DocketNumber: S. F. No. 11020.
Citation Numbers: 228 P. 11, 194 Cal. 114, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 218
Judges: Lawlor
Filed Date: 7/8/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/2/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 116 This is an application for a writ of prohibition made by the attorney for and on behalf of the petitioner, the party beneficially interested, to restrain the superior court, in and for the city and county of San Francisco, and Honorable George H. Cabaniss, judge thereof, from proceeding to trial of an action for an amount less than $300, upon the grounds that the superior court has no jurisdiction in the premises and that the petitioner has no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. An order to show cause was ordered to issue.
It appears that the Maryland Casualty Company, a corporation, as plaintiff, commenced an action against Karl Offer, as defendant, in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the city and county of San Francisco, by filing a verified complaint to enforce the alleged liability of the said defendant amounting to the sum of $53.25 for damages caused to a certain automobile, the property of one R.C. Lamayson, to whom the plaintiff had theretofore issued a certain policy of insurance, commonly called collision insurance, whereby the plaintiff agreed to pay to said R.C. Lamayson any damages which he might sustain by reason of collision; and it was further agreed that if said automobile were damaged by collision through the fault of any third person that any amount recovered from such third person on account of said damages should be for the benefit of plaintiff and that plaintiff should have a right to sue for such damages and that in any action so brought the said R.C. Lamayson would assist plaintiff to recover. A demurrer to the complaint was overruled on the ground that although the complaint involved the recovery of a sum of money less than $300 the court nevertheless had jurisdiction, *Page 117 and it is alleged that the trial will be proceeded with if the writ is not issued.
It is claimed in support of the application that the superior court is without jurisdiction (sec. 5, art. VI, Const.; sec. 112, Code Civ. Proc.) to entertain or further proceed in said action except to dismiss it for lack of jurisdiction.
Respondents claim jurisdiction upon the ground that section 76, subdivision 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure, and section 5, article VI, of the constitution, provide that the superior court shall have original jurisdiction in all cases in equity; that if a principle of equity is the foundation of the action the amount of money involved is not controlling; that the right of subrogation is applicable in a case of insurance, but that in the case at bar there was in fact no complete subrogation,but only a right to the amount sued for when recovered. It is apparent from respondents' brief that what is meant by "no complete subrogation" is that the right must first be judicially determined. In answer to the petitioner's claim that the right of subrogation has become cognizable in a court of law, especially when the right of action to which the party asks to besubrogated is a legal one, respondents claim that "it cannot be said that the plaintiff is compelled to seek his remedy at law rather than in equity."
Concerning the right of subrogation it is said in a note in 25 R. C. L. 1391: "By the civil law a surety paying the debt is subrogated to the rights of the creditor, ipso facto, but in modern practice the true rule would seem to be that a surety by payment does not become ipso facto subrogated to the rights of the creditor, but only acquires a right to such subrogation, and that before the substitution or equitable assignment can actually take place he must actively assert his equitable right thereto. It is not a substantive tangible right of such nature and character that it can be seized and held and enjoyed independently of a judicial proceeding. It is a right in action only, that is, it must be established by a judicial proceeding. For this purpose resort must be had to a civil action. Strictly speaking, there are two distinct causes of action in such cases — one consists of those facts that show the right to be subrogated to the rights of the creditor in the securities held by the latter; the other consists of those facts which show that the *Page 118 security may be enforced against the principal. In the natural order of precedence, the party must establish his right to be subrogated to the security before he can be permitted to enforce it." The note goes on to show that in every case the right to subrogation need not be first judicially determined, for if there is a statute providing for subrogation it is not necessary to the recognition of the right that there be a judicial determination thereof. (68 L.R.A. 574, 577, 587.)
