable tortfeasor." (Far West Financial Corp. v. D & S Co. (1988)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Monier is to recover its costs of appeal.
HUFFMAN, Acting P.J., and NARES, J., concur.
