268 P. 153 | Wash. | 1928
The defendants have appealed from an adverse judgment in the sum of $3,000, awarded by the trial court as damages for personal injuries received by the plaintiff in an automobile accident.
No formal assignments of error are made, but from appellants' brief and argument it clearly appears that reversal is sought on two grounds.
[1] First, it is contended that respondent was not a guest or invitee in appellants' car at the time of the accident; and second, that the appellant husband, the driver of the car, was not guilty of gross negligence such as would create a liability under the rule of Heiman v. Kloizner,
Both questions, in the last analysis, raise only issues of fact.
The case was tried to the court sitting without a jury, and findings of fact were made which, so far as now material, are as follows:
The evidence is practically without conflict on the first point and shows clearly that there was no common enterprise or joint venture involved. Indeed, we are *169 at a loss to see how the relation of host and guest could be more clearly established than was done in this case.
[2] Upon the second point, while there was some conflict in the evidence, the respondent by his own testimony, by that of his wife and the testimony of four presumably disinterested witnesses, who occupied the car which was passed, showed such a total disregard of all care and caution on the part of appellant Newkirk as to justify an even stronger finding on that subject than was made by the trial court. True, Newkirk, while admitting that he overtook and passed a car going thirty to thirty-five miles per hour, that he attained a speed of at least forty miles an hour in doing so, and that he saw the lights of the approaching car at all times, seeks to justify his act by his own testimony to the effect that the lights on the approaching car were dim and yellowish and he was thereby misled as to its nearness and was guilty only of an error of judgment. There was little, if any, corroboration of his testimony in this respect, and the trial court found against him on the facts. That finding being well supported by a preponderance of the testimony, we are content to adopt it, and with it the conclusion that Newkirk was guilty of gross negligence. In so concluding we have in mind what was said in Heiman v. Kloizner, supra, and approved in Saxe v.Terry, supra, to the effect that varying degrees of negligence or of required care cannot be differentiated with any sort of precision. The difference is not in principle, but in degree only. Therefore, where, as here, there is shown that no care whatever was exercised, in a situation obviously involving great danger, the conclusion of gross negligence follows.
The judgment is affirmed.
FULLERTON, C.J., PARKER, MITCHELL, and ASKREN, JJ., concur. *170