Zwick v. Burdin
Zwick v. Burdin
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff was injured in an accident when she was riding in defendant’s automobile. Defendant is plaintiff’s son-in-law. In this action she obtained a judgment. Defendant, by this appeal, claims that his motion for an involuntary nonsuit should have been allowed. The only issue was plaintiff’s status — guest or non-guest — at the time of the accident.
Mrs. Zwick was frequently a baby sitter for the children of her daughter and defendant son-in-law. Defendant was taking her to his home for that purpose when the accident happened. Mrs. Zwick was a widow with little financial means. She testified that her pur
The evidence would have warranted jury conclusions that plaintiff was riding in the car as an employee, not as a mother-in-law; that she was there as an essential part of a business transaction and was saving her son-in-law an expenditure of some unspecified number of dollars he would otherwise have been obliged to pay. These conclusions also left it to the jury to reach a further conclusion that plaintiff was conferring “* * * a substantial benefit in a material or business sense * * *” upon defendant. And, that the benefit was a “motivating factor” in the transportation. OPS 30.115(1). Sinclair v. Barker, 1964, 236 Or 599, 390 P2d 321.
The facts related and the permissive inferences mentioned distinguish this case from Tarbet v. Green, 1964, 236 Or 361, 388 P2d 468, appellant’s best hope. In order to more pointedly distinguish the Tarbet case from this one it is necessary to mention three of our recent decisions and emphasize their differences. The first is Spring v. Liles, 1963, 236 Or 140, 387 P2d 578. Next was the Tarbet case and the third was Sinclair v. Barker, supra.
In the Tarbet case the only evidence was that the mother was assisting her daughter in a usual mother-daughter social relationship as distinguished from Spring v. Liles.
Sinclair v. Barker was concerned only with the element of payment. Sinclair had testified that he had been invited to ride in order to help plan some improvements to some of Barker’s property. It was held to be for the jury to decide if an expectation of business benefit was the motivation for the invitation to ride.
In the instant case, the emphasis of the evidence and the court’s instructions to the jury related to the payment-motivation test applied in Sinclair v. Barker. This is a different test than applied in Spring v. Liles, and, to a lesser extent in Tarbet v. Green. The evidence in the instant case permits a stronger inference that a benefit to the driver was a motivating factor in the ride than in Sinclair v. Barker. Here, there was no direct evidence of any other purpose.
Affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
Specially concurring.
My concurrence is based solely upon the ground that there was evidence from which the jury could find that the presence of plaintiff in defendant’s ear was for defendant’s purposes and not plaintiff’s and that she was therefore not a guest. I do not believe there is any necessity to consider the question of whether there was payment under subsection (1) of ORS 30.115.
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