Thе principal action was an action of tort by the plaintiff O’Mara for injury due to the negligent driving of the defendant Zwicker, an employee of the defendant H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. (Hood). At the time of the accident the plaintiff was a passenger in a car driven by Ann Bodmer, and Hood and Zwicker impleaded Bodmer as a third party defendant, claiming contribution under G. L. c. 23IB, § 1, inserted by St. 1962, c. 730, § 1. The case is beforе us on exceptions taken by Hood and Zwicker to the direction of verdicts against them on their contribution claims.
The jury could have found the following facts. On March 29, 1965, the plaintiff was a passenger in а car driven by Bodmer, her daughter. After a visit in Marblehead they left for Boston. It had been snowing for three-quarters of an hour, the snowstorm was getting much worse, and cars were having great difficulty. Bodmer became lost and confused and turned the wrong way into a one-way street. As she approached an intersection she was going uphill at about fifteen miles an hour. The road was very slippery, and she was barely able to keep the car going. She saw a Hood truck approaching the interseсtion from her right about forty-five feet away. She did not want to stop and lose traction; accelerating, she continued into the intersection, where the truck hit the middle of the right side of the car.
The third рarty declaration contained six counts, but exceptions were taken only with respect to two counts, one by Hood and one by Zwicker, each alleging gross negligence on the part of Bodmer and claiming contribution in the event of recovery by the plaintiff. Hood and Zwicker now clаim (1) that proof of gross negligence was not necessary to entitle them to contribution, and (2) that еven if gross negligence was required, the evidence was sufficient to go to the jury.
1. Hood and Zwicker alleged and undertook to prove gross
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negligence on the part of Bodmer. If they proved ordinary negligence but failed to prove gross negligence, and verdicts were directed against them on that ground, it is not clear that it should now be open to them to claim that the word “gross” was surplusage. Compare
Royal Steam Heater Co.
v.
Hilchey,
This is the first case whiсh has reached us under the contribution statute, although we have referred to it in other cases.
Selby
v.
Kuhns,
Section 1 (a) of G. L. c. 231B grants a right of contribution “where two or more persons become jоintly liable in tort for the same injury to person or property.” The language of the 1955 Uniform Act is identical except that it refers to persons “jointly or severally” liable. Section 1 of the Uniform Act as originally promulgated in 1939 contained substantially similar language. The Commissioners’ Note to § 1 (a) of the 1955 Uniform Aсt refers to the 1939 Act and states: “The language used has been adequate to exclude casеs where the person from whom contribution is sought was not liable to the injured person. Thus where the potential contributor is the spouse of the injured per *238 son. ... Or the parent of the injured person. ... Or wherе the injured person assumed the risk of the potential contributor’s negligence. . . .” 9 U.L. A. 128 (1967 Supp.)-.
In other jurisdictiоns recovery of contribution has been denied in circumstances like those before us unless the рotential contributor was directly liable to the injured person.
Troutman
v.
Modlin,
2. Under our common law decisions, Bodmer was not hable to her guest in the absence of gross negligence.
West
v.
Poor,
Exceptions overruled.
