(for affirmance). The trial judge erred in taking from the jury the defendants’ pleaded and amply supported defense of personal contributory negligence. However, that error was committed against the defendants and was cured by the jury’s *649negative verdict.1 In these circumstances our sole task is to determine whether the trial judge erred in some other respect, to the prejudice of the plaintiff-appellant. My response is negative.
There seems to he some misunderstanding here of that which came to precedential decision when Bricker v Green, 313 Mich 218 (1946) was released. The misunderstanding — if it is one — arises out of another; that somehow the doctrine of imputed contributory negligence, distinguished from personal contributory negligence, came to issue and was tried below. I hasten in these circumstances to quote the defendants’ affirmatively pleaded defense:
“(1) The negligence of plaintiff in not warning her husband driver of a closely approaching vehicle and in encouraging her husband to drive in a reckless manner when she knew he was in an intoxicated condition, * * * .”
For the purposes of review of the questions brought to and considered by Division 1 the factual situation may he described properly as will now ensue. Preliminarily, though, it should be noted that there is a paucity if not outright absence of evidence, or reasonable inference from evidence, that the defendant driver was negligent.2
*650Two motorists are driving on the same highway from opposite directions toward a typical right-angled highway intersection that is traffic-controlled by alternating stop and go colored lights. Both enter the intersection by authority of simultaneously lighted green signals. One of the two motorists, his wife being a passenger, turns left into the rightful and imminent path of the other straightaway driving motorist. The result is a violent collision in the intersection and serious injuries suffered by the wife. The wife sues the other motorist and the husband-owner of the car she was driving.
The pleaded, supported and tried affirmative issue in this case being- that of personal contributory negligence, I perceive no prejudice whatever in reception of the substantive testimony of causal intoxication of Mr. Yanderah and of his wife’s presumptive knowledge of the fact. That testimony went probatively to the question whether Mrs. Yanderah, as plaintiff, was guilty of contributory negligence for having voluntarily ridden that night from out the Moose Bar with a drunk at the wheel.
Now for the transcript, all appendices being woefully deficient under GCB 1963, 855. (As for such apparently habitual deficiency and our past difficulties therewith, see the Author’s Comment which followed original adoption of the appendix system in 1956 with amendment in 1959; Honigman, Michigan Court Buies Annotated, 1959 pocket supplement, pp 196-199.)
Two of the investigating officers arrived at the place of collision while the wrecked cars were still positioned in the intersection. They testified to facts which if believed by the jury constituted direct evidence of driving by Mr. Yanderah while he *651was intoxicated. Other testimony disclosed that Mr. and Mrs. Yanderah left the Moose Lodge Bar some four miles west of the intersection, where each had hut “two beers,” and headed east on Yan Born toward the Merriam Road intersection. They were observed on the way by eastbound motorist-witness Miskell as they drove past him. He testified that their car was going at a rate of speed well over the posted limit (about 70 miles per hour); that it partially forced his car off the road in passing and then went off and then on the road before he, Miskell, arrived at the intersection of collision some two minutes after it occurred. After having identified as the car previously observed by him the red Pontiac that was wrecked in the intersection, Mr. Miskell testified that the last time he saw that car was about a mile west of the intersection as he vainly tried to catch up to get its license number.
The foregoing testimony would if believed warrant a finding that the plaintiff passenger got into her husband’s car and rode with him knowing that he was intoxicated, and that she on that account was personally and contributorily negligent. As for the applicable authorities, there is no present need for review thereof beyond pointing to the general rules which, in 8 Am Jur 2d, Automobiles and Highway Traffic, pp 94-95, “§ 537. Riding with intoxicated driver,” were assembled for the Bench and Bar. This is not to say that the outlined testimony warranted an instructed negative verdict. It is to say that testimony of such nature presents a submissible question of personal contributory negligence.
Trial Judge Murphy excluded from jury hearing most (but not all) of the testimony of witness Miskell. He did so on ground that same was too “remote”, but did permit the excluded portion to *652be taken by separate record. Here again I think the judge was in error; nonreversible it is true in view of the jury’s verdict. See Jenks v Ingham County, 288 Mich 600 (1939); Shoemaker v Trompen, 326 Mich 120 (1949); Rinkevich v Coeling, 344 Mich 493 (1955), and the authorities assembled in 8 Am Jur 2d, Automobiles ,and Highway Traffic, pp 494-497, “§ 950. Speed, or manner oí operating vehicle, before reaching scene of accident.”3
The excluded testimony of Mr. Miskell was admissible, not for the purpose of proving proximately negligent causation as the Vanderah and Olah cars imminently approached and crashed in the intersection, but clearly as tending to support defendants’ theory and the testimony of the officers that Mrs. Vanderah was knowingly riding with an intoxicated driver.
