95 F.2d 304 | 2d Cir. | 1938
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury in favor of the defendant. The action was begun in the Supreme Court of Westchester County, N. Y., and on diversity of citizenship was duly removed to the District Court. The plain
After reading to the jury the relevant portions of the statute, the judge correctly stated that the principal issue was whether the plaintiff’s injury was sustained as a result of the wilful and wanton misconduct of the defendant. He then proceeded to distinguish between “wilful” and “wanton,” and, in so doing, stated that “A wilful act is one done knowingly and purposely, with the direct object in view of injuring another.” And he refused requests to charge that “wilful misconduct does not contemplate or must not necessarily mean that the defendant intended to injure the plaintiff on that night”; that ill will is not a necessary element to establish the charge of wilful misconduct; and that, if the acts were committed under circumstances exhibiting a reckless disregard for the safety of others, it would be wilful misconduct. From all this we think that the jury must have been given the impression that in order to return a verdict for the plaintiff they had to find that the defendant intended to injure him. This is surely more than the statute requires; only the misconduct need be “wilful and wanton,” the resulting injury need not be. Thus, in Seiffe v. Seiffe, 267 Ill. App. 23, it was held that a judgment for a passenger might be sustained where the accident resulted from excessive speed (78 to 80 miles an hour), the opinion explaining that gross negligence may justify the presumption of wilfulness and wantonness when it is such as to imply a disregard for consequences. See, also, Reed v. Zellers, 273 Ill.App. 18; Gannon v. Kiel, 252 Ill. App. 550. We doubt if it is helpful to attempt to define “wilful” and “wanton” separately in a charge to the jury. The phrase as a whole is rhetorical and implies no more than excessively reprehensible conduct; such conduct as justifies an inference of consciousness that injury may probably result from the act done and a reckless disregard of consequences. Although the decisions of the Illinois Appellate Courts are not binding authorities, they accord with decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois construing “wilful and wanton” in other connections (Jeneary v. Chicago & Interurban Traction Co., 306 Ill. 392, 398, 138 N.E. 203; Walldren Express & Van Co. v. Krug, 291 Ill. 472, 478, 126 N.E. 97), and we believe they have correctly construed the statutory phrase in question. Hence, we are of opinion that the charge was wrong.
It remains to consider whether it was so prejudicial as to require reversal, for the appellee may support a judgment by anything in the record, even though it involve insistence upon a contention which the District Court rejected. Indiana Farmer’s, etc., Co. v. Prairie Farmer Pub. Co., 293 U.S. 268, 281, 55 S.Ct. 182, 186, 79 L.Ed. 356; In re Schwartz, 2 Cir., 89 F.2d 172, 173; Dean v. Davis, 4 Cir., 212 F. 88, 89. At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for dismissal-on the ground that the evidence failed to show wilful and wanton misconduct on the part of the defendant. If this contention was well taken, the judgment should be affirmed regardless of error in the charge.
This requires an examination of the testimony. On March 16, 1932, the plaintiff, who was the general sales manager of the Dry Ice Corporation of America, met in Chicago with several of the corporation’s sales representatives, including the defendant, who came on for the meeting from Kansas City. Mr. Longaker’s parents resided in a suburb of Chicago and, after dining
If negligence were all that the plaintiff were required to prove, he undoubtedly made a case for the jury; but we do not think that Longaker’s failure to see the sign and his maintenance of a speed of 35 miles in crossing á street at 1 o’clock in the morning is evidence of negligence so gross as to justify a finding of “wilful and wanton misconduct.” As’to the traffic conditions to be expected at that hour, Longaker testified that after leaving the Shoreham there was “just about the usual amount of traffic there would be in Chicago at 1:30 or 2 o’clock in the morning. I mean it is not as heavy as it is at noon, but a,moderate amount of traffic, as I recall.” This is too general to mean anything to a jury as to the amount of traffic to be expected on Dearborn street at its intersection with Burton place. Cusack said merely that he saw no other cars around there at the time of the collision. On this record we think the case should not have been left to the jury. Consequently the judgment is affirmed.
“An Act in relation to motor vehicles,” chapter 121, § 243(b), Smith-Hurd Ill.Rev.Stat., Smith-Hurd Stats, c. 95%, § 58(b) provides:
“(h) Provided, however, that no person riding in a motor vehicle as a guest, without payment for such ride, nor his personal representative in the event of the death of such guest, shall have a cause of action for damages against the driver or operator of such motor vehicle or its owner or his employee or agent for injury, death or loss, in case of accident, unless such accident shall have been caused by the wilful and wanton misconduct of the driver or operator of such motor vehicle or its owner or his employee or agent and unless such wilful and wanton misconduct contributed to the injury, death or loss for which the action is brought.”