This is an action for damages for personal injuries suffered by appellant while a spectator at a sports car race. The case was tried before a jury. At the close of appellant’s case respondents moved the court for judgment of nonsuit, which was granted. Appellant seeks reversal of said judgment.
On January 27, 1957, appellant accompanied by friends attended sports car races being held at the Pomona Fair *191 Grounds by respondents Elks Club and California Sports Car Club. Grandstands with a total seating capacity of about 4,500 persons were provided for spectators at various points along the circuit of the race course. The record, 1 does not indicate whether these grandstands were filled to capacity at the time of appellant’s injury. The total attendance for that day of racing was 15,000 persons.
It had rained during the day of the accident and the track was wet throughout its circuit. Appellant did not attempt to seek seating in the grandstand, for she did not know that a grandstand was available, but watched the races from a position near the car in which she had arrived and, subsequently, from a position near a “snow fence” separating the spectators and the race course itself. The “snow fence” was approximately 100 feet from the track itself. It was while in this position that appellant was injured when a sports ear driven by respondent Miles was unable to negotiate a turn and went out of control and through the “snow fence” into the spectators. Appellant had chosen this vantage point voluntarily. It was within an area in which spectators were permitted to stand, and a great many spectators were nearby.
Appellant had attended automobile races some half a dozen times prior to this date and had seen motion pictures and television programs of automobile racing. She had driven an automobile for about twenty-five years, and in all kinds of weather, but she had never attended a sports car race.
“The granting of a motion for nonsuit is warranted '. . . when, and only when, disregarding conflicting evidence, and giving to plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn from that evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.’
(Card
v.
Boms
(1930),
The trial court, relying on the case of
Morton
v.
California Sports Car Club,
“The defense of assumption of risk is available when there has been a voluntary acceptance of a risk, and such acceptance, whether express or implied, has been made with knowledge and appreciation of the risk.
(Austin
v.
Riverside Portland Cement Co.,
“‘ Where the facts are such that the plaintiff must have had knowledge of the hazard, the situation is equivalent to actual knowledge, and there may be an assumption of the risk, but where it merely appears that he should or could have discovered the danger by the exercise of ordinary care, the defense is contributory negligence and not assumption of risk.’
(Prescott
v.
Ralphs Grocery Co.,
In the Morton case, supra, the court held: "Even if we assume that the question would ordinarily be one of fact, the evidence in the instant case so clearly establishes the defense of assumption of risk that reasonable minds could not differ and the question should not, therefore, have been submitted to the jury.” (P. 689.) In that case the plaintiff was a sports car driver and owner, a member of the defendant California Sports Car Club, a sports car enthusiast, a person *193 whose knowledge of sports ear races included meetings where films of sports car races were shown, and a person who had not only attended several sports car races but who had actually assisted in the operation of the races. Under these facts the court concluded: “In the instant ease the evidence discloses that plaintiff must have had knowledge of the hazard to which he was subjecting himself by taking the position he did on the race course [on a curve]. He ignored this hazard in his desire to observe the races from the best (rather than safest) location. ’ ’ (P. 688.)
The appellant here is a woman who had never been to a sports car race, never assisted in the operation of a sports car race, never saw films of such races, and had no particular interest in going to the races in question. The uncontradicted facts show that appellant herein was totally unfamiliar with sports car racing although she had seen six races of other types of cars and watched other ear races on television.
There was evidence in the Morton case that hay bales had been placed at various points on the track and that plaintiff could have taken a position behind any one of them; or he could have sat in the grandstand had he so desired, for his protection. In this ease the evidence reveals that the only hay near the track was on the curves and near various structures for the purpose of protecting the drivers. The appellant and those who accompanied her testified that they did not even see any grandstands. Morton positioned himself at the most dangerous place on the track—on a curve. Appellant was positioned on the straightaway behind a “snow” fence in an area designated for spectators.
The court in the
Morton
case distinguished the ease of
Saari
v.
State,
The courts of California have held that assumption of the
*194
risk of being hit by a flying puck in a hockey game is one of fact for the jury.
(Shurman
v.
Fresno Ice Rink, Inc.,
Sports car racing can hardly be said to compare with the universal popularity of baseball. The risk of being hit by a fly ball is indeed a common, expected, and frequent occurrence in every baseball game. The risk of being killed or injured by a racing sports car is neither so common, frequent, nor expected an occurrence that it should be considered a matter of “common knowledge” sufficient to impose “actual knowledge” on the paying spectator who is standing in an approved spectator area.
In this case there is much evidence that appellant did not have actual knowledge. On this matter of assumption of risk we cannot say that reasonable minds could not differ on this point (as was said in Morton, supra) and that it would be error to submit it to a jury. The Morton case is factually distinguishable, as previously shown. The knowledge of Morton was much greater than appellant here, and it must be remembered that the Morton case did not hold that Morton had assumed the risk as a matter of law.
For the above reasons the question of assumption of the risk should have gone to the jury.
Concerning the question of contributory negligence
*195
the language of
Austin
v.
Riverside Portland Cement Co., supra,
The trial court erred in granting the nonsuit.
Judgment reversed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
