Sanders Ex Rel. Wolf v. Pitner Ex Rel. Pitner

508 P.2d 602, 1973 Wyo. LEXIS 151
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1973
Docket4159
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 508 P.2d 602 (Sanders Ex Rel. Wolf v. Pitner Ex Rel. Pitner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders Ex Rel. Wolf v. Pitner Ex Rel. Pitner, 508 P.2d 602, 1973 Wyo. LEXIS 151 (Wyo. 1973).

Opinions

[603]*603Mr. Justice GUTHRIE

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs in this case, appellants here, filed a suit against defendant, appellee here, for injuries sustained in an accident which occurred approximately 23 miles north of Cheyenne on U.S. Highway 85. After a jury trial, wherein a verdict in favor of defendant was returned and judgment entered thereon, appellants filed this appeal.

A short factual statement of the case resolving all conflicts in favor of appellee and most favorable to him as is required by our rules will be hereinafter set out. There is a conflict in the testimony in some areas.

On the morning of October 8, 1970, Lance and David Sanders, appellants, left Ft. Collins, Colorado, with Michael Dale Pitner, appellee, in his automobile, which he was driving to Newcastle, Wyoming, for the purpose of hunting and visiting. None of the boys had parental approval. Lance was 17 years old, David was 14, and Michael 16 at the time of the accident.

The road and weather conditions were good in Ft. Collins and continued substantially the same way until a point north of Cheyenne at the intersection of Interstate Highway 25 and the Torrington cutoff (U.S. 85), at which point they began encountering blowing and drifting snow, which because of the temperature was melting and becoming slushy in places. The southbound lane of the highway was more heavily covered with snow and slush than the northbound lane. There were patches of snow and slush at intermittent intervals in the northbound lane. Lance was riding in the front seat and David in the back. Michael drove at the rate of 60 to 65 miles per hour and slowed for the slushy spots. David suggested once that he slow down. Lance never told him he was driving too fast or asked him to slow down. (There is a conflict in this testimony, Michael denying it.) The testimony of Lance as to these warnings is somewhat equivocal.

Approximately 23 miles north from Cheyenne the car. collided head-on with a car approaching them from the north. Michael’s car came up over a hill and at that point hit snow or slush. He let up on the accelerator as the car skidded into the other lane (southbound) where it collided with an oncoming car. Defendant describes it as like “a big hand had took us and pushed us right into the other lane.” Lance yelled at him to get back into the right lane, which he tried to do. The car initially failed to respond and he was unable to get it back into the northbound lane although at the time of the collision it had started to turn back. The boys had passed a snowplow some miles south of the accident, and although the car fishtailed Michael did not lose control at that time. Although David had made some warning of the road condition, there is no suggestion that either of the brothers asked to get out or suggested that Lance drive. Lance had styled Michael as a pretty decent driver and as a good driver, and both plaintiffs had ridden with him before. The tires on the car were in excellent condition, there being new snow tires on the rear and the front tires being in good shape. There is some testimony by Darrol Cameron, who was then a patrolman, as to the condition of the road, which does not agree with the above. He said in his testimony he was forced to drive between 30 and 35 miles per hour a large part of the way after he reached Highway 85, slowing up as he came to slushy places. He was apparently approximately 25 miles from the scene of the accident when he received the call concerning it and arrived at the scene in 21 minutes, after driving the first nine miles at 100 miles per hour. The jury may well have made some computation as to the probable average speed he drove the last 16 miles and found the same not much different than defendant’s speed.

Appellants submit three propositions to the court on their appeal. They are briefly stated as follows:

That since plaintiffs were guests they assumed the burden of showing gross [604]*604negligence or willful and wanton misconduct, and that the court committed error in instructing on contributory negligence and assumption of risk since these are defenses only to ordinary negligence.
That the court erred when it did not take the issues of contributory negligence and assumption of risk from the jury and instructing thereon since there is no evidence of these elements, and that this was strongly prejudicial.
That since plaintiffs had the burden of proving gross negligence or willful and wanton misconduct it was error for the court to refuse plaintiffs’ offer of instruction relating to the standard of care to be used in determining gross negligence of an inexperienced minor driver.

Appellants pursue an argument that the words “gross negligence or wilful and wanton mis-conduct” in § 31-233, W. S.1957, C.1967, contemplate a single category of conduct which is contrasted with ordinary negligence, but connote no separate categories within the phrase itself. We cannot reach this question in light of the record. Both the complaint and amended complaint allege operation in a “grossly negligent manner” and that the injuries were suffered “as a direct and proximate result of gross negligence.” The pretrial memorandum filed by appellants poses a question of law, “whether defendant was grossly negligent.” The pretrial order sets out gross negligence as an issue without mention of willful and wanton conduct. In addition, and decisively, the court, after including in full the guest statute in an instruction, in the following instruction defined “gross negligence” and included therein this statement:

“It is, however, something less than willful and wanton conduct defined as conduct which is or ought to have a tendency to injure.”

This instruction, being • given without objection, became the law of the case, Joly v. Safeway Stores, Inc., Wyo., 502 P.2d 362, 365, and cases cited therein.1 Appellants cannot now fairly assert that these terms are synonymous and avoid instructions on contributory negligence or assumption of risk.

Insofar as the first contention is concerned this issue is confined to a determination of whether it be proper to instruct on contributory negligence and assumption of risk in a case wherein “gross negligence” is the claimed basis for recovery. Appellants strongly rely on Williams v. Carr, 68 Cal.2d 579, 68 Cal.Rptr. 305, 440 P.2d 505, which is inapplicable because of a different guest statute which limits recovery to those accidents resulting from intoxication or willful misconduct, 66A West’s Annotated California Codes, § 17158, p. 168 (1971). The holding in the Williams case is based upon a rule that contributory negligence is no defense to a claim of willful misconduct and therefore is no authority for the proposition urged in this case. Prosser, Law of Torts, ch. 11, p. 426 (4th Ed.), states the rule as follows:

“ * * * Thus if the defendant’s negligence is merely ‘gross,’ an extreme departure from ordinary standards, but still without elements of ‘wilfulness’ or ‘wantonness,’ it is generally held that the plaintiff’s ordinary negligence is a defense. * * * ”

See also Henley v. Carter, Fla., 63 So.2d 192, 44 A.L.R.2d 1339; Parrott v. Garcia, Tex., 436 S.W.2d 897, 901; Myers v.

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Sanders Ex Rel. Wolf v. Pitner Ex Rel. Pitner
508 P.2d 602 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
508 P.2d 602, 1973 Wyo. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-ex-rel-wolf-v-pitner-ex-rel-pitner-wyo-1973.