Division 1.
On this appeal we are required to consider the question of whether a tortfeasor who initially causes serious injuries is entitled to indemnity from a negligent doctor when death subsequently results.
This is an appeal by Transcon Lines and Oris Clayton Reed, defendants below, from a judgment denying their cross-claim for indemnity.
Plaintiffs, in the action below, instituted a wrongful death action which arose out of the following sequence of events. On or about February 27, 1966, Rose Bates,
Some 49 days later, on April 15, 1966, Mrs. Bates was taken to the Williams Airport and placed on an airplane for transportation to her home in Oakland, California, where, in Dr. Barnes’ opinion, she might make better recovery during the anticipated lengthy convalescent period. During the flight, approximately two hours after take-off, she suddenly ■expired. The cause of death, according to an autopsy performed on her, was bron-chopneumonia.
The above sequence of events led to the filing of a wrongful death action against Transcon, Oris Clayton Reed, Dr. Barnes and the hospital and medical attendants that treated and cared for Mrs. Bates during her hospital stay. Appellants Transcon and Oris Clayton Reed (here•after “Transcon” or “appellants”) filed a •cross-claim for indemnity against all other defendants. Prior to trial appellants stipulated to their negligence in causing the auto accident, but they expressly stated that they were not stipulating to any liability for Mrs. Bates’ death.
Later in the proceeding the trial court ruled that Transcon was responsible as .a matter of law for any negligent treat-ment rendered by Dr. Barnes or the other medical defendants.
While the issue of appellants’ liability for the wrongful death consequences was repeatedly raised in the trial court, the court did not deviate from its ruling that .•appellants were liable, as a matter of law, for any damages caused by defendant Barnes et al., and appellants have not •raised this issue as error in the present .appeal. Rather, they challenge the judgment of the court denying their cross-claim for indemnity.
After the court’s ruling as to the liability of Transcon for the negligence of Barnes et al., the trial proceeded as to proof of medical malpractice and proof of wrongful death damages. Thereafter the jury returned a verdict in the amount of $125,000 in favor of plaintiffs and against Dr. Barnes, Transcon Lines and Reed. Several months later the trial judge signed a judgment dismissing appellants’ cross-claim for indemnity. The relevant portion of that judgment reads as follows :
“The Court proceeded to hear the evidence on behalf of the Defendants Transcon Lines and Oris Clayton Reed upon their crossclaim and having heard the same determined that there was no issue to be submitted to the jury upon the Crossclaim.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the Crossclaim of the Defendants Transcon Lines and Oris Clayton Reed against the Defendants Harry Albert Barnes, Lenore Reed, Edward L. Ely and Williams Hospital be and the same is hereby dismissed and the Crossclaimants Transcon Lines and Oris Clayton Reed take nothing by way thereof.” (Emphasis added).
Appellants’ notice of appeal indicates that they appeal from this judgment only. Their claim for indemnity is grounded in a two-step argument. First, they claim that the liability imposed on them for Dr. Barnes’ negligence and the ensuing death of Mrs. Bates arose out of a positive rule of law requiring that result, and not upon a finding that their negligence actually caused Mrs. Bates’ death. Second, they claim that such a large difference of negligence exists here that under Arizona law they can only be regarded as “passive” or “secondary” tort-feasors, and thus they are entitled to indemnity against Dr. Barnes, the “active” or “primary” tortfeasor. In the same vein
Alternatively appellants urge that the equitable nature of indemnity requires restitution in this case, because they had no part in the selection of the doctors or hospital, no control over the direction or conduct of the hospital, nothing to do with the treatment and/or care of the decedent and nothing to do with the decision to transfer the decedent from the hospital to Oakland, California. In short, they argue that they had no opportunity to protect themselves against the negligence of Dr. Barnes, and thus that they are entitled to indemnity. In support of this position they cite a California case, Herrero v. Atkinson,
Appellee argues that the “active-passive” “primary-secondary” rationale is inapplicable here, because it evolves from a case totally different on its facts, and because appellants here were negligent tortfeasors. Appellee therefore concludes that the Restatement of Restitution 2 governs this case, and that the Restatement allows indemnity between successively negligent tortfeasors, apart from certain specific situations described, only where the first actor is ordinarily negligent and the second actor is wantonly negligent.
