This case presents the issue whether a defendant successor corporation in a products liability action is entitled to indemnity from the employer of the injured plaintiff employee. We hold that it is not and affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
*594 I
Plaintiff William L. Langley was employed by the King-Seeley Thermos Company. He was severely injured when the die-cutting press he was operating allegedly double-tripped. The press was designed, manufactured and sold by the T. W. & C. B. Sheridan Company (Old Sheridan). The Harris Corporation is the successor corporation to Old Sheridan, having purchased its entire business in 1964. 1
Langley filed suit against the Harris Corporation, among others, alleging negligence in the design and manufacture of the press and breach of express and implied warranties of merchantability and fitness. Additional counts were filed against the electrical company that repaired the press, the company that manufactured and distributed the components used to repair the press, and the KingSeeley Thermos Company, plaintiffs employer, for knowingly allowing plaintiff to operate the allegedly dangerous press.
King-Seeley filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2(1) on the ground that plaintiffs exclusive remedy against his employer was under the workers’ compensation act. 2 This motion was granted by the trial court and affirmed on appeal._
*595
Harris Corporation then filed a third-party complaint against King-Seeley for indemnity. KingSeeley moved for summary judgment to dismiss the third-party complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The motion was granted. In a per curiam opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Langley v Harris Corp,
II
Harris Corporation, third-party plaintiff-appellant, argues that in a products liability personal injury action, an alleged successor corporation which neither designed, manufactured nor sold the product involved, whose potential liability is non-voluntary, non-statutory, classic vicarious liability without personal fault, should be entitled to indemnity from an employer who negligently, maliciously and intentionally caused the injuries suffered by its employee. We note that the mere statement of the issue is cumbersome because this case involves the convergence of products liability law, workers’ compensation law, the theory of successor corporate liability, and the principle of indemnity.
In
Turner v Bituminous Casualty Co,
So characterizing its liability, Harris then argues that on the basis of the principles set forth by this Court in
Dale v Whiteman,
Indemnity relates to the obligation of one person or entity to make good a loss another has incurred while acting for its benefit or at its request. See 42 CJS, Indemnity, § 1, p 564; 41 Am Jur 2d, Indemnity, § 1, p 687. While the right frequently arises out of an express contract to indemnify, it can also *597 be based on an implied contract or be imposed by law. Resting on the equitable principles of a right to restitution and unjust enrichment, the general rule is that "[a] person who, in whole or in part, has discharged a duty which is owed by him but which as between himself and another should have been discharged by the other, is entitled to indemnity from the other, unless the payor is barred by the wrongful nature of his conduct.” Restatement Restitution, § 76, p 331.
Indemnity should be distinguished from contribution. Contribution distributes a loss among joint tortfeasors, requiring each to pay its proportionate share; indemnity shifts the entire loss from the party who has been forced to pay to the party who should properly bear the burden. See Prosser, Torts (4th ed), § 51, pp 310-313. The right to indemnity may arise, in the absence of an express agreement, to prevent a result regarded as unjust or unsatisfactory where the relationship between the parties entitles the one held liable to shift its total loss.
It has long been held in Michigan that the party seeking indemnity must plead and prove freedom from personal fault. This has been frequently interpreted to mean that the party seeking indemnity must be free from active or causal negligence.
Provencal v Parker,
The mere assertion of passive negligence, however, is not sufficient to automatically allow indemnity by Harris since the party from whom indemnity is sought is the plaintiffs employer, traditionally entitled to invoke the protection of the workers’ compensation statutes.
Workers’ compensation laws have been carefully structured to establish and define the rights and liabilities as between employer and employee. Statutory compensation is an employee’s exclusive remedy when an injury is sustained in the course of employment.
Solakis v Roberts,
This Court has allowed a third party held liable to a plaintiff employee to recover indemnity from the plaintiffs employer despite the bar of the exclusive remedy provision. In Dale v Whiteman, *599 supra, an employee of a car wash was injured by a car being driven by another employee of the car wash. The automobile’s owner was allowed to recover indemnity from the car wash owner-employer. Recovery was based on the fact that the car’s owner was without personal fault, liability arising solely because of the owner’s liability statute. The car wash owner was vicariously liable for the negligence of its employee. 4
*600
In
McLouth Steel Corp v A E Anderson Construction Corp,
While these cases demonstrate that indemnity has been allowed by the courts, it is apparent that they all present instances where the third party seeking indemnity and the employer stand in a special legal relationship which permits enforcement of indemnity without offending the exclusive remedy provision.
