Klaber by and Through Klaber v. Elliott
Klaber by and Through Klaber v. Elliott
Opinion
Plaintiff Sherry Klaber was injured while a passenger in the automobile driven by defendant Renee Elliott. Klaber sued Elliott for negligence and wantonness in the operation of her car, and the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Elliott. Klaber appeals from that judgment.
On Sunday afternoon, May 27, 1984, Elliott, Klaber, and three other girls, Stacey Johnson, Marsha Williams, and Tracy Defoor, left Elliott's house in Elliott's car and headed to the house of some friends, the Holdbrooks, just outside Haleyville on Bear Creek Lake. After staying about 15 minutes, the girls left around 4 p.m., while it was still daylight, in order for one of them to go to church at 6 p.m. that night. Klaber was in the front passenger's seat, Elliott was driving, and the other three girls were seated in back. It had been raining *Page 577 earlier that day and was still drizzling when the girls headed back to Haleyville on Pepper's Mill Road. This road curves to the right just before it intersects with county road 71, or Dime Road. As Elliott approached the curve on Pepper's Mill Road, with which she says she was unfamiliar, she applied her brakes, at which time the car slid off the right side of the road into an adjacent ditch and continued up out of the ditch onto Dime Road, where it finally stopped in the far lane. As a result of the accident, Klaber received compression fractures to a vertebra, which necessitated a one and one-half week stay in a hospital.
The trial court found that wanton conduct, not negligence, was the standard of liability, and granted summary judgment. The two issues on appeal are whether Klaber was a guest or a passenger within the terms of Alabama's guest statute, Ala. Code 1975, §
"Q. Did you customarily buy gas?
"A. Yes.
"Q. Did you have any sort of agreement?
"A. When it was getting low we would pitch in and —
"Q. Was it your custom and practice at that time to help buy gas each time Renee bought it?
"A. Just about.
"Q. Had you bought any gas that day?
"A. No."
Klaber contends that the fact that she occasionally helped Elliott with gas made her a paying "passenger" and not a "guest" and took her from the purview of §
The cases construing §
In explaining this dichotomy, we have quoted with approval from 60 C.J.S. Motor Vehicles, § 399(5), p. 1015 (1969), that "the sharing of the cost of operating the car on a trip, when the trip is undertaken for pleasure or social purposes and the invitation is not motivated by, or conditioned on, such contribution, is nothing more than the exchange of social amenities and does not transform into a paying passenger one who without the exchange would be a guest." Wagnon,
Examining the context of the ride in this case, we find it apparent that the venture was purely social. The girls had been swimming at Elliott's house earlier that afternoon, and they drove to the Holdbrooks' house, where more of their friends were swimming. Neither Klaber nor Elliott disputes their intended destination that day or the purpose behind it.
Harrison v. McCleary," 'Where a dispute exists as to what were the respective purposes or conditions for or upon which the transportation was undertaken, relative to the nature and existence, if any, of the benefits conferred upon the respective parties, it is ordinarily a question of fact whether or not the invitee was a guest within the meaning of the statutes.
" 'Where, however, reasonable minds can reach but one conclusion from the uncontroverted facts, the question becomes one of law for the court.' "
Therefore, we hold as a matter of law, based upon the factual context of this case, that Klaber was indeed a guest and not a paying passenger in Elliott's car.
Whitmore v. Burge," 'Before a party can be said to be guilty of wanton conduct it must be shown that with reckless indifference to the consequences he consciously and intentionally did some wrongful act or omitted some known duty which produced injury.' "
In reviewing the trial court's order granting summary judgment on this issue, we must look to the circumstances on the day of the accident, including weather conditions, the type of road, the speed of the car, etc., to determine whether there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to wanton misconduct.
Both Klaber and Elliott testified at their depositions that it had rained hard earlier that day and was still drizzling when they left their friend's house. When asked about Elliott's speed, Klaber responded, "I do remember thinking it was going too fast to make the curve right as it happened." Elliott, on the other hand, testified that she was driving only 25 mph. Her account of the conditions of the road and weather just prior to the accident is:
"It had been raining hard that day and the roads were real slippery, and I had never been on that road before. And when you turn in you turn on the curve. It doesn't look like a curve. When I was coming out it was straight and the curve pops up. I was driving slow and I was driving carefully but when I got up on the curve I didn't know it that well and I slid off of the road."
She attributes her losing control of the car to the fact that she "did not see the curve until [she] got right up on it" because she was unfamiliar with that particular road.
Elliott argues that her unfamiliarity with the road should be a consideration, as it was in Marshall v. Marshall,
We recognized in Hamer v. Nelson,
Jerry Feltman, a law enforcement officer investigating motor vehicle accidents for 26 years, calculated that the car skidded 53.5 feet prior to the ditch and 115 feet after crossing the ditch. He also concluded that the extreme minimum possible speed of the car was 45.15. Klaber testified that there was a sign warning of the curve on Pepper's Mill Road prior to the bend in the road. She also agreed that she and the rest of the girls were "talking and carrying on" and that "Renee just went into the curve too fast and couldn't make it."
Knowledge need not be proven directly but may be inferred from the facts of the case. Burns v. Moore,
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
TORBERT, C.J., and JONES, SHORES and ADAMS, JJ., concur.
"The owner, operator or person responsible for the operation of a motor vehicle shall not be liable for loss or damage arising from injuries to or death of a guest while being transported without payment therefor in or upon said motor vehicle, resulting from the operation thereof, unless such injuries or death are caused by the willful or wanton misconduct of such operator, owner or person responsible for the operation of said motor vehicle. (Acts 1935, No. 442, p. 918; Code 1940, T. 36 § 95.)"
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Sherry Rena Klaber, a Minor, Who Sues by and Through Her Mother and Next Friend, Nell Klaber v. Renee Elliott.
- Cited By
- 16 cases
- Status
- Published