Summary
In Cowden v. Crippen, 1936, 101 Mont. 187, 53 P.2d 98, 103, the Court said: "The pertinent question is whether the speed, whatever it may have been, was so excessive as to affect defendant's control over his car under the conditions which actually existed at that particular time and place, or as they reasonably appear to defendant to exist.
Summary of this case from Merithew v. HillOpinion
No. 7,461.
Submitted December 6, 1935.
Decided January 7, 1936.
Personal Injuries — Automobiles — Guest Law — Negligent Driving — Evidence — Insufficiency — Failure to Keep Lookout — Excessive Speed — Duty of Driver on Highway — Presumption That Driver Endeavoring to Pass will Do so Lawfully — Complaint — Instructions — Law of Case — Appeal — When Submission of Cause to Jury Error. Personal Injuries — Automobile Guest Law — What Plaintiff must Show to Warrant Recovery. 1. Under the Automobile Guest Act (Chap. 195, Laws of 1931) before a guest of a motorist is entitled to recover for injuries sustained while riding in his host's car he must prove that they were caused directly and proximately by defendant's grossly negligent and reckless operation of the car, either standing alone or in concurrence with wrongful acts of another. Trial — Instructions — Law of Case. 2. Instructions given become the law of the case and are binding on the jury as such. Personal Injuries — Automobiles — Mere Occurrence of Accident not Evidence of Negligence. 3. The fact that an accident or automobile collision occurred is no evidence of negligence. Same — Negligence of Automobilist in Failing to Keep Lookout for Vehicles Attempting to Pass from Rear — Evidence — Insufficiency. 4. A charge of negligence on the part of defendant automobilist in an action to recover for the death of one of his guests, the accident being caused by a motorist coming from behind and striking his car in passing, in failing to keep a proper lookout for vehicles attempting to pass, held not sustained, where the evidence was uncontradicted that defendant was on his own side of the road, observed the car coming up behind, swung his car as far to the right as he could without driving off the highway, and was driving with the right wheels of his car on the shoulder of the highway. Same — Test for Determining Whether Automobile Under Control of Driver. 5. The usual test in determining whether an automobile is under control is the ability to avoid colliding with another who is using the highway and exercising proper care and caution on his own part. Same — Automobiles — Statutory Limit of Speed — Meaning of Statute. 6. The only restriction or limit placed on the rate of speed at which automobiles shall travel on state highways is that prescribed by section 1742, Revised Codes 1921, the import of which is, as applied to an accident resulting in an action for damages, that the speed, whatever it may have been, was not so excessive as to have affected the driver's control over his car under the conditions which existed at the particular time and place, or as they reasonably appeared to him to have existed. Same — Evidence Held Insufficient to Show Gross Negligence on Part of Driver in Action Under Automobile Guest Law. 7. Evidence in an automobile accident case in which the driver was sought to be held for the death of one of the driver's guests while traveling on an oil-surfaced highway, held insufficient to show gross negligence in driving at an excessive rate of speed, it on the contrary showing uncontradictedly that throughout an extended trip a uniform rate of speed was maintained, that the driver appeared to have adequate control of the car, that there was no slipping or weaving, that the other guests considered the defendant a safe and good driver apparently driving at a safe rate of speed and that neither the driver nor his guests had noticed an alleged icy condition of the part of the road where the accident, which was due to the act of a motorist coming from the rear to pass defendant's car in negligently striking the front wheel of defendant's car and causing it to swerve off the road, occurred. Same — Statutory Duty of Driver of Automobile When Aware That Motorist Endeavoring to Pass Him. 8. There is no duty resting upon a motorist to slow down his speed when he becomes aware of the fact that another car desires to pass him from the rear, the only requirement in that behalf being the provision of section 1543, subdivision 3, Revised Codes 1921, declaring that he must without unnecessary delay make every reasonable effort to permit him to do so. Same — Proximate Cause of Automobile Accident Held Act of Passing Automobilist in Crowding Defendant Off Highway. 9. Held, that under the facts as stated in paragraph 7, supra, the negligent act of the driver in attempting to pass the car driven by defendant as he did and in thus crowding the latter off the road was the direct, proximate and only cause of the accident, and that therefore the rule holding both jointly and severally liable where concurrent negligence is proved has no application. Same — Driver of Car may Act upon Presumption That One Attempting to Pass will Do so in Lawful Manner. 10. The driver of an automobile, while proceeding in a lawful manner on the proper side of the highway, has a right to assume that one attempting to pass him from the rear will proceed in a lawful manner and on his own side of the road, as required by section 1743, Revised Codes 1921. Same — When Error Committed by Trial Court in Submitting Cause to Jury. 11. Where the essential facts in a personal injury action are either admitted or undisputed, or the evidence with relation thereto is all in one direction, the matter becomes a question of law for the trial court, and it is error to submit the cause to the jury.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE SANDS dissenting.
Appeal from District Court, Custer County; S.D. McKinnon, Judge.
Messrs. Speer Hoffman and Mr. W.B. Leavitt, for Appellant, submitted a brief; Mr. Harvey B. Hoffman argued the cause orally.
Mr. George W. Farr and Mr. Carl L. Brattin, for Respondents, submitted a brief; Mr. Farr argued the cause orally.
Causative negligence on the part of appellant was not proven. Turning to the specific acts of negligence charged:
Failure to keep a lookout: The only evidence in the record is to the effect that appellant maintained a proper lookout, heard and saw Tomten from behind, turned far over to appellant's right, applied his brakes and slowed down perceptibly. No evidence of failure to have or keep a proper lookout.
