Opinion
Factual Summary
Petitioner Gentry Construction Company, Inc. (Gentry), purchased a development of graded lots in La Jolla from the predecessor of real party in interest R. H. Liquidating, Inc. (RH). The sale was contingent upon Gentry’s approval of an engineering report on the property. After the sale, Gentry built a number of homes on the lots and sold them to the public.
Plaintiff Dorcus Gregory is the owner of one of the homes. In his complaint he alleges Gentry and RH, among others, are strictly liable to him in tort for the defective condition of the soil beneath his home. He seeks damages for the diminished value of his home, loss of its use and damage to his personal property.
Gentry filed a cross-complaint against RH which alleges RH is either partially or totally responsible for plaintiff’s damages. In its third cause of action Gentry alleges a claim for comparative indemnity, while in its fifth cause of action Gentry asks for total indemnity based upon RH’s alleged strict liability.
RH moved for summary judgment on all the claims against it. In the alternative RH sought adjudication on a number of issues. The trial court denied the motion for summary judgment, but among other issues on which it granted summary adjudication, the trial court found “That Gentry cannot, as a matter of law, maintain a cause of action in strict products liability against R.H. Liquidating.” In response to our inquiry, RH states the result of this finding is to “nullif[y] Gentry’s cause of action for ‘total indemnity-strict liability.’ ” Gentry filed a timely petition for a writ of mandate in which it asks that we direct the trial court to vacate its finding on this issue. We deny the petition.
Issues Presented
Gentry’s attempt to shift the responsibility for the plaintiff’s damages to RH implicates two conflicting legal principles: the doctrine of strict liability *180 in tort for the production of defective products and the principle of equitable idemnity between tortfeasors, As we will explain, a commercial plaintiff may not rely upon the doctrine of strict liability to recover its losses. Nonetheless, where, as here, a commercial defendant has been asked to compensate a consumer, it may attempt to shift its responsibility to other tortfeasors, including those who may be liable to the consumer on a theory of strict liability. The right to seek such equitable indemnity is no different from the comparative indemnity available from negligent tortfeasors. Thus in this case we find RH’s strict liability to the plaintiff, if established, will support Gentry’s claim for comparative indemnity. However, RH’s strict liability will not support any distinct form of equitable indemnity, such as the “total indemnity based upon strict liability” Gentry has alleged in its fifth cause of action.
Discussion
There is substantial precedent which would prevent a commercial plaintiff from recovering damages it has suffered on a theory of strict liability in tort. (See
Sumitomo Bank
v.
Taurus Developers, Inc.
(1986)
“[T]he doctrine of products liability does not apply as between parties who: (1) deal in a commercial setting; (2) from positions of relatively equal economic strength; (3) bargain the specifications of the product; and (4) negotiate concerning the risk of loss from defects in it. [Citation.]”
However, different considerations obtain when the losses in dispute are not simply the losses incurred by a commercial enterprise but are losses incurred by a consumer who had or may have a claim for strict liability in
*181
tort. In such instances where, as here, two tortfeasors may both be strictly liable to a consumer,
1
we are aware of no authority which prevents one of the tortfeasors from attempting to shift responsibility for the consumer’s losses to the other tortfeasor by seeking comparative indemnity under the principles set forth in
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(1978)
In particular in
Safeway Stores, Inc.
v.
Nest-Kart
(1978)
We also note those cases which have created exceptions to the rule of comparative indemnity have done so only where, because of the particular
*182
factual context, fairness did not require that any part of the loss be shifted from a defendant to a third party, or where such loss shifting would interfere in a special relationship between the plaintiff and the third party. For instance in
Jaffe
v.
Huxley Architecture
(1988)
In
Munoz
v.
Davis
(1983)
Unlike these situations, in the case of two strictly liable torfeasors it is difficult to argue fairness would not be served by allocating the plaintiff’s damages between them in proportion to their responsibility for the plaintiff’s injuries. The relationship between strictly liable tortfeasors and consumers does not provide the damage allocation which was otherwise available in Jqffe. Moreover, unlike the attorney-client relationships discussed in Munoz and Held, the right of comparative indemnity will not undermine the nonfiduciary relationship between consumers and manufacturers or impose upon manufacturers any conflicting obligations.
In sum we believe multiple tortfeasors who are strictly liable to the same plaintiff may seek comparative indemnity from each other or from negligent
*183
tortfeasors. However, in the absence of a statute or agreement to the contrary, defendants are not entitled to any species of indemnity other than the comparative indemnity available under AMA.
(Far West Financial Corp.
v.
D & S Co.
(1988)
Having set forth these general legal principles, we next confront the record presented to us by the parties. At the outset we must frankly admit that the issues, as framed in the record, are somewhat confusing. For instance, as we have seen, RH sought and received an order determining “That Gentry cannot, as a matter of law, maintain a cause of action in strict products liability.” Were we to interpret this finding narrowly, as only referring to claims Gentry has against RH for losses Gentry itself endured, the order would be a correct statement of law under Kaiser Steel Corp. v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., supra, 55 Cal.App.3d at pages 747-748. Plainly a developer, who has the ability to protect itself from the risks posed by defective products, cannot recoup damage it suffers by way of a claim for strict liability in tort.
The problem with a narrow interpretation of the order is that Gentry has made no such damage claim against RH. Rather, as we read its cross- *184 complaint, Gentry seeks to recover from RH only the damages it may be required to pay the plaintiff. Applying the court’s finding to each of Gentry’s indemnity claims, when RH’s strict liability to the plaintiff has not itself been determined, is not consistent with the teaching in Safeway, which as we have seen, suggests that strict liability may be equitably apportioned. Thus, were our analysis to stop here we would be inclined to grant Gentry’s petition for a writ.
However there is yet another twist in the record. In making its motion, RH’s attack was directed solely toward Gentry’s fifth cause of action for “total indemnity-strict liability.” Accordingly we inquired of the parties whether the order impaired more than Gentry’s fifth cause of action and RH advised us that the effect of the order it obtained was to nullify the fifth cause of action. As we have seen, under the holding in Far West “total indemnity” as a theory distinct from “comparative indemnity” does not exist in California. Here Gentry’s third cause of action, which according to RH was not the subject of the trial court’s order, seeks comparative indemnity. Under Far West, in the absence of a statute or a contract, Gentry can ask for no more. Thus in the final analysis RH’s attack on the fifth cause of action was well taken. If the fifth cause of action seeks no more than comparative indemnity, it is surplusage. On the other hand, if it is an attempt to allege more than comparative indemnity, i.e., an equitable claim which is not subject to the good-faith settlement bar set forth in Code of Civil Procedure section 877.6, subdivision (c), it contravenes Far West. Accordingly we believe the trial court acted properly in granting an order which relieves a trier of fact of the burden of passing upon Gentry’s fifth cause of action.
Thus although the strict liability of Gentry and RH may be apportioned between them on a comparative basis, we deny Gentry’s petition for a writ.
Kremer, P. J., and Froehlich, J., concurred.
Notes
Because the plaintiff is not a party to this writ proceeding, and because RH has not asked us to do so, we have not determined whether a home buyer may proceed in strict liability against the vendor from whom a developer acquired allegedly defective lots. (But see
Preston
v.
Goldman
(1986)
