I am unable to concur in the opinion of my colleagues because to my mind the facts do not show that by remaining in the car under the circumstances with which he was then confronted appellant was, as a matter of law, guilty of contributory negligence. While the rule in California, where the action occurred and by whose laws the rights of the parties are, according to the opinion, to be measured, is that a guest who knows the driver is carelessly operating the car must use ordinary care and take proper steps for his own protection, yet even there it is a question of fact to be submitted to the jury whether his failure to leave the car constituted a want of ordinary care which proximately contributed to his injury, unless the evidence is such that only one conclusion can be drawn from it. Curran v. Earle C. Anthony, Inc., 77 Cal.App. 462,247 P. 236. Such is the law generally in the absence of a provision similar to that in Arizona making the defense *Page 103 of contributory negligence a question of fact to be left to the jury, but the evidence in this case does not bring it within the one conclusion rule, because it is such that reasonable persons may draw different inferences from it. To my mind it was peculiarly the province of the jury and not of the judge to determine whether by starting back to Yuma in the car with appellee appellant exercised ordinary care for his own safety. InZelinsky v. Howe, 163 Wn. 277, 1 P.2d 294, the court uses this language, the facts being quite similar to those in that case:
"Nor would the trial court have been justified in taking from the jury the question of the alleged contributory negligence of the respondent and determining it against him as a matter of law. Notwithstanding he was a guest, the respondent had on appropriate occasions, and in a respectful manner, questioned the propriety of the speed at which the car was being driven at particular times, but whether sitting on the rear seat of the car and failing to protest against the conduct of his host, the driver, during the last few seconds of the unlawful and increasingly excessive rate of speed at that particular time and place, or failing to leave the automobile at any time, either one or both, constituted want of reasonable care, proximately contributing to the injury, was a question of fact for the jury."
It is true, according to the testimony of appellant, Sol Friedman, that in going from Yuma to Calexico appellee drove the car two or three times at a speed of from fifty-five to sixty-five miles an hour, and that each time he did this appellant protested against it. It likewise appears that when those objections were made he would slow down but instead of keeping his car at a rate of speed satisfactory to appellant he would soon resume an excessive one though the third and last time he slowed down he let the car remain at that speed until he reached Calexico. The father *Page 104 also objected several times to the speed of the car and when they reached Calexico said to appellee, "Give me the keys, Bert. If you don't give me the keys I won't ride back with you," whereupon appellee handed the keys to his father who remarked, "Mr. Bernstein will drive us back." But when they were ready for the return trip appellant asked his father for the keys promising that he would not go fast and relying upon this statement his father gave them to him. It was then about dark and they left immediately for Yuma. Eight or ten miles out appellee, notwithstanding his promise to run more slowly, began approaching the same rate of speed he had several times going down, whereupon appellant said to him, "Bert, we are not going to no fire; there is a bad corner up there," and just at this time the engine burst into flames; appellee removed his foot from the accelerator and applied the brakes; the car slackened its speed to forty or forty-five miles, hit the dirt shoulder and turned over. There was no opportunity between Calexico and the place of the accident for appellant to leave the car.
The evidence discloses further that the car was very defective but that none of its occupants knew this except appellee. Just a day or so before the accident Harry Karnosky, an automobile repair man of fifteen years' experience, after examining the car, told appellee, as he had a dozen times before, that it ought to be fixed or it would catch on fire and the latter said he was going to fix it but did not. Concerning its condition Karnosky testified: "The oil used to come back out the breather pipe and shoot all over the motor, squirt all over the motor and get on the exhaust pipe and couldn't help burn up." He and appellee had driven it to California some three or four weeks before this and it began to shoot oil near Indio and caught on fire but they put it out. He declined appellee's invitation to go to Yuma on this *Page 105 trip because, he told appellee over the phone, he did not want to walk home.
Earl C. Yanke, another automobile repair man of much experience, examined the car at appellee's request a short while before the accident and his testimony as to its condition was substantially the same as Karnosky's.
It was under these circumstances peculiarly a matter for the jury to decide under proper instructions whether appellant failed to use ordinary care for his own safety by remaining in the car. The fact that appellee had driven at an excessive rate of speed several times going to Calexico did not show necessarily that he would repeat this conduct on the return trip and, therefore, did not prevent appellant from relying on his promise to his father just as they were ready to start back to Yuma that he would not do so. It should be remembered that appellee had respected at least the third request of appellant before reaching Calexico by bringing the car to a lower speed and keeping it there and that the promise to his father that he would not drive so fast was made before the keys were returned to him. Besides, it was dark and appellant and his wife were sixty or seventy miles from home with no other way of reaching there that night so far as the record discloses. In view of this the jury should have been permitted to decide whether appellant and his wife were justified in relying on his promise to drive more slowly going back and not have had this power taken from it upon the ground that as a matter of law no reliance should have been placed in such a promise.
