PITTMAN, Judge.
Deborah Glass, acting on behalf of her minor daughter, Laura Leigh Knight, appeals from a summary judgment entered by the Madison Circuit Court in favor of Jacquelynn Kristina Clark on claims of negligence and wantonness asserted against Clark.
In September 2009, Glass sued Clark, seeking damages on behalf of Knight for injuries Knight had suffered in a motor-vehicle accident while she had been riding in a motor vehicle operated by Clark.
On appeal, Glass contends that the evidence adduced in connection with the summary-judgment motion presented a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Knight was a guest in Clark's vehicle. Additionally, Glass asserts that substantial evidence of wantonness was adduced so as to subject Clark to liability notwithstanding the applicability of the guest statute. The record reveals the following undisputed facts. In June 2009, Knight invited Clark to go on a beach trip with her, Glass, Glass's fiancé, and Glass's fiancé's son on Wednesday, June 17, 2009, through Sunday, June 21, 2009. Knight accepted the invitation. Clark and Knight rode in Clark's vehicle to their destination in Panama City Beach, Florida, while Glass and the others rode in a separate vehicle. Before the trip, the parties agreed that Glass would pay for Clark's accommodations but that Clark would pay for her meals and gasoline during the trip.
The record reveals that on most nights during the trip (Thursday and Friday), Clark and Knight socialized with other young people, consumed alcohol, and smoked cigarettes until midnight each night; they awakened around 11:00 a.m. on Friday and on Saturday. On the last night of the trip, Knight and Clark did not go to bed until between 5:00 and 6:00 a.m. They smoked cigarettes while they were out that night, but no evidence was presented to suggest that they consumed alcohol. Glass testified that she did not recall smelling alcohol on them when they had gotten home that morning. Glass awakened Clark and Knight between 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. Glass testified that they seemed to be fine that morning but that they looked tired. Glass invited them to lunch and expressed her plans to stay for the day, but Clark wanted to go ahead and drive back to Huntsville to spend Father's Day with her father. Knight testified at her deposition that she had wanted to stay and eat with Glass and the others but that Glass had ordered her to ride with Clark so that Clark would not drive back by herself. Knight testified that Glass was "kind of fussing over [Clark]" before they left, but her testimony did not indicate that any conversation had occurred between Glass and Clark; that was the only evidence made part of the record which so much as suggests that any conversation regarding Clark's ability to drive had occurred between Clark and Glass before the girls left on Sunday. Glass testified at her deposition only that she had told Clark it was okay to go back to Huntsville (without Glass's following her) so long as it was okay with Clark's parents. Clark testified that she did not recall having any conversation with Glass in which Glass had raised concerns about her being too tired to drive or about her ability to drive and that she did not recall any conversation about Knight's riding back to Huntsville with Clark solely so that Clark would not be making the drive alone. Clark further stated that she never discussed the possibility of being too tired to drive.
The record shows that Clark and Knight stopped approximately three times on their way to Huntsville. Knight testified that they had stopped to smoke cigarettes because they could not smoke in the vehicle. Knight stated that Clark never said anything to her about being tired or being too tired to drive. Clark stated that she did not feel tired and did not recall being fatigued at all; her father also testified that Clark had telephoned him on the way home and that she had not mentioned being tired to him. Clark testified that, before
Clark and Knight were involved in a single-car accident while traveling north on Interstate 65. The record reveals that the last thing Clark remembered was driving in the far right lane and Knight's being asleep in the passenger seat. It is undisputed that, after the accident, Clark did not, and still does not, know whether she fell asleep at the wheel, blacked out, or was cut off by another driver. However, the affidavit of the state trooper who responded to the scene of the accident stated that Clark had told him that she had fallen asleep due to a lack of sleep the night before, which had caused her to lose control of the vehicle she was operating and had caused the vehicle to leave the roadway and roll down a hill. The notes of the paramedic who treated Clark at the scene of the accident, as well as the deposition transcript of the emergency-room doctor who treated Clark, report that the accident occurred after Clark had fallen asleep at the wheel. When asked about the statements recorded by the aforementioned authorities at the scene, Clark stated that she did not recall telling anyone that she had blacked out and that she knew that Knight had assumed she had fallen asleep, so she had simply gone along with that scenario when being questioned by the authorities. Knight sustained permanent injuries as a result of the accident.
