CACI No. 3801. Implied Contractual Indemnity

Judicial Council of California Civil Jury Instructions (2024 edition)

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3801 . Implied Contractual Indemnity

[ Name of indemnitee ] claims that [he/she/ nonbinary pr onoun ] [is/was/may

be] requir ed to pay [ describe liability , e.g., “a court judgment in favor of

plaintiff John Jones” ] because [ name of indemnitor ] [failed to use

reasonable car e in performing work under an agr eement with [ name of

indemnitee ]/[ specify other basis of r esponsibility ]]. In order for [ name of

indemnitee ] to recover from [ name of indemnitor ], [ name of indemnitee ]

must prove both of the following:

1. That [ name of indemnitor ] [failed to use reasonable care in

[performing the work/[ describe work or services, e.g., testing the

soil ]] under an agreement with [ name of indemnitee ] / [ specify other

basis of responsibility ]]; and

2. That [ name of indemnitor ]’s conduct was a substantial factor in

causing [ name of plaintiff ]’s harm.

[[ Name of indemnitor ] claims that [[ name of indemnitee ] [and] [ insert

identification of others ]] contributed as [a] substantial factor[s] in causing

[ name of plaintiff ]’ s harm. T o succeed, [ name of indemnitor ] must prove

both of the following:

1. That [[ name of indemnitee ] [and] [ insert identification of others ]]

[was/were] [negligent/[ specify other basis of responsibility ]]; and

2. That [[ name of indemnitee ] [and] [ insert identification of others ]]

contributed as [a] substantial factor[s] in causing [ name of

plaintiff ]’s harm.

Y ou will be asked to determine the percentages of r esponsibility of [ name

of indemnitor ][,/ and] [[ name of indemnitee ][, and] all other persons

responsible] for [ name of plaintiff ]’ s harm.]

New September 2003; Revised December 2007, May 2020, November 2020

Directions for Use

The party identifications in this instruction assume a cross-complaint between

indemnitor and indemnitee defendants. In a direct action by the indemnitee against

the indemnitor , “name of plaintiff” will refer to the person to whom the indemnitee

has incurred liability .

Implied contractual indemnity may arise for reasons other than the indemnitor ’ s

negligent performance under the contract. If the basis of the claim is other than

negligence, specify the conduct involved. (See Garlock Sealing T echnologies, LLC v .

NAK Sealing T echnologies Corp. (2007) 148 Cal.App.4th 937, 974 [56 Cal.Rptr .3d

177] [breach of warranty].)

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Read the last bracketed portion if the indemnitor claims that the indemnitor was not

the sole cause of the indemnitee’ s liability or loss. Select options depending on

whether the indemnitor alleges contributory conduct of the indemnitee, of others, or

of both. Element 1 will have to be modified if there are dif ferent contributing acts

alleged against the indemnitee and others; for example, if the indemnitee is alleged

to have been negligent and another party is alleged to be strictly liable.

A special finding that an agreement existed may create a need for instructions, but it

is a question of law whether an agreement implies a duty to indemnify . This

instruction should be given only in cases in which the court has determined that the

alleged indemnitor and the indemnitee have “a joint legal obligation to the injured

party .” ( Prince v . Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (2009) 45 Cal.4th 1 151, 1 160 [90

Cal.Rptr .3d 732, 202 P .3d 1 1 15].)

Sources and Authority

• “In general, indemnity refers to ‘the obligation resting on one party to make

good a loss or damage another party has incurred.’ Historically , the obligation of

indemnity took three forms: (1) indemnity expressly provided for by contract

(express indemnity); (2) indemnity implied from a contract not specifically

mentioning indemnity (implied contractual indemnity); and (3) indemnity arising

from the equities of particular circumstances (traditional equitable indemnity). [¶]

Although the foregoing categories of indemnity were once regarded as distinct,

we now recognize there are only two basic types of indemnity: express

indemnity and equitable indemnity . Though not extinguished, implied contractual

indemnity is now viewed simply as ‘a form of equitable indemnity .’ ” ( Prince,

supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 1 157, internal citations omitted.)

• “The right to implied contractual indemnity is predicated upon the indemnitor ’ s

breach of contract, ‘the rationale . . . being that a contract under which the

indemnitor undertook to do work or perform services necessarily implied an

obligation to do the work involved in a proper manner and to discharge

foreseeable damages resulting from improper performance absent any

participation by the indemnitee in the wrongful act precluding recovery .’ . . .

‘An action for implied contractual indemnity is not a claim for contribution from

a joint tortfeasor; it is not founded upon a tort or upon any duty which the

indemnitor owes to the injured third party . It is grounded upon the indemnitor ’ s

breach of duty owing to the indemnitee to properly perform its contractual

duties.’ ” ( W est v . Superior Court (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1625, 1633 [34

Cal.Rptr .2d 409], internal citations omitted, original italics.)

• “[A]n implied contractual indemnity claim, like a traditional equitable indemnity

claim, is subject to the American Motor cycle rule that a party’ s liability for

equitable indemnity is based on its pr oportional shar e of r esponsibility for the

damages to the injured party .” ( Prince, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 1 165, original

• “[O]ur recognition that ‘a claim for implied contractual indemnity is a form of

equitable indemnity subject to the rules governing equitable indemnity claims’

CACI No. 3801 EQUIT ABLE INDEMNITY

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corrects any misimpression that joint liability is not a component.” ( Prince,

supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 1 166, internal citation omitted.)

• “[U]nder [Code of Civil Procedure] section 877.6, subsection (c), . . . an

[implied contractual] indemnity claim, like other equitable indemnity claims,

may not be pursued against a party who has entered into a good faith

settlement.” ( Bay Development, Ltd. v . Superior Court (1990) 50 Cal.3d 1012,

1031 [269 Cal.Rptr . 720, 791 P .2d 290].)

• “W e conclude the trial court erred in denying [the indemnitee’ s] implied

contractual indemnity based on [indemnitee’ s] failure to prove [the indemnitor ’ s]

breach of warranty was the product of [indemnitor ’ s] failure to use reasonable

care in performing its contractual duties. [Indemnitee] does not need to prove a

negligent breach of contract to be entitled to implied contractual indemnity .”

( Garlock Sealing T echnologies, supra , 148 Cal.App.4th at p. 974, internal

citations omitted.)

Secondary Sources

5 W itkin, Summary of California Law (1 1th ed. 2017) T orts, §§ 224, 229

Haning et al., California Practice Guide: Personal Injury , Ch. 4-D, T echniques Wher e

Settlement Not Forthcoming , ¶ 4:784 (The Rutter Group)

5 Levy et al., California T orts, Ch. 74, Resolving Multiparty T ort Litigation ,

§ 74.03[6] (Matthew Bender)

25 California Forms of Pleading and Practice, Ch. 300, Contribution and Indemnity ,

§ 300.61[5] (Matthew Bender)

1 1 California Points and Authorities, Ch. 1 15, Indemnity and Contribution ,

§ 1 15.91[3][a] (Matthew Bender)

California Civil Practice: T orts § 4:14 (Thomson Reuters)

3802-3899. Reserved for Future Use

EQUIT ABLE INDEMNITY CACI No. 3801

Page last reviewed May 2024

Kathryn Robb

Kathryn Robb, National Director of the Children’s Justice Campaign at Enough Abuse, discusses Vice President Kamala Harris’s unusual mention of child sexual abuse during her Democratic National Convention speech and its broader implications for addressing this issue in America.

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