delivered the opinion of the Court.
When the trial judge in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County granted the appellee’s motion for a judgment n.o.v. after a jury had rendered a verdict in favor of the appellants, they appealed. The only question involved is whether appellants offered sufficient evidence, in view of the Ohio “guest-passengеr statute,” to require a submission of their case to the jury.
The appellee and the appellant, Richard P. Mroz (Mroz), neighbors in Baltimore County and college schoolmates, were visiting in the State of Ohio. In the middle of a clear July day in 1959, they set out, by automobile, for Cleveland to see a baseball game, accompanied by a young lady, Marjorie Rob *83 inson. The appellee was driving; the young lady was to his right and Mroz to her right; all on the front seat. They approached Ohio Route 241, a north-south through street, from the east on Canal Fulton Road, and proceeded into the intersection of said streets, where the automobile in which they were riding was struck by a south bound motor vehicle on the through street. It is conceded that Mroz was a non-paying guest; that a red blinking light faced appellee as he approached the intersection; and that a stop sign was located on the north side of Canal Fulton Road, about 10 feet from Route 241. Pictures offered as exhibits show that an operator on Canal Fulton Road does not have a full view to his right on Route 241 until he is very close to the intersection, but it cannot be said that the pictures clearly show that the view to the right is completely obstructed.
The three occupants of the car were the only witnesses at the trial below — Mroz and the appellee being called by the appellants; Miss Robinson by the appellee. Summarized and stated most favorably for the appellants, their testimony was to the following effect. Mroz stated that аt some time during the ride he believed he said something to the appellee about his speeding; appellee “seemed” to be in a hurry; when they approached Route 241, Mroz drew appellee’s attention to the Castaway House, which was located a short distance to their left fаcing Route 241; when they reached the stop sign, the appellee “slowed down,” and “he came to it [the intersection] very slow, and then he put it in second gear and proceeded across” (in a statement made shortly after the accident, Mroz said he did not remember whether they slowed down or not, and appellants argue this statement should aid them in taking their case to the jury); he saw appellee look to his left, but he didn’t know whether appellee looked to the right or not; when they were proceeding across Route 241, he heard a screeching which drew his attention and he saw, fоr the first time, a car some 25 to 30 feet away, approaching from his right at a high rate of speed; and very shortly thereafter the vehicles collided. He also stated the appellee told him, shortly after the accident, that appellee “didn’t even see the car coming.”
*84 The apрellee, called by the appellants, was unable to spread much light on what occurred just before the collision, in which he received a rather severe “bump” on his head. When he was 50 to 100 feet from the intersection, traveling at about 35 to 40 miles per hour, he remembered that he said something to Mroz about the Castaway House, and he could not recall anything that transpired thereafter until he was walking around his car after the accident. He didn’t remember whether he saw the stop sign, but thought he saw the blinking light; he believed he slowed down before reaching the intersection, but did not remember whether he did or not; and he saw the intersection, hut did not see the other vehicle until after the impact. The testimony of Miss Robinson afforded no additional impetus to appellants’ case.
The appellants argue that the above evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to them, and the legitimate inferеnces deducible therefrom entitled them to have the jury pass upon their case, in spite of the Ohio guest statute. This statute (General Code, § 6308-6) is set forth in Page’s Ohio Rev. Code Ann., Title 45, § 4515.02, and, in pertinent part, states:
“The * * * person responsible for the operation of a motor vehicle shall not be liablе for loss or damage arising from injuries to * * * a [non-paying] guest, * * * resulting from the operation [of said motor vehicle], * * * unless such injuries * * * are caused by the wilful or wanton misconduct of such operator * * *»
See also General Code, § 6296-10 for minor automobile operators responsibility statute.
It is obvious that the сritical words in the above statute are “wilful or wanton misconduct,” with “wilful or wanton” stated disjunctively. Although the case below was tried upon the issue of whether the appellee had been guilty of “wilful or wanton misconduct,” the appellants, in their brief and oral argument, abandon all claim of “wanton misconduсt” on the part of the appellee, hut assert that the evidence brings his actions within the scope of “wilful misconduct,” as defined by the Supreme Court of Ohio. It may well be, that in adopting this course, appellants assumed a heavier burden than if they had
*85
let the issue oí “wilful or wanton misconduct” stand. See
Bailey v. Huff,
It will not be necessary for us to formulate an original definition of wilful misconduct as used in the Ohio statute, for the Supreme Court of that State has done so. In a very pleasingly styled opinion in
Universal Concrete Pipe Co. v. Bassett,
“ ‘Wilful misconduct’ * * * is either the doing of an act with specific intent to injure his passenger or *86 with full knowledge of existing conditions, the intеntional execution of a wrongful course of conduct which he knows should not be carried out or the intentional failure to do something which he knows should be done in connection with his operation of the automobile, under circumstances tending to disclose that the motorist knows or should know that an injury tо his guest will be the probable result of such conduct.”
