Defendant Kershaw appeals from an order denying his motion for satisfaction of a judgment against him.
On July 15, 1958, defendant Benardo, while driving an automobile owned by defendant Kershaw, was involved in an accident with the pedestrian plaintiff. Benardo was a minor and his driver’s license application had been signed and verified by his mother, defendant Esther Halfon. Plaintiff sued the minor operator, the owner and the parent-signer and recovered judgment for $19,000. Pursuant to stipulation the judgment against the owner, defendant Kershaw, was limited to $5,000, and the judgment against the parent-signer, defendant Halfon, was limited to $5,000. The judgment reads *342 in part: “It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said plaintiff, Kathe Heves, have and recover from said defendants Edward Benardo, a minor, . . . and Robert Kershaw, . . . jointly and severally, the sum of $5,000.00; from said defendants Edward Benardo, a minor, . . . and Esther Halfon, jointly and severally, the additional sum of $5,000.00; and from said defendant Edward Benardo, a minor, . . . the additional sum of $9,000.00.”
On August 26, 1960, the sum of $10,000 was paid to plaintiff and she acknowledged satisfaction of the judgment against defendant Halfon in the amount of $5,000 and acknowledged a partial satisfaction against defendant Benardo in the sum of $10,000. The partial satisfaction reads: “Plaintiff hereby acknowledges full satisfaction as against the defendant Esther Halfon against whom the judgment was in the sum of $5,000.00, and acknowledges a partial satisfaction against the defendant Edward Benardo in the sum of $10,000.00 plus costs in the sum of $159.70. The sum of $9,000.00 on the judgment of $19,159.70 remains outstanding and unsatisfied, $5,000.00 of which is against defendant Robert Kershaw.”
While the record does not show who made the payment of $10,000, it is conceded that this payment was not made by defendant Kershaw.
Defendant Kershaw contends that payment by one tortfeasor on a judgment against several tortfeasors should be a credit as to each tortfeasor in the total amount of the payment. On the other hand, plaintiff contends that the liability of the owner to the injured party is direct and primary, and no payment having been made by the owner, no satisfaction of judgment should be ordered.
The question presented is whether after the application of the first $5,000 to satisfy the joint liability of the parent-signer and operator ($5,000), the remaining $5,000 should be applied to satisfy the joint liability of owner and operator ($5,000) or should be applied on account of the separate additional liability ($9,000) of operator alone.
In our opinion the joint liability created by the judgment against the owner and operator must be satisfied before any payment is used to satisfy the additional individual or several liability portion of the judgment against the operator.
We do not think the case of
Sawyer
v.
Zacavich,
We agree with the Sawyer case and if only a $5,000 payment had been made here (presumably by the parent) it would have satisfied only the joint liability of the parent and operator (as to $5,000) and left the liability of the owner outstanding because that liability, as held in Sawyer, is separate and cumulative.
In the instant case, the sum of $10,000 was paid and this is sufficient to pay both the joint liability of parent-signer and operator ($5,000) and the joint liability of owner and operator ($5,000). These two joint liabilities must be satisfied before there is any application of the payment to the individual liability of the operator.
The code sections dealing with the statutory liability of the owner (based upon imputed negligence) indicate the legislative intent to satisfy the joint liability of owner and operator before satisfaction of the individual and separate liability of the operator. At the time of the accident involved here, July 15,1958, section 402, subdivision (a) (now § 17150) of the Vehicle Code provided for the statutory liability of the *344 owner based upon imputed negligence. Section 402, subdivision (b) (now § 17151) limited the owner’s liability to $5,000. Section 402, subdivision (e) (now § 17152) provided that in any action against operator and owner, “Upon recovery of judgment, recourse shall first be had against the property of said operator. ...” Section 402, subdivision (d) (now § 17153) provided that the owner is subrogated to all rights of the injured party and may recover from the operator the total amount of any judgment recovered against the owner.
The intent of these sections is to make it clear that as between operator and owner, the primary liability is that of the operator and the liability of the owner is secondary. The owner’s liability is like that of a guarantor as to the $5,000 joint liability of owner and operator. Hence, any payment made by the operator (the minor driver in this case) must be applied first to satisfy the liability of the guarantor. This is in no way prejudicial to the rights of the injured party as far as the collection of this joint liability of owner and operator is concerned. Such joint liability must be satisfied before application of any payments to the separate and additional liability of the operator beyond the amount of the owner’s liability.
It should be emphasized that there is no conflict here as to priority of satisfaction of judgment as between the parent-signer and the owner. That part of the judgment dealing with the liability of the parent-signer having been satisfied, and there being no question on this appeal as to the propriety of the satisfaction against the parent-signer, we are only concerned with the priority of satisfaction as between owner and operator.
While the liability imposed by section 17150 of the Vehicle Code upon the owner is a primary and direct liabiliity insofar as the injured party is concerned, it is nevertheless secondary as between such owner and the person operating the car with his permission.
(Broome
v.
Kern Valley Packing Co.,
In passing, it may be noted that these rights of subrogation and recourse are given to the owner and not to the parent-signer.
*345
It is clear that the joint liability of owner and operator, which is that part of the judgment being examined here is that of joint tortfeasors. As to this phase of the question, the case relied upon by defendant Kershaw,
Bernstein
v.
Siegel,
As to the recognition of the rule that payment by one joint tortfeasor may be used as a credit on the liability of another, see 2 Witlcin, Summary of California Law (7th ed. 1960)
*346
Torts, section 18, page 1187;
Laurenzi
v.
Vranizan,
In our opinion the recognition of the priority of satisfaction of judgment in favor of the owner as against the operator does not prejudice the legal rights of plaintiff, the injured party. While the liability to the injured party is direct
(Broome
v.
Kern Valley Packing Co.,
In the instant case the injured party should not have the right to so apply payments made by the operator as to keep alive the liability of the owner until the last $5,000 is paid on account of the total sum of the judgment. While it might be more convenient for plaintiff to credit the several liabilities of the operator and to keep alive the joint statutory liability of the owner, this would not be consistent with the rights as between owner and operator, particularly the right of recourse given to the owner against the operator (Veh. Code, § 402, subd. (e), now §17152).
Considering the rights of all the parties, as clearly established by the statutes, the payment of $10,000 here, which has been acknowledged by plaintiff, must be applied to satisfy the joint and several liability ($5,000) of defendants Benardo (operator) and Esther Halfon (parent-signer), and the joint and several liability ($5,000) of defendants Benardo (operator) and Kershaw (owner), leaving unsatisfied the additional *347 and separate liability of defendant Benardo (operator) in the sum of $9,000.
The order of the trial court denying defendant Kershaw’s motion to compel satisfaction of the judgment against him is reversed and the trial court is directed to enter full satisfaction of the judgment against said defendant.
Burke, P. J., and Jefferson, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 14, 1962.