It is well settled that an appellate court is to review a summary judgment de novo, using the same standard applied by the trial court. Neal v. Sem Ray, Inc., 68 So.3d 194, 196 (Ala.Civ.App.2011). Under Rule 56(c), Ala. R. Civ. P., we must review the evidence to determine whether the movant established that no genuine issue of material fact existed, thereby entitling the movant to a judgment as a matter of law. If the movant makes that showing, the nonmovant thereafter bears the burden to adduce "substantial evidence" to rebut the movant's contention that there is no genuine issue of material fact. Bass v. SouthTrust Bank of Baldwin Cnty., 538 So.2d 794, 797-98 (Ala.1989). "[S]ubstantial evidence is evidence of such weight and quality that fair-minded persons in the exercise of impartial judgment can reasonably infer the existence of the fact sought to be proved." West v. Founders Life Assurance Co. of Florida, 547 So.2d 870, 871 (Ala.1989).
We begin by addressing the issue whether Knight was a guest in Clark's vehicle under Alabama's guest statute. That statute, Ala.Code 1975, § 32-1-2, provides:
In Neal v. Sem Ray, Inc., supra, this court reviewed a trial court's summary judgment in favor of a driver on a negligence claim asserted by an occupant of that vehicle, in which the trial court concluded that, as a matter of law, the occupant had been a guest. In that case, the occupant and the driver were cousins. The driver, employed as a dump-truck driver, had initially asked the occupant's mother to accompany her on a job-related delivery; the occupant instead accompanied the driver on the delivery because the occupant's mother could not go and requested
We affirmed the summary judgment entered in the driver's favor in Neal. In that opinion, we elaborated on the definition of the term "guest," as it is used in § 32-1-2:
Neal, 68 So.3d at 198 (quoting Cash v. Caldwell, 603 So.2d 1001, 1003 (Ala.1992)). We proceeded to discuss Cash v. Caldwell, supra, in which our supreme court had held that a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether two riders in a motor vehicle were guests of the driver; in that case the two riders, a husband and a wife, had taken a cross-country trip from California in their mobile home and had planned to stop in Alabama to visit the husband's ailing mother. When the pair reached Texas, the husband's sister, the driver, asked them to continue on to Alabama because she needed them to help her with her and the husband's sick mother. One evening when the sister was driving home with the riders from the hospital where the sister and the riders had been visiting the mother, the vehicle she was operating was involved in an accident. Our supreme court concluded:
Cash, 603 So.2d at 1003. Our supreme court further stated that, "`"`where the rider accompanies the driver at the instance of the latter for the purpose of having the rider render a benefit or service to the driver on a trip which is primarily for the attainment of some objective of the driver, the rider is a passenger and not a guest.'"'" Id.
Relying on Cash v. Caldwell, the occupant in Neal argued that she had been a passenger and that the evidence was sufficient for the trier of fact to conclude that the driver had asked her to ride in order to render a service to the driver by keeping the driver company while fulfilling the objective of the driver and the driver's employer. On the other hand, the driver asserted that the occupant had been a guest because the trip was purely social; that the occupant had accompanied the driver at the behest of the occupant's
In the present case, Glass argues that she had agreed with Clark's parents to certain arrangements regarding the trip before they left and that the fact that they had entered into such an agreement rendered Knight a passenger, rather than a guest, in Clark's vehicle. Clark, on the other hand, asserts that Knight was a guest in Clark's vehicle because (a) Knight would not have gone to the beach unless Clark had accompanied her, (b) Clark did not ask Knight to share the cost of gas with her, (c) Knight did not share the cost of gas with Clark, (d) Knight's accompanying Clark on the ride back to Huntsville gave Clark only the benefit of companionship, and (e) there was no business relationship or purpose underlying Knight's having accompanied Clark on the ride home. Glass relies heavily on Sellers v. Sexton, 576 So.2d 172 (Ala.1991), in which the driver and the rider were friends from the same hometown who attended the same college; the facts established that the driver and the rider traveled together on at least three out of four weekends each month, that the driver routinely drove her car home, and that the rider's mother would pay the driver $10 per trip. In addressing the issues in Sellers, our supreme court discussed the general principle "that if the transportation of a rider confers a benefit only on the person to whom the ride is given, and no benefits other than such as are incidental to hospitality, goodwill or the like on the [driver], the rider is a guest," Sellers, 576 So.2d at 174; our supreme court further explained that
Sellers, 576 So.2d at 174.
