As we point out later in more detail, the insurance carrier’s attempt here to escape liability for the loss accruing from the negligence of a permissive user must fail. The carrier cannot retreat into the restrictions of an asserted special condition because that condition depended for operative effect upon certification, and the policy was never certified. As of the date of the liability here, the provisions of the applicable financial responsibility laws were incorporated into the policy, and the insurance carrier must afford coverage to the full extent of its policy rather than only to the minimum amount of the legislation. The permissive user assumes the status of an assured and gets the full benefit of the policy. The insurer must discharge the whole responsibility which the Legislature placed upon the owner as to the tort of the permissive user.
On January 2, 1957, John L. Moore, a prospective customer, borrowed an automobile owned by E. N. Hacker, a used car dealer in Oakland, California. While driving the borrowed automobile, with the permission of Hacker, Moore negligently collided with an automobile owned and driven by Roger M. Roper,' injuring Roper and damaging both automobiles. *11 Moore, the driver, carried insurance under a policy issued by respondent, Globe Indemnity Company (hereinafter called Globe) covering liability with limits of $5,000 for bodily injuries for each person, $10,000 for bodily injuries in any one accident and $5,000 for property damage for each accident. The policy likewise provided that coverage afforded Moore while driving a non-owned automobile would be excess. Hacker, the dealer, carried an “Automobile Garage Liability Policy” issued by appellant Universal Underwriters Insurance Company (hereinafter called Universal), with limits of $300,000 for bodily injury to each person, $500,000 for all bodily injury liability in any one accident and $50,000 for property damage for each accident. The policy also provided that the coverage of the named insureds while using an automobile not specified in the policy should be excess over any other valid and collectible insurance.
Roper brought an action against both Hacker and Moore for personal injuries and recovered a judgment of $10,000 against Moore and, pursuant to provisions of former section 402 (present §§ 17150-17157) of the Vehicle Code, a judgment of $5,000 against Hacker. Hacker cross-complained and obtained a judgment of $2,362.23, plus interest, against Moore for damage to Hacker’s automobile. Moore tendered the defense of the action to Universal and it refused. Later, Roper sued the same parties for property damage to his automobile; the litigation did not reach the trial level because counsel stipulated that the court could adjudicate such rights of the parties in the instant declaratory relief action. Respondent sought relief against the driver, Roper, as well as against the owner, Hacker, and the insurance carrier, Universal, praying that the court determine the rights of all of the parties under the terms of the insurance policies and that Universal be required to indemnify respondent for all court costs and attorney fees expended on behalf of Moore in the action for personal injuries.
The trial court held: (1) The Universal policy provided primary coverage to Moore, the permissive user, for bodily injury, for an amount in excess of the judgment ($10,000). (2) The Universal policy provided primary coverage to Moore for property damage to Roper’s automobile. (3) The Globe policy was excess over the Universal policy. (4) The Universal policy provided the only coverage to Moore for Hacker’s judgment against Moore for property damage to Hacker’s car.
*12 We set forth in the footnote the statutes as they read at the time of the 1 Following a revision of the Vehicle Code in 1959, the Legislature amended the statutes and changed the numbering; we have followed the parties in referring to the sections by the numbers they bore when enacted.
We find no merit in appellants’ triple attack upon the judgment: first, that the court erred in holding that the Universal policy covered the permissive driver, Moore; second, that the court erred in affording Moore full coverage under the policy; and, third, that the court erred in ruling that the policy covered Moore as to the property damage inflicted upon the automobile which he was driving.
Turning to appellants’ first issue, we believe that the trial court properly held Moore to be an insured under the Universal policy. It is true that the definition of “insured” in the policy itself does not include persons using the designated automobile with the permission of the named insured. The controlling decision of
Wildman
v.
Government Employees' Ins. Co.
(1957)
To defeat Moore’s status as a permissive user appellants raise a series of answerable arguments which we discuss under the three subheadings which follow:
1. Appellants’ contention that the 1957 amendment to Vehicle Code section 415, which was not in effect at the time of the accident, should be construed retroactively so that Moore would not become a permissive user.
To meet
Wildman
appellants argue that the 1957 amendment to Vehicle Code section 415,
2
which had not become effective at the time of the accident, should be construed retroactively.