The above quotation was taken by the Ohio Court from the first case of
Tighe v. Diamond,
There is no contention in the instant case that the appellee had a “specific intent” to injure Mroz; hence, it is apparent that if the appellee’s alleged wrongful course of conduct is to be brought within the scope of the guest statute, it is incumbent upon the appellants to show that appellee’s alleged wrongful course of conduct was carried out “with full knowledge of existing conditions,” or he, at least executed some wrongful intentional act, accompanied by indifference to the safety of others after knowledge of their danger, or failure, after such knowledge, to use ordinary care to avoid injury to others.
Unfortunately for the appellants’ case, there is not a particle of evidence to show that the appellee saw the automobile approaching from his right until after the collision. On the contrary, the testimony discloses thаt neither the appellee nor *87 Miss Robinson saw the automobile until after the accident, and Mroz did not see it until it was within 25 to 30 feet from him. Nor was there a scintilla of evidence to the effect that the appellee performed any wrongful intentional act after his knowledge of Mroz’s peril (in faсt the testimony shows that it was not until after the collision that the appellee knew of any danger), or that after such knowledge, he failed to use ordinary care to avert injury to Mroz.
Bailey v. Huff, supra,
involved a question of alleged “wanton misconduct” under the guest statute. The evidence showed the plaintiff sustained persоnal injuries when the automobile, driven by the defendant and in which she was a guest, had a collision at an intersection. The defendant, who was intoxicated, had been proceeding eastwardly and was in the process of making a left turn without yielding the right of way, while the other vehicle was proceeding through thе intersection in a westwardly direction. The court pointed out that wanton misconduct is not merely a high degree of negligence. It requires proof, among other things, that the defendant’s wrongful conduct was carried out under such conditions that he must have been conscious, “from
his knowledge
of the surrounding circumstances and existing conditions,” that his conduct would in all common probability result in injury. The court then stated that there was no testimony to show that defendant knew he was intoxicated or that he knew he was an unsafe driver as a result thereof. Likewise, there was no proof that the defendant knew of the presencе of the other car, which was an essential factor of the “surrounding circumstances and existing conditions”; hence a directed verdict in favor of defendant was proper. See also
Vecchio v. Vecchio,
We have found no Ohio case, and have been referred to none, that specifically deals with the question of purported “wilful misconduct” for failure to stop at a stop sign. However, the Supreme Court of Iowa, in applying its guest statute requiring “reckless operation” of a motor vehicle for a guest passenger to recover, held that such a failure to stop at a stop sign before proceeding upon an arterial highway was
*88
not sufficient to establish “recklessness” upon the part of defendant’s driver, where it was not shown that he knew the car on the arterial highway was being driven at a speed of 35 to 40 miles per hour.
Welch v. Minkel,
The evidence, viewed in a light most favorable to the appellants cannot be held to show, under the Ohio law, more than inattention, laxity, heedlessness and oversight upon the part of the appellee. Three friendly young people were on a pleasure trip. The exhibits show the intersection to be in a rural area. Mroz, himself, stated that appellee slowed down at the stop sign, and, when he arrived at the intersection, “he came to it very slow, and then he put it in second gear and proceeded across.” Just prior thereto, there had been some conversation relative to the Castaway House located to their left. Appellee’s only wrongful acts were his failure to obey the traffic signals and to see the vehicle approaching from his right; conduсt which the appellee admits constituted negligence. However, neither of these wrongful acts was performed at a time when the appellee had “full knowledge of existing conditions,” nor did such acts show a wrongful course of action, either of commission or omission, “after knowl
*89
edge” of dаnger to Mroz. The testimony lacks a showing of a mental state disclosing a conscious realization of wrongful conduct, which is an essential element if one’s behaviour is to be labeled “wilful misconduct.” We, therefore, conclude, as did the learned trial judge, that the evidence was insufficient to carry thе case to the jury in view of the Ohio guest statute. As was said by the Supreme Court of Ohio in
Tighe v. Diamond, supra,
The appellants rely heavily upon the case of
Jenkins v. Sharp,
Finding no error, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
