Controversy between two insurers (Truck Insurance Exchange and Federal Insurance Company) as to which must pay the judgments for personal injuries growing out of an automobile accident covered by both of them. The accident occurred on March 6, 1955, a collision between a GMC tractor with half trailer, driven by one Rodriquez as the employee of Joe Torres, and a Ford driven by Gordon R. Carroll and containing other members of the Carroll and Pullara families. For injuries so received the Carrolls and Pullaras recovered judgments against Rodriquez and Torres aggregating $18,850, which have become final. 1
At the time of the accident plaintiff, Truck Insurance Exchange, had outstanding a policy covering Joe Torres as named insured and his driver Rodriquez as additional assured; it defended the actions which resulted in said judgments against Torres and Rodriquez; later it brought this action for declaratory relief to determine whether defendant Federal Insurance Company is obligated to pay all or any part of *487 the judgments. Federal had outstanding at the time of the accident a policy covering Richard George as named insured. The trial court exonerated Federal from liability; Exchange and the Carrolls and Pullaras appeal.
The primary controversy arises from the fact that the tractor and half trailer were sold by a dealer, Richard George, to Joe Torres on conditional sale contract on May 28, 1954, and no white or pink slip was ever delivered to the buyer and no dealer’s notice given to the Department of Motor Vehicles until April 4, 1955, a month after occurrence of the accident; no other attempt to comply with the provisions of the Vehicle Code was made. This failure to comply with the statute (§§ 177, 178, 186)
2
left the conditional vendor liable as owner under section 402.
(Stoddart
v.
Peirce,
It is argued that George was not shown to be the owner at the time of sale to Joe Torres and hence the rule just stated is inapplicable, but we find this untenable. George was a dealer in trucks and equipment; he had bought the tractor from Mike Torres and claimed to be the owner; he testified to the fact of ownership and that is enough to constitute prima facie proof (see Witkin on California Evidence, §180, p. 200). Moreover, George was in possession of the tractor and semitrailer when he undertook to sell them and he delivered possession to the buyer, Joe Torres, and the latter continued in possession. From these facts a presumption of ownership arose (Witkin on California Evidence, § 73, p. 93) and that presumption was not countered in any way.
But independent proof of George’s ownership was not necessary; the conditional vendor who does not comply with the statute is an “owner” for the purposes of section 402. “ [T]he rule is now well settled that a conditional vendor is considered the owner of a vehicle and the conditional vendee is held to be the operator with permission of the owner, where the vendor delivers possession to the vendee and fails to comply with section 177 with reference to giving notice of the transfer prior to the occurrence of the accident.”
{Traders etc. Ins. Co.
v.
Pacific Emp. Ins. Co.,
It thus appears that George was an “owner” whose liability under section 402 had continued to the time of accident because of his failure to comply with sections 177, 178 and 186, Vehicle Code. As stated in Traders Insurance case, supra, at page 164, “it would be paradoxical indeed if under these circumstances one is held to be the owner under the law but not under his insurance contract.” That George was the named insured in the Federal policy is undisputed.
The driver Rodriquez, and the conditional owner Joe Torres, as well as the vendor George, were thus covered with respect to this accident by the Federal policy, and Rodriquez and Torres were covered by the Truck Insurance Exchange policy, Torres as named insured, and Rodriquez (his servant) as additional insured. Here arises the question of other insurance and the operation of such clauses in this instance. 3
*489 The policy of plaintiff Exchange says: “The insurance afforded by this policy shall be excess insurance over any other insurance available to the insured, either as an insured under a policy applicable with respect to the automobile, or otherwise, against a loss covered by this policy.” The Federal policy•. “If the insured has other insurance against a loss covered by this policy, the company shall not be liable under this policy for a greater proportion of such loss than the applicable limits of liability stated in the declarations bear to the total applicable limit of liability of all valid and collectible insurance against such loss; provided, however, that the insurance under this policy shall be excess insurance with respect to loss against which the named insured has other insurance disclosed to the company as in effect on the effective date of this policy and upon the basis of which the premium for the insurance under this policy is modified, but in such event the insurance under this policy shall apply only in the amount by which the applicable limit of liability stated in the declarations exceeds the applicable limit of liability of such other insurance.
