Andrews v. Kirk

106 So. 2d 110
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 30, 1958
Docket57-457
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 So. 2d 110 (Andrews v. Kirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Kirk, 106 So. 2d 110 (Fla. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

106 So.2d 110 (1958)

William Farley ANDREWS, Appellant,
v.
Ottie Wynell KIRK, Appellee.

No. 57-457.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.

October 30, 1958.

*111 Knight, Smith, Underwood & Peters, Miami, for appellant.

Nichols, Gaither, Green, Frates & Beckham, Miami, for appellee.

CARROLL, CHAS., Chief Judge.

The appellant, who was the defendant in the trial court, appeals from an adverse judgment for $14,750 based on a jury verdict.

The appellee, as plaintiff, sued the appellant to recover damages for personal injuries received while riding as a guest or passenger in an automobile owned and driven by defendant.

The case was pleaded and presented to the jury on gross negligence and also on simple negligence — the former to meet the requirements of § 320.59, Fla. Stat., F.S.A.,[1]*112 and the latter on the theory that plaintiff's guest passenger status was ended before the accident occurred.

The determinative question is the first point stated in appellant's brief, and that is whether a guest, in protest against improper driving, by demanding to be let out, can change the guest passenger status.

The evidence of the activities of the parties leading up to the accident was given by the three persons who were in the automobile. On the evening in question the defendant William Farley Andrews encountered the plaintiff Ottie Wynell Kirk, who called herself Nell Kirk, in a bar in Miami. The parties had met several times before, and Nell had gone fishing with Andrews on at least one other occasion. Andrews invited her to go with him to Key Largo that night, where he planned to go fishing early the next morning. She accepted, after her friend Ann Coppinger agreed to go along; and the girls intended to go swimming the next day. Andrews had had some drinks, but Nell Kirk said that he did not appear to her to be under the influence of liquor.[2] Shortly after the trip commenced, Andrews began to drive improperly.[3] Further along he drove at a high rate of speed which was observed to be as much as 85 miles per hour. The girls protested, and the plaintiff Nell Kirk coupled her protests with repeated demands on Andrews that she be let out of the car.[4] In his testimony *113 Andrews disputed that he drove as fast as stated by the plaintiff. He admitted that Ann Coppinger protested, but he denied that the plaintiff Nell Kirk asked him to slow down, or made any demand to be let out. Ann Coppinger testified that she recalled one protest to the driver, which she says was made by Nell Kirk at her request. She was unable to remember any other protests or any demands of Nell Kirk to be released. Shortly thereafter the defendant entered a curve at a speed too great to permit him to negotiate it,[5] and the car departed from the road and finally overturned with resulting injuries to the occupants.

Under the charges given at the trial the jury could have found that the plaintiff was a guest passenger, in which event plaintiff would be entitled to recover if the jury found her injuries were caused by gross negligence of the defendant; or the jury could have determined that plaintiff was not a guest passenger if they found that she had reasonably protested and demanded to be let out of the car, in which event she would be entitled to recover if the jury found the defendant guilty of simple negligence proximately causing her injuries. The court's charges made no provision whereby the jurors, if they should bring in a verdict for the plaintiff, could show whether the verdict was based on a finding of gross negligence or on a finding of simple negligence only, and the verdict for the plaintiff which resulted has left that question unanswered. As the jury may have based the verdict on the simple negligence alternative, the verdict cannot stand, because of the guest passenger statute, unless it is held that the trial court did not commit error in the charge to the jury, as above referred to, holding in effect that the guest passenger status could be changed by reasonable demands to be released, authorizing recovery in that event on simple negligence.

The question presented is one of first impression in this state, and the authorities on it elsewhere are not numerous. The question has been met head-on in only two other states — in Washington, where the change of status of a guest passenger was *114 disallowed, and in Georgia, where such change of status was recognized.

In Washington, where by statute guest passengers may recover only for injuries intentionally caused (with two exceptions not important here), RCW 46.08.080, it has been held that the guest passenger relationship cannot be terminated by protests against negligent and unlawful driving coupled with demands to be released. The one case in that state in which, in addition to a protest against improper driving, there was a demand to be let out of the automobile, was Akins v. Hemphill, 33 Wash.2d 735, 207 P.2d 195, 197. Other Washington cases which dealt with or discussed a question of change of status of guest passenger must be considered distinguishable, as not involving protest and demand to be released.[6]

In the Akins case a sixteen year old girl accepted an invitation to ride with the defendant. After the commencement of the journey she learned that he was under the influence of liquor and observed him driving carelessly. She became frightened and demanded to be let out. Her demands to be let out of the automobile were loud and repeated, and they were heard but were not heeded by the host-driver, who increased his speed, and while attempting to pass one truck collided with another, causing injuries to the girl. The Washington court affirmed an order sustaining a demurrer and dismissing her complaint which was based on negligence and not on intentional injury.

The court, dividing 6 to 3 in the Akins case, held that the earlier decision of the Washington court in Taylor v. Taug, 17 Wash.2d 533, 136 P.2d 176, had "committed" the court to a rule that "when she became a guest of the respondent driver, she became such for the entire journey and did not terminate the host-guest relationship by her demands."[7]

In certain other states where the question has arisen the courts avoided passing on the point directly by treating a refusal of a reasonable demand for release from the car as evidencing gross negligence on the part of a driver, thus furnishing a means of recovery on the basis of gross negligence under a guest statute, where the guest passenger was entitled to be released, but was not permitted by the driver to leave the car. See Berman v. Berman, 110 Conn. 169, 147 A. 568, and Manser v. Eder, 263 Mich. 107, 248 N.W. 563. Cf. Klem's Inc., v. Cline, Fla. 1958, 105 So.2d 881.

The case of Vance v. Grohe, 223 Iowa 1109, 274 N.W. 902, 903, 116 A.L.R. 332, was cited in the brief of appellant as holding that the guest status cannot be changed by a demand to be released, but the case does not sustain that proposition. There was in that case a demand to be released which the driver did not heed, but there was no reasonable basis for the demand, to make it rank as one entitling the party to be let out of the car to avoid injury.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 2d 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-kirk-fladistctapp-1958.