This is аn appeal by defendant from an order granting a motion for a new trial in a wrongful death action after a verdict in his favor. The court granted the motion on the ground of errors in lаw occurring at the trial, viz.: 1. The giving of instructions upon the defense of assumption of risk; 2. having instructed on that defense the refusal of instructions proposed by plaintiffs upon the burden of prоving said defense and upon the presumption that the deceased exercised ordinary care for her own concerns. Appellant contends that the giving and refusal of the instructions in question was not erroneous and at any rate not prejudicial because as a matter of law the evidence was in *555 sufficient to establish negligence of defendant or plaintiffs’ right to any recovery.
Plaintiffs, the parents of Imogene Barnett, brought this action for the death of their 18-year-old daughter in an automobile accident.
Decedent аt the time of the accident was living at the home of her uncle defendant Jesse Lee Garrison in Seaside, California, and worked as a secretary at Port Ord. Her parents lived together in Campbell, California, but the mother had just obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce. On March 10, 1946, Imogene, her uncle and the uncle’s family left Seaside for a visit to the parents in Campbell in a 1940 four-door De Soto sedan, driven by defendant Jesse Lee Garrison. Past Santa Cruz the fuel pump of the ear failed; defendant Elmer Garrison, a younger brothеr of Jesse Lee, was called to their assistance and came with a 1935 two-door Chevrolet coach, which was used to tow them back. Jesse Lee fastened the De Soto behind the Chevrolet tying the bumpers together by coiling the tow rope of the De Soto in 10 loops around the center of the bumpers, leaving a 6-inch slack between them. Imogenе Barnett and a daughter of Jesse Lee of her age rode with Elmer in the Chevrolet, Jesse Lee and the other members of his family in the De Soto. They drove back the same way they had come with a stop of 15-30 minutes in Santa Cruz to try to find a fuel pump. On a down-grade portion of the highway from Santa Cruz to Watsonville the accident happened. Down the long incline thе cars reached a speed of 40 miles per hour, the heavier car pressing against the lighter car in front. Jesse Lee, in the De Soto, braked and thereafter the Chevrolеt began to veer to the left over into the center lane of the three-lane road. Jesse Lee braked with more force and when the Chevrolet, although slowing up, still went to the left, he applied the brakes forcibly and at the same time turned his wheels to the right. Notwithstanding the fact that Elmer also braked and tried to steer to the right, his car, whose front wheels, according to his testimony, seemed to be off the ground, went over the embankment at the left side of the road, turning over and throwing the two girls out. The De Soto also rolled over the embankmеnt and fell on the girls, killing them both.
Defendant Elmer Garrison testified that decedent had not seen the manner in which the cars were tied together but also that prior to the stop at Santa Cruz the Chevrolet “got *556 out of control a little bit”; he and the girls talked about it, mentioning it casually. He did not understand what caused it. This evidence is noted by the parties in relation to the allegеd assumption of risk by decedent.
However, if the evidence in the case as a whole would be insufficient as a matter of law to support a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, the ordеr appealed from should be reversed irrespective of the correctness of the court’s rulings on the instructions.
(Mazzotta
v.
Los Angeles Ry. Corp.,
It is true that under the circumstances of this case the mother was not a proper party plaintiff. (Code Civ. Proc., § 376;
Fuentes v. Tucker, supra,
We therefore must review whether any errors justified the granting of the motion for a new trial. “It is well settled that the granting of a motion for a new trial rests so completely within the discretion of the trial judge that an appellate court will not interfere with his action unless a manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion clearly appears. Upоn an appeal from an order granting a new trial, all presumptions favor the order as against the verdict and the order will be affirmed if it may be sustained on any ground although the reviewing court might have ruled differently in the first instance. And since a new trial may be granted upon the ground that the jury was erroneously instructed upon matters of law, the question for decision is whether this widе discretion was abused in granting (plaintiff’s) motion.”
(Mazzotta
v.
Los Angeles Ry. Corp., supra,
Assuming without deciding that there was some evidence which possibly could support defendant’s theory of assumption of risk, in which case defendаnt was entitled to the instructions based on this theory
(Ritchey
v.
Watson,
Order affirmed.
Goodell, J., and Booling, J., concurred.
