Cooper (appellee) was injured in a traffic mishap while riding in Cousins’ (appellant’s) car. Cooper sued Cousins for damages, and recovered judgment; and this appeal ensued. Appellant urges only one point: that he was entitled to an instructed verdict in his favor. All other questions are waived.
Cousins claims that he was entitled to an instructed verdict because of: (a) the Arkansas Guest Statutes, which are Act No. 61 of 1935 and Act No. 179 of 1935 (§§ 75-913 and 75-915 Ark. Stats.); or (b) assumption of risk by Cooper as under our holding in Bugh v. Webb,
Cousins is faced with difficult problems of evidence. In the traffic mishap Cooper suffered several injuries. He was unconscious for a number of days, and suffered from retrograde amnesia, so that he remembered nothing of being with Cousins, or anything else connected with the entire mishap.
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Cooper could not testify as to the relationship or status of the parties and the pleadings contained a denial. Since Cousins is one of the parties in the litigation, his testimony cannot be regarded as undisputed in testing its legal sufficiency. In Metcalf v. Jelks,
“Another rule established by this court is that the testimony of a party to an action, who is interested in the result, will not be regarded as undisputed in determining the legal sufficiency of the evidence. K.C.S.R. Co. v. Cockrell,169 Ark. 698 ,277 S. W. 7 ; Gish v. Scantland,151 Ark. 594 ,237 S. W. 98 .”
As to whether Cooper was a guest or a passenger: we have no undisputed evidence on that issue. As to whether Cousins was guilty of willful and wanton negligence even if Cooper was a guest: there was evidence to show that Cousins was traveling between 80 and 90 miles an hour when he tried to pass Lambert, and also that there was fog which, to some extent, might have obstructed the vision. So without detailing the other evidence, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to take the question of willful and wanton negligence to the jury, even if Cooper had been a guest, which is itself not undisputed in this case.
The next point is whether Cooper, if a guest, was guilty of assumption of risk as a matter of law, within the rule of Bugh v. Webb,
Without reviewing our numerous cases on the Gruest Statutes, we conclude that under the peculiar situation here existing Cousins was not entitled to an instructed verdict; and that is the only question presented.
Affirmed.
Notes
Maloy’s Medical Dictionary for Lawyers defines retrograde amnesia as, “a form which prevents the patient from recalling memories which have been acquired previously, resulting in loss of memory for events that occurred before the onset of amnesia.”