In view of defendants’ specific pleading of personal contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Vanderah and of Judge Murphy’s peremptory ouster of that issue from jury consideration, no question of imputation to Mrs. Vanderah of her husband’s negligence was involved. Bricker v Green, 313 Mich 218 (1946) did indeed outlaw Michigan’s original rule of imputation of contributory negligence. But the Court did not confine its decision to that, as this writer seems to recall; he having been trial and appellate counsel for the plaintiff in that case. Did not the Court in Bricker expressly caution the profession that its decision by no means abrogated the common-law rule that every plaintiff in negligence may — upon proof or fair inference from proof — be judged guilty of per*653sonal contributory negligence? Hear the unanimous Court on this (Bricker at 235-236, quoting in support the rule of 2 Restatement, Torts, p 857, § 315[b]):
“Our holding herein should not be construed as excluding under appropriate circumstances the defense of contributory negligence on the part of the passenger, if relative to the cause of the accident the passenger failed to exercise such reasonable care and caution as he should have exercised under the circumstances.”
The same day Bricker v Green was released (January 7, 1946), the Court decided Mitchell v DeVitt, 313 Mich 428. Plaintiff Mitchell, a front seat passenger in a Mr. Thomas’ car, was charged by defendant with having been guilty of contributory negligence “herself”. The Court’s statement of the defendant’s contention was (p 430):
“On appeal, defendant takes the position that Mrs. Mitchell was guilty of contributory negligence herself in failing to warn Thomas of the approaching danger after having observed the DeVitt car.”
The Court, disposing first of the question of imputation of the driver’s alleged neglig’ence to Mrs. Mitchell, saying it was “settled adversely to defendant’s contention in Bricker v Green, ante at 218,” went on to say:
“Under the circumstances of the case the question of whether Mrs. Mitchell was guilty of contributory negligence herself was one of fact, determined adversely to appellant by the trial judge who heard the case without the aid of a jury.”
To Recapitulate:
I perceive no reason for grant in circuit of plaintiff’s visibly argumentative requests to charge and *654agree with Division l’s disposition of that question as well as others considered in the opinion of the Panel. No issue was made or tried of imputation to Mrs. Vanderah of her husband’s negligence. The precisely framed and tried issue was that Mrs. Yanderah was guilty of contributory negligence for having voluntarily ridden with her husband while he was intoxicated. Such a defense, if sustained by proof and upheld by the finder or finders of fact, is good both by the weight of authority and the wisdom of common sense. The jury did uphold that defense. Its verdict and the successive judgments entered below should be affirmed. I vote accordingly.
T. E. Brennan, J., concurred with Black, J. Williams, J.(For affirmance but giving notice of intention to remand a similar future case under a doctrine of comparative negligence.) Fundamentally, this case raises an interesting question of public policy relative to the justice of the rule of absolute denial of any right of recovery for contributory negligence regardless of degree of fault. The underlying issue concerns the right of recovery (and against whom) of a guest passenger knowingly choosing to ride with a drink-impaired driver when the ride results in injury from an accident due to the combined negligence of the host drink-impaired driver and a non-drink-impaired third party driver.
The opinion of my Brother Thomas Gr. Kavanagh comprehensively sets forth such facts as the transcript makes available. For purposes of this opinion it is sufficient to posit and use the following hypothetical accident, where driver B at an intersection turns left in the face of oncoming driver A. with a resulting collision. Driver A was slightly *655negligent, whereas driver B was seriously negligent, due in large part to his mental and muscular impairment as a result of drinking alcohol. B’s guest passenger who joined him knowing of his condition due to drink was injured in the accident. A fair comparative negligence measurement would be that driver A was 10% negligent and driver B 90%.
The question directly before this Court is can B’s guest passenger sue driver A for 100% damages? If she cannot sue A for any damages, an ancillary question of logical and practical relevance is whether she can sue her host driver B?
Not directly before this Court but also of logical and practical relevance, is the question of what rights would A’s guest passenger have against driver B and we might add for inclusiveness against her host driver A?
Normally and under existing Michigan law we can begin with these principles. Where an accident is caused by the combined negligence of two drivers, under the rule of contributory negligence1 neither can sue the other regardless of the degree of ordinary negligence, in this case posited at 10% and 90%. Furthermore the guest passenger of each driver cannot sue his host driver because of a statute prohibiting it except in case of “gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct” of the driver.2 *656However, each guest passenger can sue the driver of the other car on the theory that the driver of the other car was negligent, whereas the passenger was free of negligence, regardless of the comparative negligence of the two drivers.3
The question before this Court is whether the logic of this train of reasoning and policy is carried over to the situation where the host driver’s capacity to drive is impaired by drink and the guest passenger knows or should know it.
