*502 Opinion
This case calls upon us to define the term “good faith” as it is used in Code of Civil Procedure sections 877 and 877.6. Specifically, we must decide whether a settlement is in “good faith” when it is “too cheap,” i.e., when it allows the settling codefendant to escape from the litigation without paying his fair share of the damages. We find that the standard of “good faith” is not met when a codefendant’s settlement price is grossly disproportionate to his fair share of the damages. However, we find that the settlements at issue here involve no such gross disproportion and were therefore made in good faith. We, therefore, affirm dismissals made by the trial court, pursuant to its finding of good faith.
Facts
On May 24, 1976, Pablo Torres (Torres), an employee of Union Pacific Railroad Company (Union), was about to leave work for the day when he discovered that his car had a flat tire. Needing a jack to enable him to change this tire, Torres borrowed a Jack-all-Jack from Union and started to work on his car, which was parked on Union premises. While so working, Torres tripped the reversing mechanism on the jack, and the jack handle jerked violently from the horizontal to the vertical position, striking Torres in the head and causing him to lose one eye.
Torres sued Union and the manufacturer and distributor of the Jack-all-Jack, A. H. Bottorff Company and J. C. Hallman Manufacturing Company, Ltd. (collectively Hallman). In his first count, Torres alleged Union’s liability under the Federal Employers Liability Act. Four other counts sought damages against both Union and Hallman under theories of negligence, express warranty, implied warranty and strict liability.
After suit was filed, Union conducted certain experiments with the Jack-all-Jack to determine whether it was indeed hazardous. These experiments, Union claims, showed that the jack “ratcheted dangerously” when the reversing lever was engaged while the handle was in the horizontal position. Union also claims that later versions of the jack bear warning labels advising that the handle be placed in a vertical position before the reversing mechanism is engaged.
Union cross-complained against Hallman, alleging that its negligent design was responsible for Torres’ injury. Hallman, in turn, cross-complained against Union, claiming that it negligently used and allowed Torres to use the Jack-all-Jack for unintended purposes. Settlement negotiations ensued among Union, Hallman, and Torres. Union and Hallman made one offer of *503 $200,000 to Torres; this $200,000 liability was to be split evenly between both parties. Torres rejected this offer, whereupon cooperation between the defendants began to break down.
Union finally made a sliding-scale offer to Torres, which the latter accepted. Under this “Mary Carter” agreement, Union paid Torres $200,000. Fifty thousand dollars of this was an outright settlement with Torres; the remaining $150,000 was a guarantee ensuring that if Torres’ suit against Hallman failed, or fell short of $150,000, Torres would be entitled to keep the portion of the advance necessary to bring his total recovery, including the $50,000 outright settlement, to $200,000. In return for this settlement, Torres promised diligently to pursue his claim against Hallman and to return to Union the first $150,000 of any recovery from Hallman; Torres was entitled to keep any settlement received from Hallman in excess of $150,000.
Torres later settled with Hallman for $300,000. His ultimate settlement thus amounted to $350,000; of this Union paid $50,000 and Hallman paid $300,000.
Union sought court approval of the good faith of its settlement pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure 1 section 877.6. Hallman challenged this settlement, claiming that it was not made in good faith and that Hallman was therefore entitled to seek equitable indemnity from Union. Hallman, in turn, sought approval of the good faith of its settlement pursuant to 877.6, and Union in turn objected, claiming that Hallman’s settlement was not made in good faith since Hallman was primarily liable and therefore responsible for all the damages to Torres. After an extensive hearing conducted pursuant to section 877.6, the trial court found that both parties’ settlements were made in good faith and that equitable indemnity was therefore barred. The court thereupon entered orders of dismissal against both Union’s and Hall-man’s cross-complaints against each other.
Hallman appeals from the order of dismissal based on the trial court’s finding of good faith; Union responds and cross-appeals from the dismissal of its cross-complaint.
