MICHAEL GENE UBER, a Minor, etc., Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
OHIO CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY et al., Defendants and Appellants; NEW AMSTERDAM CASUALTY COMPANY, Defendant and Respondent.
California Court of Appeals. Fourth Dist., Div. One.
Parker, Stanbury, McGee, Peckham & Garrett, Raymond G. Stanbury, Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps and Robert G. Steiner for Defendants and Appellants.
Smith, Prante & Biggins and Robert C. Baxley for Plaintiff and Respondent.
No appearance for Defendant and Respondent.
COUGHLIN, J.
Plaintiff sustained injuries in an automobile accident; in a previous action recovered judgment against the driver of an automobile invоlved in the accident; and by the instant action sought recovery on that judgment from the defendant insurance companies under policies of liability insurance respectively issued by them to three automobile sales agencies plaintiff claims were the оwners of the automobile at the time of the accident. Each policy contained an omnibus clause insuring any person using an automobile owned by the named insured with the latter's permission. Plaintiff brought this action against the insurance companies under the provisions of Insurance Code section 11580, upon *614 the ground the driver was insured under the omnibus clause in their policies. The automobile, prior to the accident, had been the subject of three transfers, each without compliance with the registration and title transfеr provisions of Vehicle Code section 5600. The first transfer was by the original owner to British Motor Sales Company, which was the named insured in the policy issued by defendant Ohio Casualty Insurance Company; the second transfer was by British Motors to Fred Kirk Motors, which was the named insurеd in the policy issued by defendant Travelers Insurance Company; and the third transfer was from Kirk Motors to Eastside Motors, which was the named insured in the policy issued by defendant New Amsterdam Casualty Company. [fn. 1] The driver at the time of the accident was using the automobile with the express permission of Eastside Motors.
Each transfer followed a bona fide sale and was accomplished in approximately the same manner. Possession of the automobile was delivered to the transferee. No notice of the transfer was givеn the Department of Motor Vehicles as provided by Vehicle Code, sections 5602, 5900 and 5901. The registration certificate, because it had been lost or mislaid, never was delivered to either of the transferees. Upon the initial transfer the certificate of ownership was delivered to British Motors by the registered owner and by the then legal owner, with an endorsement by the latter, and a power of attorney in blank signed by the former, the purported purpose of which was to permit its endorsement by an attorney in fact. British Mоtors and Kirk Motors, in making their transfers, each endorsed the certificate of ownership and delivered it to the transferee with the power of attorney. Following the accident an employee of Eastside Motors, using the blank power of attorney as authority therefor, endorsed the name of the original transferor, i.e., the registered owner, upon the certificate of ownership. Thereafter, new certificates of ownership and of registration were issued.
The trial court determined plaintiff was entitled tо recover from each insurance company a designated pro rata share of the personal injury judgment. This determination was predicated upon the conclusion that at the time of the accident each of the aforesaid automоbile agencies was an owner of the automobile driven by the person against whom plaintiff obtained judgment; the latter then was using the automobile *615 with their permission; and, for this reason, by virtue of the omnibus clause in the policy issued to each agency, the driver was an additional insured under each such policy.
The case was tried on a stipulated statement of facts supplemented by the testimony of two witnesses.
The insurance companies for British Motors and Kirk Motors, i.e., Ohio Casualty and Travelers, respectively, appealed from the judgment contending the conclusion of the trial court on the issue of liability and respecting the manner of proration was error.
[1] The transferee of an automobile under a sale accompanied by delivery of possession is deemed to be an owner thereof as to a third party injured by its use, for the purpose of imposing lability under Vehicle Code section 17150, even though there is no compliance with the prerequisites to transfer of title prescribed by Vehicle Code, section 5600; аnd the transferor is deemed to continue to be an owner as to such third party, for this purpose, unless he complies with the prerequisites to avoidance of liability as prescribed by Vehicle Code, section 5602. (Stoddart v. Peirce,
Under the foregoing rules British Motors and Kirk Motors, at the time of the accident resulting in plaintiff's injury, were owners of the subject automobile within the meaning of Vehicle Code section 17150 as they had not complied with the provisions of Vehicle Code section 5602, which would have terminated their subjection to liability under the former section upon endorsement and delivery of the ownership certificate and delivery of the registration certificate to their respective transferees, or upon the giving of the prescribed notice of transfer to the Department of Motor Vehicles. [4] Strict compliance with section 5602 is required before an owner may escape the liability imposed by section 17150 on account of an accident occurring before notice of the transfer is received by the Department of Motor Vehicles. (Stoddart v. Peirce, supra,
[6] The omnibus clause in an automotive liability insurance policy extends coverage thereunder to a person using an automobile owned by the named insured with the express or implied permission of the latter; is statutorily included in every such policy (Wildman v. Government Employees' Ins. Co.,
The elements of ownership and permissiоn essential to coverage under an omnibus clause have been specialized by case law. [7] The ownership of the offending automobile by the named insured must be that which subjects him to liability under Vehicle Code section 17150. (Borjesson v. Simpson,
[9] We conclude the parties to a transfer of an automobile, accompanied by a delivery of possession, contemplate its use not only by the immediate transferee but also by subsequent transferees and by permittees of all such transferees; a transferor who continues to be an owner for liability purposes because of his failure to comply with pertinent provisions of the Vehicle Code, impliedly consents to the use of the automobile transferred by the immediate transferee, subsequent transferees and the permittees of all such transferees (cf. Bardin v. Case,
Appellants assert, in substance, this court should reject the rules stated and applied in Harbor Ins. Co. v. Paulson, supra,
The judgment prorates liability for the loss in question between the three insurance companies according to the provision therefor in the "other insurance" clause in each policy. Appellants contend the court erred in prorating liability because the "other insurance" clause in their policies contains an "excess insurance" provision not contained in New Amsterdam's policy; the insurance covering the subject loss is excess insurance; and, under these circumstances, New Amsterdam's liability is primary and their liability is secondary.
[11] Where multiple policies apply to the same loss, the reciprocal obligations of the insurers thereunder, as a general rule, are governed by the "other insurance" clause in their policies. (American Automobile Ins. Co. v. Republic Indem. Co.,
The "excess insurance" provision in appellants' policy is expressed in the policy issued by Ohio Casualty in the following language: "[P]rovided, however, the insurance under this policy with respect to any ... non-owned automobile shall be excess insurance over any other valid and collectible insurance available to the insured, ..."; and is expressed in the policy issued by Travelers in substantially the same language. *619 By policy definitiоn a "nonowned" automobile is an automobile not owned by the named insured. Thus, "the insurance" declared to be excess insurance is that covering the loss arising out of the use of an automobile not owned by the insured.
Basic to liability under the omnibus clause of the рolicies is the fact the named insured is the owner of the automobile used by the person covered as an additional insured. Thus, the insurance provided under the omnibus clause, being dependent upon ownership of the offending automobile by the named insured, for the same reason, is not "the insurance" referred to in the "excess insurance" provision. In substance, for insurance purposes, the situation effecting coverage of the "additional insured" is the same as that effecting coverage for the named insured whilе driving his automobile.
The trial court properly disregarded the "excess insurance" provision in appellants' policy and properly prorated liability according to the prorating provisions in the three policies.
The judgment is affirmed.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Whelan, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[fn. 1] 1. Fred Kirk Motors and Eastside Motors were fictitious business names under which the owners thereof did business.
