Opinion by
As this automobile accident happened in Ohio and the plaintiff’s decedent was the defendant driver’s guest, the Ohio Guest Statute applies: General Code, §6308-6, Page’s Ohio Revised Code, Ann., Title 45, Motor Vehicles §4515.02. This act requires of a non-paying
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guest, as here, proof of wilful or wanton misconduct by defendant before recovery is allowed:
Mike v. Lian, 322
Pa. 353 (1936),
The jury found for the defendant, the court below refused a new trial, and plaintiff has appealed.
It is possible, since juries don’t always explain their actions, that this one found no wilful or wanton misconduct, and this would dispose of the case unless there was error. As for what constitutes wilful or wanton misconduct, we said in
Mike,
quoting from
Reserve Trucking Co. v. Fairchild,
The jury might well have felt that the evidence of defendant’s intoxication and of dozing at the wheel did not measure up to these stringent standards. Of interest on the point that far worse intoxication has been held in Ohio not to amount to wilful and wanton misconduct, see
McCoy v. Faulkenberg,
The plaintiff offers two complaints. • The first is that the trial judge improperly refused to charge that plaintiff was entitled to the presumption of due care. Whatever presumptions may be applicable, they are those of Pennsylvania, the
lex
fori:
Rodney v. Staman,
supra (
We start with the notion that since the defendant’s duty was not that of ordinary care, contributory neg
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ligenee is not a defense:
Tanner v. Pennsylvania Truck Lines, Inc.,
We do not see how the presumption of due care could arise from this record. It exists only to bridge the gap of silence caused by death, but it may be overcome when there is evidence of how the occurrence happened:
Bernstein v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
The view that the assumption of risk occurs when the guest enters the car is supported by
Reedy v. Brown,
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Plaintiff points to no Pennsylvania or Ohio case holding that the gnest who assumes the risk of driving with an obviously drunken driver is still entitled- to the presumption of due care, but he offers a case from Illinois where there is a Guest Act:
Anderson v. Launer,
. Plaintiff’s second complaint is that the trial judge erred in excluding evidence that plaintiff’s witness, Mrs. McCue, had spoken with the defendant’s representative before trial. Appellant tries to build up a recondite farrago of insinuations, suggestions, and inferences, but the incident is very simple. In a deposition not read to the jury Mrs. McCue referred to the *462 man who talked to her before trial as being from the insurance company and resembling defendant’s trial counsel. During the trial defense counsel cross-examined her about her talk with one of plaintiff’s counsel. Plaintiff now says in its brief: “The plaintiff offered to show that the witness spoke to the defendant’s representative before speaking to the plaintiff’s attorney, either with the mention of insurance or without mentioning it.” The trial judge obviously thought that the danger of Mrs. MeCue’s blurting out that the defendant’s representative was from the insurance company was too great to risk allowing it and to have to declare a mistrial if it happened. This seems to us clearly more weighty than counsel’s delicate balancing of subjective assumptions. Far from there being an inference that the witness had been coached by her attorney, she testified directly that he did not tell her what to say and that she told him “exactly what I am telling here.” This was a matter for the court’s discretion and we see no abuse of it.
The judgment is affirmed.
