Defendants Cannon-Schaefer Agency, a copartnership, and Fred J. Cannon, one of the partners, appeal from summary judgment rendered against them in favor of plaintiffs Meyer Koulish Co., Inc., and Arthur Nass, respectively.
Defendants were manufacturers’ agents. Plaintiffs separately shipped certain jewelry from New York to Los Angeles on consignment to defendant Cannon-Schaefer Agency *423 and both defendants are charged with and admit receipt of the jewelry upon and pursuant to the terms and provisions of consignment memoranda sent them by plaintiffs. These memoranda place the risk of loss from all hazards upon defendants until the return of the jewelry to plaintiffs. On March 4, 1957, while Mr. Cannon was on a sales trip, his trunk which contained the consigned jewelry was stolen from the baggage room of the Southern Pacific station at Tucson, Arizona, while the trunk was still checked on the railroad claim ticket. The theft was not due to any fault or negligence on the part of Cannon.
The complaint alleged three causes of action on behalf of each plaintiff. The first cause of action was for breach of contract, based upon the memoranda. The second cause of action was based on alleged conversion, and the third cause of action upon alleged negligence. Prior to the time plaintiffs made their motion for summary judgment, they dismissed their causes of action based on alleged negligence and conversion, and thereafter relied solely on the cause of action based upon the memorandum receipts and the non-return of the merchandise.
In defense of the action defendants pleaded that plaintiffs were fully reimbursed for their loss by plaintiffs’ insurance company and that thereby the claims of plaintiffs growing out of said losses have been fully paid and discharged, and that the said insurance company or companies do not have any greater equities in the premises than do the answering defendants, the property in question having been stolen without fault or neglect of the defendants.
Plaintiffs’ attorney admitted in open court that this suit was actually a subrogation claim asserted by plaintiffs’ insurance company in the names of plaintiffs.
Appellants’ first contention on this appeal is that neither an insurance company nor a reimbursed insured can recover against anyone other than a wrongdoer who caused the loss. This affirmative defense was tried by the court, under the provisions of section 597, Code of Civil Procedure, prior to the trial of any other issue. The court ruled that this was not a proper defense.
“The principle on which the right of subrogation is founded applies in all eases in which one person, not a volunteer, pays a debt for which another is primarily answerable, and which, in equity and good conscience, should have *424 been discharged by the latter. 1 The principle is applied in favor of those who are legally bound to pay debts of others, such as sureties, guarantors, and insurers.” (46 Cal.Jur.2d, Subrogation, §3, p. 69.) “Furthermore, the equitable doctrine of subrogation will be liberally applied to promote justice.” 2 (46 Cal.Jur.2d, Subrogation, § 3, p. 71.) (Italics added.)
“An insurer, on paying the amount of the loss on the property insured, is subrogated in a corresponding amount to the insured’s right' of action against any other person responsible for the loss. The right of the insurer against the wrongdoer does not rest on any relation of contract or privity between them, but arises out of the nature of the contract of insurance as a contract of indemnity.” (46 Cal.Jur.2d, Subrogation, §4, p. 74.)
“ [A]s between master and servant and their respective insurers, the master has a right of indemnification against the servant who has negligently caused an injury for which the master has had to pay, and principles of subrogation afford this same right to the master’s insurer against that of the servant. The principle involved may be applied as well where the party insured by the plaintiff has a right of indemnification against another by contract. The' fact that the right arises from agreement rather than from tort is immaterial. In other words, one who has a superior equity growing out of contract may enforce it by way of subrogation though that contract was made with a third party.” 3 (46 Cal.Jur.2d, Subrogation, § 13, p. 99.) (Italics added.)
Appellants rely upon eases holding that an insurer upon a fidelity bond may not pursue subrogation from a bank for a loss sustained by the insured employer when the bank made payment on a check forged by an employee.
The cases of
Meyers
v.
Bank of America etc. Assn.,
The true nature of subrogation in regard to insurance companies is set forth in the California case of
Offer
v.
Superior Court,
In the same ease the court cites with approval the annotation in connection with
Mobile Insurance Co.
v.
Columbia & G. R.R. Co.,
When the insurer reimbursed the plaintiffs Koulish and Nass for their loss, it thereby became subrogated to all of the rights of the plaintiffs in relation to this loss. The fact that the right was a contractual one, rather than a right founded in tort, in no way affects the result that after payment by the insurer the right of recovery which originally vested in the insured now vests in the insurer.
American Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Seaboard Surety Co.,
155 Cal.
*426
App.2d 192 [
The case of
United States Fidelity
&
Guaranty Co.
v.
Slifkin
(N.D.Ala. 1961)
The court in the
Slifkin
case cited with approval the case of
Chicago, St. L. & N.O.R.R. Co.
v.
Pullman Southern Car Co.,
The case of Chicago St. L & N.O.R.R. Co. v. Pullman Southern Car Co., supra, involved an action brought by a lessor against a lessee for damages caused when leased railroad cars were destined by fire from an unknown cause. The defendant railroad company had agreed to repair all damages of every kind occasioned by accident or casualty. The railroad company urged that the plaintiff had already been reimbursed by its insurance carrier for the loss and hence it could not maintain the action. The court held that the insurance companies of the lessor were subrogated to the rights of their insured and could in the name of the *427 insured maintain an action against the railroad company for indemnity. The court further held that the liability of the railroad company was primary and that of the insurer secondary in order of ultimate liability.
