Young v. State

491 P.2d 122, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 272
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1971
Docket1466
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 491 P.2d 122 (Young v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. State, 491 P.2d 122, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 272 (Ala. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

This is an appeal by Frank Young from the adverse decision of the trial court sitting without a jury. 1 We affirm.

In 1963, the State of Alaska let a construction contract to Peter Kiewit Sons’ Company for the construction of a highway to Chena Hot Springs, north of Fairbanks. *124 The contract specifications required Peter Kiewit Sons’ Company to construct completed bridge approaches, the bridges themselves to be contracted for separately by the state.

On September 12, 1964, Edward Krivak and appellant Young, his passenger, drove in Krivak’s car to the area where the road construction began. A moveable barricade had been erected marking the end of the public highway and the beginning of the construction zone. Although several signs were posted along the road and on the barricade itself warning that the road was under construction and closed, Young and Krivak proceeded past the barricade intending to drive to Young’s cabin located adjacent to the hot springs.

Several miles down the road, Krivak drove toward a new bridge approach at approximately 35 miles per hour and realized too late that there was no bridge beyond. He veered to the left, ran off the road and down the embankment and, as a result, Young suffered injury. At trial, Young argued that the state and the contractor were negligent in failing to post signs at hazardous points along the route and in failing to lock the barricade in order to prevent access to the road. 2

In his memorandum opinion the trial judge found that adequate warning signs had been posted and a barricade erected, and that Young had seen the signs and knew the road was closed, having been over the road several times in the past while it was under construction. The remainder of the opinion contains a rather involved discussion of alternative theories of recovery.

The appellant’s argument on appeal focuses on the concluding sentences of the lower court’s opinion:

Plaintiff has brought this action on a theory of negligence by the defendants. Even if the defendants were to be found negligent under any theory, and the court does not make a finding in this regard, plaintiff’s travel beyond the noted warnings and knowledge of the construction area beyond lead directly to the injury he suffered and would bar his recovery. Van Reenen [Van Reenan] v. Golden Valley Electric Association, Inc., 379 P.2d 958, 961 (Alaska 1963). (emphasis added)

Young argues that the lower court mistakenly applied the contributory negligence standard governing a driver’s conduct to a passenger without any control over the vehicle. Appellant reasons that since it would not have been negligent for a passenger to doze, watch the scenery, or read a map, he was under no duty to keep a lookout or to warn the driver of particular hazards on the road. We think that this argument, although persuasive on the surface, misconstrues the lower court’s holding. The court found the plaintiff contributorily negligent not for his failure to warn the driver of the particular hazards involved in approaching the bridge at a high rate of speed, but rather for agreeing to travel on the road under construction, with knowledge of the dangers involved.

It is clear that this is a proper case for application of the contributory negligence defense. The Second Restatement of Torts, 3 defines contributory negligence as “conduct on the part of the plaintiff which falls below the standard to which he should conform for his own protection, and which is a legally contributing cause co-operating with the negligence of the defendant in bringing about the plaintiff’s harm.” Restatement § 466 provides that plaintiff’s contributory negligence may be either:

a) an intentional and unreasonable exposure of himself to danger created by the defendant’s negligence, of which danger the plaintiff knows or has reason to know, or
b) conduct which, in respects other than those stated in Clause (a), falls short of the standard to which a reasonable *125 man should conform in order to protect himself from harm.

The contributory negligence at issue here, of course, is of the former variety, sometimes referred to by the court as “voluntary assumption of risk.” The Restatement sets out the following example of this type of contributory negligence: 4

[I] f a plaintiff rides in an automobile knowing that the driver is drunk, ignorant of driving, or habitually reckless or careless, or that the machine has insufficient brakes or headlights, he ordinarily cannot recover against the defendant through whose negligence an accident occurs if the drunkenness, incompetence or carelessness of the driver or the bad condition of the vehicle is a contributing factor in bringing about the accident.

It is well established that in certain circumstances a person can be contributorily negligent by merely agreeing to be a passenger in a vehicle. 5

Although in Leavitt v. Gillaspie, 443 P.2d 61 (Alaska 1968), we disapproved of the assumption of risk defense, that case does not preclude defensive use of conduct by which a person negligently exposes himself to an unreasonable risk of harm. In other words, if a plaintiff voluntarily and unreasonably assumes a negligently created risk, his conduct amounts to contributory negligence and he is barred from recovery. 6 Gillaspie, in fact, is close in point because we held that it was proper to submit the contributory negligence issue to the jury when the facts were that plaintiff decided to ride as a passenger in an automobile operated by an intoxicated driver. Further, we think there was sufficient evidence on the record so that the court’s finding of contributory negligence was not “clearly erroneous.” 7

A more troublesome aspect of the lower court’s opinion is its apparent failure to find the defendants negligent before reaching the issue of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence. As noted above the court stated:

Plaintiff has brought this action on a theory of negligence by the defendants. Even if the defendants were to be found negligent under any theory, and the court does not make a finding in this regard, plaintiff’s travel beyond the noted warnings and knowledge of the construction area beyond lead directly to the injury he suffered and would bar his recovery. * * * (emphasis added)

*126 Elsewhere in its opinion, however, the court made the following statement:

Too, there are public policy considerations to be weighed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
491 P.2d 122, 1971 Alas. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-state-alaska-1971.