“With respect to any valid and collectible insurance covering automobiles not owned by or registered in the name of the named insured and which extends to the benefit of the named insured, the insurance under this policy shall be excess insurance.”
The Exchange policy provides in case of other insurance for excess insurance only; Federal’s policy provides first for proration of the loss; the proviso in the first quoted paragraph is not applicable to the facts at bar and hence may be disregarded in our further discussion; the last paragraph distinctly spells excess insurance within certain narrow limits.
In approaching our specific problem it is well to remember what was said in
American Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Seaboard Surety Co.,
Comparing the Exchange provision with the first portion of the quotation from the Federal policy it appears plain from the language that Federal coverage is “available to the insured” to the extent of Federal’s share of a prorated loss based upon policy limits; hence, the Exchange excess insurance becomes operative with respect to the balance of the loss and the net result is proration in accordance with the terms of the Federal policy. Such has been the holding in similar situations.
(American Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Seaboard Surety Co., supra,
We are not troubled here with the disturbing thought (as was the Supreme Court in American
Automobile Ins. Co.
v.
Republic Indemnity Co.,
What we have just said relates to the first portion of the Federal paragraph referring to other insurance. The last paragraph of that text is not applicable; it could not possibly fit any vehicle other than the George tractor and semitrailer, and while he had never registered same in his name he continued to be the owner, both in the sense that it should have been registered in his name and that as a matter of common law the title still stood in him.
If, perchance, both policies were held to afford only excess coverage the result would be that equity would require pro-ration in order that insurers who had undertaken a single and common burden should not be absolved entirely. (See
Oil Base, Inc.
v.
Transport Indem. Co.,
American Automobile Ins. Co.
v.
Republic Indemnity Co., supra,
“Where ‘other insurance’ clauses of this type appear in *492 the automobile liability policies of both the driver and the owner, the eases have generally given effect to the excess provision in the policy of the driver and have held that the insurer of the owner is primarily liable and must bear the whole loss, within the limits of its policy.” Clearly that is not the situation presented at bar and the rule there announced and applied is not controlling upon the facts before us.
Rodriquez was operating a tractor and semitrailer which were hitched together and moving as a single unit. They were sold by George to Joe Torres through a single conditional sale contract; hence they had equal status under the Vehicle Code and the principles discussed above are fully applicable to both. Counsel for Federal contend, however, that its policy named only the tractor and that somehow this affects the whole liability situation. If this be factually true, we do not think the suggested result follows. Hitched together as they were the tractor and trailer constituted a single vehicle (cf.
Miller
v.
Berman,
Respondent and amici curiae argue that plaintiff is precluded from holding George and his insurer Federal liable because of res judicata. There was no such plea entered, nor was the point urged at the trial. 4 Be that as it may, the contention cannot be sustained. Its nourishment comes from the fact that the personal injury complaint alleges that Torres at the time of accident was the registered owner of a tractor and trailer (which allegation was denied) and that George negligently serviced, maintained, inspected and reconditioned the tractor-trailer,—the claim being that no attempt was made to hold George as owner, and that the judgment for plaintiffs *493 establishes Torres’ liability as that of registered owner and hence George and his insurer cannot be held in that same capacity. But the complaint also alleged Rodriquez to have been the agent, servant and employee of Torres, and that allegation was admitted by Torres’ answer. The record seems to require the inference that Torres was held liable on the theory of respondeat superior, as witness the fact of a verdict in favor of Juanita Carroll in excess of the statutory limit. But these considerations are not determinative.
The basic applicable rule is that a judgment is res judicata only between parties who are litigating with each other, ordinarily not so operative with respect to codefendants. Truck Insurance Exchange defended the action on behalf of Torres and Rodriquez. This undoubtedly established that Exchange is liable to them and to the plaintiffs in that action to make payment of the judgments, now final.
(Lamb
v.
Belt Casualty Co.,
“ [I]t is fundamental as to the doctrine in
res judicata
that before the former adjudication may operate as an estoppel as to issues in the later action, there must be an identity of parties, as well as an identity of issues.”
(Standard Oil Co.
v.
John P. Mills Organization,
Hardy
v.
