Summary
In DeWinne v. Waldrep, 101 Ga. App. 570 (114 SE2d 455) (1960), we held that one who stood in the rear of a pickup truck moving across a field while deer hunting assumed the risk of falling out of the truck as a matter of law.
Summary of this case from Teems v. BatesOpinion
38258.
DECIDED APRIL 18, 1960. REHEARING DENIED MAY 2, 1960.
Action for damages. Monroe Superior Court. Before Judge Brown. January 21, 1960.
William B. Freeman, Martin, Snow, Grant Napier, George C. Grant, for plaintiff in error.
Harold G. Clarke, Hugh Dorsey Sosebee, contra.
One who knowingly and voluntarily takes a risk of injury to his person, the danger of which is so obvious that the act of taking such risk, in and of itself, amounts to a failure to exercise ordinary care and diligence for his own safety, can not hold another liable for damages for injuries thus occasioned.
DECIDED APRIL 18, 1960 — REHEARING DENIED MAY 2, 1960.
Marvin B. Waldrep sued Ernest DeWinne to recover for injuries and damages sustained when he fell from the rear of a pickup truck being operated by the defendant. It was alleged that the defendant owned the pickup truck, that the defendant urged the plaintiff to aid him in hunting deer from such pickup truck, that for a period of time the plaintiff rode in the cab of the truck with the defendant, that later a third person joined them and the plaintiff was instructed to take up a position in the rear of the truck where he stood, "that plaintiff did secure his position in the back of said pickup truck by bracing his right foot against the inside of said truck's body, bracing his left foot against a tire and wheel on the floor of said truck and leaning with his chest against the back of the cab of said truck, further securing himself by holding with his right hand to the inside of the right window of said truck, and that the position in which the plaintiff was stationed at the direction of the defendant was a safe and proper position for hunting deer so long as the truck was operated in a careful and proper manner." It was further alleged that the defendant let his attention be diverted from his driving, while driving across a field, dotted with trees, at a speed of 30 miles per hour, by a deer on the right side of said truck, that when the defendant returned his attention to his driving he discovered a tree located directly ahead of said truck, that the defendant suddenly turned at an angle of approximately 70 degrees to the left, when a 30-degree turn would have resulted in the truck missing such tree, that said turn was made without any warning to the plaintiff had his eyes fixed upon the deer for the purpose of shooting it, and that as a result of such turn being made without warning to the plaintiff he was violently thrown from the truck causing his injuries and damages. The petition contained other allegations not necessary for a decision of the case. The defendant filed various special and general demurrers to the petition which were overruled, and it is to such judgments adverse to him that the defendant now excepts.
While the defendant argues that the plaintiff cannot recover because they, the plaintiff and the defendant, were engaged in an illegal enterprise, to wit: Hunting deer from a truck in violation of a Texas Statute, pleaded in the petition, as well as other reasons as to why his demurrers should have been sustained, since the plaintiff's petition was subject to general demurrer for the following reason these other contentions need not be considered.
Many decisions have been written in Georgia and elsewhere with reference to whether a person, not in a passenger's seat, is in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety when he is injured as the result of the operation of a motor vehicle. In Lassiter v. Poss, 85 Ga. App. 785 ( 70 S.E.2d 411), it was held that a jury question was presented where the plaintiff, a 14-year-old girl, was injured while riding on the fender of an automobile. In Crane Auto Parts v. Patterson, 90 Ga. App. 257 ( 82 S.E.2d 666), it was held that where an employee of the defendant directed the plaintiff, a customer of the defendants, to ride on the running board of a truck in the scope of the defendant's business and the plaintiff's injury resulted, a jury question was presented. However, in Taylor v. Morgan, 54 Ga. App. 426 ( 188 S.E. 44), it was held that, where the deceased was riding on the left running board of a coupe so that his body protruded beyond the car and was struck by a passing vehicle, he was not in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety. This case further held (headnote 2), that while ordinarily such a case presents a question for the jury, yet if there was no necessity for the deceased to assume such a position there can be no recovery, for "A person who voluntarily assumes a position of imminent danger when there is at hand and accessible to him a place of safety, and by reason of having assumed such dangerous position he is injured, can not recover against another who is also negligent." A careful reading of these cases as well as an examination of 80 A.L.R. 553; 104 A.L.R. 312; 44 A.L.R. 2d 238; 5A Am. Jur. 752, Automobiles and Highway Traffic, § 804; and 61 C. J. S. 113, Motor Vehicles, § 490, will disclose that each such case must stand or fall on the particular circumstances shown by the pleadings or evidence.
The plaintiff in the present case was standing facing the cab of the pickup truck, was braced against the side which was only 20" high and against a spare tire and wheel on the floor, while his right hand was being used to hold onto the right window, and while the petition is silent as to the plaintiff's left hand it must be assumed that he was using it to hold a firearm or other weapon to shoot the deer since this is allegedly why he didn't realize that it would be necessary for the defendant to turn the truck. In Taylor v. Morgan, 54 Ga. App. 426, 430, supra, the following language was quoted from Western Atlantic R. Co. v. Ferguson, 113 Ga. 708, 713 ( 39 S.E. 306, 54 L.R.A. 802): "If there is anything present at the time and place of the injury which would cause an ordinarily prudent person to reasonably apprehend the probability, even if not the possibility, of danger to himself of doing an act he is about to perform, then he must take such steps as an ordinarily prudent person would take to ascertain whether such danger exists, as well as to avoid the consequences of the same after its existence is ascertained." The plaintiff in the present case by the exercise of ordinary care should reasonably have foreseen that to stand in the rear of a pickup truck while it traveled across an open field at 30 miles per hour was to place himself in a position where the slightest bump or turn could "throw" him out of such truck and onto the ground. Especially should this have been realized when the plaintiff's attention would not be on the route over which the truck would travel but must of necessity have to be on the deer being hunted.
The allegations of the petition affirmatively show that the plaintiff voluntarily placed himself in a place of patent danger, and the judgment of the trial court overruling the defendant's general demurrer to the petition must be reversed. The questions presented by the special demurrers are nugatory.
Judgment reversed. Felton, C. J., and Bell, J., concur.