*220 Opinion
On Dеcember 21, 1967, State Compensation Insurance Fund filed an action in the Municipal Court of Compton Judicial District against Clevester Williams, Jr., and various fictitiously named defendants seeking $80 plus attorney’s fees and costs as damages under Labor Code sections 3850-3864. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier for Walt Weber Machine Shop, a corporation; thаt Kenneth C. Weaver, an employee of that company, sustained injuries on December 23, 1966, in the course and scope of his employment which injuries were proximately caused by the negligence of the defendants in the operation of an automobile. The complaint alleged that plaintiff had been required to pay $80 for medical benefits and would be required to pay unknown additional amounts in the futurе, all proximately caused by the negligence of the defendants. Defendant Williams alone answered with a general denial, and pleaded contributory negligence of Weaver as an affirmative defense. On June 22, 1970, plaintiff filed a notice of motion to amend its prayer for damages, and requested the cause be transferred to the superior court. The cause was transferred and, after several sеttlement conferences in .that court, plaintiff filed a motion to file a supplemental complaint to increase the allegation of damages to $7,347.30. This motion was granted. On September 22, 1972, the court, after a nonjury trial on August 15, 1972, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Williams in the sum of $7,347.39 with interest and costs. No reference was made to attorney’s fees. Defendant filed notice of appeal from the judgment on October 26, 1972. At the time of trial the parties entered into a stipulation outlining the facts of the accident. It was a rear-end accident and as a result, “there are no mitigating circumstances insofar as contributory negligence or anything else. For all practical purposes, the accident is one for which Clevester Williams, Jr., was legally liable.” It was further stipulated that at the time of the accident Weaver was in the course and scope of his employment and pursued a cause under the workmen’s compensation law and “by reason of that cause the State Compensation Insurance Fund brings action against Williams under the appropriate labor code provisions.” Counsel for defendant then stated: “Mr. Cooksey: Finally, we are prepared to stipulate that if evidence were submitted as to the amount of the claim of the State Compensation Insurance Fund the total claim would amount to $7,347.39 but that the defendant objects to the introduction of any such evidence as measure the damages on the ground that it was a denial of due process under the California and United States Constitutions to fix the amount of Williams’ *221 damages and, for all practical purposes, in view of the liability situation, to fix his complеte liability without affording him an opportunity to be heard at the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board hearing. Therefore, the objection to the evidence is that it is irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent.”
The court overruled the objection “under compulsion of”
Board of Administration
v.
Ames,
Contention
Defendant on appeal contends that the court erred in admitting in evidence over objection the stipulation and the evidence of the award by the Wоrkmen’s Compensation Appeals Board as the basis of its assessment of damages against him and that by doing so, he has been denied due process of law because he had no right or legal opportunity to be heard before the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board which made the award, upon which plaintiff’s cause of action was based.
Discussion
We are here concerned to a degreе with questions regarding the constitutionality of California Labor Code section 3854. 1 Although respondent also discusses section 3855, we are not concerned with that section because the employee, Weaver, was not a party to the action in the court below.
As indicated, appellant contends that section 3854 violates the due process of law clauses of both the federal and state Constitutiоns because it authorizes a taking of his property without giving him an opportunity to
*222
appear before the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board and contest the issue of the amount of damages which Weaver claimed to have sustained. Respondent replies that the issue is not one of procedural due process but one of substantive due process: Was the creation of a cause of action by the Legislature a reasonable exercise of the Legislature’s authority under its police power to enact laws for the general welfare? As thus framed, what we are really concerned with is the constitutionality of section 3852.
2
Appellant does not refer to section 3852 in his brief filed herein. This section creates a new cause of action unknown at common law entirely sepаrate from the injured employee’s common law right of action for damages.
(City of Los Angeles
v.
Howard,
As was stated in
Board of Administration
v.
Ames, supra,
The court also said, at page 226: “The Labor Code subrogation provisions, . . . providing that the amount fixed by the Industrial Accident Commission as compensation for the employee may be recovered from a third party tortfeasor, have been in effect for over 40 years and their constitutionality has never been denied.”
In
Evans
v.
Los Angeles Ry. Corp.,
In
Smith
v.
County of Los Angeles,
The court also said, at pages 165-166: “The
Matulich [State Comp. Ins. Fund
v.
Matulich,
“In
Board of Administration
v.
Ames,
Smith v. County of Los Angeles, supra, stands for the proposition that in an action by the employer for indеmnity [erroneously called subrogation] against a third party tortfeasor, the measure of the employer’s damage is the amount which he is required by law [ordinance, statute or final award of the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board] to pay to the employee or his heirs.