The leading case on indemnity in Arizona, and the case from which appellants derive their “primary-secondary”, “passive-active” theory, is Busy Bee Buffet, Inc. v. Ferrell,
In arguing that a finding of liability imputed by law is a basis for allowing indemnity if other requirements are met, appellants in this case point to the following language in Busy Bee, taken from Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Federal Express,
“. . . . as between joint tort-feas-ors, the issue of primary and secondary liability only arises: . . . where one is liable by constmction of law or on account of some omission of a duty of protection or care; and where one tort-feasor is liable to the third party by reason of a legal relationship to the other tort-feasor, or because of a condition brought aboitt by the latter, in the creation of which the other has not' joined.”82 Ariz. at 198 ,310 P.2d at 821 . (Emphasis added).
The dictum of Busy Bee notwithstanding, the holding of that case as to liability
“The liability of the Buffet is based upon its positive legal duty to Ferrell to maintain the passageway in a reasonably safe condition for his use. It did not actively participate in the wrong which was the immediate cause of the injury to Ferrell. It was Pastis, a co-tenant with the Buffet, who, acting independently and without the knowledge of the Buffet, primarily caused the injury to Ferrell. It was his act in opening the trap door to the basement and leaving it unguarded which rendered the passageway unsafe for the use of Ferrell. His act did more than render it unsafe it rendered it highly dangerous. It constituted gross and wilful negligence for which he was liable to Ferrell either as an invitee or a licensee.”82 Ariz. at 198 ,310 P.2d at 821 . (Emphasis added).
With regard to appellants’ argument that they qualify as “passive” or secondarily liable tortfeasors, in that they did not participate in the acts which caused Mrs. Bates’ death, the following language in Busy Bee, comparing the negligence ■of the Buffet and Pastis is relevant:
“The Buffet was guilty of no active fault in creating the danger to Ferrell. Its negligence was passive or static. Its negligence was incapable of producing injury to any one at that time except though the active negligence of another. Pastis, in opening the trap door and leaving it unguarded, was the immediate cause of Ferrell falling through the opening and sustaining the injuries which form the basis of this litigation.”82 Ariz. at 197 ,310 P.2d at 820-821 .
We are not convinced that these statements in Busy Bee are applicable to the case at hand. The “primary-secondary”, “active-passive” language used therein is largely conclusory, and has been the source of much criticism by legal writers. See Davis, Indemnity Between Negligent Tort-feasors : A Proposed Rationale, 37 Iowa L.Rev. 517 (1952); Leflar, Contribution and Indemnity Between Tortfeasors, 81 U.Pa.L.Rev. 130 (1932); Sherk, Common Law Indemnity Among Joint Tortfeasors, 7 Ariz.L.Rev. 59 (1965). Moreover, as Sherk demonstrated in the last cited article, the case most heavily relied upon in Busy Bee to support its theory of indemnity impliedly excluded concurrently negligent tortfeasors from the class of persons entitled to indemnity. The Busy Bee court quoted with approval the following language from Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Federal Express:
“ ‘It is also said that where one is the “active” tort-feasor, and the other, the “passive”'—or where the primary or active fault rests upon one tort-feasor, he, as the active tort-feasor, is liable to the other. But this is only another way of expressing the same rule as otherwise above stated. It does not mean that the joint tort-feasor whose negligence is the lesser can have indemnity from the other for damages caused by the concurring negligent act of both.’ ”82 Ariz. at 198-199 ,310 P.2d at 821 . (Emphasis added).
Subsequent Arizona decisions construing Busy Bee have not limited the principles stated therein to conditiomof-the-prémises cases, but they have been adamant that the one seeking indemnity
not be' personally at fault in any way
if he is to recover. In Thornton v. Marsico,
“It is argued that Busy Bee Buffet v. Ferrell, supra, changed the general rule where one party is actively negligent and the other party is only passively negligent. We do not believe this to be so. What the Supreme Court of Arizona said was that when one was liable because of a duty imposed by law although he had not actively participated in the wrong which was the immediate cause of the injury, then that one had a right to indemnity from the party who actively caused the injury. 7 Ariz.L.Rev. 59, 69. This is an expansion of the law of indemnity and not an abrogation of the law of noncontribution among joint tort-feasors. As the Supreme Court said in Busy Bee:
‘The term “difference in kind and character” between the negligence of the Buffet and Pastis must not be confused with “comparative negligence” or “degrees of negligence” ’.