Before reaching a conclusion on this question this Court must confront the meaning of the host driver’s driving ability being impaired by drink. The threshold fact that this Court cannot blink, and must take judicial notice of, is that drink-impaired drivers are responsible for an awesome number of traffic fatalities and personal injuries. Leaving out estimation of the actual number of cases where alcohol may have been involved but considering only those cases where alcohol involvement was actually reported the result is shocking. The Michigan State Police Michigan Accident Facts, 1971 reports the following reported alcohol related traffic accidents:
46% of all fatal accidents,
21.7% of all personal injury accidents.
Having in mind the tremendous impact of drunkenness on traffic fatalities and personal injuries, what rule should this Court adopt as to allowing or *657disallowing suit by a guest passenger who knowingly rides with a drink-impaired host driver; first as against the third, party driver, and second as against the drink-impaired host driver?
As against the third party driver, it is well to begin by remembering in normal circumstances of accident due to combined negligence of two drivers the guest has the right to sue because the third party driver is negligent, whereas the guest passenger is without negligence. It is recognized that where the guest passenger is himself guilty of contributory negligence he may not sue. Bricker v Green, 313 Mich 218, 235 (1946). Neither our hypothetical case nor the instant case involves the same kind of causal contributory negligence spoken of in Bricker v Green. However, it cannot be gainsaid that a guest passenger who entrusts his personal safety to the driving of a host driver he knows or should know to have his brain and reflexes impaired by drink is failing to exercise the due care required of a reasonably prudent man. This Court appears to recognize this doctrine in Graham, v United Trucking Service, Inc, 327 Mich 694, 700-701 (1950) but there found the facts inapplicable.
The Restatement of Torts has a rule directly in point. It reads as follows:
“The plaintiff’s contributory negligence may be either
“(a) an intentional and unreasonable exposure of himself to danger created by the defendant’s negligence, of which danger the plaintiff knows or has reason to know, * * * ” 2 Restatement, Torts 2d, §466.
The comment to this section indicates that despite the rule against imputation of negligence,4 the *658plaintiff who entrusts himself to an incompetent or drunk person may not recover against a partially negligent third person.
“Thus, if a plaintiff rides in an automobile knowing that the driver is drunk, ignorant of driving, or habitually reckless or careless, or that the machine has insufficient' brakes or headlights, he ordinarily cannot recover against the defendant through whose negligence an accident occurs if the drunkenness, incompetence, or carelessness of the driver or the bad condition of the vehicle is a contributing factor in bringing about the accident.” 2 Restatement, Torts 2d, § 466, Comment e.
We are persuaded that this Restatement rule is sound jurisprudence. We find that it is not contrary to Michigan case law, although it is more definitive and far reaching than any existing case. We adopt the Restatement rule as Michigan law.
Since this Court finds that plaintiff guest passenger of driver B has no cause of action against negligent driver A because of her own failure to exercise the care required of a reasonably prudent person in voluntary self-exposure to the perils of driving with a drink-impaired host driver, this Court next confronts the problem of whether the guest passenger of driver B under these circumstances has a cause of action against host driver B. We hold that there is such a cause of action.
*659The civil liability act5 relieves the host driver of liability to his guest passenger unless the accident and injury was caused and contributed to by the “gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct” of the host driver. We hold that drinking a sufficient amount of alcohol to impair ability to drive safely and driving so negligently as to cause an accident constitutes “gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct” within the meaning of the civil liability act. This standard involves fact questions for jury determination.
Furthermore we hold that the degree of drinking causing such impairment of driving which with the consequent negligent driving constitutes “gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct within the civil liability act” is that degree of drinking which triggers the disqualification of a guest passenger of such a drink-impaired driver from being able to sue a jointly negligent third party driver.
While I feel bound for the present by the recognition of this “contributory negligence” doctrine by our case law and by the Restatement, I recognize the blunderbuss, all or nothing, character of the doctrine. Plaintiff guest passenger is not without fault, for if she had not been so dangerously foolish she would never have been in a position where she could have been injured. However, as noted, this is not the kind of causative contributory negligence referred to in Bricker v Green, supra, that would defeat a plaintiff’s recovery under classical tort doctrine. While the plaintiff may have been negligent in knowingly exposing herself to a recognized risk, her negligence has, in this case, merely caused her to be where she would be injured when the ac*660cident occurred but had nothing to do with causing the accident, which was caused by the combined negligence of her host and the third party driver.
It must also be recognized that under this doctrine of “contributory negligence” the plaintiff who knowingly exposes herself to a recognized risk will be denied recovery only where her host driver was himself contributorily negligent. If, for example, the driver whose abilities are impaired by drink is nonetheless driving within the limits of law and reason at the time of the accident and the only negligence involved is that of the other driver, then despite the unreasonable exposure of herself to the driving of her host, the passenger will not be denied recovery as against the negligent third party driver, and for that matter neither will the host driver himself.
