This is аn appeal on a settled statement of facts (rule 7, Cal. Rules of Court) from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of defendants in a wrongful death *996 case. The triаl court refused to give instructions on negligence, and ruled that the California guest law (§ 17158 of the Veh. Code) applied, and instructed that plaintiffs could recover only uрon a finding of willful misconduct. The sole question presented is whether the guest law is applicable to an accident on a private roadway as distinguished from a public highway.
Decedent, whose mother and stepfather are plaintiffs in this action, accepted a social invitation from defendant driver to ride in his car. The ride for which decedent gave no compensation, commenced at a picnic site, continued for approximately one mile on a public highway, аnd then followed a private road known as the Mobil Oil Lease Road. While traveling on this private road, defendant failed to negotiate a sharp curve, and his car plummeted from the road down the side of an adjoining cliff causing fatal injuries to decedent. Thus, although the ride started on a public highway, the alleged negligencе, resulting in the death of decedent, occurred on a private road.
Section 17158 of the Vehicle Code provides as follows: “No person riding in or occuрying a vehicle owned by him and driven by another person with his permission and no person who as a guest accepts a ride in any vehicle upon a highway without giving compensation for such ride, nor any other person, has any right of action for civil damages against the driver of the vehicle or against any other person legally liable for the conduct of the drivеr on account of personal injury to or the death of the owner or guest during the ride, unless the plaintiff in any such action establishes that the injury or death proximately resulted from the intoxication or wilful misconduct of the driver. ’ ’ (Italics added.)
The word “highway” is defined in the Vehicle Code to mean a “public roadway.” (Veh. Code, § 360.) As originally enacted, the statute limiting liability to guests specifically was limited to accidents on “public” highways (Stats. 1929, ch. 787, p. 1580). The word “public” was deleted in 1935 (Stats. 1935, ch. 27, p. 154), when the statute was incorpоrated into the Vehicle Code. By such incorporation the definition of “highway” as a “public roadway,” then found in section 81 of the Vehicle Code, became applicable. Thus the conclusion is inescapable that the term “highway” in section 17158 must be interpreted to mean a public roadway and does not include privаte roadways.
The words “during the ride” appearing in that statute *997 and italicized above, refer to the ride mentioned earlier in the statute, namely, “a ride in any vehicle upon a highway.” In light of the plain language usеd by the Legislature, there is no rational basis to construe the statute, as urged by defendants, to mean that it is to be applied when part of the ride is on a public highway but the negligent injury is inflicted on private property.
Moreover, the guest law must be strictly construed. As was said in
Prager
v.
Isreal,
In several analogous cases, this court and the Court of Appеal have refused to expand the application of the statute beyond the plain meaning of the words contained therein. In
Prager
v.
Isreal, supra,
*998
These cases also demonstrate that the relationship between the driver and occuрant of a motor vehicle may fluctuate during the course of a single trip, as circumstances bring them within or without the language of the statute. Another illustration is the case involving the owner of a car who for compensation customarily drove some of his fellow employees to work. The court held that the host-passenger rеlationship ended upon arrival at the place of work and that, when the car pool arrived at work early and decided to go to a cafe, the status of the occupants changed to that of host-guest for the side trip.
(Lyon
v.
City of Long Beach,
The distinction between a public and a private road is frequently the crux of a decision. "It hаs been generally held in civil actions involving motor vehicle accidents that statutory traffic regulations or rules of the road have no application to thе conduct of traffic on private ways or premises.” (7 Am.Jur.2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic, § 169, p. 723.) In
Gootar
v.
Levin,
Defendants urge that cases dealing with the process provisions of the nonresident motorist statute show that thе term “highway” includes private roads. That statute, Vehicle Code, section 17451, provides in part: “The acceptance by a nonresident of the rights and privileges conferred upon him by this code or any use of the highways of this State . . . [makes him amenable to service of process] in any action or proceeding against the nonresident operator or nonresident owner
growing out of any accident or collision resulting front the operation
of any motor vehicle upon the highways of this State. ...” (Italics added.) Such statutes must be liberally
*999
rather than strictly construed. Moreover, the language of the statute is clearly broader than that of the guest law, еvidencing the legislative intent consistent with the policy favoring wide jurisdiction that its scope be greater. The juxtaposition of the word “highway” with the words “growing out” and “resulting” exрands the reach of service of process to accidents occurring off the public highway. That language was given its intended breadth of meaning in
McDonald
v.
Superior Court,
Defendants’ final argument
2
is that the suggested result creates an unconstitutional distinction between the obligations of one who is an automobile host on a highway and one in the same status on a private road. That contention is without merit. The Legislature has wide discretion in making a classification, and its exercise in this instance does not distinguish among persons of like qualifications, under like conditions and circumstances; it need not attempt to correct all supposed abuses at once.
(Silver
v.
Silver,
The judgment is reversed.
Traynor, C. J., McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Burke J., and Sullivan, J., concurred.
Notes
When the guest remains in the vehicle on a highway hut the driver has stepped out at the time the injury occurs, the guest statute does apply.
(Panopulos
v.
Maderis,
Defendants refer us to eases from foreign jurisdictions that apply their statutes to private property. Those еases are inapposite because their statutes do not contain the restrictive language found in ours, and the decisions expressly depend on that factor.
(Fishback
v.
Yale
(Fla.)
85
So.2d 142, 147;
Kitchens
v.
Duffield,