When Thornton drove the patrol car he acted. This act excludes him from the category of ‘without personal faulf and therefore the third party plaintiffs do not come within the purview of Busy Bee Buffet v. Ferrell.”5 Ariz.App. at 302 ,425 P.2d at 872 . (Emphasis added).
The furthest extension of the Busy Bee “primary-secondary” rationale is found in De Pinto v. Landoe,
“It is true that DePinto’s liability to Provident was ‘primary’ in the limited sense that Provident could sue him in the first instance because of his breach-of fiduciary duty. This was also true-in Busy Bee Buffet. In both Busy Bee-Buffet and Blakely [Blakely Oil, Inc. v. Crowder,80 Ariz. 72 ,292 P.2d 842 ] we-think the Arizona Supreme Court made-it clear that it used the ‘primary’—‘secondary’ dichotomy as a means of differentiating one whose active wrongful conduct caused the damage from one-whose wrongful conduct was not active, but rather consisted in a failure to fulfill a legal duty of preventing another from committing a wrong. DePinto is. in the latter position.”411 F.2d at 301 .
Whatever expansionary effect the De Pinto case may have had on the “active-passive”, “primary-secondary” theories of Busy Bee, however, has been largely lost in subsequent decisions by our Court of Appeals. Pinal County v. Adams,
The Court of Appeals framed Pinal County’s claim for indemnity thusly:
“Since its negligence consisted of the- failure to do something, its negligence was passive rather than active. Therefore, it argues under the theory of Biisy Bee that it is entitled to indemnity from Adams who was actively driving the automobile and whose active negligence caused the accident.” 13 Ariz.App. at 573 ,479 P.2d at 720 . (Emphasis in original) .
This contention was flatly rejected. Pinal County’s contribution to the accident, and the resultant death of two passengers and serious injury to another, even though marginal and even though arising out of an omission instead of a positive act, was enough for the court to deny indemnity. Analyzing the problem in terms of the Busy Bee terminology, the court said:
“The court in Busy Bee made it clear that it did not mean that a joint tort-feasor whose negligence is lesser can have indemnity from the other for damages caused by the concurring negligent act of both. The Busy Bee case holds that when the indemnitee, solely through the negligence of the indemnitor, breaches his duty to maintain his premises in a reasonably safe condition for use by invitees, indemnity is available. Such is not the situation in the case sub judice.
“The facts in the case at hand show that the parties were guilty of concurrent negligence. The difference in the negligence between them is not so significant in kind or quality as to prompt us to shift the burden of the loss from the shoulders of the County and place it upon Adams.”13 Ariz.App. at 573-574 ,479 P.2d at 720-721 . (Emphasis added).
Another case having tangential relation to the questions at hand is Chrysler Corp. v. McCarthy,
With reference to Busy Bee the court said:
“Busy Bee Buffet permits a right of indemnity against the active tort-feasor by one whose liability is based upon merely “passive” negligence and a legal relationship which makes him responsible for the other’s active negligence. As indicated in Thornton v. Marsico,5 Ariz.App. 299 ,425 P.2d 869 (1967), Busy Bee Buffet does not permit a right of indemnity where the liability of the original defendant and would-be indemnitee is based upon his own active negligence or active participation in the liability-creating event.”14 Ariz.App. at 538 ,484 P.2d at 1067 . (Emphasis added). (Footnote omitted).
The most recent case construing Busy Bee is Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co. of Wis. v. Advance Transformer Co.,
Then Foley’s insurer filed a third party complaint against the manufacturers and assemblers of the fixture, seeking indemnity. Summary judgment in favor of the latter was granted at trial. On appeal the Court of Appeals reviewed the stipulations, which, in relevant part, admitted Foley’s negligence and admitted “that such negligence was the proximate cause of Mr. Morgan’s death”.
“Thus we see the record reflects that appellant’s insured was admittedly negligent in failing to ground the subject fixture. Assuming arguendo that ap-pellees’ products were defective in design, manufacture, or assembly, it is well settled in this jurisdiction that there can be no contribution or indemnity between joint tortfeasors. Pinal County v. Adams,13 Ariz.App. 571 ,479 P.2d 718 (1971) and cases cited therein. It is equally well settled that when one is liable because of a duty imposed by law although he had not actively participated in the wrong which was the immediate cause of the injury, then he has a right to indemnity from the party who actively caused the injury. Busy Bee Buffet, Inc. v. Ferrell,82 Ariz. 192 ,310 P.2d 817 (1957); Thornton v. Marsico,5 Ariz.App. 299 ,425 P.2d 869 (1967); 7 Ariz.Law Review 59, 69 (1965). (Emphasis in original).