Since the amount which the employer is required to pay the employee is legally conclusive as to the employer, it is at least to that extent conclusive as to any third party tortfeasor as evidence of the “damage” which the employer has sustained. As pointed out in Board of Administration v. Ames, supra (215 Cal.App.2d at pp. 224-225), the Supreme Court, in denying a hearing in City of Sacramento, supra, suggested that there might be situations in which an employer was entitled to additional amounts from a third party tortfeasor but as to the amount of the award which the employer was legally bound to pay by reasоn of the award of the state agency, *226 then the third party tortfeasor, if found to be liable, would be liable for at least the amount of the award since that award is at least the minimum measure of such damage.
The constitutionality of section 3852, or its earlier counterparts, has been upheld. (See
Western States etc. Co.
v.
Bayside L. Co.,
The constitutionality of workmen’s compensation laws generally has been upheld as a proper exercise of the state’s police power. (See
Mathews
v.
Workmen’s Comp. Appeals Bd., 6
Cal.3d 719 [
It is manifest that if an employer or his insurance carrier could not recover from a third party tortfeаsor the full amount of an award that the employer was required by law to pay to an employee by virtue of an order of a state agency, then the employer could not recover the “damage” which he sustained, and the object and purpose of the workmen’s compensation laws would be frustrated. The employer in such event would not have a cause of action to recover the “damage” he sustained, but merely a cause of action for something else.
It may well be that in an action by the employee against the third party tortfeasor the employee would have the burden of proving that the various items claimed were reasonable and necessarily incurred as the proximate result of the third party’s negligence. The reason for the difference is that as to the employee the amount of the award by the state agency is not an element of the employee’s damage. As to the employee, the amount of the award is an account receivable. It is not an obligation to pay. The amount of such ari award is therefore not an element of damage insofar as the employee is concerned. Insofar as the employer is concerned, such an award is an element of damage since there is no legal escape from the obligation to pay once the award becomes final.
The due process requirements of the state and federal Constitutions are satisfied insofar as the third party tortfeasor is concerned when he is accorded the opportunity to be heard on the question of his liability to pay the employer’s “damage” but once that issue of liability is determined, ad *227 versely to the third party tortfeasor, then the measure of the employer’s (or its insurer’s) legal obligation to pay the employee is at least the minimum measure of the employer’s “damage” and his claim against the third party tortfeasor.
One other point should be considered. After the parties had entered into the various stipulations above referred to, and the award of the Wоrkmen’s Compensation Appeals Board had been received in evidence, the following occurred: “The Court: Any further evidence on the part of the plaintiff? Mr. Pala: No, Your Honor. The Court: Plaintiff rests? Mr. Pala: Plaintiff rests. The Court: Further evidence on the part of the defendant? Mr. Cooksey: No. Defendant rests, Your Honor.”
It is clear from the foregoing that appellant made no effort to offer evidence, if any he had, to refute the propriety of the award by the Workmen’s Compensation Appeals Board. He made no effort to prove and tendered no evidence that all or any portion of that award was unnecessary or excessive or unreasonable. The only evidence before the court therefore was the award itself. Under these circumstances we think that appellant’s claim of denial of his constitutional rights of due process is academic. He never sought to exercise such rights. He made no offer of evidence and no offer of proof. Under such circumstances he cannot claim a denial of his constitutional right of due process.
The judgment is affirmed.
Allport, Acting P. J., and Cobey, J., concurred.
Notes
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Labor Code section 3854 reads as follows: “If the action is prosecuted by the employer alone, evidence of any amount which the employer has paid or become obligated to pay by reason of the injury or death of the employee is admissible, and such expenditures or liability shall be considered as proximately resulting from such injury or death in addition to any other items of damage proximately resulting therefrom.”
Note: The “action” referred to in the section is an action against a third party tortfeasor. All references herеafter are to sections of the Labor Code unless otherwise noted.
Section 3852 reads as follows: “The claim of an employee for compensation does not affect his claim or right of action for all damages proximately resulting from such injury or death against any person other than the employer. Any employer who pays, or becomes .obligated to pay compensation, or whо pays, or becomes obligated to pay salary in lieu' of compensation, may likewise make a claim or bring an action against such third person. In the latter event the employer may recover in the same suit, in addition to the total amount of compensation, damages for which he was liable including all salary, wage, pension, or other emolument paid to the employee or to his dependents.” '
The word “employer” as used in this section “includes insurer." (Lab. Code, § 3850, subd. (b).)