In Sellers, our supreme court held that a question of fact existed because, although the driver and the rider were friends and often engaged in social activity together, there was in place "an arrangement for
Glass contends that the agreement reached between Clark's parents and herself before the trip in this case parallels the agreement between the parties in Sellers such that the circumstances of this case, at the very least, raise an issue of fact as to whether Knight was a passenger or a guest in Clark's car on the ride home, as the circumstances in Sellers did; specifically, Glass's contention is that, like the mother of the rider in Sellers, Glass "paid" for Clark's gasoline by covering the accommodation costs during the trip. Even though the parties in the present case agreed that Clark would pay for her own gasoline and meals and that Glass would cover Clark's accommodations on the trip, the facts of the present case are significantly different from the facts in Sellers. Crucially, in Sellers, the driver and the rider were being transported to a destination to which they shared an equal interest in arriving: college. Even if the rider in Sellers had not ridden with the driver, the rider nonetheless would have engaged in some form of transportation to get to college; the driver and the rider merely planned a routine for traveling together from which they each derived a mutual benefit. Here, however, it is undisputed that Knight invited Clark on the trip because, otherwise, Knight did not want to go; in other words, but for Knight's having extended an invitation to Clark, Knight might not have gone to Panama City Beach and Clark certainly would not have gone there at all. Therefore, the arrangement in Sellers reflects an exchange that mutually benefitted both the rider and the driver, whereas in this case Clark's taking her car to the beach and Knight's riding with her was so that Knight would accept her mother's vacation offer, and Knight's riding with Clark on the return trip was merely incidental to that. Like Neal, the undisputed evidence in the present case establishes that the only benefit Clark received from being accompanied by Knight was companionship.
In Neal, after determining that the driver's sole benefit derived from being accompanied by the rider was companionship, we then looked to the issue of "whether, as a matter of law, a rider is a guest `"`where the rider accompanies the driver at the instance of the latter for the purpose of having the rider render a benefit or service to the driver [solely in the form of companionship] on a trip which is primarily for the attainment of some objective of the driver.'"'" Neal, 68 So.3d at 199 (quoting Cash, 603 So.2d at 1003). Our discussion in Neal was as follows:
Neal, 68 So.3d at 199-201 (footnote omitted).
In Neal, despite there being a question as to whether the occupant had ridden with the driver at the instance of the driver or at the instance of the occupant's mother, we nonetheless affirmed the summary judgment in favor of the driver on the ground that the occupant had been a guest in the vehicle. In this case, the evidence clearly establishes that Knight accompanied Clark at the instance of Glass, as the record reveals no evidence to suggest that Clark asked Knight to ride back to Huntsville with her, much less that Clark — being 18 years old — would not have driven back to Huntsville had Knight not ridden with her; regardless of Knight's motivation for agreeing to ride with Clark, the evidence is undisputed that Glass, not Clark, was the one who encouraged Knight to accompany Clark. Clark's desire to drive back to Huntsville that morning was because she wanted to spend Father's Day with her father and was in no way dependent on whether Knight accompanied her on the drive. Therefore, the facts of this case are even stronger than those present in Neal in support of the proposition that the injured vehicle occupant was a guest, rather than a paying passenger. We therefore affirm the summary judgment in favor of Clark as to Glass's negligence claim.
Next, we look to whether the trial court erred in determining that there was no substantial evidence demonstrating that Clark's operation of the motor vehicle was wanton. In her brief, Glass asserts that, "[u]nder the circumstances of this case, it may be reasonably inferred that Clark knew she was too tired to drive and continued to drive anyway." Clark responds that the trial court did not err because, she posits, no evidence, much less substantial evidence, was presented to suggest that she was conscious that her small amount of sleep the night before presented a danger from which she knew an injury would likely
Glass's brief relies primarily on Lankford v. Mong, 283 Ala. 24, 214 So.2d 301 (1968), in which the driver, like Clark, was unable to recall what had happened leading up to an automobile accident. In that case, the record showed that the driver had had very little sleep during the two nights before the accident because he had worked both nights as a piano player and singer; it was undisputed that he was an experienced driver, that he had been losing sleep, and that he had been awake since the early morning of the day before the accident, which had occurred sometime after 12:30 a.m. following his having left the club where he had worked and immediately embarking upon the 80-mile drive from Atlanta, Georgia, to Anniston. Glass also cites Gunnells v. Dethrage, 366 So.2d 1104 (Ala.1979), in which the issue of wantonness was submitted to a jury on the basis of evidence indicating that the driver had dozed off a few times while driving but had, nonetheless, continued to drive.
