OPINION
In March 1973 a student was seriously injured while using a trampoline at a Phoenix high school. Suit was brought against the Phoenix Union High School District. Two theories of liability were presented: (1) that the District was negligent in permitting the use by students of something so dangerous as a trampoline; and (2) that two coaches, defendants Beeson and Imp-son, were negligent in allowing the particular student to use the trampoline given the facts known to them. On the eve of trial, the case was settled by the insurer for the District, plaintiff Industrial Indemnity Company. It sought what it termed indemnification or contribution from the insurer of the coaches, defendant Horace Mann Mutual Insurance Co., and recovered $257,-000. On appeal, Division One of this court reversed that judgment, ruling that indemnification was unavailable against one’s own insured, as the coaches were under the District’s policy, and remanded for a determination whether equitable contribution was available against Horace Mann.
Industrial Indemnity Co. v. Beeson,
In a situation unique to indemnification law, some courts have held that a showing of potential liability is sufficient where the indemnitor has received notice and an opportunity to defend.
Parfait v. Jahncke Service, Inc.,
Horace Mann also asserts that it cannot be liable if the trampoline injury was the result of the negligence of both the coaches and the District because that would permit contribution among joint tortfeasors, forbidden at the time of this action by Arizona law. But this assertion rests on the flawed premise that an insurer of two tortfeasors is to be treated, when seeking contribution from a co-insurer of one of the tortfeasors, as if it were the other tortfeasor. Whatever policies underlay the rule forbidding contribution between joint tortfeasors, now rejected in Arizona, they surely did not apply to those free from individual fault seeking contribution for a liability which they share in an equal amount and for the same risk. See
Arizona Joint Underwriting Plan v. Glacier General Assurance Co.,
Industrial Indemnity has moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that Horace Mann should have earlier sought special action relief. We are cited no authority for the proposition that failure to seek early relief by way of special action is a waiver of the right to appeal and we decline to adopt it. We can imagine nothing more likely to disrupt sound judicial administration than that notion. It would invite interlocutory appeals on all matters for fear of losing the right to appeal. The resulting deluge would effectively immobilize appellate courts.
The case is remanded for trial of defendants’ liability.
