This appeal involves the question of the liability of the driver of an automobile for injuries to another riding with him under the .so-called “guest” law.
The McCanns, husband and wife, sued to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the wife when they were riding with the defendants in the latters’ automobile in Santa Clara County. On the trial the plaintiffs ’ ease showed that the two couples had planned to leave San Mateo on a few days’ pleasure trip to Rio Del Mar. The defendants’ automobile was to be used to transport the parties to their destination and return. The two couples were friendly and had mutually enjoyed social intercourse and entertainment, the cost of which had been equally borne by them. They had not, however, previously engaged in a joint automobile trip. No specific agreement had been made by them as to the sharing of expenses of transportation, hotel and meals, but it was apparently the tacit and mutual understanding that such expenses would be shared equally. The accident occurred on August 4, 1934, shortly after the commencement of the journey. The defendant Clifford Hoffman was driving.
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He left the main highway at Fremont Avenue. While he was driving toward the intersection of Fremont Avenue and Grant Eoad, at a speed of about sixty miles an hour, his automobile collided with another 'car approaching on the intersecting crossroad. The defendants’ motion for a non-suit was granted. The plaintiffs appealed from the judgment entered thereon. The court concluded that the defendant driver was not guilty of wilful misconduct. There was no error in so concluding. His acts did not meet the test of wilful misconduct approved by this court in
Meek
v.
Fowler,
3 Cal. (2d) 420 [
At the time involved herein section 141% of the California Vehicle Act provided that any person who as a guest accepted a ride in any vehicle and was injured while so riding should have no right of recovery against the driver or owner except for injury resulting from wilful misconduct or intoxication of the driver. The same statute defined the term "guest” as a person who accepted a ride without giving compensation therefor. It is contended that' the unexpressed agreement to share the expense of gasoline and oil constituted compensation within the meaning of the definition, and that the plaintiffs were passengers and not guests. This subject has not heretofore been given extended consideration by this court.
Many states have enacted statutes substantially to the same effect as our own. In other states, notably Massachusetts, Georgia and formerly Washington, the case law has been to the effect that the driver of a vehicle is not liable to a "gratuitous” passenger for ordinary negligence.
In this state, prior to the enactment of section 141% of the California Vehicle Act, the degree of care to be exercised toward "gratuitous” passengers was governed by see
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tion 2096 of the Civil Code, providing that a carrier of persons without reward was answerable for the breach of ordinary care. The courts of this and other states have held that statutes depriving a person carried without reward of the right to recover damages for injuries caused by breach of ordinary care are in derogation of the common law and must be construed strictly against the change. (See
Callet
v.
Alioto,
In the Restatement of the Raw of Torts, section 490, the designations, “passenger” and “guest” have been adopted for the purpose of distinguishing a person carried for hire or reward from one carried gratuitously. Por convenience only these designations will be adopted herein, as they have been in other cases construing similar statutes, to distinguish a person who has given compensation within the meaning of the statute here involved from one who has not given such compensation.
Courts have undertaken to define the word “guest” as used in such a statute. Such definitions are of little practical assistance inasmuch as a definition has been furnished by the legislature, viz., one who has not given compensation for the carriage. We are therefore concerned with the meaning of that language.
In construing the statute the court may consider the prior state of the law, the purpose of the enactment effecting a change in the law, and the nature of the matter to be remedied. These matters have heretofore been considered and are well understood without further repetition.
(Rocha
v.
Hulen,
6 Cal. App. (2d) 245, 251 [
A review of a few only of the numerous eases indicates that the nature of the compensation as contemplated by such a statute is as variable as the particular facts involved. Compensation has been deemed made: When the carriage is of a prospective purchaser of real estate or other customer riding in contemplation of the mutual business of the parties.
(Crawford
v.
Foster,
On similar considerations, and applying the rules of construction hereinabove noted, the courts have quite uniformly held one to be a passenger and not a guest who embarks upon a joint venture of a business nature rather than of a merely 'social aspect. A case which falls into this category is
Jensen
v.
Hansen,
12 Cal. App. (2d) 678 [
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The great weight of authority is to the effect that the sharing of the cost of gasoline and oil consumed on a trip, when that trip is taken for pleasure or social purposes, is nothing more than the exchange of social amenities and does not transform into a passenger one who without such exchange would be a guest, and consequently is not payment for the transportation or compensation within the meaning of the statute. It is obvious that if a different result obtained under any construction of the statute its purposes would be defeated and its effect annulled. The relationships which will give rise to the status of a passenger must confer a benefit of a tangible nature and are limited.
(Chaplowe
v.
Powsner,
Therefore, where a special tangible benefit to the defendant was the motivating influence for furnishing the transportation, compensation may be said to have been' given. But it is not given where the main purpose of the trip is the joint pleasure of the participants. The payment of a portion of the expense, as for gasoline and oil consumed on the trip, is merely incidental and does not constitute the moving influence for the transportation. The provocation for the offer of transportation remains the joint social one of reciprocal hospitality or pleasure. The same conclusion was announced in
Rogers
v.
Vreeland,
16 Cal. App. (2d) 364 [
On the other hand, following the precepts and rules of construction herein noted, the cases indicate either by a direct holding or by recognition, that where the relationship between the parties is one of business and the transportation is supplied in the pursuit thereof for their mutual benefit, compensation has been given and the plaintiff is a passenger and not a guest.
(Bradley
v.
Clarke,
The record in the present case supports only the conclusion that the sole purpose of the contemplated trip was the joint pleasure of the parties. The trial court was therefore correct in granting the non-suit on the ground that the plaintiffs were guests and not passengers.
The judgment is affirmed.
Edmonds, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