Excessive speed: Appellant, admittedly, was going about fifty miles per hour. That had nothing to do with Tomten running up on him from behind, heading in and crowding appellant into the ditch. There is no contradiction of appellant's testimony that Tomten headed in, hit and immediately the appellant's automobile took the ditch as the direct result; nor is Crippen's testimony contradicted, impeached or diminished that Tomten's car hit his and took the control away, throwing him in the ditch. In McDonough v. Smith, 86 Mont. 545, 284 P. 542, this court said: "And, where the uncontradicted testimony shows that plaintiff was driving on the right-hand side of the road and was overtaken by defendant's car and struck, it makes out a case of negligence."
The respondents' position is reduced to an absurdity by the following: Appellant having proceeded in a Regal sedan with such momentum that Tomten's rash act threw him into the ditch with a resulting upset, Tomten would escape liability upon the plea of contributory negligence, notwithstanding that appellant had the right to assume that Tomten would comply with section 1743, subsection 1, of the Revised Codes 1921, requiring him to keep to the left in passing. Courts universally hold that one using the highway may assume others using it will follow the statutes and other laws of the road. ( McGregor v. Weinstein, 70 Mont. 340, 225 P. 615; Blashfield, Ency. of Auto. Law, pp. 425, 489, 496, 501, 845, 849 and 1012; 3-4 Huddy, Ency. of Auto Law, p. 344, sec. 180; Government Street Lbr. Co. v. Ollinger, 208 Ala. 699, 94 So. 922; Greer Transp. Co. v. Knight, 157 Md. 528, 146 A. 851; Gosma v. Adams, 102 Fla. 305, 135 So. 806, 78 A.L.R. 1193; Curtis v. Perry, 171 Wn. 542, 18 P.2d 840; Killilay v. Hawk, 250 Ill. App. 222; Price v. Bailey, 265 Ill. App. 358; L. Hammel Dry Goods Co. v. Hinton, 216 Ala. 127, 112 So. 638; Swartz v. Feddershon, 92 Cal.App. 285, 268 P. 430; Hickerson v. Jossey, 131 Or. 612, 282 P. 768, 283 P. 1119; Tregonning v. Castantini, 243 Mich. 233, 220 N.W. 171.) Generally, when the automobile passing turns in too close, and collides with the automobile on its own side of the road, the driver or owner of the latter may recover damages sustained. (See 24 A.L.R. 517; 47 A.L.R. 718; 62 A.L.R. 984.) In the only cases we could find, third parties by the roadside, damaged or injured by the automobile crowded off the road by the passing car turning too close, were denied recovery against driver that was crowded off. ( Staples v. L.W. Blinn Lumber Co., 97 Cal.App. 387, 275 P. 813; McDonald v. Cantley, 214 Cal. 40, 3 P.2d 552.)
Furthermore, speed alone is generally held not to constitute gross negligence or recklessness. ( Ascher v. Freidman, Inc., 110 Conn. 1, 147 A. 263; Vanderkruik v. Mitchell, 118 Conn. 625, 173 A. 900; Yearwood v. Yearwood, 45 Ga. App. 203, 164 S.E. 105; Jones v. Massey, 158 Va. 121, 163 S.E. 63; Levinson v. Hagerman, 214 Iowa, 1296, 244 N.W. 307; Shenkle v. Mains, 216 Iowa, 1324, 247 N.W. 635; Balcer v. Pere Marquette Ry. Co., 266 Mich. 538, 254 N.W. 198.)
As to what constitutes gross negligence in a case such as this, see Liston v. Reynolds, 69 Mont. 480, 223 P. 507; Siesseger v. Puth, 213 Iowa, 164, 239 N.W. 46; Silver v. Silver, 108 Conn. 371, 143 A. 240, 65 A.L.R. 943; Ascher v. Freidman, Inc., supra; Altman v. Aronson, 231 Mass. 588, 121 N.E. 505, 4 A.L.R. 1185; Krause v. Rarity, 210 Cal. 644, 293 P. 62, 77 A.L.R. 1327; Coconower v. Stoddard, 96 Ind. App. 287, 182 N.E. 466, 86 A.L.R. 1147.
A guest in an automobile must protest reckless speed. Respondents may not say that deceased did not see or know what he must have seen or known, had he looked. ( Grant v. Chicago etc. Ry. Co., 78 Mont. 97, 112, 252 P. 382.) One with knowledge of the speed making no objection cannot recover, for he is held to have approved and acquiesced. (1 Berry on Automobiles, 6th ed., secs. 665 and 689; Wagenbauer v. Schwinn, 285 Pa. 128, 131 A. 699; Olson v. Hermansen, 196 Wis. 614, 220 N.W. 203, 61 A.L.R. 1243; Fair v. Union Traction Co., 102 Kan. 611, 171 P. 649; Harding v. Jesse, 189 Wis. 652, 207 N.W. 706; Maybee v. Maybee, 79 Utah, 585, 11 P.2d 973.)
Refusal of the instruction that "It is the law that a party is only answerable for the natural, probable, and reasonable consequences of his act, and where some new efficient cause, not set in motion by him and wholly independent of his acts, intervenes and produces the injury, such new development is the proximate and dominant cause thereof and the defendant is in no wise responsible," etc., was error. It was particularly applicable because Tomten's act was not within reasonable contemplation, and the uncontradicted evidence of appellant that he had control and no injuries or accidents would have happened, except for Tomten's rashness, is amply corroborated by other evidence. The following authorities sustain the right to the instruction: Anderson, Automobile Accident Suit, p. 747; Johnson v. Omaha, 108 Neb. 481, 188 N.W. 122; Louisville Auto Supply Co. v. Irvine, 212 Ky. 60, 278 S.W. 149; Consolidated Coach Corp. v. Saunders, 229 Ky. 284, 17 S.W.2d 233; Ruffin Coal Transfer Co. v. Rich, 214 Ala. 633, 108 So. 596; Bona v. S.R. Thomas Auto Co., 137 Ark. 217, 208 S.W. 306; Reynosa v. Pickwick Stages System, 115 Cal.App. 383, 1 P.2d 548.