In
F.H. Vahlsing, Inc.
v.
Hartford Fire Ins. Co.
(Tex. Civ. App.)
Both the
Pullman
and the
Vahlsing
cases are cited with approval in the ease of
Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co.
v.
Cooney
(9th Cir. 1962)
“The agreement in the Pullman case would seem to have created a bailment of the sleeping cars; if not, a relationship existed which was very close to that of bailor and bailee. ‘ (Bailment) may be comprehensively defined as a delivery of personalty for some particular purpose, or on mere deposit, upon a contract, express or implied, that after the purpose has been fulfilled it shall be redelivered to the person who delivered it, or otherwise dealt with according to his directions, or kept until he reclaims it, as the case may be, , . . The object of bailment may be as various as the *428 transactions of men. ’ 8 C.J.S., Bailments, § 1, pp. 222, 225.” (P. 260.)
The jewelry in the instant case well may be said to come under the definition of bailment as given above, and thereby to come within the rule of the Pullman and Cooney cases, supra.
Cooney also quotes from In re Future Manufacturing Coop. (N.D. Cal.) 165 F. Supp. Ill, at page 113: “ ‘Thus the prevailing rule is that an insurer upon indemnifying an insured mortgagee for the loss of his interest in destroyed mortgaged property is entitled to be subrogated to the mortgagee’s right to enforce payment of the mortgagor’s debt. Shippers’ insurers, upon payment for goods lost or damaged in transit, have usually been subrogated to the shippers’ contractual rights against the carrier. Insurers of leased property, upon paying the lessor for loss or damage to the property, are ordinarily subrogated to his rights against a lessee who has contracted to keep the property in good repair or to indemnify the lessor for loss or damage. ’ ” The court concludes: “Cooney’s agreement to accept full liability as an insurer for the Exchange property entrusted to its care and custody brings the instant ease within the ambit of the rules permitting subrogation.” (P. 261.)
Appellants herein rely upon eases holding that an insurer upon a bond indemnifying an employer against defalcations of an employee may not recover by way of subrogation from the employer’s bank for a loss sustained by the employer arising from the bank’s payment of checks forged by the employee. However, in one of these eases,
American Surety Co.
v.
Bank of California
(9th Cir. 1943)
Here appellants accepted primary liability by written agreement, bringing this case within the rule of the
Pullman
and
Cooney
eases rather than the suretyship rule followed
*429
in
American Surety Co.
v.
Bank of California, supra,
“It is true that subrogation is an equitable doctrine, and in the suretyship and vendor-vendee cases the courts have relied upon equitable considerations in denying subrogation. ’ ’ (Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co. v. Cooney, supra, p. 261.)
Appellants were parties to an express contract whereby they assumed responsibility for the loss of the goods of respondents. They thereby accepted primary liability and it cannot be said that appellants stand on equal footing with the insurance company. The equities in this matter do not balance but preponderate in favor of the insurer of the bailor.
The trial court properly ruled that defendants’ first affirmative defense was not a proper defense to plaintiffs’ suit for breach of contract and that the insurance company was properly subrogated to plaintiffs’ contract claim against defendants.
Defendants also contend that the provisions of section 597, Code of Civil Procedure, were improperly invoked.
An order was granted for a special trial, pursuant to plaintiffs’ motion under section 597 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as to the special defense of whether or not the plaintiffs had any rights against the defendants in view of allegedly having been recompensed fully by way of policies of insurance covering the plaintiffs for the alleged losses which were the subject matter of the actions, and whether the insurance company or companies which so paid the plaintiffs, had a greater equity and right of recovery than did the answering defendants in view of the allegation that the property, which was in the defendants’ care, custody and control, was stolen, lost or otherwise disappeared without fault on the part of the defendants.
Section 597 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “When the answer pleads . . . , or sets up any other defense not involving the merits of the plaintiff’s cause of action but constituting a bar or ground of abatement to the prosecution thereof, the court may, upon the motion of either party, proceed to the trial of such special defense or defenses before the trial of any other issue in the ease. . . .” (Italics added.)
A definition of the word “merits” is found in 57 Corpus Juris Secundum, page 1070: “If taken in its ordinary *430 acceptation, the word ‘merits’ would mean the abstract justice of the case, without regard to any technical or arbitrary rules of law. However, it has been said that a better definition would be to consider it as meaning the combined questions of law and fact presented by the pleadings of the case. ... As a technical legal term, ‘merits’ is defined as meaning the various elements which enter into or qualify the plaintiff's right to the relief sought; matter of substance, as distinguished from matter of form or technicality. . . . ” Since it was established without controversy prior to trial that this ease is one of subrogation, the determination of plaintiffs’ right to pursue was not merely defensive matter but definitely involved the merits of the causes of action alleged by the plaintiffs.
