A jury found defendant guilty of the crime of reckless driving. The court sentence was thirty days in jail and a fine of $500 with the jail sentence suspended. The first assignment of error is based on denial of a motion for a directed verdict оf not guilty. A statement of the evidence is therefore appropriate.
It appears defendant was driving in a westerly direction on graveled Highway 36 and approaching the intersection of Highway 10 abоut 4:15 p. m., November 20, 1963. Highway 10 is a hard surfaced through highway. About fifty feet on the east side is a "Yield Right of Way" sign. Defendant was familiar with the intersection and this sign, and had traveled the road many times as he lived in that vicinity.
Defendant testified he looked but did not see anybody coming — as he was going to cross the highway the front of his pickup hit the right side, near the rear, of a car coming from the isouth driven by a Mrs. Schonley. She died at the scene of the accident. Defendant further testified he did not see her until she was two or three feet in front of him. The view to the south was unobstructed for a person driving west on Highway 36 for many hundred feet, and traffic on Highway 10 was visible for a distance varying from 240 feet as defendant admitted or according to other evidence from 500 feet to less than 1,000 feet. There was testimony defendant was traveling 40 miles an hour, and as he approached the intersеction slowed to between 20 and 25 miles per hour; that he was having trouble with his brakes, and had them adjusted; but he did have to pump them to make a sudden stop and he didn't have time to pump them; the car was right in front of him before he realized it.
*482 Heretofore SDC 44.9921 defined reckless driving. So far as is apt here, it read:
"Any person who drives any vehicle upon a highway carelessly and heedlessly in willful or wanton disregard of the rights or safety of others, or without due caution and circumspection and at a speed or in a manner so as to endanger or be likely to endanger any person or property, shall be guilty of reckless driving * * (Emphasis suppliеd)
So phrased, this court in State v. Rossman,
The complaint here charges thе offense in the words of the second definition. In discussing the latter, the court in Rossman indicated if a speed violation was present, "it must also appear that the violation of the statute (speed) was the рroxi *483 mate cause of the accident." We will first examine defendant's duties as he approached this intersection. Ch. 225, 1961 Session Laws authorizes the designation of
"main traveled or through highways by erecting at the entrances thereto from intersecting highways, signs notifying drivers of vehicles to come to a full stop or to yield and before entering or crossing such designated highways shall be certain that such main traveled or designatеd highway shall be free from oncoming traffic which may affect safe passage. It shall be unlawful for the driver of any vehicle to fail to comply with the provisions of this section. * * *
"Preferential right of way at an intersection may be indicated by stop signs or yield signs * * *.
"The driver of a vehicle approaching a yield sign shall in obedience to such sign slow down to a speed reasonable for the existing conditions, or shall stop if nеcessary as provided in section 44.0321, and shall yield the right of way * * * to any vehicle in the intersection or approaching on another highway so closely as to constitute an immediate hazard. Said driver having sо yielded may proceed and the drivers of all other vehicles approaching the intersection shall yield to the vehicle ■so proceeding, provided, however, that if such driver is involved in a collisiоn with a pedestrian in a crosswalk or a vehicle in the intersection after driving past a yield sign without stopping, such collision shall be deemed prima facie evidence of his failure to yield right of way."
With reference to the duty of a driver approaching a through highway protected by a stop sign the court said in Kundert v. B. F. Goodrich Co.,
An Alabama statute contained the same wording as our second phrase. In Kirk v. State,
"* * * the phrase, 'without due caution and circumspection,' constituting one of the alternative characterizations of reckless driving, means no more than negligence, for if one drives on a highway in such manner, he is guilty of negligence."
In Neessen v. Armstrong,
"The second alternative, to wit, 'or without due caution and circumspection,' constitutes no more than negligence".
Pointing out that the Hawaiian statute
2
does not use the words willful and wanton оr reckless commonly employed elsewhere, the court after a review of many state statutes and
*485
opinions concludes both portions of their statute set up a standard of ordinary care, namеly the failure to exercise that care which a reasonably prudent person would have exercised under the given circumstances. State v. Tamanaha,
The trial court instructed the jury as to the law of the road, that is the duty of a driver approaching an intersection of a highway where a yield sign was erected, the duty to exercise ordinary care as to lookout and for the motor vehicle to be equipped with brakes in good working order. No objection is made that the instructions did not properly state the law — error is asserted defendant was not being tried for failure to yield or keep proper lookout and there was no evidence the brakes were not operating properly. Giving similar instructions in a reckless driving prosecution was held not to be error in State v. Sullivan,
*486 "The jury had a right to know the law regarding speed limit, rights of the road, manner of рassing, and such matters to see if there were any violations and then to determine whether these violations were such as constituted reckless driving * * *."
Affirmed.
Notes
. An example of the difficulty of defining degrees of negligence is thаt of a Pennsylvania statute which first stated the crime of reckless driving as “Any person who drives any vehicle * s; carelessly and willfully, or wantonly disregarding the rights and safety of others * * (Emphasis supplied) It was amended in 1951 by deleting the wоrds emphasized above. In Commonwealth v. Forrey,
. R.L.H.1955, § 311-1: “Whoever operates any vehicle * * * carelessly or heedlessly of the rights or safety of others, or in a manner sо as to endanger or he likely to endanger any person or property * * *”
. Much of the uncertainty of the offense commonly referred to as “reckless driving” is due to the differences of the wording of the various statutes; Fisher, Vehicle Traffic Law, 1961, p. 323, et seq. which sets out many of these statutes and see 8 Blashfield § 5368, Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice. The terms vary from our former “willfully and wanton”, “high degree of negligеnce”, “reckless driving”, “recklessly”, etc. Interpretations by the courts have not always arrived at the same conclusions. Some of them have stated the negligence should be from ordinary negligence and more than ordinary negligence to culpable, gross and criminal negligence. In. a state where it was said we “do not recognize degrees of negligence”, Melby v. Anderson,
