This action was brought to recover damages for the death of the wife of plaintiff Brown, caused by the overturning of the defendant’s automobile while he was driving it and in which Mrs. Brown was riding as his invited guest. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant and the court granted plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. This appeal is from the order granting a new trial.
Mrs. Brown and several others were riding in the automobile at the time of the accident, which occurred late at night. None of the occupants of the machine except the defendant were witnesses at the trial. He testified that immediately before the accident “there was a car coming ... on the other side and what made me pull out of the road, the car was coming on the other side of the road with no lights’’; that he thereupon drove off the graveled part of the road and as he attempted to pull back again the right rear wheel collapsed and his automobile overturned. The wheel had broken off at the hub. The defendant testified that before turning off the graveled road he was traveling at the rate of twenty-five to thirty miles an hour and that he continued at that speed until the accident occurred. In confused and uncertain terms he testified that when the machine left the traveled part of the road, the shoulder thereof evidently being sideling, Mrs. Brown threw her *182 arms around him and thereby caused him to lose control of the automobile. There is neither allegation nor evidence that the defendant was driving at an excessive or dangerous rate of speed. The jurors, of course, were not bound to accept the defendant’s explanation of the cause of the accident. The order granting a new trial does not specify whether it was granted upon the ground of insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and, therefore, it is “presumed that the order was not based upon that ground.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 657.) Negligence is charged in the complaint in general terms only.
The court instructed the jury, in effect, that if the defendant was driving at an excessive or dangerous rate of speed and that'fact was known to the deceased “or was plainly obvious to a reasonable person in her situation,” and that she failed to remonstrate with the defendant, she was guilty of contributory negligence. The instruction is so clearly erroneous that it is deemed sufficient to cite
Dowd
v.
Atlas T. & A. Service,
The court instructed the jury to the effect that the doctrine of res
ipsa loquitur
is applicable to the facts of the case and also that it is not applicable thereto. The doctrine has often been stated in this and other states in the language of Earle, C. J., in
Scott
v.
London Dock Co.,
3 Hurl. & C. 596, decided in 1865. The plaintiff in that case, an officer of customs, while in the discharge of his official duties in the defendant’s warehouse, was injured by the unexplained fall upon him of six bags of sugar. In the opinion it is said: “There must be reasonable evidence of negligence. But where the thing is shown to be under the management of the defendant or his servants, and the accident is such as in the ordinary course of things does not happen if those who have the management use proper care, it affords reasonable evidence, in the absence of explanation by the defendant, that the accident arose from want of care.” The question here is whether a presumption of negligence arose from proof merely that the automobile overturned while in the exclusive operation and control of the defendant, The answer must be in the affirmative if
*183
the foregoing doctrine is to be applied literally. The doctrine is applicable in eases of carriers by automobile for hire.
(Scarborough
v.
Urgo,
. . . The jury could have done no more than guess as to whether the accident was the result of careless and negligent operation of the ear or of the blow-out. Verdicts cannot rest upon guess or conjecture. It is the duty of the plaintiff to prove negligence affirmatively; and, while the inferences allowed by the doctrine of
res ipsa loquitur
constitute such proof, it is only where the circumstances leave no room for a different presumption that the maxim applies.” It is to be inferred from the last sentence quoted that from mere proof of the overturning of the automobile while it was being operated by one of the defendants a presumption of negligence arose, but that this presumption was overcome by proof of the blow-out. In this state it has been held that “such a presumption is evidence in the case, but it has no greater or different effect than the testimony of witnesses. . . . When all the evidence is in the question for the jury is whether the preponderance is with the plaintiff.”
(Scarborough
v.
Urgo, supra,
p. 346.) “The presumption of defendant’s negligence arises regardless of the fact that the injury may have been caused by some other agency.”
(Osgood
v.
Los Angeles etc. Co.,
The order granting a new trial is affirmed.
Thompson, J., pro tem., and Plummer, J., concurred.