í{í s}c í|í ijt iji
“When Foley, acting through its employee, installed the subject fixture, it acted. Having actively participated in the wrong which caused Morgan’s death, Foley was not ‘without personal fault’ and therefore not within the purview of Busy Bee Buffet v. Ferrell, supra. There being no factual issue as to Foley’s active participation in the wrong which caused Morgan’s death, the trial court properly ruled, as a matter of law, that there was no right of indemnity.”15 Ariz.App. at 3 ,485 P.2d at 593 . (Footnote omitted).
The case before us, of course, differs from Employers Mutual Liability Insurance Co., supra, in that appellants here did not stipulate to having proximately caused the death of Mrs. Bates. They were nevertheless properly held liable for that death under the Restatement of Torts and other authorities. We are therefore presented with two questions. First, was the liability of the appellants equivalent to the technical liability of the Buffet in Busy Bee? Second, under Busy Bee and the cases subsequently decided, are appellants entitled to indemnity?
We are of the opinion that the finding that appellants were liable for any damages flowing from Mrs. Bates’ death was not merely a finding of “technical” liability. It differs significantly from the Buffet’s liability—-a liability founded on the breach of a non-delegable duty with respect to the condition of the premises. Without the active misconduct of another, there would have been no injury whatsoever in Busy Bee—the entire injury and damages were occasioned solely by the misconduct of another. Here the liability of Transcon stemmed, first from its admitted performance of a negligent act resulting in serious injuries to Mrs. Bates, and then from these injuries combining with negligent medical care and treatment to produce the final injurious consequence, a foreseeable risk, flowing from Transcon’s original negligence.
As the trial judge indicated to counsel for appellants at trial, they participated in the liability-creating event in forcing decedent to seek medical care. In response to counsel’s argument that the “proximate cause” of death was a jury question, the court stated:
“But the injury put her in the hospital. If their negligence produced the bronchopneumonia, this is directly within the restatement rule.” (Emphasis added).
Although the question is not presented to us on appeal, we feel that the fact that the injury put Mrs. Bates in the hospital was clear enough. That was a proper “but-for” determination by the court, and it did not need to be sent to the jury. The question we must resolve is whether under the authorities there was sufficient participation in the liability-creating event by appellants by virtue of this “but-for” relationship to bar them from receiving indemnity.
Here appellants did not participate in the care and treatment of Mrs. Bates, but they were responsible for the event which caused her to be hospitalized. Moreover their negligence did not arise out of a mere breach of an affirmative duty to act. They acted, and they did so negligently when they drove their truck into Mrs. Bates’ automobile. In short, they were not without personal fault; thus they are not entitled to indemnity.
We have carefully reviewed the case of Herrero v. Atkinson,
The decedent’s personal injury claim remained in full force in accordance with a California survivorship statute. The administrator of her estate, however, also filed an action for wrongful death, naming the doctors, the hospital, and Herrero. Herrero filed a cross-complaint for declaratory relief and indemnity against the hospital and doctors.
The California district court of appeals granted the relief requested by Herrero. The court noted that Herrero’s liability for the negligence arose solely “out of a positive rule of decisional law of this state.” 3 The court then granted indemnity to Her-rero (as to the wrongful death suit), expressing the following rationale:
“Although the original negligence of Herrero may be regarded in law as a proximate cause of the damages flowing from the subsequent malpractice of the cross-defendants, and the plaintiff may recover a joint and several judgment against all who are found liable, there is no reason why the ultimate burden of damages should not be distributed among the various defendants, and each be made to bear that portion of the judgment which in equity and good conscience should be borne by him. Here, Herrero has had no part in the selection of any of the cross-defendant doctors or hospital. Nothing appears to indicate that he was even aware of the decedent’s decision to submit to surgery. He has had no control or direction over the conduct of the cross-defendants and not the slightest opportunity to protect himself against their negligence, yet he is made liable in law for any damages caused by them. Under such circumstances it is equitable and just that indemnity be allowed Herrero, and that the cross-defendant doctors and hospital bear that portion of the damagescaused by their own negligent conduct.” 227 Cal.App.2d at 75 ,38 Cal.Rptr. at 493 . (Emphasis added).