[1] The principle upon which the right of subrogation is founded applies to cases of suretyship, but it is applied in all cases in which "one party pays a debt for which another is primarily answerable, and which, in equity and good conscience, should have been discharged by the latter." (Sheldon on Subrogation, p. 2.) [2] Thus insurance companies are given the right (Id., p. 333 et seq.). This right of the insurer against the wrongdoer does not rest upon any relation of contract or of privity between them, but arises out of the nature of the contract of insurance as a contract of indemnity. The right arises independent of a provision in the contract of insurance which gives the insurer the right to recover damages from the person responsible for the loss. (44 Am. St. Rep. 731-739.) [3] However, it is plain that the insurer on paying the amount of the loss on the property insured is subrogated only in a corresponding amount to the insured's right of action against any other person responsible for the loss (Liverpool GreatWestern Steam Co. v. Phenix Ins. Co.,
The development of subrogation is closely analogous to several other modes of remedy. The question often arises whether one who has suffered by being held liable for the tort or breach of contract of another should seek his remedy by an action founded on an express promise of indemnity, if such there was, or on the implied assumpsit raised by his payment of the obligation of the other, or upon the theory of subrogation. In some cases the claimant may have taken an assignment of the demand he has paid; he may have an express contract of indemnity, or an implied assumpsit to rest upon, and yet, perhaps, may have an election to proceed on the theory of subrogation, "which is a sort of assignment by operation of equity." This doctrine of subrogation having grown up out of the doctrine of assignment of causes of action it may be well to trace the progress of the latter. *Page 120
Originally the common-law courts would not recognize an assignment of a right of action; the assignee had no standing in court, and the assignor could sue notwithstanding his assignment. Finally, the courts of equity began to recognize assignments and to enforce them as between the parties and as against the debtor. This equitable practice being firmly established, the courts of law, while theoretically respecting the old common-law doctrine that the assignment was void at law, employed the fiction of a suit by one to the use of the other and gave the assignee an adequate remedy at law. And it was not necessary to first establish the right to the assignment in a court of equity. At this stage, then, the courts of equity refused to entertain a bill brought by an assignee because he had an adequate remedy at law by suing in the assignor's name. That is the situation here. In modern practice, by the adoption of codes of procedure, the assignee is given the right to sue in his own name. The doctrine of subrogation has progressed in much the same way as the doctrine of assignment, but has not reached the same stage of development. At first, subrogation was purely an equitable remedy not to be claimed at law. But the courts of law gradually grew to sustain actions founded on the doctrine of subrogation in cases where the claim itself was cognizable at law. [6] The better view is that a court of law may deal with subrogation as it may with assignment, and when the right of action to which a plaintiff asks to be subrogated is a legal right of action a court of law may treat a plaintiff who is entitled in equity to subrogation as an assignee and allow him to maintain an action of a legal nature upon the right to which he claims to be subrogated. When the common law first adopted the doctrine of subrogation it was held that the party seeking subrogation could not sue at law in his own name — the action must have been maintained for his benefit in the name of the original claimant. In the practice under the codes of procedure, requiring that the real party in interest shall bring the action, the courts allow one claiming subrogation to a legal cause of action to sue at law in his own name. An assignee is allowed to sue in his own name on the same ground. Of course, if the cause of action to which he claims to be subrogated is an equitable one, he must sue in equity, and there can always sue in his *Page 121
own name. (Note to French v. Vix, 30 Abb. N.C. 158-176; Dunlop
v. James,
In Boyd v. McDonough, 39 How. Pr. (N.Y.) 389, it was said: "This right of subrogation is also recognized by courts of law." In De Brauwere v. De Brauwere,
[7] Section
In considering the right of subrogation two theories must be kept in view. One theory is that it is a right which must be established by a proceeding in equity, or if there is a statute which recognizes the right in any particular class of claims and the right to which the party claiming subrogation is a legal right, such right may be enforced in a court of law. This theory regards the right as a matter of substantive law (68 L.R.A., supra). The other theory makes the enjoyment of the right depend upon the remedy provided. [10] In New York and other jurisdictions, as in this state, where there is a merger of law and equity and a single forum is theoretically capable of taking cognizance of all rights, both legal and equitable, a so-called equitable right may be enforced in a court of law. InKing v. Chase,
[11] The fact that the complaint prays that the court decree the insurance company to be subrogated to the rights of the insured does not determine the nature of the action. In essence the action against petitioner herein is a legal action and he is entitled to have such action tried in a court of law.
Let a writ of prohibition issue. So ordered.
Richards, J., Lennon, J., Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Waste, J., and Myers, C. J., concurred.
Powell v. . Water Co. , 171 N.C. 290 ( 1916 )
Liverpool & Great Western Steam Co. v. Phenix Insurance , 9 S. Ct. 469 ( 1889 )
United States v. California , 113 S. Ct. 1784 ( 1993 )
EMPLOYERS'FIRE INS. CO. v. United States , 167 F.2d 655 ( 1948 )
Peerless Insurance v. Superior Court , 85 Cal. Rptr. 679 ( 1970 )
Truck Insurance Exchange v. Torres , 14 Cal. Rptr. 408 ( 1961 )
Griffin v. Calistro , 280 Cal. Rptr. 30 ( 1991 )
Phoenix of Hartford Insurance v. Colony Kitchens , 128 Cal. Rptr. 893 ( 1976 )
George L. Schnader, Jr., Inc. v. Cole Building Co. , 236 Md. 17 ( 1964 )
Hoffmaster v. Harleysville Insurance , 441 Pa. Super. 490 ( 1995 )
Allstate Insurance v. Mel Rapton, Inc. , 77 Cal. App. 4th 901 ( 2000 )
Union Bank v. Gradsky , 71 Cal. Rptr. 64 ( 1968 )
in-the-matter-of-malissa-alberta-meeks-whitehead-in-bankruptcy-malissa , 583 F.2d 1104 ( 1978 )
Meyers v. Bank of America National Trust and Savings Ass'n , 1938 Cal. LEXIS 275 ( 1938 )
Rossmoor Sanitation, Inc. v. Pylon, Inc. , 13 Cal. 3d 622 ( 1975 )
Northwestern Mut. Ins. Co. v. Farmers Ins. Group , 143 Cal. Rptr. 415 ( 1978 )
National American Fire Ins. of Omaha v. United States , 171 F.2d 206 ( 1948 )
Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. Starley , 28 Cal. 2d 347 ( 1946 )
People v. Bernal , 101 Cal. App. 4th 155 ( 2002 )
Clark v. Lesher , 46 Cal. 2d 874 ( 1956 )
Lebet v. Cappobiancho , 3 Cal. Sup. 204 ( 1940 )
Sapiano v. Williamsburg National Insurance , 33 Cal. Rptr. 2d 659 ( 1994 )