Discussion
A settlement made in good faith by an alleged tortfeasor discharges that tortfeasor from liability for contribution or equitable indemnity to any other joint tortfeasor. (§§ 877, 877.6.) On appeal Hallman contends that Union’s *504 settlement is not in “good faith” within the terms of section 877, and is therefore not sufficient to discharge Union’s liability to Hallman for implied equitable indemnity. Hallman, however, does not impute to Union’s settlement any wrongful means or malignant motive. Rather, Hallman argues that Union’s settlement here is lacking in good faith because its price is too low; the settlement, Hallman concludes, allowed Union to escape from this action without paying its fair share.
In making this argument, Hallman exposes a point of conflict in California case law. It is well settled that certain settlement tactics or motives constitute bad faith. For example, a plaintiff might single out the most unpopular of several codefendants and settle with all the other codefendants, leaving the unpopular party to face the jury alone. (See
Lareau
v.
Southern Pac. Transportation Co.
(1975)
This conflict finds its origin in the more profound conflict between two policy considerations underlying section 877. The first such consideration is the legislative desire to promote the settlement of disputes and the finality of such settlements.
(River Garden Farms, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In two recent cases, courts have thrown up their arms and declared this conflict intractable, incapable of judicial resolution.
(Burlington Northern R.R. Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In Cardio Systems, the plaintiffs’ decedent died when a brain embolism was caused as a result of the improper assembly of a heart-lung machine. Decedent’s widow and children sued the manufacturer and distributor of the machine and the hospital for wrongful death. The distributor settled for costs. The hospital later settled for $1 million and sought equitable indemnity against the distributor. The trial court found that the distributor’s settlement was not made in good faith and therefore held that section 877 did not bar equitable indemnity. The appellate court reversed, holding that the good faith requirement precluded only tortious or wrongful conduct. Since no such conduct was alleged, the court held that the distributor’s settlement for costs was made in good faith. The court labelled its result “unsatisfactory” and “fundamentally unfair” and called upon the Legislature to amend section 877. (122 Cal.App.3d at pp. 890-891.)
In
Burlington, supra,
We agree that the conclusions reached in these cases were unfair, but we disagree with the necessity of reaching these conclusions. Earlier and better-reasoned cases make clear that the Legislature did indeed strike a balance between the policy of fairness and the policy of promoting settlements; the fulcrum of this balance is the requirement of good faith.
(River Garden Farms, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
This role of good faith as a mediator between policy considerations was recognized in
River Garden Farms, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The
Cardio Systems
and
Burlington
decisions go astray by ignoring the accommodating role of the good faith requirement and by adopting, albeit under protest, the undesirable extreme of promoting settlement at all costs. This error is founded upon an unreasonably narrow definition of the term good faith. As noted, these decisions hold that, for purposes of section 877, any settlement is in good faith unless based on tortious or wrongful conduct.
(Cardio Systems, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Section 877, then, requires that the settling codefendant look beyond the immediate prospect of a favorable deal with the plaintiff. Rather, the codefendant must “make a good faith determination of the relative liabilities” in the case.
(Commercial U. Ins. Co.
v.
Ford Motor Co., supra,
*508
There is ample authority for the conclusion that “good faith” requires that the price of a defendant’s settlement bear some relationship to the merits and values of the case against that defendant. It has long been recognized that “[t]he price of a settlement is the prime badge of its good or bad faith.”
(River Garden Farms, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
It will be said that the weakness of this conclusion, compared to that in Cardio Systems and Burlington, is that it will have some chilling effect on settlements. Realistically, however, it will be rare for a codefendant to resist a settlement for fear of the cross-complaints. A codefendant, after all, attains an advantage by settling; his liability to the plaintiff is thereby extinguished, and liability to the remaining codefendants will not arise unless and until the plaintiff prevails against them. We therefore doubt that the chilling effect of our conclusion will be great.
The vagaries of litigation, however, are notorious, and we concede that in some cases the policy of encouraging settlement will be furthered when a party, by settling, can finally “close the book” on a matter. Our conclusion here prevents the settling party from so doing, unless that party is certain that his settlement does not differ grossly from what is fair. Obviously, the trick for the practitioner will be to estimate what is fair. Settlement will be discouraged to the extent this is inestimable. However, as the court noted in
River Garden Farms, supra,
One such settlement imponderable is the liability figure ultimately decided by a jury. A settling party may well have a good faith belief that a claim is worth much less than the value the jury finally assigns to it. Accordingly, this figure should not be used in determining whether a settlement is in good faith. (See
River Garden Farms, Inc. supra,
26 Cal.App.3d at p.
977; Fisher
v.