In Lankford, which addressed as an issue of first impression whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant submission of the issue of wantonness to a jury, the court explained the significance of evidence indicating that a driver had fallen asleep at the wheel as a basis for a wantonness claim, distinguishing it from the nature and extent of evidence sufficient to establish negligence on the part of the driver. Our supreme court explained that to make a prima facie case of wantonness, as opposed to negligence,
Clark answers Glass's assertions, arguing that Glass failed to present substantial evidence sufficient to permit the issue of wantonness to be resolved by the fact-finder. In support of that position, Clark directs us to two cases in which our courts
Caselaw thus affords a spectrum within which the present case must fall. On one end are Lankford and Gunnells, cases in which evidence was adduced indicating that the pertinent drivers had knowingly experienced drowsiness or sleepiness, yet continued to drive. On the other end are Tew and Roszell, in which evidence would allow an inference to be drawn that the pertinent drivers fell asleep at the wheel but not that they had had a "`consciousness or awareness of sleepiness, tiredness, and fatigue [yet] continued to drive with reckless indifference to the consequences.'" Roszell, 591 So.2d at 513 (quoting Tew, 417 So.2d at 146). The touchstone is the knowledge of the pertinent driver: "Even under the old `scintilla rule,' [Alabama] required that there be a legitimate inference of knowledge of premonitory symptoms before submitting the issue of wantonness to a jury." Roszell, 591 So.2d at 513.
In her brief, Glass asserts that "Clark knowingly got on the road after partying all night, having only four hours of sleep, and admitted to feeling sleepy prior to falling asleep at the wheel," and she posits that, based on those facts, it can be inferred that Clark had knowledge of premonitory symptoms of sleep.
Glass's contentions regarding the factual basis of the wantonness claim are simply inconsistent with the evidence presented. Glass admits in her brief on appeal that Clark did not recall what caused her to run off the road. Also, there was no evidence presented to support the assertion that Clark had been "partying" at all the night before the accident; the record establishes only that Clark had smoked cigarettes the night before the accident. Moreover, there was no evidence presented indicating that Clark had felt sleepy at any time the day of the accident, much less that she had "admitted feeling sleepy prior to falling asleep at the wheel." The only evidence in the record even remotely suggesting that Clark experienced sleepiness that day is Glass's testimony that she thought Clark and Knight had looked tired when they woke up that morning. Although Glass, in her brief, claims that she expressed concern to Clark about Clark's being too tired to drive, no evidence was
The evidence presented by Glass is not substantial evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to wantonness because it does not establish a sufficient factual basis for a finding that Clark knowingly experienced premonitory symptoms indicating to her that she was sleepy or drowsy and that she continued to drive with reckless disregard of that knowledge. Therefore, on the authority of Tew and Roszell, we conclude that the trial court correctly entered the summary judgment in favor of Clark as to Glass's claim of wanton conduct.
In light of the foregoing facts and authorities, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
AFFIRMED.
THOMPSON, P.J., concurs.
BRYAN, J., concurs in the result, without writing.
MOORE, J., concurs in part and dissents in part, with writing, which THOMAS, J., joins.
MOORE, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I concur with the main opinion to the extent that it affirms the summary judgment with regard to the negligence claim on the basis that that claim is barred by Alabama's Guest Statute, § 32-1-2, Ala. Code 1975. With regard to the affirmance of the judgment as to the wantonness claim, however, I respectfully dissent.
The affidavit of Adam Ezekiel, the state trooper who responded to the accident, indicated that Jacquelynn Kristina Clark had "stated that she became tired from lack of sleep the previous night." That statement, when viewed in a light most favorable to Deborah Glass, acting on behalf of her minor daughter, Laura Leigh Knight, indicates that Clark "`ha[d] been without sleep for a considerable period of time and ha[d] experienced symptoms [i.e., sleepiness].'" Lankford v. Mong, 283 Ala. 24, 27, 214 So.2d 301, 303 (1968) (quoting C.T. Drechsler, Annotation, Physical Defect, Illness, Drowsiness, or Falling Asleep of Motor Vehicle Operator as Affecting Liability for Injury, 28 A.L.R.2d 12, 72 (1953)). Clark's "`continu[ing] to drive under such circumstances'" constitutes substantial evidence from which a jury could infer wantonness. Id. Although there was also substantial evidence indicating that Clark had not been aware of her oncoming sleep, the conflicting substantial evidence precludes the entry of a summary judgment. See, e.g., Mobile Airport Auth. v. HealthSTRATEGIES, Inc., 886 So.2d 773, 786 (Ala.2004) (Johnstone, J., concurring in the result) (stating that "conflicting substantial evidence creates a genuine issue of material fact ... which precludes summary judgment"). Accordingly, I would reverse the trial court's summary
THOMAS, J., concurs.