Appellant's counsel have apparently entirely overlooked the question of concurrent negligence as presented in this case. Plaintiff's complaint charged that the negligence of the defendant Crippen and of Tomten concurred together to produce the accident and the resulting injuries. Under the decisions of this court, Crippen and Tomten are jointly and severally liable, and the plaintiff may recover from either or both. ( Marinkovich v. Tierney, 93 Mont. 72, 17 P.2d 93; Jones v. Northwestern Auto Supply Co., 93 Mont. 224, 18 P.2d 305; see, also, Freeman v. Sand Coulee Coal Co., 25 Mont. 194, 64 P. 347; Ellinghouse v. Ajax Livestock Co., 51 Mont. 275, 152 P. 481, L.R.A. 1916D, 836; Forsell v. Pittsburgh Montana C. Co., 38 Mont. 403, 100 P. 218; Black v. Martin, 88 Mont. 256, 292 P. 577.) The negligence of the one is no excuse for that of the other. ( Graves v. Flesher, 176 Wn. 130, 28 P.2d 297; Anderson, Automobile Accident Suit, secs. 603 and 610.) In cases involving the injury of a guest by reason of the host driving at an excessive rate of speed, the proximate cause is for the jury. (Id.)
The evidence clearly discloses that Crippen was driving at a reckless rate of speed, and that in so doing he was guilty of gross negligence. The plaintiffs were entitled to produce and prove, by men who not only had long experience in the handling and driving of automobiles, but by men who actually had seen the highway as it was at that time, as to what would be a safe rate of speed at which to drive a car over that highway. ( Butler v. Hyperion Theatre Co., 100 Conn. 551, 124 A. 220; Demarais v. Johnson, 90 Mont. 366, 3 P.2d 283; Lockhart v. Litchtenthaler, 46 Pa. 151; Gillespie v. Collier, 224 Fed. 298, 139 C.C.A. 534; Spring Co. v. Edgar, 99 U.S. 645, 25 L.Ed. 487; Beeson v. Cress, 7 Ohio App. 482; Anderson, Automobile Accident Suit, sec. 412; 22 C.J. 536-549, 569, 570.)
In the case at bar not only did Crippen fail to keep a proper lookout but he also drove at an excessive rate of speed, and he also did not give heed to the warning signal by the car in the rear of a desire to pass, and he did not slow down or turn to his right. He did not have his car under proper control.
The case of Monner v. Starker, 147 Or. 118, 31 P.2d 1109, is one where the element of excessive speed was important, and the court held that whether the rate of speed constituted gross negligence was for the jury. In Dye v. City of Seattle, 173 Wn. 515, 24 P.2d 67, the excessive rate of speed of the car in question was considered as the decisive element in determining whether the driver was guilty of gross negligence.
"It is generally held that evidence indicating that a vehicle driven by the host left the highway without apparent cause and collided with a tree or other object near or along the highway, thereby injuring the guest, raises a question of the host's gross negligence that must be determined by the jury." (Anderson, Automobile Accident Suit, sec. 821, and cases cited on page 985, note 18.) Excessive speed is sufficient to require the submission of the matter of gross negligence to the jury. ( Lindsey v. Kindt, 221 Ala. 190, 128 So. 139; Dickson v. Dinsmore, 219 Ala. 353, 122 So. 437.) When gross negligence is shown on the part of the defendant contributory negligence is not a defense. In other words, a showing by the plaintiff that the defendant was guilty of gross negligence is sufficient to prevent interposition of a plea of contributory negligence. When a guest is required to prove gross negligence in order to recover, the defense of contributory negligence is not available to the host. Ordinarily it will not be held as a matter of law that a guest assures the risk of the host's conduct, unless the evidence shows that he was fully aware thereof and acquiesced therein. (Anderson, Automobile Accident Suit, secs. 823, 825, 828.)
The case of Fishman v. Silva, 116 Cal.App. 1, 2 P.2d 473, is in its analysis of the facts and the legal questions involved illuminating as to some of the questions presented in the case at bar. While the facts were somewhat different, the legal principles involved were very much similar. There, the concurrent negligence of two defendants was alleged. The fact of the accident was conceded, as was the fact that at least one of the two defendants was guilty of the negligence proximately causing the accident. But there, as here, one of the principals involved attempted to absolve himself and fasten the entire blame upon the other. It was found that the accident, with its loss and injury and damages was proximately caused by the concurrent negligence of both defendants. The court after discussing the evidence of the slippery condition of the highway and the speed, found that both parties were negligent. The conclusion of the court is as follows:
"We are satisfied that the facts as disclosed warrant and support the judgment of the court below that the proximate cause of the collision was the concurrent negligence of both parties. The question of whether the negligence of two defendants is independent or concurrent is generally one for the trial court; and if there be evidence to support it, the finding is conclusive on this court."
Viola Cowden, Loretta Cowden, Lorna Crawford and Ruth Cowden, heirs at law of L.E. Cowden, deceased, obtained a judgment in the district court of Custer county against Clarence Crippen. The action was prosecuted under the so-called "Guest Statute" of the state of Montana (Chap. 195, Laws of 1931), which reads as follows:
"Section 1. The owner or operator of a motor vehicle shall not be liable for any damages or injuries to any passenger or person riding in said motor vehicle as a guest or by invitation and not for hire, nor for any damages to such passenger's or person's parent or guardian, unless damage or injury is caused directly and proximately by the grossly negligent and reckless operation by him of such motor vehicle.