Superior Court, supra,
This holding should discourage fraudulent or sham settlements, as well as settlements which are unfair because they are simply “too cheap.” By the same token, this standard should encourage defendants, who really do wish to “close the book” on a matter, to arrive at a settlement figure which bears some relationship to what is fair.
Armed with this standard, we examine the settlements in the case at bench.
Union’s Settlement With Torres Was Made in Good Faith
In the case at bench Hallman manufactured the dangerous object; Union bought it and lent it to the injured party, its employee Torres. The trial court weighed the merits and values of Torres’ claim against both Hallman and Union, including the claim that Union was liable under the Federal Employers Liability Act. After a lengthy hearing, the trial court found “substantial doubt” as to Union’s liability to Torres and “convincing evidence” that Hallman was responsible for the defective condition. The court found that Union’s guarantee and ultimate payment of $50,000 was fair settlement of Union’s dispute with Torres. 4
The record contains substantial evidence to support the finding that Union’s settlement was fair. We have found no evidence that the settlement was in any way disproportionate to Union’s fair share of the liability, let alone grossly disproportionate to this figure.
Accordingly, the summary judgment granted based upon the finding that this settlement was made in good faith is affirmed.
Hallman’s Settlement With Torres Was Also Made in Good Faith so as to Preclude Liability for Equitable Indemnity
The trial court found that the Hallman’s $300,000 settlement with Torres was made in good faith. Accordingly, that court ruled that section 877.6
*510
precluded Union’s seeking equitable indemnity against Hallman. Union attacks this ruling by way of cross-appeal. Union argues that Hallman bore 100 percent of the liability for the injury to Torres and that Hallman was actively and primarily negligent in creating the defect in the jack. Union claims that its negligence, in contrast, was merely passive and secondary. Union concludes that section 877 does not work to bar indemnity in cases where one party bears all the fault and the other is secondarily negligent. (See
Huizar
v.
Abex Corp.
(1984)
Whatever the merits of Union’s argument, it is not applicable to the case at bench. Here, part of the wrongful conduct which Torres planned to allege at trial was Union’s refusal to rehire Torres. Such a refusal was original to Union and is not attributable to Hallman. This case thus differs from total indemnity cases in that the plaintiff has attributed some specific primary fault to Union. Accordingly, section 877 and the good faith test enunciated above are applicable here. Applying these standards, we find no gross disproportion between the settlement price paid by Hallman and Hallman’s fair share of the liability. Nor do we find any other evidence of bad faith. Accordingly, we find that the trial court acted properly in finding that the settlement made by Hallman was made in good faith so as to bar equitable indemnity. The judgment based on this finding is therefore affirmed.
The judgments of good faith and the judgments (orders) of dismissal are affirmed.
Johnson, J., and Pickard, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied July 23, 1984.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
We think that this point has been overemphasized. (See, e.g.,
Burlington Northern R.R. Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
River Garden Farms
and
Lareau, supra,
were decided before
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(1978)
Hallman complains that the trial court did not make findings of fact or conclusions of law. We find, however, that the court did make such findings and conclusions in its detailed judgment, which outlined the basis for its decision. This judgment makes clear that the court examined the relationship between Union’s settlement price and its fair share of the damages and found no significant disproportion.
Cases such as Huizar, supra, create an exception to the harsh interpretation of sections 877 and 877.6, rejected above, which bars equitable indemnity in almost all cases. They do so by declaring that suits for total indemnity are not within the purview of section 877 and 877.6; a defendant may therefore sue his codefendant for total indemnity, even if that codefendant has entered into a good faith settlement. With the broader definition of good faith adopted here, however, it may well be urged this exception is not necessary and that all cases of indemnity, total and partial, should be subject to sections 877 and 877.6.
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