Rosenthal,
The claim of res judicata does not lie in the case before us.
Federal relies upon “Exclusion 13” of its policy as an exemption from liability for the instant loss. By endorsement there had been added to the Federal policy before the accident an exclusion clause which, with the introductory phrase of the policy, says: 1 ‘ This policy does not apply: . . . Exclusion 13. To the use by the insured of any automobile as a public or livery conveyance or for carrying property for a charge.” Federal claims that this immunized it from any obligation to protect its insured with respect to the negligence action and judgment, but it did not plead any such defense. It appears that Torres had, as a licensed radial highway common carrier, transported from Tracy to March Field certain miscellaneous freight which was delivered on March 3 or 4; this was done by means of the GMC tractor and trailer, with Rodriquez driving. After making the delivery he had visited his grandmother for two or three days and was on his way back to Tracy at the time of the accident; the truck was empty, not carrying any property whatever.
Respondent does not seriously argue that the vehicle was being used as “a public or livery conveyance,” nor could it successfully do so.
(Cf. Pimper
v.
National American Fire Ins. Co.,
But respondent asserts that every carrying of property for a charge must involve a return trip and the exclusion clause reasonably covers the round trip. This view is precluded by the settled principle that the language of an insurance policy, being that of the insurer, is to be construed against it in ease of any ambiguity.
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co.,
The foregoing discussion disposes of all the contentions made by respective counsel which we deem it necessary to review, for they are dispositive of this appeal. Counsel present numerous other arguments but we consider that due regard for justifiable complaints against inordinately long opinions and increasing costs of necessary legal literature, such as official reports and advance sheets, demands that we not satisfy *497 counsels’ natural desire for a detailed explanation of our subsidiary rulings and that we now refrain from further comment.
The judgment is reversed with instructions to the trial court to make new or amended findings and judgment not inconsistent with the views herein expressed and imposing proportional liability upon Truck Insurance Exchange and Federal Insurance Company for payment of the existing judgments in favor of the Carrolls and Pulieras which are described in the pleadings herein.
Fox, P. J., and McMurray, J. pro tern., * * concurred.
The petition of respondent Federal Insurance Company for a rehearing was denied July 25, 1961, and its petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 23, 1961. White, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
By the time of trial all parties of record had been eliminated except the personal injury plaintiffs, the insurance companies, and the defendants Rodriquez and Torres.
We refer herein to code sections as they existed and were numbered before the revision of 1959.
We here enter a field which badly needs legislative action. A myriad of confusions has grown out of inability of insurers to agree upon the incidence or sharing of a common loss. The court said in
Firemen’s Ins. Co.
v.
Continental Cas. Co.,
The multiplicity of problems arising from this type of litigation between insurers is made clear in 5 Stanford Law Eeview 147, “Other Insurance’’ Clauses Conflict. The types of controversies are summarized as Escape clause v. excess clause, Excess v. prorate, Escape v. prorate, Prorate v. prorate, Excess v. excess. Escape v. escape. The insurance companies, probably as a matter of necessity, bring the personal injury plaintiffs into declaratory relief actions which often are brought before any judgment has been rendered in the personal injury case. These claimants are thus faced with employment of lawyers to litigate insur *489 anee coverage while engaged in establishing their right to a judgment for damages. Often they are unable to bear this additional financial burden. In the case before us the Carrolls and Pullaras have been actively represented in the personal injury suits, this declaratory relief action brought by Exchange and an appeal of their own from the judgment therein. We are persuaded that definite statutory rules which will obviate this large volume of intricate litigation, would be plainly in the public interest.
This is illustrated by the following passage quoted from the transcript:
‘ ‘ The Court: Maybe I missed your point. Mr. Brill: . . . The thought in my mind is this, that there never has been any finding of ownership in George of this vehicle. ... In the absence of some finding that George is the owner, which is the first barrier to even a discussion of the omnibus clause, or any of the other policy provisions, neither Torres nor Rodriquez could be considered additional insureds under the Federal policy. The Court: I follow that, and the two earlier judgments did not determine that? Mr. Brill: That is correct, your Honor. They simply determine liability of Torres and Rodriquez.” (Italics added.)
Assigned hy Chairman of Judicial Council.