American Automobile Ins. Co.
v.
Republic Indemnity Co.
(1959)
Not only does
American
specifically refute appellants’ contention but in a very recent instance the Second District Court of Appeal again rejected appellant Universal’s assertion of the same argument. That court in
Royal Exchange Assurance
v.
Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.
(1961)
2. Appellants’ contention that Moore did not become a permissive user because the policy was not certified and therefore no liability accrued under the policy.
Appellants argue that “As the Universal policy was never‘certified’it is . . . clear that Moore was not an insured thereunder by virtue of the quoted provision pertaining to financial responsibility laws.” Appellants suggest that, because condition 8 did not function, Moore did not become a permissive user under the financial responsibility laws. While it is true that condition 8 never became an operative part of the contract Moore acquired the status of a permissive user on the basis of Wildman, which incorporates into the policy sections 415 and 402 of the Vehicle Code. Not the policy, but the court’s interpretation of the Financial Responsibility Law, designates Moore as an insured.
Moreover,
American
specifically rejects appellant’s argument on this score: “The conclusion that Special Endorsement No. 4 is invalid is supported by
Wildman
v.
Government
*15
Employees' Ins. Co.,
Appellants’ reliance upon an alleged legislative adoption of the 1939 decision of the Ninth Circuit of the United States Court of Appeals in
State Compensation Ins. Fund
v.
Bankers Indem. Ins. Co.
(1939)
3. Appellants’ contention that language in a policy effecting compliance with financial responsibility laws does not embrace permissive user coverage unless the policy is certified as required by law.
Appellants argue that the Financial Responsibility Law as effective for the purposes of this case did not require the owner of an automobile to carry insurance until after the occurrence of an accident; it provided only that a person be able to respond in damages for injuries resulting from an accident. Appellants state “As such legislation does not require insurance prior to an accident, courts from other jurisdictions having similar legislation almost unanimously have held that language in a policy effecting compliance with such laws to the extent required do not extend or enlarge the coverage otherwise granted by the policy unless and until the policy is certified as required by law.”
This proposition cannot stand because, at the time of the
*16
accident, no California statute required such certification of a motor vehicle policy under the circumstances of the instant case. As a consequence, the cases cited by appellants interpret the legislation of other states, which differs from that of California. Thus appellants’ quotation from
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
v.
Walker
(Okla. 1958)
Appellants’ reliance upon United States Fidelity evokes a two-fold answer: first, as we have seen, Universal’s liability does not, as in United States Fidelity, arise out of any policy provision; second, California had not established two distinct types of policies. Even though the statute in 1956 did not require an owner to maintain insurance upon his car, the insured here did procure such insurance. There is no statutory basis upon which we may find that the California Legislature, when referring to motor vehicle liability policies in financial responsibility legislation, intended to include only those policies required by law. 3
Since appellants fail to sustain their first major position that the policy did not cover the permissive user we *17 turn to the second basic argument that the trial court erred in affording Moore coverage to the full limits of the policy. We believe that Moore assumes the status of an insured under the policy and hence receives its whole protection. Moore thus becomes an additional insured under the policy and obtains its protection as much as the “partner, employee, director or stockholder” who is specifically named in the policy’s “Definition of Insured. ’ ’ Since the limitations of paragraph 8 do not affect the situation, and since the policy itself contains no differentiations as to those insured or the amounts of the protection, we find no basis for curtailment of Moore’s coverage.
Despite appellants’ criticism of the Supreme Court’s language in
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co.
(1956)
As respondent points out, since the Universal policy did not set up different provisions for omnibus insureds, the fact that Mason, “unlike Moore, became an omnibus insured through an interpretation of a policy definition” does not differentiate the cases. The point is that once Moore became an insured by operation of law, and once Mason became an assured by application of the policy, they both were protected to the full limits of the policy. We must reject, therefore, appellants’ attempt to meet the impact of the decisional language by an assertion that it “was ill considered and should not be followed.” Again, we find the Supreme Court language binding upon us and conclusive in its reasoning.
Appellants’ reliance upon
Shapiro
v.
Republic Indemnity Co. of America
(1959) (Cal.App.)
