DocketNumber: File No. CV 2-663-43492
Judges: Kinmonth
Filed Date: 3/22/1968
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This action was brought to recover damages for injury to person and property caused as a result of a motor vehicle accident, and the defendant filed a counterclaim for property damage. The jury found for the plaintiff on his complaint and on the counterclaim. The defendant appeals, alleging error in the charge and in certain rulings on evidence.
The plaintiff offered evidence to prove and claimed to have proved the following facts. On March 24, 1965, at approximately 4 p.m., he was operating a motor vehicle in a northerly direction on Chopsey Hill Road near the intersection of Woodrow Avenue. The defendant was operating a motor vehicle in an easterly direction on Woodrow Avenue. There was a stop sign on Woodrow Avenue approximately thirty to thirty-five feet westerly of the westerly line of its intersection with Chopsey Hill Road. The defendant failed to stop at the intersection, and the motor vehicles collided in the southwest quadrant of the intersection almost at the center of the intersection. The plaintiff received an abrasion to his left knee and a contusion of his left shoulder, for which injuries he incurred a doctor’s bill in the amount of $125, a hospital bill for $43, and an x-ray bill for $20; his property damage amounted to $431.87. The plaintiff had sustained injuries to his right shoulder in an earlier accident on January 30,1965.
The defendant offered evidence to prove and claimed to have proved the following facts. The defendant stopped at the stop sign on Woodrow Avenue, looked left and right and, not seeing any vehicles, proceeded into the intersection. A vehicle stopping at the stop sign would have a clear vision for a distance of 100 to 125 feet south on Chopsey Hill Road, and if it stopped at the westerly curb line of Chopsey Hill Road there would be a clear vision
We will first consider the defendant’s exceptions to the court’s charge to the jury. The record does not contain any written requests to charge. Consequently, we consider on appeal only the exceptions which were taken to the charge as given. State v. Mallette, 153 Conn. 584, 587. The first assignment of error is that the court erred in charging the jury that a stop by the defendant’s motor vehicle at a point thirty feet from the intersection in question did not comply with the requirements of General Statutes § 14-301 (c), which reads as follows: “The driver of a vehicle shall stop in obedience to a stop sign at such clearly marked stop line or lines as may he established by the traffic authority having jurisdiction or, in the absence of such line or lines, shall stop in obedience to a stop sign at the entrance to a through highway . . . .”
The defendant took exception to the following charge: “If you find that the defendant stopped at the stop sign, and if you find that the stop sign was thirty feet from the intersection, and if you find that there were no clearly marked line or lines for the defendant to stop at, then you must find that the defendant did not comply with the requirements of the statute. Such failure to comply with the requirements of the statute is negligence.” The defendant claims that this charge was erroneous because it did not permit the jury to consider as a question of fact where the entrance to a throughway began. See Olson v. Musselman, 127 Conn. 228, 237. Just prior to the above quoted charge the court, after reading the statute, charged: “Once an operator has complied with the provisions of the stop sign statute, he then may proceed and the drivers of all other vehicles approaching the intersection shall
The charge taken as a whole adequately left for the determination of the jury whether the defendant had complied with the statute. “A charge must be read in its entirety and is to be considered from the standpoint of its effect on the jury in guiding them to a correct verdict.” Gulia v. Ortowski, 156 Conn. 40, 47; Lucier v. Meriden-Wallingford Sand & Stone Co., 153 Conn. 422, 426. The test of a court’s charge is not whether it is as accurate upon legal principles as the opinion of a court of last resort but whether it fairly presents the case to the jury in such a way that injustice is not done to either party under the established rules of law. Lucier v. Meriden-Wallingford Sand & Stone Co., supra, 425. Repeatedly the charge reminded the jury that they were to consider all of the evidence in the case and the situation as they found it to be. Read in its entirety, the charge was accurate in law, adapted to the issues, and sufficient as a guide to the jury in reaching a correct verdict.
The next assignment of error to the charge is in regard to the items of special damages. The court charged as follows: “Now if you conclude after
The final assignment of error to the charge concerns the possible verdicts which the jury could return. The defendant maintains that the court failed to instruct the jury that if they found for the defendant on the complaint they could also find for the plaintiff on the defendant’s counterclaim. The court so instructed the jury, but the gravamen of the defendant’s claim seems to be that in the court’s final instruction to the jury as to the possible verdicts, it failed to include a form covering the situation. Both counsel agreed that the verdict forms were not proper, whereupon a discussion was held between the court and counsel as to the verdict forms. There is nothing in the record as to what action was taken on the verdict forms, but we must assume that, the court having instructed the jury thoroughly on this aspect of the case, the proper forms were submitted to the jury as a result of the conference, since no exceptions were thereafter taken.
The final assignment of error is the rejecting as evidence a complaint filed in the Court of Common Pleas by the plaintiff for a prior injury in which he
There is no error.
In this opinion Jacobs and Macdonald, Js., concurred.