Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant Southern Counties Gas Company entered after said defendant’s general demurrer to the first amended complaint had been sustained withоut leave to amend.
Plaintiffs sought damages for the loss of their “Caterpillar *350 D8 tractor equipped with a Bulldozer 8S blade attachment and No. 29 Cable Control attachment; . . . hereinafter . . . rеferred to as plaintiffs’ bulldozer.” They had rented it to certain ranch owners and it was totally destroyed by fire after striking and puncturing a high-pressure gas pipeline less than 15 inches under the surface of the ranch property. The amended complaint is in two counts. Count one concerns only the alleged negligence of the ranch owners in the operation of the bulldozer over the pipeline when they should have known its location. Count two concerns only the alleged negligence of the gas company in permitting its pipeline to remain so neаr the surface of the ground.
The general demurrer of the gas company (the only defendant named in count two) was sustained on the ground that plaintiffs had affirmatively pleaded their own cоntributory negligence by alleging negligence on the part of the ranch overseer in count one, which negligence is imputed to plaintiffs, as owners of the bulldozer, under section 402 of the Vehicle Code. That section provides: “Every owner of a motor vehicle is liable and responsible for the . . . injury to . . . 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 person shall be imputed to the owner for all purposes of civil damages.”
Plaintiffs contend: (1) That their bulldozer may not properly be classified as a motor vehicle so as to permit the imputation of negligence as provided by said section 402; but (2) even if section 402 does apply so as to permit such imputation, the allegations of negligence of the ranch overseer in count one are not available to defeat plaintiffs’ separately stated cause of action against the gas company in count two. On the other hand, the gas company claims: (1) That plaintiffs’ bulldozer cоnstitutes a motor vehicle within the meaning of the Vehicle Code so as to justify the imputation of negligence under section 402; and (2) that such negligence as shown in count one amounts to an аffirmative pleading of plaintiffs’ own contributory negligence so as to defeat plaintiffs’ claim against the gas company though separately stated in count two. The gas company cites the general rule that a complaint which shows on its face contributory negligence is demurrable.
(Routh
v.
Quinn,
In
Behling
v.
County of Los Angeles, 139
Cal.App.2d 684 [
Count one of the amended complaint alleges the negligence of the ranch overseer, the agent of plaintiffs’ bailees, in the operation of plaintiffs’ bulldozer, and such negligence is
*352
imputable to plaintiffs as the “owner of a motor vehicle . . . for all purposes of civil damages.” (Veh. Code, § 402.) Manifestly, the phrase
“all
purposes of civil damages” indicates application of the statute to “all eases where the rights and obligations of the owner arе involved in civil actions for damages”
(Milgate
v.
Wraith,
But a plaintiff may plead inconsistent causes of action in separate counts of a single complaint.
(Steiner
v.
Rowley,
There are exceptional instances where the allegations
*353
of one count have been considered in connection with the allegations оf another count in ruling on a demurrer. Thus a common count may be joined with a count wherein all of the facts are specially pleaded; and if the count containing the specific facts is demurrable, so is the common count which is obviously based on the same set of facts.
(Orloff
v.
Metropolitan Trust Co.,
Here the gas company alone is named defendant in count two, and only its alleged negligencе is involved in count two. Count two does not concern the alleged negligence of the ranch owners, which rests on a different premise for the recovery of damages as stated in count one. In short, the two counts in their respective separate statements of alleged negligence—that of the ranch owners, on the one hand, and that of the gas company, on the other—indicate that plaintiffs are in doubt as to which defendants should be held liable for the damages sustained, and for that reason plaintiffs have elected to set forth their two сauses of action in the one complaint. Plaintiffs may do this under the right of joinder of defendants afforded by our system of code pleading (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 379a, 379b, and 379c;
Kraft
v.
Smith,
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to overrule the general demurrer of defendant gas company to the amended complaint and to allow said defendant a reasonable time within which to answer.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Traynor, J., Schauer J., McComb, J., and Peters, J., concurred.
Notes
A rehearing was granted on April 17, 1959, and a hearing was granted by the Supreme Court on September 16, 1959.