Appellants’ third and last main point that the policy did not cover Moore as to the property damage inflicted upon the ear which he was driving falters upon the same ground as that which upset their previous position. Once Moore becomes an insured under the policy, he garners the protection of the policy. The fact that section 415, subdivision (d), of the Vehicle Code provides that the policy “need not cover any liability for . . . damage to property in charge of the assured” does not affect Moore’s acquired status as an insured. As such he receives the full coverage, and nothing in section 415 or the Supreme Court’s interpretation of it suggests that he is to get less.
We do not believe that the provision in the policy excludes liability as to property owned by the named insured necessarily when the automobile is operated by a permissive user. The exclusion reads: “This policy does not apply:
*19
...(f) under coverage B, to injury to or destruction of (1) property owned by or rented to the insured. ...” But, here, Moore, the permissive user, did not own the car. He became an additional assured under the policy by operation of law. Moore damaged Hacker’s car; Moore is liable; the policy protects him because the damaged car was not “property owned” by him but by Hacker. We construe the policy against the insurer because it “ ‘prepared the policy’ ”
(Narver
v.
California State Life Ins. Co.
(1930)
We believe that the purpose of the relevant financial responsibility law has been to place responsibility upon car owners for accidents involving such owners and permissive users. The ever increasing fatality and injury resulting from the congestion of the highways have compelled legislation to afford protection to the victim and corresponding obligation upon the owner. The cases uniformly call for broad and liberal interpretation of such legislation.
(Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co., supra,
We affirm the judgment.
Bray, P. J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
Vehicle Code section 415: 1 ‘ Requisites of Motor Vehicle Liability Policy, (a) A ‘motor vehicle liability policy,’ as used in this code means a policy of liability insurance issued by an insurance carrier . . . to or for the benefit of the person named therein as assured, which policy shall meet the following requirements:
“ (2) Such policy shall insure the person named therein and any other person using or responsible for the use of said motor vehicle or motor vehicles with the express or implied permission of said assured.
“(3) [Establishes the financial responsibility limits of $5,000 and $10,000 for bodily injury and $1,000 for damage to the property of others. All policies must contain this minimum coverage.]
“(d) Any liability policy issued hereunder need not cover any liability for . . . damage to property in charge of the assured or the assured’s employees or agents.’’ (Stats. 1943, ch. 911, §12, pp. 2761, 2767-2768.)
Vehicle Code section 402: “Liability of Private Owners, (a) Every owner of a motor vehicle is liable and responsible for . . . injury to person or property resulting from negligence in the operation of such motor vehicle ... by any person using or operating the same with the permission, express or implied, of such owner, and the negligence of such shall be to the owner for all of civil damages.
“(b) [Such liability is limited to $5,000 for injury to one person, $10,000 for any accident and $5,000 for damage to property of others.] ’ ’ (Stats. 1951, ch. 1469, § 1, pp. 3447, 3448.)
In 1957 the Legislature amended section 415 to provide as follows: "Requisites of Motor Vehicle Liability Policy, (a) A ‘motor vehicle liability policy,’ as used in this chapter means an owner’s policy or an operator’s policy, or both, of liability insurance, certified, as provided in Section 414 as proof of ability to respond in damages, issued by an insurance carrier authorized to transact such business in this State to or for the benefit of the person named therein as assured.” (Emphasis added to indicate changes; Stats. 1957, ch. 1654, § 1, p. 3034; cf. Stats. 1943, eh. 911, $ 12, pp. 2761, 2767.)
This amendment introduced into section 415, for the first time, a requirement of certification.
A hearing was granted by the Supreme Court on January 17, 1962. The final opinion of that court is reported in
In 1959 the Legislature drastically revised the Vehicle Code. An examination of the new sections, sections 16450 and those following, may indicate that the Legislature did intend to create two types of policies, an “owner’s policy” and a “motor vehicle liability policy.” Section 415, as enacted in 1956, did not contain such language. (See Stats. 1943, ch. 911, § 12, pp. 2761, 2767.) In 1956, section 415 provided that a “ ‘motor vehicle liability policy’ . . . means a policy of liability insurance issued by an insurance carrier ... to or for the benefit of the person named therein as assured, which policy shall meet the following requirements. ...” (Stats. 1943, ch. 911, § 12, pp. 2761, 2767.) This language shows no intention to narrowly define such a policy.