It was therefore improper for the trial court to have ordered a special trial under section 597, but this in and of itself would not constitute reversible error. The California Constitution provides, in article VI, section 4%, that no judgment may be set aside or new trial granted for error that does not, in the opinion of the reviewing court, result in a miscarriage of justice.
The trial court has the power to regulate the order of proof under section 2042 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and section 597 does not add a great deal to this power.
(Booth
v.
Bond,
Defendants also contend that error was committed in the trial of the special defense, because this was done after an improper denial of defendants’ motion for a trial by jury. It was only as to the trial of the equitable defense that the court denied defendants’ motion for a trial by jury. The right of trial by jury in civil actions is not an absolute right that extends to all cases but one that extends only to those cases where a right to trial by jury would have existed at common law at the time the California Constitution was adopted.
(People
v.
One
1941
Chevrolet Coupe,
In
Asamen
v.
Thompson,
That the defense offered in the case at bar is of a purely equitable character in its essentials is discernible from the case of
Offer
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Defendants allege that the absence of findings of fact and conclusions of law requires reversal of the judgment. This contention is not well taken.
The reviewing court in the case of
Crofoot
v.
Crofoot,
The court orally ruled that the affirmative defense was not well taken, entered a minute order to that effect, and proceeded to trial of the remaining issues. Plaintiffs moved to *432 strike all their causes of action except the two sounding in breach of contract. The court granted said motion. Plaintiffs then moved for a summary judgment.
The fact that a summary judgment was granted to the plaintiffs and therefore there was no trial of a question of fact on the other issues cannot be said to place upon the trial court the necessity of making findings. A summary judgment does not contemplate or connote findings of fact; there is no power in the court to make them
(Weichman
v.
Vetri,
Defendants’ contention in regard to plaintiffs’ alleged waiver of their right to recover from defendants for breach of contract is unfounded. Waiver is an affirmative defense that must be pleaded with specificity and separately stated. In pleading waiver the defendant must set forth the facts upon which he bases his claim of waiver. This was not done.
(Calhoun
v.
Davis,
The parties have agreed that certain items of merchandise described in exhibits A and B to plaintiffs’ complaint were delivered to defendants; that receipt of the jewelry was pursuant to the conditions and provisions set forth upon the consignment memorandum; that the plaintiffs were notified by said answering defendants that the jewelry had been lost, stolen, or otherwise disappeared; that those items of jewelry that were in the care, custody and control of the defendants pursuant to the consignment memoranda, attached as exhibits A and B to plaintiffs’ complaint, were not paid for or returned to the plaintiffs; that at the time of delivery to the named defendants and acceptance thereof by them of said items of jewelry, said items were in good condition and free from damage or defect and were of the reasonable value of $6,685.16. All the necessary requisites for the proof of breach of contract are admitted by the parties; therefore, there was no actual triable issue of fact. Granting plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment was proper.
Defendants contend that the amount of damages was in dispute and this issue should go to the jury.
Defendants admit, in the “matter of fact agreed upon” as set forth in the pretrial conference order, that
*433
the value of the jewelry which was not paid for or returned was $6,685.16. Defendants admit, and it is well settled law, that the pretrial order will control inconsistent pleadings. (California Rules of Court, rule 216
*
;
Baird
v.
Modson,
However, the judgment for plaintiff Nass was $5,790.16, which was $900 more than the prayer for damages in his complaint. The trial judge erroneously concluded that the “agreed value” of $6,685.16
4
was in conflict with plaintiffs’ prayer for damages and that the pretrial order would thereby control. There is no conflict here. The “matters of fact agreed upon” simply state the value of the jewelry when received by defendants, not that plaintiffs were damaged in that amount. The court stated, in
Taylor
v.
S. & M. Lamp Co.,
*434
Here, none of the four procedures was followed, for neither was the complaint amended nor was the issue of damages reformed and set forth in the pretrial order. Therefore, plaintiff is limited in his recovery to that amount prayed for in his complaint. In the absence of an amendment to conform to proof, the court may not properly award plaintiff damages in excess of the amount of damages which he claims to have sustained,
(Meisner
v.
McIntosh,
The judgment is affirmed as to plaintiff Koulish, but as to plaintiff Nass the judgment is hereby modified so as to conform with the amount prayed for in his complaint, to wit, $4,890.16, plus interest. Appeal from order granting summary judgment dismissed.
(Chilson
v.
P.G. Industries,
Pox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
Notes
Meyers
v.
Bank of America etc. Assn.,
The doctrine of subrogation has been held available to those who pay in the performance of a legal duty imposed by contract or rules of law.
(Fresno Investment Co.
v.
Brandon,
American Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Seahoard Surety Co.,
Matters of fact agreed upon in pretrial conference order: “... 5. That those items of jewelry that were in the care, custody and control of the defendants, pursuant to the consignment memorandums plead as Exhibits to plaintiffs’ complaint, were not paid for or returned to the plaintiffs. 6. That at time of delivery to the named defendants and acceptance thereof by them of said items of jewelry, said items were in good condition and free from damage or defects and were of the reasonable value of $6,685.16.”
Formerly Rules for the Superior Courts, rule 8.8.
