Dawson v. Salt Lake Hardware Co.

136 P.2d 733, 64 Idaho 666, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 36
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1943
DocketNo. 7067.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 136 P.2d 733 (Dawson v. Salt Lake Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawson v. Salt Lake Hardware Co., 136 P.2d 733, 64 Idaho 666, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 36 (Idaho 1943).

Opinions

*669 HOLDEN, C.J.

On the evening of October 31, 1941, the Business and Professional Women’s Club of Twin Falls, Idaho, held a Halloween party at the home of one of its members about a mile north of Hansen, Idaho, on what is locally known as the Hansen Bridge Road. Respondent, Mabel M. Bellville, drove her car to this party taking along with her, as gratuitous guests, Mrs. Ella P. George, Mrs. Bessie Weinrich, Mrs. Temple Dawson and Mrs. Belle Green. Respondent and her guests left the party at about 11:00 o’clock p. m. On the return trip, Mrs. George rode in the front seat with respondent Bellville, driver of the Bellville car. In the rear seat were Mrs. Weinrich, Mrs. Green and Mrs. Dawson, the latter sitting between Mrs. Weinrich and Mrs. Green. Respondent Bellville drove south from the party to the corner at Hansen where U. S. Highway No. 30 and the Hansen Bridge Road intersect. It was a rainy, misty, dark night. Almost immediately after entering the intersection, the Bellville car was struck by another car driven by respondent Stephen S. Lynch, employed by the Salt Lake Hardware Company as a travelling salesman. As a result of the injuries sustained, Mrs. Dawson died shortly after the accident.

December 15, 1941, this action was commenced by Frank C. Dawson, surviving husband of the said Temple Dawson, joined by Robert Dawson, Millard Dawson and James Dawson, children of Frank C. and Temple Dawson, against the Salt Lake Hardware Company, Stephen S. Lynch and Mabel M. Bellville to recover both general and special damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of the death of *670 said Temple Dawson. Plaintiffs sought to recover against respondent Bellville under Sec. 48-901, I. C. A. [our guest statute], and against respondents Salt Lake Hardware Company and Stephen S. Lynch on the ground of negligence.

The cause was tried by the court, sitting with a jury, commencing May 25,1942. May 28, 1942, the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants and respondents, and on the same day judgment was entered thereon “that plaintiffs take nothing under and by virtue of their complaint filed herein and said complaint be, and it is, hereby dismissed.” From this judgment and an order denying a new trial, plaintiffs appeal.

It is first contended by appellants “The court erred in instructing the jury in its instruction No. 15 to the effect that although the plaintiffs did not claim that defendant Bellville intentionally injured Temple Dawson, they could not find for the plaintiffs unless they found from the evidence that defendant Bellville in operating her automobile, in which decedent Temple Dawson was riding as a guest, was guilty of such an act of conscious indifference that they would be justified in finding that she wilfully injured Temple Dawson, and that reckless disregard, wilfull disregard and wanton disregard are equivalent and synonymous terms.”

By instruction No. 15, the trial court instructed:

“You are instructed, Gentlemen, that Sec. 48-908, [48-901] Idaho Code Annotated as amended by Chap. 160 of the Idaho Session Laws of 1939, provides as follows:
‘Liability of Motor Owner to Guest: No person transported by the owner or operator of a motor vehicle as his guest without payment for such transportation shall have a cause for damages against such owner or operator for injuries, death or loss, in case of accident, unless such accident shall have been intentional on the part of the said owner or operator or caused by his intoxication or his reckless disregard of the rights of others.’ In this case there is no claim or contention upon the part of the plaintiffs that Mabel M. Bellville intentionally injured Temple Dawson or that she was intoxicated. You will, therefore, disregard these two elements. The only theory, Gentlemen, upon which you could then return a verdict against Mabel M. Bellville would be because of her reckless disregard of the rights of Temple Dawson. The phrase or term ‘reckless *671 disregard’ as used in the guest statute above quoted means an act destitute of heed or concern for consequences; especially foolishly heedless of danger, headlong, rash; an act of such conscious indifference to consequences that the jury is justified in saying that the driver wilfully injured his guests. Reckless disregard, wilful disregard and wanton disregard are, gentlemen, equivalent and synonymous terms.”

After having so instructed the jury the trial court gave the further instruction that:

“Before the plaintiffs can recover from the defendant Mabel M. Bellville, they must not only prove that she was negligent, but they must prove by a prepondance of the evidence and to your satisfaction that she acted with reckless disregard of the rights of the said Temple Dawson, deceased, and that her reckless disregard of the rights of Temple Dawson was a proximate cause of the injuries to and subsequent death of Temple Dawson. In other words, Gentlemen, you can not find against the defendant Mabel M. Bellville merely because you may believe from the evidence that she may have been negligent in one or more particulars charged in the complaint; this is not sufficient. A guest in a car cannot recover against his host merely because of negligence of the host. The negligence must amount to a reckless disregard to the rights of the guest as that term has been defined to you in these instructions.”

It will be noticed the court expressly, and we thing correctly, by the last above-quoted instruction, instructed the jury appellants could recover against respondent Bell-ville if they proved by a preponderance of the evidence she drove her car with a reckless disregard of the rights of her guest, Temple Dawson. The court further instructed the jury it had “not attempted to embody all the law in this case in any one instruction. In considering any single instruction you must consider it in- connection with all other instructions and construe them in harmony with each other. You are not at liberty to single out a particular instruction and base your verdict upon it alone.” Hence, the jury, reading instruction No. 15 and the above-quoted instruction together, as the court instructed it to do, could not have understood “they [the jury] could not find for the plaintiffs unless they found from the evidence that defendant Bellville in operating her automobile, in which decedent Temple Dawson was riding as a guest, was guilty *672 of such an act of conscious indifference that they would be justified in finding that she wilfully injured. Temple Dawson.” Nor could the jury have understood, as argued by appellants, they could not find for appellants unless “they would be justified in finding that she [respondent Bellville] wilfully injured Temple Dawson,” for the additional reason that the court (in instruction No. 15) expressly defined the phrase “reckless disregard” “as used in the guest statute to” mean “an act destitute of heed or concern for consequences.” In other words, the court instructed the jury that “an act destitute of heed or concern for consequences” was the equivalent of and would amount to an act of “reckless disregard of the rights of Temple Dawson” as the phrase “reckless disregard” is used in our guest statute.

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Bluebook (online)
136 P.2d 733, 64 Idaho 666, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-salt-lake-hardware-co-idaho-1943.