"Section 2. Any person riding in a motor vehicle as a guest or by invitation and not for hire, assumes as between owner and guest the ordinary negligence of the owner or operator of such motor vehicle.
"Section 3. The ordinary negligence of the owner or operator of a motor vehicle as between owner and guest is imputed to any person riding in such vehicle as a guest or by invitation and not for hire."
It appears that the deceased Cowden, who was a farmer living near Sidney, Richland county, was desirous of attending a farmers' meeting at or near Miles City on December 4, 1933. By previous arrangement W.L. Bell, Godfried Miller, Daniel La Bonte and L.E. Cowden arranged to ride to Miles City with Crippen as nonpaying passengers. All were desirous of attending a turkey grading school which was to be held by the United States Range Livestock Marketing Association. The school was scheduled to open at about 8 o'clock in the morning. At a very early hour Crippen picked up his passengers. Bell, who resided in Sidney, rode in the front seat with Crippen; the others were picked up at intervals between Sidney and Glendive. At Glendive the party stopped for breakfast, and later proceeded on towards Miles City.
The road from Glendive through Terry and to a point about twenty miles east of Miles City was a Federal-Aid highway, graded and graveled but not oiled. From this last-named point on to Miles City the road was what was known as oil-finished or surfaced. Crippen was an experienced driver, having owned eight automobiles and having driven several hundred thousand miles over a period of years. The car he was driving on this occasion was a 1933 Studebaker Regal sedan equipped with heavy, nonskid, six-ply tires. He had owned the car for about five months and had driven it about 2,500 miles. It was in good condition, and, according to all of the evidence, it ran normally, and he was a good driver. No complaint was made of his driving, although he made an average speed of from 45 to 50 and perhaps 60 miles an hour.
All the witnesses agreed that the speed was fairly uniform, and that there was no slipping or skidding or anything of an unusual character connected with the trip until they reached the point of the accident, which was 2 1/2 miles east of Miles City, and about 18 or 20 miles west of the beginning of the oil-surfaced road. The only change observed by the driver or the passengers between the oiled road and the graveled was that the car ran more smoothly, but about the same rate of speed was maintained.
At a point about two or three miles from the place of the accident a high school boy by the name of Tomten, driving a Chevrolet car, came into the road from the north and just ahead of the Crippen car. There is some difference of opinion as to the speed maintained by Tomten as he came onto the highway. Crippen, however, slowed his car down, and Tomten straightened out on the highway on the right side of the road. Immediately after that Crippen passed the Tomten car and moved over to the right side of the road himself, and proceeded at about the same rate of speed, that is, somewhere between 45 and 63 miles an hour.
It appears that Tomten decided to pass the Crippen car and proceeded to speed up. He gave notice of his desire by honking his horn. All of the passengers agree that he so signified his intention. Crippen said that he heard the signal, applied his brakes a few times with the purpose of slowing down, and that he moved farther toward the right side of the road to make way for the Chevrolet car. At this point the oiled surface of the road was 20 feet wide, with a graveled shoulder or extension of about 3 feet on each side thereof. Crippen's car moved over to the extreme right of the oiled surface. According to the witnesses who examined the tracks after the accident, the right wheels of the Crippen car moved along the edge of the oiled surface, part of the time on the gravel and part of the time on the oiled surface, the left wheels being toward the middle of the road.
There was but one witness to the accident, in addition to the occupants of the car; that was one Fred Hansen, a farmer who lived some 60 rods from the road. He was in his yard and observed the two cars moving at what he denominated a high rate of speed, 50 to 60 miles an hour. He said he thought there would be an accident and he watched to see, and finally observed the occurrence. The Tomten car pulled in toward the Crippen car and a contact was made which resulted in the accident. Cowden was either instantly killed or so badly injured that he died shortly thereafter. The other occupants of the car were taken to Miles City and hospitalized.
In due time this suit was instituted. The particular acts of negligence charged against Crippen were: (a) That he failed to keep a proper lookout, particularly for vehicles attempting to pass; (b) that he was running at excessive speed, to-wit, about 50 miles an hour; and (c) that he failed to keep his car under control so that he could apply the brakes or bring it to a stop on the traveled surface of the roadway or highway, without the car wheel skidding on or off the highway. The important allegations of the complaint are substantially as follows: That the highway upon which the party was traveling was a public highway known as Federal-Aid Highway No. 10; that for approximately 20 miles eastward from Miles City it was oiled, hard and smooth; that the night before the accident there had been a fall of rain, snow and sleet and a below-freezing temperature; that the surface of the highway was covered with ice, so that it was rendered dangerous and unsafe for travel; that the driver was required to keep and maintain a lookout and watch for other vehicles attempting to pass, and to operate his automobile at a slow rate of speed on account of the icy condition, and so as to keep the car under complete control; that, as the car proceeded over the highway, one Ernest Tomten, driving a Chevrolet car, attempted to pass Crippen's car, and that the two cars came together and collided by reason of the careless, negligent and reckless manner in which Crippen was driving his car; that as a result of the collision the Crippen car slipped and skidded off the traveled portion of the highway, turned over several times, threw Cowden violently against the framework thereof, and injured him to such an extent that he died; and that the results were due to the concurrent wrongful acts of negligence of both Crippen and Tomten.
The answer denied the essential allegations of the complaint, but admitted the collision between the two cars. It alleged that the accident occurred by reason of the negligent and reckless driving of Tomten, who, it is alleged drove his car into the Crippen car and forced it from the road. Thereafter reply was filed, and the cause came to trial; julgment was entered for the plaintiffs and against the defendant Crippen, who appealed from the judgment.
