Opinion
Plaintiff Nellie G. Monroe (wife) appeals from the order granting a summary judgment in favor of her husband Charles H. Monroe (husband) in an action for damages for personal injuries she sustained in an automobile accident. The wife, a passenger, was injured when the vehicle driven by her coowner husband collided with another vehicle. She charges the husband with negligence, causing her injuries.
Based upon the admitted facts of coownership, the express language of Vehicle Code section 17158 and the authority of
Schwalbe
v.
Jones,
Discussion
Vehicle Code section 17158 provides: “No person riding in or occupying a vehicle owned by him and driven by another person with his permission has any right of action for civil damages against the driver of the vehicle or against any other person legally liable for the conduct of the driver on account of personal injury to or the death of the owner during the ride, unless the plaintiff in any such action establishes that the injury or death proximately resulted from the intoxication or willful misconduct of the driver.” (Italics added.)
The wife contends this section is unconstitutional. It “creates a denial of equal protection” when applied to persons who own a vehicle as community property. The wife also asserts this subsidiary contention: She did not grant permission to her husband to drive the coowned automobile.
The husband relied (and could with good reason do so when this matter was before the trial court) upon the decision in
Schwalbe
v.
Jones, supra,
The section violates state and federal equal protection standards “by singling out, from the wide range of automobile accident victims, one narrow class—injured passengers who happen to own the car in which they are injured—and barring this, and only this, class of victims from obtaining recoveiy from drivers who negligently caused their injuries.” (Id., at p. 843.)
In
Cooper
v.
Bray, supra,
The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court actions, reasoning: “Section 17158 divides injured automobile passengers into two classes, passengers who own the vehicle in which they are injured and passengers who do not own the vehicle, and deprives those injured persons who fall into the owner-passenger category of the traditional legal right to sue the driver of the vehicle for negligently inflicted damages, preserving an owner-passenger’s recovery only in situations in which his injuries proximately result from the driver’s intoxication or willful misconduct.”
(id.,
at p. 848) and relied upon the
Brown
v.
Merlo,
Mrs. Monroe sits legally in the same seat as did Mrs. Cooper excepting only the marriage relationship of the Monroes. To deny a spouse—and *392 for that reason alone—the legal rights enjoyed by every other class of automobile victim would give new life to a statutory denial of equal protection more blatant than those laid to rest in Brown v. Merlo, supra, and Cooper v. Bray, supra.
The anachronistic theory of the identity of spouses has had a lingering yet certain demise. It was buried by the California Supreme Court in its holding a spouse can sue the other for an intentional or negligent personal tort.
(Selfv. Self,
Judgment reversed.
Cologne, Acting P. J., and Wiener, J., concurred.
