Opinion
Roberto Gamboa was killed when he was struck, while riding his bicycle, by a tractor-trailer owned by the Fred Alberg Trucking Company (Alberg Trucking) and driven by its employee, Leland Ray Demele. At the time of the accident, Alberg Trucking was subhauling freight for Conti Trucking, Inc. (Conti Trucking). Appellants, Araceli Gamboa (Roberto Gamboa’s widow) and her three minor daughters, brought a wrongful death action against respondents Alberg Trucking, Fred Alberg as an individual, Leland Ray Demele and Conti Trucking.
Summary judgment was granted in favor of Conti Trucking and against appellants on the ground that Conti Trucking was not liable for the acts of Alberg Trucking. 1 Appellants filed this appeal after their motion for reconsideration was denied.
The controlling facts are not in dispute. Conti Trucking was licensed by the Public Utilities Commission as a highway common carrier. At the time of the accident, Conti Trucking had entered into a subhauler agreement with Alberg Trucking. Alberg Trucking was an independent contractor under the subhauler agreement. Alberg Trucking held a Public Utilities Commission
Appellant contends that Conti Trucking, as a highway common carrier, could not delegate its duties to an independent contractor so as to escape liability for the independent contractor’s negligence.
The nondelegable duty doctrine as to highway carriers was first stated in California by our Supreme Court in
Eli
v.
Murphy
(1952)
“C.M.T. contends that under the terms of its contract with Leo J. Murphy, the latter was an independent contractor, and that it is therefore not liable for the negligence of Murphy’s employee. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, contend that under both the common law and certain regulations of the Public Utilities Commission, C.M.T., as a highway common carrier, could not delegate its duties to an independent contractor so as to escape liability for their negligent performance.
“C.M.T., operating as a highway common carrier, is engaged in a ‘business attended with very considerable risk’
(Venuto
v.
Robinson, supra; Barry
v.
Keeler,
Conti Trucking contends that to the extent of any nondelegable duty imposed by
Eli
v.
Murphy,
Conti Trucking’s vicarious liability was extinguished pursuant to
Klein
v.
Leatherman
(1969)
Klein
v.
Leatherman
involved a personal injury action arising out of a multivehicle collision. At the time of the accident, California State Shippers,
Conti Trucking relies on the following dicta in
Klein
v.
Leatherman, supra:
“A highway contract carrier engaging another as a subhauler thus is under a practical compulsion to verify that the subhauler possesses an unrevoked permit and the required insurance coverage. This is in the public interest, as well as his own. If the subhauler has complied, the monetary liability under the nondelegable duty may be eliminated, or diminished, pro tanto. If the subhauler has not complied, it is presumed that an arrangement for subhauling will not be made in the first place. If such an arrangement is made, both he who violates the law and one who procures it are penally liable. (Pub. Util. Code, § 3801.)” (
The quoted excerpt Conti Trucking relies upon is not the holding of the case but is dicta. The holding of
Klein
v.
Leatherman, supra,
is an expansion of the nondelegable duty doctrine. The Court of Appeal recognized that one
The quoted language relied upon by Conti Trucking does not state that the nondelegable duty is eliminated. It states that the “. . .
monetary liability
under the nondelegable duty
may
be eliminated, or diminished, pro tanto.”
(Klein
v.
Leatherman, supra,
The judgment is reversed. Appellants shall recover costs on appeal.
Gates, Acting P. J., and Nott, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 15, 1993, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 12, 1994.
Notes
Appellants reached a settlement with Alberg Trucking, Fred Alberg, and Demele for Alberg Trucking’s policy limits of $250,000. The trial court found this settlement to be in good faith over Conti Trucking’s opposition.
“There are basically three types of operating authority required by California law (Pub. Util. Code, § 3501 et seq.): (1) highway common carrier; (2) radial highway common carrier; and (3) highway contract carrier. A highway
common carrier
is a public utility engaged in the transportation of property on the highways and is regulated as a public utility; a highway common carrier dedicates his facility to the public and ordinarily operates between fixed termini or over regular routes; a highway common carrier is required to obtain a certificate of public convenience and necessity from the Public Utilities Commission. (Pub. Util Code, §§ 213, 215, 3513.) A
radial
highway
common carrier
engages in the transportation of property on the highways, but is not regulated as a public utility; a radial highway common carrier does not operate between fixed termini or over regular routes; he establishes his own rates until rates are fixed by the Commission; he is required to secure a permit, not a certificate of public convenience and necessity; the essential difference between a common carrier and a radial common carrier is that the latter carrier does not operate between fixed termini or over regular routes.
(Alves
v.
Public Utilities Com.,
“ ‘An individual or a corporation carrying on an activity which can be lawfully carried on only under a franchise granted by public authority and which involves an unreasonable risk of harm to others, is subject to liability for bodily harm caused to such others by the negligence of a contractor employed to do work in carrying on the activity. [Quote from original footnote.]’ ”
In
Eli
v.
Murphy, supra,
Conti Trucking contends that it was a highway contract carrier as well as a highway common carrier and that fact brings this case within the rule of
Gaskill
v.
Calaveras Cement Co., supra,
