Summаry judgment should be granted only in those cases where undisputable, plain and palpable facts exist on which reasonable minds could not differ as to the conclusion to be reached.
Malcom v. Malcolm,
The trial court erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Judgment reversed.
Statement of Facts.
Stukes brought suit against Miss Trowell alleging that he, a guest passenger in her car, was injured when she negligently drove it into a telephone pole. Plaintiff’s deposition was taken, in which he testified that earlier in the evening he had two cans of beer and that he and Miss Trowell, together with another couple had gone to a drive-in movie, where they had split another can of beer, and after the movie on their return to his fraternity house he had purchased a fifth of bourbon whiskey approximately one-half of which he and Miss Trowell consumed before he escorted her to the apartment of her grandmother, where she obtained the key to the car to take him back to the fratеrnity house, and as she drove the car out of the driveway onto Clairmont Avenue she made a sweeping right turn, striking the telephone pole on the opposite side of the street.
Concerning her condition he testified: “Q. Now, she was under the influence that evening, wasn’t she, Mr. Stukes? A. Yes, sir. Q. You were too, to some extent, weren’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. And you knew that when you got in the car with her, didn’t you? A. Yes, sir, but I believe I could have missed the pole.” He also testified that although he knew that Miss Trowell was somewhat under the influence from the drinking of the beer and whiskey, she appeared to be driving the car in a normal manner until he “sensed” that they were leaving the roadway shortly before the car struck the pole. “I was looking at her, and then I had the feeling that we weren’t travеling in *654 a straight line. I just had the sensation that we were going off the road, and we hit the post.” When she visited him at the hospital she said that she “must have been drunk.”
Miss Trowell testified in her deposition that she went with Mr. Stukes and another couple to a movie in a car suрplied by the other couple. There was an ice bucket with cans of beer in the car and they drank some of it on the way back. She thought she had one can and did not recall splitting a can with Stukes. After the fifth of bourbon was purchased on the wаy back they went to the basement of the fraternity house, where they had some drinks—she “did not recall how many, but it must have been three or four.” The drinks were “on the strong side.” As to whether it was less safe for her to drive after having that much to drink, she asserted, “Yes, sir. I knew it wаs less safe.” As to why she drove the car, she testified that “Howard wanted to borrow my car that night, and I didn’t want him to use it because I thought he had had too much to drink.” She thought that he had had more to drink than she had, and that he was less capable of driving than she was.
Dеfendant’s motion for summary judgment was granted and plaintiff appeals.
Ebbrhakdt, Judge, dissenting. While plaintiff testified that as the defendant’s escort he exercised control as to where the car was to be driven, we do not feel it necessary to bottom оur decision upon this fact. Rather, we would place it squarely upon the proposition that when the plaintiff entered the car with the defendant at the wheel, knowing that she was under the influence of intoxicants to the extent shown by this evidence, he assumed the risk of whatever might happen as a result of her condition.
Redding v. Morris,
It is well settled in our law that when one exposes himself to a known and obvious danger he assumes the risk, and cannot recover when he is injured, for he has failed to exercise оrdinary care for his own safety.
Southern R. Co. v. Hogan,
We have not hesitated to hold that there is an assumption of risk when one, miscalculating the speed of the train, goes upon a railroad track in front of an approaching train thinking that he could get across ahead of it
(Thomas v. Central of Ga. R. Co.,
Nor does it matter that the plaintiff was himself intoxicated when he got into the car. Just as one cannot be excused from the commission of a crime while he is in a state of voluntary intoxication
(Grimes v. Burch,
For the reasons stated in
Freeman v. Martin,
In relying on the report of
Powell
in
In his special concurrence Mr. Justice Atkinson makes reference (p. 707) to the prior appeal as it aрpeared in
Once the guest admits knowledge of the fact of the driver’s intoxication, whether by pleadings or by testimony, the assumption of risk doctrine should be applied or it should be held that he failed to exercise ordinary care for his own safety by getting into the car in spite of his knowledge, absent some emergency or compulsion.
The summary judgment was properly granted.
I am authorized to state that Chief Judge Felton, Presiding Judge Jordan and Judge Whitman concur in this dissent.
