Ford Motor Co. v. Robert J. Poeschl, Inc.

21 Cal. App. 3d 694
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1971
DocketCiv. No. 12471
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 Cal. App. 3d 694 (Ford Motor Co. v. Robert J. Poeschl, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Motor Co. v. Robert J. Poeschl, Inc., 21 Cal. App. 3d 694 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Acting P. J.

Through this indemnification suit Ford Motor Company seeks to shift the cost of a personal injury settlement to the dealer and the leasing agency who placed an allegedly unsafe automobile in the hands of the customer.

Gist of Ford’s complaint is that it sent to its dealers a notice requesting the recall of certain 1964 Thunderbird automobiles (designated by number) in order to have the rear brake light serviced; that, despite the recall notice, one of the listed Thunderbirds leased to a customer by defendants was involved in an accident allegedly caused by the very brake light defect described in the recall notice; that Ford paid $72,000 to settle litigation instituted by the injured parties against Ford, the dealer and the leasing agency; that the latter two parties refused to contribute to the settlement.

The trial court held that Ford’s second amended complaint failed to state a claim for relief and sustained a general demurrer without leave to amend. Ford has appealed from the ensuing judgment.

The parties entered into no contract to indemnify. Ford’s claim is thus hinged to the principle of implied indemnity, which permits one of two tortfeasors to shift the entire loss to the other when, without active fault on the claimant’s part, he has been compelled by reason of some legal obligation to pay damages occasioned by the immediate fault of the other. As a rough rule of thumb, the decisions allowing indemnity speak of the “passive” fault of the claimant as compared with the “active” fault of the indemnitor. Standing alone, the passive-active fault criterion is too vague to serve as a decisional guide. The standard most frequently applied by the California appellate courts is one drawn from an opinion of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Builders Supply Co. v. McCabe, 366 Pa. 322, 325-326 [77 A.2d 368, 24 A.L.R.2d 319]: “The right of indemnity rests upon a difference between the primary and secondary liability of two persons each of whom is made responsible by the law to an injured party. . . . The difference between primary and secondary liability is not based on a difference in [697]*697degrees of negligence or on any doctrine of comparative negligence,—a doctrine which, indeed, is not recognized by the common law. ... It depends on a difference in the character or kind of the wrongs which cause the injury and in the nature of the legal obligation owed by each of the wrongdoers to the injured person. . . . But the important point to be noted in all the cases is that secondary as distinguished from primary liability rests upon a fault that is imputed or constructive only, being based on some legal relation between the parties, or arising from some positive rule of common or statutory law or because of a failure to discover or correct a defect or remedy a dangerous condition caused by the act of the one primarily responsible.”1

Recognizing that any verbal formulation is vulnerable to subjective manipulation, a commentator has shrewdly observed that deterrence is the policy goal underlying most of the implied indemnity decisions. (Comment, Allocations of Loss Among Joint Tortfeasors, 41 So.Cal.L.Rev. 728, 744.) A similar measuring device is suggested by the last clear chance concept, drawn by analogy from another area of the law involving dual sources of fault. (See 2 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (1960) pp. 1542-1543.) The analogy has been noted by the American Law Institute’s reporters for the Restatement of Restitution. Section 97 of the Restatement calls for indemnification of one tortfeasor by another, when the latter knew of the peril and could have averted it when the first actor was unable to do so.2

Wrongs other than negligence may create dual liability to the third [698]*698party and produce the claim of indemnity. In products liability cases such as this, a manufacturer’s or retailer’s strict liability in tort may form the springboard for the indemnity claim. (See Dart Transportation Service v. Mack Trucks, Inc., 9 Cal.App.3d 837, 848 [88 Cal.Rptr. 670].) An automobile manufacturer who produces a defective car and places it on the market is strictly liable in tort for resultant damages without proof of negligence; moreover, a manufacturer cannot escape liability by delegating to its dealers responsibility for inspections and corrections necessary to have its cars delivered to the ultimate customer free of dangerous defects. (Vandermark v. Ford Motor Co., 61 Cal.2d 256, 261 [37 Cal.Rptr. 896, 391 P.2d 168].)

Before applying these standards to the case at hand, we take note of decisions holding that the issue whether the claimant’s conduct precludes indemnity is a fact question for the jury and becomes one of law only when the result is clear and undisputable. (Pearson Ford Co. v. Ford Motor Co., 273 Cal.App.2d 269, 275 [78 Cal.Rptr. 279]; Ralke Co. v. Esquire Bldg. Maintenance Co., supra, 246 Cal.App.2d at pp. 144-145.) Such pronouncements are made in the context of post-trial appeals which equip the reviewing court with an evidentiary record and a verdict or finding. Here the indemnity claim comes-up on the plaintiff’s pleading. The issue’s character as one of fact is dubious in any event. (See Aerojet General Corp. v. D. Zelinsky & Sons, supra, 249 Cal.App.2d at p. 610; Weiner, The Civil Jury Trial and the Law-Fact Distinction (1966) 54 Cal.L.Rev. 1867.) The doubt is not troublesome here. Plaintiff has twice amended its complaint and is thus accountable for a crystallized statement of the facts. The fact situation being fixed, the task is to characterize it according to legal standards, essentially a law determination rather than a fact-finding problem.

Whether the vehicle was in the dealer’s hands or whether it had reached the customer at the time of the recall notice, Ford cannot recover. Its complaint alleges that the dealer had local service facilities for correcting the brake light, while it did not. Ford’s lack of local service facilities is not significant, for it had other practicable means of preventing injury. Ford makes no claim that it lacked ability to locate the vehicle or that it could not have had the defect repaired at its expense in the dealer’s shop or elsewhere. Even if the vehicle had reached the customer’s hands when the manufacturer discovered the defect, it could have plucked the flower of safety out of the nettle of danger by locating the owner and notifying him of the defect.3

[699]*699By notifying the dealer alone, Ford could not shift to the dealer the direct obligation of safety it owed the customer. (Vandermark v. Ford Motor Co., supra.) Ford’s production of the defective car, coupled with its failure to attempt direct notice to the customer, breached a direct obligation it owed the latter. Ford had -a “last clear chance” to avert injury and failed to use it. Its fault is primary, not secondary, and not imputed to it as a consequence of the dealer’s or leasing agency’s fault. Under the pleaded circumstances, the latter are not liable for indemnification of the manufacturer.

The dealer and the leasing agency shared Ford’s ability to reach the customer before an accident occurred.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ford Motor Co. v. Robert J. Poeschl, Inc.
21 Cal. App. 3d 694 (California Court of Appeal, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Cal. App. 3d 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-robert-j-poeschl-inc-calctapp-1971.