Baker v. Knott

1972 OK 6, 494 P.2d 302, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 262
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 18, 1972
Docket43921
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1972 OK 6 (Baker v. Knott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Knott, 1972 OK 6, 494 P.2d 302, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 262 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

Coryell, Judge.

Action by plaintiff, Zorah Ethel Knott, against defendant, Harold Baker, for damages for injuries received in an automobile accident in New Mexico. From verdict and judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals. Affirmed.

Best, Sharp, Thomas & Glass, Joseph A. Sharp, Joseph F. Glass, Tulsa, for plaintiff in error.

In the trial court, plaintiff Zorah Ethel Knott sued her grandson, Harold Baker, for damages for injuries she received in a one-car automobile accident. She was a passenger in the car, which was owned and driven by the defendant. From verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $16,500, defendant appeals.

This is not an ordinary negligence action. Although both plaintiff and defendant lived in Creek County, where the action was tried, the accident happened in New Mexico, and it is agreed that the substantive statutory law of New Mexico is determinative of the rights of -the parties. New Mexico law requires a showing of considerably more than ordinary negligence in guest passenger cases.

Defendant’s principal argument on appeal is that the evidence was insufficient, and the court erred in not sustaining his motion for directed verdict. We therefore summarize the evidence before discussing the requirements of the New Mexico statute.

On the question of liability, plaintiff’s principal witness was the defendant, and the evidence is substantially uncontradicted. After defendant had worked all day, he and his grandmother left Bristow at 5:30 P.M. on a trip to Phoenix, Arizona, where defendant was to attend a national Jaycee convention and his grandmother planned to visit relatives. The accident happened about 6:30 the next morning when defendant fell asleep at the wheel. During the intervening time they had traveled continuously except for brief stops for refreshments or gasoline at Oklahoma City, Elk City and Albuquerque. Shortly after leaving Albuquerque defendant felt drowsy and stopped for a moment to “walk around and wake up” because “the road had seemed to hypnotize me”. A little later defendant stopped again to help a stalled motorist who was headed for the same convention in Phoenix. The accident happened about an hour after that when defendant went to sleep and his automobile crashed into a concrete abutment at the “McCarty Underpass” near Grants, New Mexico.

During the last hour and a half before the accident, defendant “dozed off and woke up” three times, the last such occurrence being after the last stop to help the stalled motorist. After the plaintiff grandmother began to notice that defendant was “nodding a little bit”, she admonished him several times and would “slap him and yell at him and tell him to be careful”. She tried to get him to stop and get some sleep; he refused to do so because he wanted to beat the other Bristow Jaycees to Phoenix. Defendant testified that he knew it would be unsafe for him to continue driving under these conditions.

*304 The New Mexico “Guest Statute” denies to a non-paying guest passenger the right to recover damages from the host-owner or operator of an automobile involved in an accident “ * * * unless such accident shall have been intentional on the part of said owner or operator or caused by his heedlessness or his reckless disregard of the rights of others”. New Mexico Laws of 1935, ch. 15, sec. 1; New Mexico Statutes Annotated, Sec. 64-24 — 1. The New Mexico statute is identical with the original “guest passenger” statute adopted in Connecticut in 1927, and since repealed.

The New Mexico enactment was construed by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma before the New Mexico Supreme Court had occasion to do so. Gill v. Hayes (1941), 188 Okl. 434, 108 P.2d 117. In so doing, this court followed constructions of the identical statute of Connecticut, under the general rule that when one state adopts a statute from another, it is presumed to have adopted the construction placed upon that statute by the highest court of the other state.

The New Mexico court followed the same rule when it first gave detailed consideration to the statute in Smith v. Meadows, 56 N.M. 242, 242 P.2d 1006. It quoted decisions of the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors to the general effect that the type of conduct required to justify a recovery under the guest statute is “ * * wanton misconduct, evincing a reckless indifference to consequences to the life, or limb, or health, or reputation or property rights of another” and that “Wanton misconduct is more than negligence, more than gross negligence”. It also noted with approval the prior construction of the statute by this court in Gill v. Hayes, supra.

The New Mexico court has used language similar to that quoted above in most of the cases construing the guest statute that have arisen since it was adopted. A summary of many of these cases may be found in Garrett v. Howden, 73 N.M. 307, 387 P.2d 874. A review of the facts in those cases would serve no useful purpose here because, as the court said in Garrett, “The difficulty in this type of a case is that prior authorities merely set out general guidelines, it being impractical, if not impossible, to state a rule which will apply to the facts in any particular case”.

However, the only New Mexico “sleep” case that has come to our attention, De Blassie v. McCrory, 60 N.M. 490, 292 P.2d 786, is helpful by way of analogy. In that case, a judgment for defendant in an action arising under the guest statute was affirmed. In distinguishing that case from a Connecticut case in which a verdict for plaintiff had been affirmed, Potz v. Williams, 113 Conn. 278, 155 A. 211, the New Mexico court noted that in Potz, there had been evidence that the defendant “dozed off once” and added that “It is significant that, prior to the accident, he [the defendant in De Blassie] had not as in Potz v. Williams, supra, actually fallen asleep, once”.

Potz v. Williams, supra, among other cases, was also mentioned by the New Mexico court in Smith v. Meadows, supra. In that case, in distinguishing various Connecticut cases in which judgments for plaintiffs had been sustained, the following language from another Connecticut case was quoted:

“ * * * There is no evidence and no permissible inference that this driver knowingly assumed a risk or was aware of danger, Potz v. Williams, 113 Conn. 278, 281, 155 A. 211, or that he was warned or requested to do anything different from what he did, * * * ■ or that he was guilty of more than thoughtlessness, inadvertence, or an error of judgment, * * * or anything to justify an inference that he was indifferent to the consequences which might result to his passengers from his conduct * *

Of course in the case now before us, there was uncontradicted evidence that the defendant “dozed off” not once but three times before the accident; that he was *305

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Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 6, 494 P.2d 302, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-knott-okla-1972.