The effect of this rule then is on the one hand to relieve from any liability, because of the “negligence” of the passenger, a third party driver who, despite the lesser or greater degree of his negligence, is nonetheless an affirmatively negligent driver without whom the accident would not have happened and, on the other hand, to possibly separate from any recovery one whose cause of injury is the direct result of the negligence of others and her “negligence” though real is only in associating herself with a negligent actor. A more equitable and rational balancing of the interests to be served by the law of tort would allow the jury to balance the foolishness of the plaintiff guest against the negligence of her host and the negligence of the other driver, and to return a verdict expressed in terms of a percentage of the plaintiff’s damage attributable to the defendant third party driver’s negligence.
The importance of the recognition of the character of the guest passenger’s “contributory neg*661ligence” would be highlighted if she had not had the right to sue her host driver (as she would not have unless a jury finds his conduct “gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct”) or if the third party’s negligence had been 90% and her host driver’s 10%.
In short it appears that, while there is logic in our Michigan law of negligence which renders real justice in most cases, it is so rough hewn that in a number of cases its all or nothing rule gives either too much or too little. It is for this reason that a comparative negligence system appears necessary to render a more even level of justice. The character and stage of this case render it an inappropriate instrument to launch such a doctrine, but, absent clear evidence of the legislature filling this gap in our present system, when an appropriate case opportunely appears an opinion supporting a rule of comparative negligence will be forthcoming.
Affirmed, no costs, a public issue being involved.
Swainson, J., concurred with Williams, J. T. Gr. Kavanagh, J.Division 1 ruled, properly in my opinion (27 Mich App 342, 344): “However, tbe questions could not have prejudiced tbe plaintiff as tbe trial judge instructed the jury that the plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.”
I find no reference in tbe statement of facts plaintiff has set forth in her brief, or in any page of either appendix submitted, by the parties, or in any page of the transcript to which any counsel has referred us, to proof or inference from proof that the defendant driver (Mrs. Olah) committed any act or acts of negligence as charged against her. It must be that the trial proceeded on theory that if there was a collision, as indeed there was, an inference of negligence on the part of both driver? arose from that fact.
A fitting key to the cause of this wholly unnecessary collision was res gestae uttered by plaintiff herself: “Bob, you are not going to make it.” She was so right, for Bob didn’t make it. Ño driver, *650drunk or sober, could have made it, the timing and circumstances being what they were.
Por a thoroughly comprehensive brief covering this topic, see 46 ALR2d, p 9 et seq., and subsequent eases listed in the ALR 2d Later Case Service, p 555 et seq. of bound volume and p 53 of 1971 pocket supplement.
See 17 Michigan Law & Practice, Negligence, § 81 and cases cited therein.
The so-called “guest statute,” MCLA 257.401; MSA 9.2101. Even if a passenger is contributorily negligent vis-a-vis his driver in a suit against the driver under the “gross negligence” exception to the guest-passenger statute, a finding of gross negligence by defendant will ordinarily excuse the contributory negligence of the plaintiff, Gibbard v Cursan, 225 Mich 311, 320-322 (1923); Clark v Braham, 386 Mich 53, 57-58 (1971). Although it is said that the mere fact of drinking does not alone amount to gross negligence so as to give rise to a cause of action by a passenger under the guest passenger *656statute, Bushie v Johnson, 296 Mich 8 (1941); Davis v Hollowell, 326-Mich 673 (1950), the combination of drinking along with other evidence of improper driving makes the question of gross negligence one for the jury, Davis v Hollowell, supra; Hindes v Heyhoer, 368 Mich 561 (1962); Price v Western, 330 Mich 680 (1951). Under the rule stated infra, p 659, the question of the gross negligence or wilful and wanton misconduct of the host will be a jury question in almost every conceivable case.
The negligence of the passenger’s driver is not imputed to the passenger, Seta v Swain, 327 Mich 668, 671 (1950); Bricker v Green, 313 Mich 218, 235 (1946). See also 2 Restatement, Torts 2d, § 490.
The Restatement rules against imputing negligence refer cases *658such as ours back to the quoted comment to § 466 above. Section 490 and the relevant comment follow:
“Passenger or Guest in Vehicle
“A passenger or guest in a vehicle is not barred from recovery for harm resulting from the negligence of a third person by the negligence of his carrier or host.
“c. This Section deals only with the effect of the contributory negligence of the carrier or host. The effect of the plaintiff’s knowledge that the driver of the carrier or his host is reckless or incompetent or that the vehicle is in dangerous disrepair is stated in § 466, Comment e.” 2 Restatement, Torts 2d, § 490.
The “guest statute,” MOLA 257.401; MSA 9.2101.