We granted this interlocutory appeal to examine a request that we abandon our rule requiring common liability as a prerequisite to contribution and indemnity. We decline to modify our rule and accordingly reverse the trial court’s ruling.
June 25, 1984, plaintiff Michael Rees, his wife and child joined as plaintiffs in a petition at law seeking damages from Dallas County. They alleged that on the evening of May 12, 1984, Michael was severely injured when his motorcycle left a Dallas County road. The petition alleged fifteen specifications of negligence on the county’s part, including unsafe road design, failure to warn, failure to erect signs, improper maintenance, and failure to illuminate. The county answered, denying all negligence and affirmatively alleging Michael was drunk, speeding, and driving negligently.
July 3, 1984, Dallas County filed a third party petition against Ernest and Mona Barnes (Barnes) as third party defendants. This petition alleged Barnes were proprietors of the tavern at which Michael became intoxicated on the evening of May 12. The county asked for indemnity or contribution from Barnes in the event it was found liable to “plaintiff Michael Rees.” The county did not pray for contribution or indemnity in the event it was found liable to the other plaintiffs.
Barnes filed a motion to dismiss the third party petition. They asserted an immunity from Michael’s suit because Iowa Code section 123.92 negated the common liability necessary to support an action for contribution. The district court for Dallas County overruled the motion to dismiss. We granted Barnes’ application for interlocutory appeal.
This appeal presents a single question: May a defendant in a negligence action maintain an action for contribution or indemnity from a dram shop operator who defendant alleges served plaintiff alcoholic beverages to the point of intoxication?
The parties apparently take the following position with respect to the applicable law. Michael’s petition was filed shortly before the July 1, 1984, effective date of Iowa Code chapter 668 (Liability in Tort — Comparative Fault). Therefore,
Goetzman v. Wichern,
I. Iowa has long adhered to the commonly accepted theory that contribution is available between concurrent tort-feasors only when those tortfeasors have a common liability to the injured party.
See Thompson v. Stearns Chemical Corp.,
In Iowa, a bar patron may not sue a dram shop operator for the injuries the patron suffers as a result of his or her own drunkenness.
Robinson v. Bognanno,
Iowa Code chapter 668 preserves the common liability rule. Section 668.5(1) provides:
A right of contribution exists between or among two or more persons who are liable upon the same indivisible claim for the same injury, death, or harm, whether or not judgment has been recov-' ered against all or any of them. It may be enforced either in the original action or by a separate action brought for that purpose.
(Emphasis added.) The county has no right of contribution under this statute because Barnes are not liable for Michael’s injuries under any claim.
The county relies heavily on
Federated Mutual Implement & Hardware Insurance Co. v. Dunkelberger,
Support for the county’s argument is found in decisions from those jurisdictions that have relaxed the common liability rule in the workers’ compensation context to allow a third party to seek contribution from a negligent employer.
See, e.g., Lambertson v. Cincinnati Corp.,
II. Our Iowa decisions have identified four bases for recovering indemnity: (1) express contract, (2) vicarious liability, (3) breach of an independent duty of indem-nitor to indemnitee, and (4) secondary as opposed to primary liability (active-passive negligence).
Sweeny v. Pease,
Indemnity based on express contract, vicarious liability, or breach of an independent duty focuses on the relationship between the indemnitor and indemnitee. In
*506
contrast, indemnity based on the active-passive negligence dichotomy focuses on the relationship between the injured party on the one hand and the indemnitor and in-demnitee on the other. For this reason, indemnity based on active-passive negligence has been called “an extreme form of contribution.”
Iowa Power & Light Co.,
Neither
Thompson
nor this ease has presented the issue whether, following recognition of comparative fault in
Goetzman
and its codification in Iowa Code chapter 668, indemnity based on the troublesome active-passive negligence theory should still be recognized.
2
The concept apparently evolved from an effort to avoid the harshness of the old rule prohibiting contribution between joint tortfeasors.
Loose v. Offshore Navigation, Inc.,
It is sufficient for resolution of this controversy to note that in any event the common liability rule applies to foreclose indemnity as well as contribution.
See Iowa Power & Light Co.,
Iowa Code chapter 668 does not directly address the question of indemnity. Because indemnity based on active-passive negligence is a form of contribution, section 668.5(1) is relevant to our analysis. That section preserves the common liability requirement. We conclude that to allow indemnity based on active-passive negligence in the absence of common liability would be inconsistent with the statutory scheme of chapter 668.
The county’s argument against applying the common liability rule to indemnity based on active-passive negligence is founded on Goetzman and the concerns with “fairness” said to have animated that decision. We considered and rejected that rationale in Thompson and are not persuaded to accept it now.
The district court erred in overruling Barnes’ motion to dismiss the county’s third party petition. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court must be reversed.
REVERSED.
Notes
. We note that in 1973 legislation was enacted to prohibit the intoxicated person’s insurer from obtaining contribution from a dram shop operator. See Iowa Code § 123.94 (1973).
.
See Tolbert v. Gerber Indus., Inc.,
Aside from the difficulty of deciding which conduct constitutes passive negligence and which is active negligence, it is indisputable
that in some circumstances passive negligence is much more reprehensible than active negligence. Quite naturally courts have recoiled from a result that would shift the entire responsibility for the occurrence to a less reprehensible tortfeasor. They have looked to comparative fault where that doctrine was available.
Id. at 62-63.