As we have suggested, there was but one eye-witness, aside from the occupants of the cars. Tomten did not testify nor make any explanation of his actions. The witness Hansen was approximately 60 rods away. W.L. Bell sat in the front seat with the driver; he testified that he heard the horn of the Tomten car, and that Crippen applied his foot brake and had slowed down some when the Tomten car came up to the Studebaker. At the inquest he gave the speed of the Crippen car as 50 miles an hour at the time of the signal, and said that thereafter Crippen slowed down to about 40. At the trial he gave the speed of the Crippen car as 63 miles an hour and said that Crippen slowed down to 60. He said that the Tomten car came onto the road at about 50 miles an hour but slowed down to 20 or 25 after it got on the road. He detailed the incident of Crippen's passing the Tomten car, and said that when Tomten in turn tried to pass the Crippen car he moved alongside Crippen, and he thought that the wheel of the Tomten car caught on the bumper of the Crippen car; he was sure that there was some kind of contact between the two cars, causing the Crippen car to leave the road. He had not observed any ice or any slippery condition of the highway until after the accident; immediately after the accident, when he got out he observed ice on the highway.
Miller, who was riding on the back seat of the Crippen car, told of the approach of the Tomten car, and said it looked to him as though Tomten "was headed for us." He testified at the trial that Crippen was driving 50 or 60 miles an hour at the time, but in a previous statement made shortly after the accident he had estimated the speed at around 40 miles. He did not observe any trouble or slippery condition on the oiled highway and had not noticed any skidding. He first observed the ice after the accident.
La Bonte, another back-seat passenger, estimated the speed of the Crippen car at 50 or 60 miles an hour. He also said that it looked for a time as though Tomten was going to "drive into us." He said that Crippen did not slacken his speed; he also stated that there was a contact or collision between the two cars. He had not noticed any ice on the road or any unfavorable driving conditions previous to the accident.
One Hooker, a witness for plaintiffs, testified that he drove over that highway at approximately the hour of the accident, and that its condition was icy and slick.
Adrian Lindsay, another witness for plaintiffs, drove over the road; he said that his tires were smooth, and he observed the icy condition of the road and was forced to drive near the edge where the wheels on one side would be on the graveled surface instead of the oiled surface. Other witnesses, including the sheriff and undersheriff, testified that there was ice on the road, but no one testified that the Crippen car had slipped or skidded by reason thereof prior to the accident.
Sheriff Taylor, of Custer county, reached the scene of the accident shortly after its occurrence. He made observations and measurements. He said that the highway was icy on the oiled part, and that there had been no skidding of the Crippen car for a distance of 200 feet before it went off the grade. He observed that the brakes had been applied once or twice, and that the left wheels, running on the oiled surface, had slipped forward or straight ahead. He measured the width of the road as 20 feet on the oiled portion, and as 3 or 4 feet of gravel surface on each side. He said that the right wheels of the Crippen car had been running partly on the oiled surface and partly on the gravel, so that it indicated that Crippen was over as far to the right as he could get; that near the point where the Crippen car went off the grade for 20 or 30 feet the right wheels were on gravel directly off the oiled pavement; and that all skidding was straight ahead. He said there was no evidence of frozen gravel sufficient to interfere with the traction of the right wheels. He observed the tracks of the Tomten Chevrolet as they approached the tracks of the Studebaker. He said that at a distance of about 200 feet east of the place of accident the tracks of the two cars were from eight inches to a foot and a half apart; at some points they were not over 8 inches apart. He estimated the distance of the right-hand track of the Chevrolet car as being 9 1/2 feet from the right side or edge of the oiled surface, so that it indicated that Tomten was over to the right of the middle of the road. He said that at the point where the Studebaker left the highway, the tracks veered off into the ditch at about a 45° angle, and that at no time was there any evidence of slipping sideways. Specifically he said, "Yes, it looked simply like the wheels turned into the ditch to the right."
Crippen himself testified that as he was proceeding along, after passing the Tomten car, he heard the horn indicating that there was a car behind desiring to pass; that after he heard this signal he applied his brakes and pulled over still farther to the right side of the road in order to let the car go by; and that then his right wheels were just off the pavement on the gravel. He said he did not observe any slipping or sliding or weaving of his car; that when he first saw the front end of the Chevrolet, it was just a little ahead of the back of his car; that he tightened his grip on his steering wheel and kept his car approximately straight ahead; that the Chevrolet hit his car at an angle and slid up until it hooked on something; that his car then turned off at an angle and started down the bank; that he distinctly felt the impact when the Chevrolet hit his car; and that the reason his car went off the highway was that the other car came in from the side and hit him and took the front wheel off the ground so that it took the control of the car out of his hands and shoved it over the bank. He also testified that he could have held the road with safety on up to Miles City if it had not been for the collision.
There is no evidence in the record relative to any protest or suggestion from any one of the passengers as to Crippen's driving, or as to the rate of speed, or the manner of his handling his car. All admit that Crippen was a good driver and that he observed the law and rules of the road. None of the occupants of the car seemed to realize or apprehend that there was ice on the surface of the road or that the condition was unusual, extraordinary or dangerous; at least, if any of the passengers observed such conditions, they failed to make them known to the driver and did not detail such facts in any of the testimony or statements made before the trial or in the course of the testimony given at the trial.