What happened after they left Calexico had no bearing on the question of appellant's right in this respect because they were only eight or ten miles out when the accident occurred, and the evidence of the witness, Charles Bernstein, is that there was absolutely no opportunity for appellant to leave the car *Page 106 before that, because appellee made no stop whatever prior to the accident. He had reached a speed of fifty-five to sixty miles an hour and just as he did so appellant suggested to him that they were not going to a fire. As this statement was made, the motor burst into flames and a few feet farther on the car turned over. Clearly it was a matter for the jury to decide in this situation whether he was justified in relying on appellee's promise. The evidence would support a verdict that he was. "Where an intoxicated driver," says 5-6 Huddy, Cyclopedia of Automobile Law 268, note 62, "made no stops after a guest's protest against excessive speed, the latter was not contributorily negligent in remaining in the machine." In support of this statement the author cites Trotter v. Bullock, 148 Wn. 516, 269 P. 825. In Shields v. King, 207 Cal. 275, 277 P. 1043, the court in disposing of the contention that appellant, who had ample opportunity to insist that the car be stopped and to alight from it but failed to do so, was as a matter of law guilty of contributory negligence by remaining upon the ride, said:
"We cannot subscribe to this construction of the evidence. We do not believe that it was incumbent upon this elderly woman, even granting that the driver might have acceded to a request from her that he stop the machine, to alight therefrom alone upon a rainy highway at an isolated point, leaving to chance the possibility of reaching shelter or her destination by some other conveyance, in order to hold herself free from the charge of contributory negligence."
As said in Krause v. Hall, 195 Wis. 565, 217 N.W. 290:
"Should the host persist in his reckless driving, the guest may ask to be let out of the car, but that he should do so under all circumstances has never been held his duty as a matter of law, so far as we are advised. Here the plaintiff did protest, not once, but several times. She did not ask to be let out of the *Page 107 car, and it was for the jury to say whether her failure in this respect constituted a want of ordinary care on her part. The jury might well have believed that the ordinary person would have taken chances on remaining in the car rather than be let out on a highway many miles from home on a dark night."
There is another and, to my mind, more impelling reason why the court should not have held as a matter of law that appellant contributed to his own injury. Appellee undoubtedly handled the car in a manner so careless and negligent as to make him liable for an injury resulting therefrom, but whether it was the excessive rate of speed he was driving, or the defective motor, or both, that was the proximate cause of the accident the jury should have been permitted to decide, for certainly the evidence is not such that the court can say as a matter of law that it was caused by the excessive rate of speed the car was being driven. No one, as I see it, can read the record and not feel that it is just as probable that the immediate cause was the bursting into flames of the motor and the consequent excitement of appellee that caused the accident as it is that the excessive rate of speed caused it, and, if this be true, appellant could not have contributed to it, unless it be further true that the excessive rate of speed caused the motor to catch on fire. But again the evidence is such that a jury might have found that the defective condition of the motor and not the speed of the car was responsible for this. In fact, it is just as reasonable, if not more so, to say that it was, because the record discloses that the car had been driven more rapidly several times on the trip than it was going when it burst into flames and no serious consequences of any kind had followed, and the condition of the motor was so defective that it was liable to catch on fire any time, whether running moderately or excessively fast, a condition that appellant had no knowledge of whatever. *Page 108 Had there been no defect in the motor and had the rate of speed been the same as it was it is quite possible that no accident would have occurred, and since the excessive rate of speed at which the car was being driven could sustain a verdict for appellant against appellee, or produce a result to which he could have contributed, only if it brought about the accident and, therefore, constituted the proximate cause of the injury, it was peculiarly a question for the jury to decide whether appellant's injury was proximately caused by appellee's rapid driving or by his own act in remaining in the car when it was being so driven, for, to my mind, no one can say that only one inference can be drawn by a reasonable person from the facts of the case. 5-6, Huddy, Automobile Law 246; Munson v. Rupker, (Ind.App.)151 N.E. 101; Curran v. Earle C. Anthony, supra.
The relations between a host and his guest on an occasion of this kind are reciprocal and the mere fact that one is a guest should not deprive him of his rights against a host who fails to take at least ordinary care for his safety while entertaining him. Hence, before it may be held that a guest who continues to ride with his host driving at an excessive rate of speed forfeits the right to recover damages from the latter it should be clear not merely that the act causing the injury compels one inference only, but also that it is of such a nature that he could at least have contributed to it.
The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. *Page 109