Judges: Bkown, Dickenson, Ells, Jennings, Maltbie
Filed Date: 3/5/1947
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
In this appeal by the defendant from a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs, it has assigned six errors. One assignment has been withdrawn. Another, that the trial court refused to give certain requests to charge, is not pressed. One of the requests contained an erroneous statement of the law; the others were adequately included in the charge as delivered. Two errors were assigned in the charge, but as no objections were made to it at its conclusion they present nothing for our consideration. Practice Book 156; Svenberg v. Subotkouski,
The action was brought by the named plaintiff. Soon after the writ and complaint were returned, his employers filed an application to intervene as coplaintiffs and to file an intervening complaint on the ground that they had paid and become obligated to pay large sums of money to their employee under the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Act. General Statutes 5231. The court granted the motion, the employers became coplaintiffs, and an intervening complaint was filed. In the course of impaneling the jury the court allowed four challenges to the named plaintiff and four to the coplaintiffs, and the defendant has assigned error in the ruling. The statute, as it is applicable to this case, provides that "each party may challenge peremptorily four jurors." General Statutes 5577. The question is whether the coplaintiffs are a party within the purview of the statute. The judgment designated the employers as coplaintiffs and apportioned *Page 449
the damages in a manner which is not in dispute. It is manifest that the employers had a very substantial interest in the case, for they recovered $4575.25 as damages, which included an allowance of $700 as a reasonable attorney's fee. They filed a complaint to which the defendant made answer. They could have brought a separate action against the defendant under the conditions specified in 5231 to recover the compensation they had paid or become obligated to pay. The statute also permits employer and employee to join as parties plaintiff in an action for damages against a defendant. In Mickel v. New England Coal Coke Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.