Perry v. Schmitt

339 P.2d 36, 184 Kan. 758, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 16, 1959
Docket41,335
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 339 P.2d 36 (Perry v. Schmitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Schmitt, 339 P.2d 36, 184 Kan. 758, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 342 (kan 1959).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This is an action brought under the provisions of the guest statute (G. S. 1949, 8-122b) by plaintiff (appellee), Carlos Perry, against defendant (appellant), Terry Lee Schmitt, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff while riding in an automobile driven by defendant.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that defendant was guilty of certain enumerated acts of gross and wanton negligence which were the proximate cause of his injuries. Defendant’s answer denied the allegations and alleged that plaintiff voluntarily participated in and consented to all the acts and conduct of defendant and voluntarily assumed the risk therefrom. Plaintiff, by way of reply, denied these allegations.

The case proceeded to trial upon the issues thus joined. Evidence was introduced by the parties and the cause was submitted to the jury, which returned a general verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $19,500, and at the same time returned answers to special questions submitted by the court, as follows:

“1. Did the liquor and beer consumed by the defendant contribute to the accident in which plaintiff was injured? Answer: Yes.
“2. What was the proximate cause or causes of the accident in which plaintiff was injured? Answer: High speed.
“3. If you find that excessive speed was a proximate cause of the accident, what do you find such speed to have been in miles per hour? Answer: 80 to 85.
“4. [Not material herein.]
“5. Did the plaintiff at the time he went to sleep know how much liquor and beer had been consumed by defendant? Answer: Yes.
“6. Did the plaintiff furnish any of the beer and liquor consumed by defendant? Answer: Yes.
"7. If you find the defendant committed acts constituting gross and wanton negligence as defined in the Court’s instructions: A. Set out the acts constituting such gross and wanton negligence. Answer: Too high speed. B. At the time such acts were committed was the defendant indifferent and unconcerned with the possibility of injury to person or property? Answer: Yes. C. At the time such acts were committed could the defendant have realized the imminence of danger of injury resulting therefrom if he had exercised the degree of judgment ordinarily exercised by reasonably prudent persons? Answer: Yes.”

*760 From an order overruling defendant’s post-trial motions and from the judgment in plaintiff’s favor, defendant appeals.

The pertinent portion of the evidence disclosed by the record follows: Plaintiff and defendant, both minors, had known each other for several years. Plaintiff was on a four-day leave from the Salina Air Base, where he had been on an alert from midnight of December 22, 1955, until 6:00 p. m., December 23, after which he drove to Hugoton and visited with his parents until midnight. About six o’clock on the evening of December 24, after defendant got off work, he and plaintiff went to defendant’s home, where he cleaned up and they each had a highball. They later drove around the streets of Hugoton in defendant’s 1950 Ford coupé and then decided to drive to Liberal [about thirty-two miles awayl. Before they left town, plaintiff bought half a pint of whisky, from which they each had two drinks on the way to Liberal. There they went to the “Supper Club,” where they met some friends and drank “two or three beers.” They then drove around the town until about. 11:00 p. m., when they started back to Hugoton. Defendant was driving “sensibly,” and after they left Liberal’s city limits plaintiff went to sleep. The next thing he remembered was waking up in the Amarillo Air Base hospital.

On the night of the accident, Highway Patrolman Anderson, had stopped a car on the highway (83 and 270) four or five miles north of Liberal, when he heard an approaching car and got off the road. He recognized defendant’s car as it passed him and estimated its speed to be between ninety and 100 miles an hour. It was then between 11:30 and 12:00 p. m.

A Mr. Teele and a Mr. Nix testified that about 11:45 that evening they were driving north toward Hugoton on the same highway when they saw a car on its side in a maize stubble field. They stopped and found defendant lying underneath the car. When he was asked if anyone else was in the car with him “he alternated saying yes and no.” He said “he was going pretty damn fast and lost control of it.” They took him home, after which his mother called the sheriff’s office and said she was sure there was another boy out at the wreck.

The sheriff and Patrolman Anderson arrived at the scene of the accident together, where they found plaintiff in the field between “50 and 100 feet north and west of the car.” They radioed for an ambulance, which took plaintiff, who was unconscious, to the hospital. Anderson testified that he went east of the scene of the acci *761 dent and “found tracks on the left side of the road for a distance of 336 feet off the road on the south side. They were rolling tracks.” The car had come back “on the slab and it looked like it turned over in the middle of the road sliding on its top, left the road on the north side 129 feet west . . . where it came back on the south side and then rolled over and came to rest in the maize field 162 feet further west.” About 2:00 a. m., December 25, Anderson talked to defendant at the hospital, who admitted having one beer and two drinks of whiskey. He carried on what appeared to be an intelligent conversation and said “he was headed west and felt the car whip and did not remember what happened after that.” At a later date defendant admitted he was probably driving eighty-five miles an hour on the night in question.

A complaint was filed charging defendant with driving on the night of the accident in such a manner as to indicate a willful and wanton disregard of the safety of persons and property and transporting a bottle of alcoholic liquor upon which the seal had been broken. He subsequently pleaded guilty to both counts and paid the fine assessed therefor.

The defendant testified that the sheriff had cautioned him several times before this accident about fast driving and told him that if he didn’t settle down in his driving he was going to hurt somebody; that the sheriff had gone to his home and talked to him and both of his parents about defendant’s driving and had told him that the manner in which he was driving was going to endanger him and other people riding with him; that other people had told him the same thing, but he did not believe the way he was driving was going to hurt anybody. He stated that before this particular accident happened his driving had been a problem to the law enforcement officers of the community and they had been trying to settle him down; that he had been arrested for reckless driving about a week before the night in question.

Plaintiff was severely injured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
339 P.2d 36, 184 Kan. 758, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-schmitt-kan-1959.