Opinion
This equitable subrogation action arose from an underlying personal injury lawsuit brought by Nichole Fortman (Fortman) against Austin Hardware and Supply, Inc. (Austin), the component part manufacturer of a jeep door handle and lock assembly, and others. Safeco Insurance Company of America (Safeco), Austin’s primary insurer, repeatedly refused to settle before trial within its $300,000 primary policy limits. When Austin settled during trial, Safeco contributed its policy limits. U.S. Fire Insurance
Fortman then filed this action. The trial court granted summary judgment for Safeco and dismissed the case. Fortman appealed. We must decide whether the absence of a judgment in excess of Austin’s primary policy limits, and the underlying jury determination absolving Austin of responsibility for Fortman’s injuries, preclude Fortman’s equitable subrogation action. We find they do not and reverse the summary judgment.
Facts
The relevant facts are undisputed. Three-year-old Nichole Fortman was permanently injured when thrown from a moving jeep driven by her mother. The jeep was covered by a molded shell with a rear-hinged door secured by a nonrecessed lock and handle. Before trial of her underlying lawsuit, Fortman settled with all defendants except the shell’s manufacturer and Austin, which supplied the lock and handle. Safeco was Austin’s primary insurer, and U.S. Fire provided Austin’s excess insurance coverage.
Before and during Fortman’s personal injury trial, Safeco repeatedly refused settlement offers within its policy limits, alone and in combination with other defendants and insurers, to dismiss Austin as a defendant. Before trial, Safeco rejected a $125,000 settlement offer and offered $7,500. During trial, Safeco increased its settlement offer to $25,000. Despite express requests, Safeco did not convey these offers to Austin or U.S. Fire or keep them apprised of the litigation’s progress. Safeco retained no engineering or medical experts to evaluate liability or damages. U.S. Fire did not learn until the third week that the case was in trial. U.S. Fire then retained outside counsel to evaluate the case. Counsel determined that there was a serious likelihood of a verdict against Austin in excess of all Austin’s insurance coverage. During the fifth week of trial, Safeco unconditionally offered to combine its policy limits with those of U.S. Fire and another insurer to settle the case against Austin.
Fortman already had presented much evidence against Austin. After the Austin settlement, because the court ruled that the limits on joint and several liability incorporated in Proposition 51 would retroactively apply, Fortman presented no further evidence or argument against Austin. Fort-man then directed the case exclusively against the jeep manufacturer and sought to exculpate Austin. However, Austin was included in the special verdict and the jury was asked to apportion responsibility to it for Fort-
After Fortman filed this equitable subrogation action, Safeco moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted Safeco’s motion and stated: “[A]s a matter of law, [Fortman] fails to state a cause of action for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing against defendant Safeco Insurance Company, under a theory of equitable subrogation, since an essential prerequisite to any such action requires that there be a judgment against the primary carrier’s insured in excess of the policy limits, which has not been satisfied here. As a further basis for its decision, the court is also influenced by the fact that the jury in the underlying personal injury lawsuit considered the question as to whether Safeco’s insured was liable and reached a negative finding.”
Issues
Fortman contends: (I) a judgment against Austin in excess of its primary policy limits is not a prerequisite to an equitable subrogation action by U.S. Fire against Safeco; and (II) the jury verdict finding Austin not responsible for her injuries does not bar her suit.
Discussion
I
Preliminarily, as conceded by the parties, we note that the facts are undisputed. The trial court resolved no factual disputes, made no factual findings, and determined both issues raised by Fortman exclusively as matters of law. Thus, we independently review the trial court’s legal conclusions. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c); see
AARTS Productions, Inc.
v.
Crocker National Bank
(1986)
Fortman contends that because U.S. Fire actually paid $1,125,000 as part of the Austin settlement, and did so only because Safeco unreasonably refused offers to settle the case within Safeco’s policy limits, the absence of a judgment against Austin in excess of Safeco’s policy limits does not bar her equitable subrogation action. Safeco argues that an excess judgment is a legal prerequisite to Fortman’s equitable subrogation suit.
In contrast, actions between liability insurers are not based on contract. “The reciprocal rights and duties of several insurers who have covered the same event do not arise out of contract, for their agreements are not with each other. [Citations.] Their respective obligations flow from equitable principles designed to accomplish ultimate justice in the bearing of a specific burden. As these principles do not stem from agreement between the insurers their application is not controlled by the language of their contracts with the respective policy holders.”
(Amer. Auto Ins. Co.
v.
Seaboard Surety Co.
(1957)
Moradi-Shalal
v.
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Companies
(1988)
Moreover, “the assertion that a
settling
excess insurer cannot recover in excess of policy limits from a primary insurer guilty of bad faith refusal to settle is not well founded.”
(Northwestern Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Farmers’Ins. Group
(1978)
While Safeco correctly notes that the quoted passages are
dicta
because in
Northwestern
the underlying wrongful death cases were tried and resulted in judgments
(Northwestern Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Farmers’ Ins. Group, supra,
In
Continental Casualty Co.
v.
Reserve Ins. Co.
(1976)
Although it did not discuss this issue at length, the First Appellate District recently affirmed a judgment for an excess insurance carrier which settled the underlying case against its insured for an amount in excess of the primary coverage and sued the primary carrier in an equitable subrogation action for bad faith refusal to settle.
(Continental Casualty Company
v.
Royal Ins.
(1990)
Even in the related context of statutory bad faith actions under Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision (h), a conclusive judicial determination is not a prerequisite in first party, as opposed to third party
(Royal Globe Ins. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
On this record, Safeco repeatedly, and allegedly in bad faith, refused settlement offers below its policy limits. Had the case been settled for any of those amounts, U.S. Fire would have paid nothing. Instead, U.S. Fire actually paid $1,125,000 toward the eventual settlement. If we adopted Safeco’s position, U.S. Fire would suffer that loss without a remedy. On the other hand, an excess insurer who proceeded to trial and was required to pay any portion of a resulting judgment would be able to prosecute a similar action. Doing so might expose the excess insurer to a bad faith claim by the insured. Such a rule would encourage trials in cases which otherwise might settle.
Safeco relies on several cases which it claims require a prior excess judgment as a prerequisite to bad faith suits by insureds against their insurers. (See, among others,
Nationwide Ins. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
Safeco claims our failure to adopt its proposed rule would encourage sham settlements and collusive agreements between excess insurers and tort plaintiffs. In the situation before us, however, those possibilities do not exist. U.S. Fire actually paid $1,125,000 because of Safeco’s refusal to settle within Safeco’s policy limits. In the cases cited by Safeco, the insured must show the existence, not actual payment, of an excess judgment. In the equitable subrogation context before us, the excess insurer must show it actually paid an amount in excess of the primary insurer’s policy limits. Courts easily could distinguish equitable subrogation cases with facts suggesting a collusive settlement from cases like this one in which the excess insurer actually paid a settlement. The trial court erred in requiring an excess judgment.
II *
Disposition
We reverse the judgment. Fortman is entitled to costs on appeal. Spencer, P. J., and Devich, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 19, 1990.
Notes
Even in the third party statutory
Royal Globe
context, a stipulated judgment, but not a settlement, would provide the required final judicial determination of liability.
(California State Auto. Assn. Inter-Ins. Bureau
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
See footnote, ante, page 1394.
