261 Wis. 528 | Wis. | 1952
A host driving a car in which his guest is riding is, in law, required to exercise such skill and judgment as he possesses in the management of the car with relation to the laws of the road and the exercise of ordinary care for the safety of his guest. “A guest takes the host as he finds him, so far as skill and judgment are concerned, but he is entitled to assume upon entering the car that the host will obey the laws of the road.” Olson v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co. (1947), 252 Wis. 37, 40, 30 N. W. (2d) 196. See Poneitowcki v. Harres (1930), 200 Wis. 504, 509, 228 N. W. 126. It has been held that the established rule as to assumption of risk by a guest “ ‘should not be extended to situations where a host is inattentive and careless in making observations, to situations where his faulty judgment is based upon faulty premises proceeding from careless observation, or to hasty judgments resulting from careless observations.’” Rudolph v. Ketter (1940), 233 Wis. 329, 333, 289 N. W. 674. See Harter v. Dickman (1932), 209 Wis. 283, 288, 245 N. W. 157; Goehmann v. National Biscuit Co. (1931), 204 Wis. 427, 430, 235 N. W. 792. In the case last referred to, it is said, “The momentary management of the car should be left to the driver.” In Poneitowcki v. Harres, supra, it is said that it is also the duty of the host “to exercise ordinary care not to increase the danger or add a new one to those which she [the guest] assumed when she entered the car.”
As appellant proceeded in a southerly direction, he approached a bend in the road described as a four-degree
There is no occasion for extended treatment of the point that appellant was an experienced driver. There is ample evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that he failed to exercise the skill and judgment which he possessed. He had driven for years all manner of motor vehicles. At the time of his turning back onto the pavement, he was then confronted only with the matter of regaining his normal lane of travel. At this point the evidence of speed and with relation to management and control becomes controlling. Appellant was not in danger but was in a position to proceed safely in the direction of his destination. It is because of his attempt to vary his course while proceeding at a high rate of speed that the accident resulted. By turning to the left at the time and in the manner in which he did, he started his car toward the southeast while its momentum was such that he was unable, on reaching the pavement, to bring the car around to its normal lane of travel. The speed under which his car was moving so interfered with his effort to stay on the concrete that it brought into play the centrifugal force which carried him toward the east and brought the result described by the witnesses.
As to the assumption of risk by respondent, it appears that there was no occasion alarming to her or for protest from her up to the time of the sudden turning toward the southeast after the danger from the other cars had passed. The respondent testified that the appellant appeared perfectly normal, that he was sober and in full control of his
The jury, from the evidence, found that the speed was excessive, and that appellant was negligent in that particular and in the management and control of his car, thus increasing the risk of respondent over that which she assumed when she became a guest in his car.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.