In accordance with the provisions of the Automobile Guest Act, [1] it was incumbent upon plaintiffs, before they were entitled to recover, to prove that Cowden's death was caused directly and proximately by Crippen's grossly negligent and reckless operation of his car ( Nangle v. Northern P. Ry. Co., 96 Mont. 512, 32 P.2d 11), either standing alone or in concurrence with wrongful acts on the part of Tomten. The court instructed the jury as to the provisions of the Guest Statute. "The proximate cause of an injury," the court said, "is that cause which in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any new and independent cause, produces the injury, and without which it would not have occurred." ( McNair v. Berger, 92 Mont. 441, 15 P.2d 834, 837.) The court further instructed the jury that "gross negligence is something more than ordinary negligence; it is the want of slight care." ( Nangle v. Northern P. Ry. Co., supra.) It further said that "if the deceased, L.E. Cowden, knew that the defendant Crippen was driving his automobile at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed, and had the opportunity to insist that Crippen desist from operating his said automobile at such dangerous and excessive rate of speed, if any, and failed to do so, and sat by without protest and permitted himself to be driven at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed, and that by reason of such excessive and dangerous speed the defendant Crippen caused the said automobile to overturn and injure the deceased, then in that event you must find your verdict in favor of the defendant"; that a person in the position of Cowden while riding in Crippen's car "is presumed to see that which he could see by looking and he will not be permitted to say that he did not see or know what he must have seen or known had he looked"; and that, "where there is a sudden peril presented to a man he is not held to the exercise of the same judgment that he would be held to exercise under ordinary circumstances." The jury was also instructed that if they believed from the evidence that Tomten did attempt to pass defendant's automobile at about the place of the accident and in attempting to pass he cut in upon defendant's automobile and collided with it, and that his so doing was the sole and proximate cause of this accident and the resulting injury to the deceased, then their verdict must be for the defendant.
These instructions as given by the court became the law of the [2] case and were binding on the jury as such. ( Harrington v. Butte Miner Co., 48 Mont. 550, 139 P. 451, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 1257, 51 L.R.A. (n.s.) 369; Friesen v. Hart-Parr Co., 64 Mont. 373, 209 P. 986; Allen v. Bear Creek Coal Co., 43 Mont. 269, 115 P. 673.)
Defendant contends that in rendering a verdict for plaintiffs, the jury disregarded and failed to follow the instructions outlined above, and that the verdict is against the law as given by the court. He asserts that the record fails to disclose any evidence to support the verdict. Thus we are confronted with the questions, first, whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain a finding that defendant was guilty of gross negligence; and, second, if he was grossly negligent, whether that gross negligence was the proximate cause of Cowden's death.
The fact of the accident or collision alone is no evidence of [3] negligence. ( Autio v. Miller, 92 Mont. 150, 11 P.2d 1039.) Plaintiffs, however, assert and rely upon certain acts of negligence, to wit, failure to keep a proper lookout, particularly for vehicles attempting to pass; excessive speed (50 miles or more an hour); and defendant's failure to keep his car under control so that he could apply the brakes or bring the car to a stop on the traveled surface of the highway without the car wheels sliding or skidding on and off the highway.
Taking up these alleged elements of negligence in the order [4] enumerated, we find that there is no evidence in support of the allegation that defendant failed to keep a proper lookout. The evidence on this point is uncontradicted and shows conclusively that defendant was over on his own side of the road; that he observed the Tomten car coming up behind him; that his vision was clear and unobstructed; that when Tomten honked his horn, defendant swung his car as far over to the right side of the road as he possibly could without driving entirely off the highway; and that he was actually driving with the right wheels on the graveled shoulder of the highway.
The elements of speed and control are so closely connected that we may with propriety and convenience discuss them together. As was said in the case of McNair v. Berger, supra: "Control and speed are so inseparably connected that it is doubtful whether the former could ever be said to exist when the speed is [5] excessive. The test usually applied in determining whether a car is under control is the ability to avoid colliding with another who is using the highway and exercising proper care and caution on his own part." There is no specific legal limit or restriction placed on the rate of speed at which a car shall [6] travel on the highways of the state. The only restriction of this character is that appearing in section 1742, Revised Codes 1921, which provides in part that: "Every person operating or driving a vehicle of any character on a public highway of this state shall drive the same in a careful and prudent manner, and at a rate of speed no greater than is reasonable and proper under the conditions existing at the point of operation, taking into account amount and character of traffic, condition of brakes, weight of vehicle, grade and width of highway, condition of surface, and freedom of obstruction to view ahead." A careful reading of the record fails to disclose any evidence to support plaintiffs' assertion that, in the light of conditions as they then appeared to defendant and the other occupants of the car, the speed at which defendant was driving at the time of the accident was so excessive and unreasonable that it might be characterized as gross negligence on defendant's part.
While there is some conflict in the evidence with reference to [7] the rate of speed at which defendant was driving, the exact rate of speed is of little importance. The pertinent question is whether the speed, whatever it may have been, was so excessive as to affect defendant's control over his car under the conditions which actually existed at that particular time and place, or as they reasonably appeared to defendant to exist. This is clearly the import of section 1742, supra. The evidence is uncontradicted that defendant had maintained approximately the same rate of speed continuously throughout the trip from the time he started at Glendive up to the point of the accident; that during the entire trip up to that time he appeared to have adequate control of the car; that there had been no slipping, skidding or weaving; that up to the time of the accident all the other occupants of the car apparently considered that defendant was a good, safe driver; and that he was driving at a reasonably safe rate of speed. Although they had proceeded for several miles on the alleged icy highway before reaching the point of the accident, there is no evidence that either the defendant or any of the other occupants of the car had noticed the slippery condition which is alleged to have existed on the oiled highway; in fact, the evidence is all directly to the contrary.
