118 A. 518 | Conn. | 1922
The plaintiff offered evidence to prove that she was injured while riding as a guest in the automobile of the defendant Dickerson, in consequence of his negligence in the operation of the automobile and while she was in the exercise of due care. The jury rendered its verdict for the plaintiff against defendant Dickerson.
The appeal assigns error in two points in the charge. The first assignment of error, being the only one pursued in the brief of the defendant, questions this portion of the charge: "Coming now to Mr. Dickerson, he was the driver of this car, and the father-in-law, I think, of Mrs. Dickerson, the plaintiff; the duty which he owed to Mrs. Dickerson, riding as his guest in that car was, also, to exercise reasonable care to see that no injury came to her, the care that an ordinarily prudent person would exercise, situated as he was situated in driving that car, to avoid any injury to her. The `active negligence' which Mr. Smith spoke of in his argument as being the test, in some sort, of the duty resting upon Mr. Dickerson, means no more than did he, in the operation of the car, do or fail to do anything which a reasonably prudent person would not have done or would have done in order to avoid injury to her; it is the same test applied to the driver of the automobile instead of to the driver of the trolley-car. Did he use the care of an ordinarily prudent person, situated *89
as he was situated, to avoid the result which followed?" The defendant complains of this excerpt from the charge as holding that the defendant owner and operator of the automobile owed the same duty to the plaintiff, who was a guest, that he owed to the world in general, and as making no distinction between the gratuitous carrying of the plaintiff and the carrying of one for hire; whereas, as he insists, the true rule enforces liability for injury to a guest only for active negligence toward the guest, which involves something more than the failure to exercise ordinary care and involves the presence of some conduct upon defendant's part which constitutes gross negligence, which is the failure to even use a slight degree of care toward the guest. In chief support of his position the defendant cites the late Massachusetts case of Massaletti v.Fitzroy,
The guest on entering the automobile takes it and the driver as they then are, and accepts the dangers incident to that mode of conveyance. If the driver be intoxicated, or the automobile be defective, and the owner does not then know this, and injury result to the guest in consequence, the owner of the automobile is not liable to him. If the driver becomes intoxicated after the gratuitous transportation has begun, or the defect in the automobile was one which the owner knew about and failed to inform the guest of, he exposed the guest to a new danger in the first instance, and in the second he was injured in consequence of the failure of the owner to exercise toward him ordinary care and inform him as to the defect. Not to do so would be a clear failure on the part of the owner to use reasonable care toward his guest. Pomponio v. New York,N. H. H.R. Co.,
In Pigeon v. Lane,
Outside of the few jurisdictions which classify negligence as slight, ordinary, and gross, the courts which have passed upon the question of the liability of the owner of a conveyance to his guest adopt the rule which we have adopted. In Fitzjarrell v. Boyd,
Error is also assigned in the following charge: "Again, I say, to you, gentlemen, that it makes no difference from what source the money came which she used to pay these bills; whether it came from her father-in-law who is defending here, or from any other source. As regards the father-in-law, if he made advances to her, very obviously they were not payments made on account of any liability which he had incurred arising out of this accident; so that, in the proper adjustment of the situation, whether or not he advanced money to her is of no consequence." The charge follows the late case of Roth v. Chatlos,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.