Our difference of opinion with the California court rests in the fact that we do not believe that an appellate court’s notion of what is “equitable and just” should interfere with its determination of whether one tortfeasor should recover indemnity against another. The key to that determination is simply whether the one seeking indemnity was in any way at fault. Perhaps, one of the “circumstances” which influenced the California court was the fact that Herrero, by virtue of the sur-vivorship statute, probably would be held liable for personal injury damages. We do not have that circumstance before us, and even if we did, we would not consider it with reference to a right to indemnity.
The California court’s approach to indemnity questions is an uncertain one at best, as evidenced by the following statements made before finding that Herrero was entitled to indemnity:
“The duty to indemnify may arise, and indemnity may be allowed in those fact situations where in equity and good conscience the burden of the judgment should be shifted from the shoulders of the person seeking indemnity to the one from whom indemnity is sought. The right depends upon the principle that everyone is responsible for the consequences of his own wrong, and if others have been compelled to pay damages which ought to have been paid by the wrongdoer, they may recover from him. Thus the determination of whether or not indemnity should be allowed must of necessity depend upon the facts of each case.”227 Cal.App.2d at 74 ,38 Cal.Rptr. at 493 .
The Restatement of Restitution is much clearer. Section 96 reads as follows:
“A person who, without personal fault, has become subject to tort liability for the unauthorized and wrongful conduct of another, is entitled to indemnity from the other for expenditures properly made in the discharge of such liability. (Emphasis added).
Appellants claim, however, that this section of the Restatement of Restitution, also affords them the right to indemnity in this case. We disagree. Appellants argue that they fall under the following portion of Comment a to this section, which reads:
“The rule applies likewise to other situations in which, by statute or otherwise, a person without fault is responsible for the conduct of another.”
Reading further in the Comment, however, we discover that all of the illustrations given are cases where liability was merely imputed without any positive act or omission on the part of the person seeking indemnity. The Comment proceeds as follows:
“Illustrations of this are found under modern decisions and statutes which impose liability upon a person who has permitted another to drive an automobile, as where the head of a household is made liable for the negligent driving of the members of the family, the licensed driver is made liable for the negligence of an unlicensed driver driving in his presence, or the owner of a car is made the insurer of the conduct of one to whom he lends the car.”
Not only is the imputed liability theory expressed in this Comment inapplicable to appellants, but, as we have indicated previously, we are of the opinion that appellants were not without personal fault in bringing about the liability-incurring event.
Another section of the Restatement of Restitution is helpful here. It is Section 102, and it reads as follows:
“Where two persons acting independently or jointly, have negligently injured a third person or his property for which injury both became liable in tort to the third person, one of them who has made expenditures in the discharge of their liability is not entitled to contribution from the other.” (Emphasis added).
The only relevant exception to § 102, as indicated in Comment c, is where the second actor “has been guilty of supervening intentionally harmful or reckless conduct”. While appellee’s wrongful conduct may have been “supervening” in the sense that it followed appellants’ wrongful conduct, we cannot say that it was reckless or intentional. As a matter of fact, neither plaintiff’s complaint, nor appellant’s cross-claim, alleged reckless, gross, or intentional negligence on the part of appellee.
We conclude with a recognition that this might have been a more proper case for contribution than indemnity. Appellants did not seek contribution, however, apparently recognizing that Arizona adheres to the rule denying contribution among joint tortfeasors. This is a harsh doctrine, and its harshness has been explained by Justice Learned Hand as giving rise to “lenient exceptions” in the form of rules of indemnity.
See
Slattery v. Marra Bros., Inc.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Section 457, Restatement of Torts 2d provides:
“If the negligent actor is liable for another’s bodily injury, he is also subject to liability for any additional bodily harm resulting from normal efforts of third persons in rendering aid which the other’s injury reasonably requires, irrespective of whether such acts are done in a proper or a negligent manner.”
. See Restatement of Restitution §§ 89— 98 and 102.
. The case from which this “positive rule of decisional law” stemmed was Ash v. Mortensen,