The evidence is uncontroverted that up to the point of the accident, defendant was maintaining a straight, steady course on his own side of the highway. There is no evidence which would even indicate that defendant did not have control of his car up to the point where the Tomten car struck his car. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether defendant applied his brakes and slowed down when the Tomten car sought to pass around him. However, whether he applied his brakes or not, the evidence is clear that his car did not skid or slip sideways on the highway or pass out of control before reaching the point where it [8] left the road when struck by the Tomten car. There is no merit in the suggestion advanced by plaintiffs that there was a duty resting on defendant to slow down when he became aware of the fact that Tomten desired to pass him. The only requirement of this nature is that appearing in subdivision 3 of section 1743, Revised Codes 1921, which provides that "the operator or driver of any vehicle upon a public highway, upon being overtaken by another vehicle and receiving a signal or notice from the operator or driver of the vehicle in the rear that he desires to pass, must, without unnecessary delay, make every reasonable effort to permit him to do so." The evidence shows that defendant complied with the provisions of this statute after he became aware that Tomten desired to pass him. There is no evidence that he speeded his car up at that time. On the contrary, there is considerable evidence that he applied his brakes and slowed down to some extent. Whether he did or did not slow down is of no great importance, because he was not necessarily required to decrease his speed.
On the whole, we are unable to find any evidence in the record to support the assertion that defendant was guilty of gross negligence in any of the particulars charged, or in any manner. Indeed, it is doubtful if the evidence could be said to support a charge of ordinary negligence. Even if it appeared that defendant was guilty of some degree of negligence, we fail to see wherein such negligence could be properly designated as the proximate cause of the accident, in view of the court's instructions and the previous decisions of this court. (Compare Autio v. Miller, supra.) In spite of the alleged icy condition of the highway, defendant had his car under control and was proceeding in an apparently safe manner on the proper side of the road until his car was struck by the Tomten car. There is nothing in the record to controvert defendant's testimony to the effect that if the Tomten car had not hit him, he would not have gone off the road and would have been able to continue on to Miles City without mishap.
While there is some quibbling over the question of whether the [9] Tomten car struck defendant's car, there can be no doubt that such was the fact. Both the complaint and the answer allege that the two cars did collide, and practically all the evidence bearing on the question points to the fact that there was such a collision. It is true, of course, that in such a situation there might have been concurrent negligence on the part of defendant and Tomten. That is the theory of plaintiffs in this case. If such concurrent negligence were proved, then defendant and Tomten would be jointly and severally liable, and plaintiffs might recover from either or both. ( Marinkovich v. Tierney, 93 Mont. 72, 17 P.2d 93; Jones v. Northwestern Auto Supply Co., 93 Mont. 224, 18 P.2d 305.) But the evidence fails to show that the slippery condition of the road, or that the speed maintained, had anything to do with the car running into the ditch and turning over. There is no evidence tending to show that the defendant might have foreseen the accident ( Burns v. Eminger, 84 Mont. 397, 276 P. 437), or that defendant should have anticipated that some accident was likely to happen as the reasonable and natural consequence of the manner in which he was driving. ( Mize v. Rocky Mountain Bell Tel. Co., 38 Mont. 521, 100 P. 971, 129 Am. St. Rep. 659, 16 Ann. Cas. 1189.)
Defendant, while proceeding in a lawful manner on the proper [10] side of the highway, had a right to assume that anyone attempting to pass around him would proceed in a lawful manner and on his own side of the road, as required by statute. (Sec. 1743, supra; McGregor v. Weinstein, 70 Mont. 340, 225 P. 615; Gosma v. Adams, 102 Fla. 305, 135 So. 806, 78 A.L.R. 1193; Swartz v. Feddershon, 92 Cal.App. 285, 268 P. 430; Hickerson v. Jossey, 131 Or. 612, 282 P. 768, 283 P. 1119; Curtis v. Perry, 171 Wn. 542, 18 P.2d 840.) This court has held that "the person passing [as Tomten was attempting to do here] is negligent if he so carelessly directs or manages his automobile that a collision results, or if he attempts to pass at a time or under conditions which are not reasonably safe." ( McDonough v. Smith, 86 Mont. 545, 284 P. 542, 544.) To us it seems manifest that Tomten was guilty of negligence. Of course, as we have indicated, if defendant were also negligent, he would not be relieved simply because of Tomten's negligence. We fail to find any evidence supporting the assertion that defendant was negligent. Certainly he was not grossly negligent. The evidence, taken as a whole, points clearly to the fact that the contact between the two cars was the cause, and the only cause, of defendant's car leaving the road and of the injuries incurred thereby. This impact or collision between the two cars was due solely to Tomten's fault or negligence without concurring negligence on the part of defendant. In other words, Tomten's negligence was the sole and proximate cause of the accident.
In many respects this case is similar to the cases of Staples v. Blinn Lumber Co., 97 Cal.App. 387, 275 P. 813, and McDonald v. Cantley, 214 Cal. 40, 3 P.2d 552, wherein roadside third parties damaged or injured by a car crowded off the road by a passing car turning too close were denied recovery against the driver who was crowded off the road. It was held that the reckless driving on the part of the car attempting to pass was the direct and proximate cause of the accidents. It is worthy of note that in both those cases it was held that the driver who was crowded off the road was not guilty of even the ordinary negligence necessary there in order to fix liability on the defendants. Here, as already pointed out, before defendant can be held liable, he must be shown to have been guilty of gross negligence.
A careful investigation of all the evidence as to the [11] proximate cause of the accident and the alleged gross negligence of defendant leads to what seems to us to be an inevitable conclusion, viz., that the essential facts are either admitted or undisputed, or that the evidence with relation thereto is "all in one direction," and that therefore the matter became a question of law for the decision of the court. (See Davidson v. Stagg, 94 Mont. 272, 22 P.2d 152; Morton v. Mooney, 97 Mont. 1, 33 P.2d 262.) It was error to submit the case to the jury. It is likewise clear that under the court's instructions the verdict of the jury is without substantial evidence to support it.
Defendant urged several other specifications of error, but in view of the conclusion reached it will not be necessary to discuss them.
