DocketNumber: No. 30760.
Citation Numbers: 207 P.2d 195, 33 Wash. 2d 735, 1949 Wash. LEXIS 480
Judges: Grady, Hill, Steinert
Filed Date: 6/10/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/16/2024
The factual situation, as disclosed by the amended complaint and admitted by the general demurrer, is that the respondents Aphfell maintained a family car and respondent Robbie Hemphill was permitted to use such automobile. On the occasion in question, Robbie Hemphill invited Joyce O. Akins, of the age of sixteen years, to be his guest to travel with him in the automobile from her home in Tacoma to Fort Lewis, which invitation she accepted. Soon after the commencement of the journey, Joyce O. Akins discovered that her host-driver was under the influence of intoxicating liquor. He was driving the automobile in such a negligent manner that she became frightened and demanded of him that he stop the automobile and allow her to alight therefrom, but instead of so doing, he increased the speed of the automobile and continued the careless and dangerous manner of his driving for approximately a half-mile. During this time, she continued to demand loudly of the respondent driver that he let her out of the automobile, but he made no audible reply to her demands, did not stop the vehicle nor slow down to such a speed as would have enabled her to have alighted from the car without great personal and immediate danger. The demands and *Page 737 statements made by Joyce to her host-driver were heard by him but were not in any way heeded. At the end of the half mile referred to, the driver attempted to pass a truck. He was driving at a speed of over fifty miles per hour. The automobile collided with the rear of another truck and Joyce sustained severe and permanent injuries.
The judgment of the trial court was based upon Rem. Rev. Stat., Vol. 7A, § 6360-121 [P.P.C. § 295-95], commonly known as the "host-guest" statute, and our application thereof to the situation presented in the case of Taylor v. Taug,
"No person transported by the owner or operator of a motor vehicle as an invited guest or licensee, without payment for such transportation, shall have cause of action 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 said owner or operator: Provided, That this section shall not relieve any owner or operator of a motor vehicle from liability while the same is being demonstrated to a prospective purchaser."
In Taylor v. Taug, supra, we decided that one who voluntarily rides with a driver of a vehicle who recently had been drinking intoxicating liquor assumes the risks of the venture and is guilty of contributory negligence. We decided also in that case that the relationship of host and guest existed between the driver of the automobile and the injured plaintiff; that Rem. Rev. Stat., Vol. 7A, § 6360-121 was applicable, and that the plain intent of the statute was that in order to recover damages from a host, the guest must show that the host-driver, prior to the accident, conceived and acted upon a premeditated intent to injure the guest. In that case the plaintiff contended that when she requested the driver of the automobile to stop and allow her to alight therefrom, the relationship of host and guest terminated, and from that time he was responsible for any injury caused by his negligence. With the foregoing construction of the statute as a basis, we said: *Page 738
"When appellant accepted a ride with respondent, she became a guest for the entire journey. To hold otherwise would nullify the plain wording and intent of the host-guest statute."
The appellant argues that the Taylor v. Taug case is distinguishable from the case at bar, in that it did not appear in that case that the driver heard the spoken words of the guest when she made the request that he stop the car and let her alight, or that he refused to comply with her request; while in this case the guest did not discover that the driver of the car had been drinking intoxicating liquor until some time after the commencement of the journey, and that he heard her demands to stop the car in order to allow her to alight but made no audible reply.
[1] The factual situation in the case before us would justify a claim on the part of the appellant that her daughter did not assume the risks of the journey and was not guilty of contributory negligence by voluntarily riding with a driver who had been drinking intoxicating liquor, but it does not take away the effect of the rule to which we are committed that, when she became a guest of the respondent driver, she became such for the entire journey and did not terminate the host-guest relationship by her demands.
[2] The statute as construed by this court affords complete immunity to a host-driver except in the event the accident causing the injury to the guest shall have been intentional on his part, or the host-driver was demonstrating the motor vehicle to a prospective purchaser. Neither exception is claimed in this case.
The application of the statute and our construction of it may seem harsh and unjust in view of the facts as disclosed by the record before us and the severe permanent injuries the daughter of the appellant has sustained by reason of the negligence of the respondent driver, but the courts must take the statute as it is written and apply it accordingly. *Page 739 Any appeal from the rigor of the statute must be addressed to its creator, the legislature, rather than to the courts.
The judgment is affirmed.
JEFFERS, C.J., SIMPSON, and SCHWELLENBACH, JJ., concur.