"Practically all authorities, including texts and Restatements, would agree that, if the indemnitee has become liable on purely technical or vicarious grounds, his constructive 'fault’ should not bar his right of indemnity against one who has saddled him with liability through genuinely tortious conduct. This would include an indemnitee made liable, for example, solely by an automobile Owner’s Liability Statute, or by a *601 nondelegable duty with respect to the condition of premises.” 2A Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 76.72, pp 14-718—14-719.
The case before us is significantly different. The crucial distinction is apparent when we examine the nature of the relationship between Harris, a successor corporation in a products liability action, and King-Seeley, the employer, for there is, in fact, no relationship on which to base the right to indemnity. Indemnity serves to shift the burden of loss when equity so requires; however, the right can only be enforced where liability arises vicariously or by operation of law from the acts of the party from whom indemnity is sought.
Harris’s relationship to King-Seeley is that of manufacturer-seller to buyer. While this may be termed a type of contractual relation, it is not one along which the obligation to indemnify can run. When a purchaser buys a product, there is no duty imposed that insures that the goods will be used in such a way as not to create liability in the manufacturer. See
Bullock v Black & Decker, Inc,
"[W]hen the relation between the parties involves no contract or special relation capable of carrying with it an implied obligation to indemnify, the basic exclusiveness rule generally cannot be defeated by dressing the remedy itself in contractual clothes, such as indemnity, since what governs is not the delictual or contractual form of the remedy but the question: is the claim 'on *602 account of the injury, or on account of a separate obligation running from the employer to the third party?” 2A Larson, supra, § 76.84, pp 14-755—14-756. 5
Decisions in the federal courts, our Court of Appeals, and other jurisdictions support this position. See
Prosky v National Acme Co,
Harris’s status as a successor corporation is the basis of its liability to plaintiff Langley. Though this liability arose solely by operation of law, we believe that to allow indemnity against the employer would impermissibly distort the Turner concept of successor liability. This is not a situation in which the equitable principles of indemnity should be allowed to penetrate the exclusive remedy provision of our workers’ compensation laws.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Notes
For a complete account of the transfer agreement, see
Turner v Bituminous Casualty Co,
MCL 418.131; MSA 17.237(131): "The right to the recovery of benefits as provided in this act shall be the employee’s exclusive remedy against the employer.”
Even when the employee alleges gross negligence on the part of the employer, if an injury is sustained in the course of employment, workers’ compensation benefits are the employee’s exclusive remedy.
Sewell v Bathey Mfg Co,
The Dale Court, after enumerating the theories upon which indemnity may be based, wrote:
"In this case, the right to indemnity might be predicated upon the theory of a bailment * * *. Or it might be implied as a part of the undertaking of Goldfarb to wash the car in a workmanlike fashion * * *. We prefer to base such right upon the equitable principle that Whiteman was without personal fault or as the United States Supreme Court reasoned in
Italia Societa per Azioni di Navigazione v Oregon Stevedoring Co, Inc, 376
US 315, 324;
The idea that "liability should fall upon the party best situated to adopt preventive measures” has been quoted as one of the basic principles of indemnity. See
Minster Machine Co v Diamond Stamping Co,
However, correlating absence of personal fault with the standard that liability should be borne by the party that is best able to adopt preventive measures erroneously elevates to a general criteria of indemnity the Supreme Court’s holding in the Italia decision. Italia was an admiralty case based on federal maritime law. A shipowner sought indemnity from a stevedore company for breach of the company’s implied warranty of workmanlike service after a defective rope, non-negligently supplied by the company, injured one of the company’s employees. The defect in the rope was latent. The Court’s decision rested on the ground that the defective rope rendered the ship unseaworthy; neither party was held to have been negligent. In the absence of negligence, the Court employed a comparative test, comparing the ability of both parties to prevent the injury. Liability was imposed where the degree of fault on the part of the company was minimal and the fault of the shipowner nonexistent.
The Court said, "recovery in indemnity for breach of the stevedore’s warranty is based upon an agreement between the shipowner and stevedore and is not necessarily affected or defeated by the shipowner’s negligence, whether active or passive, primary or secondary.” Italia, 321.
This Court has consistently held that the active negligence of a *600 party will preclude the recovery of indemnity. In cases where negligence is alleged, we reject the notion that the Italia comparative test is an appropriate consideration. See 2A Larson, Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 76.62(e), pp 14-670—14-674.
When the liability of the employer is "on account of’ the injury to the employee, workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy. If liability to indemnify arises "on account of’ the employers’ contract or relationship with the third party, the exclusive remedy clause will not preclude the action.