The judgment of the district court of Custer county is reversed, with direction to enter judgment for the defendant.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MATTHEWS, ANDERSON and MORRIS concur.
I dissent. The majority opinion in this case has reached the conclusion that the verdict of the jury is unwarranted on the theory that the testimony was insufficient to hold the defendant guilty of gross negligence in causing the death of L.E. Cowden in an automobile accident near Miles City. There is no serious suggestion that there was error in the introduction of testimony, in the instructions to the jury, in the amount of the verdict, or that the jury was improperly influenced.
The fundamental law of the land inherited from generations back provides for the determination of the facts of each lawsuit by a jury of twelve disinterested citizens. The jury determines the facts, and the court determines the law. But this theory has been gradually modified by courts in recent generations to the extent that a very large percentage of our cases fairly tried by a fair jury are reversed by supreme courts and either sent back for a new trial, or dismissed as unwarranted. Supreme courts have practically abrogated the duty of the jury or at least often far exceeded their just authority in my opinion. Jurymen from the common body of the people and more in touch with the conduct and impelling forces that actuate the common people are possibly, indeed probably, better able to interpret the effect of commonplace conditions than the judges who are often too technical and inclined to review circumstances appearing at the trial with a one-sided partiality. It is therefore a confirmed principle with me, except in extreme cases, that it is improper for a court to review and weigh the evidence with a view of rendering a new verdict. There might be extraneous circumstances which would so prejudice a jury at the time of the trial that the court would be warranted in setting it aside on the ground of prejudice. There are no circumstances warranting any conclusion of that kind in the instant case.
But so long as this court has determined that there was not sufficient evidence of gross negligence to sustain the verdict, I revert to the testimony to explain a few of the reasons why I think the jury rendered the verdict that it did in this case. Justice Stewart has set out much of the testimony. I will not repeat, as he has in his usual fair manner correctly stated the facts which most seriously impressed him. I rely principally on the testimony of the only eye-witness, the farmer Fred Hansen, living many miles from the residence of the parties. He appears to be wholly disinterested. He testified that he was in his barnyard approximately a quarter of a mile distant from the road, and used this to me convincing language: "All I can say is that I heard a car doing a lot of honking out in the road as I was in the barnyard, and that is what drawed my attention, and I turned around and saw these cars going down the road between fifty and sixty miles an hour, and at the speed they were going I went in the house and I said to my wife, — well, I went to the house and I watched these two cars and I had in mind something was going to take place, and I stood there and watched them until it came to a climax. I don't know what the one car was, I knew the one was a Chevrolet. The way it looked to me, he was trying to pass this Studebaker or whatever it was, — I could tell it was a big car, — and I stood right there and watched them, and this Chevrolet kept gaining on the big car, and I couldn't say whether they hit or not, but from where I was and the way it looked, the Chevrolet hit this big car, and the way it looked from where I was, when the Chevrolet hit the big car, the big car started rolling over, it went end over end. It went end over end four times as near as I could see. From that point where I was standing, it was about sixty rods. I observed the cars on the road for a distance of between half and three-quarters of a mile. There was not a thing to obstruct my view there, and I saw them about that distance. Yes, I heard the honking of the horn, it was three or four times. Yes, that was the car I described as a Chevrolet. There was no response made by the large car to the honking of the horn that I observed, and he held his speed right along. After this I went back in the barnyard and got my saddle horse and went down there. Yes, I went over on my horse, and when I got there I saw the two wrecked cars. After I got down there I saw where the Studebaker had skidded I would say about thirty feet."
The witness was attracted by the horn. He watched the two cars for a distance of a half to three-quarters of a mile. He went from the barnyard to his house. He "had in mind something was going to take place." He talked to his wife about it before the "climax." This testimony establishes that the circumstances were uncommon. He scented danger — he knew the slippery condition of the road. The speed of both cars was apparent and apparently suggested danger. He [defendant] "held his speed right along." It is unfortunate the witness was not permitted to detail the conversation with his wife, but this is one of those cases where the rules of evidence do not permit.
It appears to me from this evidence the cars must have traveled close together for quite a distance. The honking of the car would suggest to me that the defendant was reluctant to let the boy driving the Chevrolet car go past him, and the boy, when he did get by, boy like, crowded over and caused the accident. There appeared little doubt that the boy was grossly negligent, but the driver of this car, a man of mature age, should have taken into consideration the fact that the passing car was being driven by a boy. The road was very slippery and the rate of speed was very high under the circumstances. The defendant was perhaps within his rights in giving half the road, but it was no time or place for him to closely insist on his rights. If the boy was violating the road laws there was a safe and sane remedy. Indeed, it was the duty of the driver to report to the proper authorities of the road violation by this boy and perhaps thereby save an accident of similar character at some other time. This circumstance may have appeared to the jury as it does to me, and on such suggestion they may have rendered their verdict.
However, there is another feature that should be considered. The defendant testified that he did not know the road was icy until after the accident. He was driving and it was his duty to know the condition of the road. All of the other witnesses testified that the road was icy and slippery. The testimony of the other men in the car that they did not know the road was icy is no excuse. They were not paying attention to the driving, knowing full well that the man at the wheel was perfectly capable of doing the driving himself, and there was no time to protest to the driver. He could not be bothered by protests while the other car was passing.
The testimony relative to the speed of the cars varies very much. The jury was entitled to believe that the car was running at as high a rate of speed as sixty-three miles per hour, which is too fast on an icy, slippery road.
I view this testimony in the light of common experience and frequent newspaper accounts of accidents. It behooves the court to protect the public from reckless driving, and while an innocent man should not be held liable for an unavoidable accident, the testimony of the driver should be viewed very critically. Therefore my dissent.