Appellants contend that the trial court erred in changing the answers of the jury in three subdivisions of question 9, and we agree.
David Tomchek testified he had ridden with Balkansky many times; that he considered him a good driver and felt that he was driving all right at the time of the accident.
Respondents agree that the evidence is clear as to the causal negligence of Balkansky in all respects found by the jury. As to speed, it was the testimony of the two disinterested witnesses, Mr. and Mrs. Lesperance, who made their estimates on the basis of their own speed of 50 miles per hour, that Balkansky was traveling at 70 or 75 miles per hour as he passed them some 450 to 600 feet from the intersection, and that he never slowed down for the intersection.
In
Bronk v. Mijal
(1957),
“If a host is proceeding at a negligent rate of speed, which the guest assumes, and by reason of this speed finds himself in a situation requiring instant decision and giving him opportunity for further negligence with respect to control, it is impossible to isolate the subsequent negligence from the prior negligence and to hold, in spite of the fact that the guest has acquiesced in the former, that the momentary character of the latter makes acquiescence impossible. In such a situation, where the emergency itself is produced by negligence of the host, the guest who has assumed the risk of such negligence must be held to assume the risk involved in the emergency produced by it.”
In the Bronk Case, supra, this court stated that it could not hold as a matter of law that there was assumption of risk as to lookout. It observed, however (p. 202) :
“It is possible to assume a hypothetical state of facts where the speed of an automobile might be so great that the driver could not read highway safety signs, such as the curve warning sign in the instant case. In such a situation a guest who assumed the negligent speed ought to be held to have assumed the negligence of his host in not seeing such a highway safety sign. However, we certainly cannot make such a determination as a. matter of law under the facts here presented. For example, there was no evidence presented that the curve warning sign could not have been seen and read by the ordinary operator of a car proceeding at a speed of 75 miles per hour.”
In this case, of course, we have a finding by the jury that Tomchek assumed the risk with respect to negligent lookout, as well as all other aspects of Balkansky’s negli *584 gence. He had his head turned to the left, away from any warning sign that may have been on the roadside. Where the best evidence was that Balkansky was traveling at a speed of 70 or 75 miles per hour as he approached the intersection, the jury was entitled to conclude that speed was the element which occasioned all the other items of negligence, and that since Tomchek acquiesced as to speed he assumed the risk of all.
It is true that negligent lookout is ordinarily a momentary failure which the guest does not assume. Negligence as to management and control, likewise, is usually of a momentary character, as in
Peterson v. Magnus
(1956),
We consider that the reasoning of that case is just as applicable to the matter of assumption of risk as to lookout under circumstances where speed is so great as to have an overpowering effect on the driver’s ability to exercise ordinary care. In the instant case the jury could well believe that it was Balkansky’s speed which made it almost impossible for him to maintain a proper lookout. Having seen the junction sign, Balkansky testified, he looked for a stop sign but did not see one. His failure to see the stop sign could logically be attributed to the fact that his speed and his passing of the Lesperance car placed him in the position of being unable to see it. Moreover, there is the testimony of the Lesperances that as the Balkansky car passed them the occupants looked backward. All this, at a speed of 70 *585 or 75 miles an hour on a road 17 feet wide, Tomchek felt was “good driving.” Certainly the circumstances justified the conclusion of the jury that Tomchek assumed the risk with respect to lookout as well as speed. The same view must be taken of the jury’s findings of assumption of risk as to failure to stop for the arterial and failure to yield the right of way. It was entitled to infer that they were essentially attributable to the basic element of Balkansky’s negligence, speed. If it was his speed, probably coupled with his passing of the Lesperance car, that made it impossible for him to see the stop sign, it was also his speed which made it impossible for him to stop and yield the right of way.
Appellants also raise some questions on Shimon’s negligence and on evidence affecting the findings on damages, but in view of our decision on the question of assumption of risk it becomes unnecessary to discuss them.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint.
