DocketNumber: File No. 249
Citation Numbers: 372 A.2d 525, 33 Conn. Super. Ct. 778
Judges: SPEZIALE, J.
Filed Date: 10/15/1976
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
This action for damages arises out of an accident in a shopping center which was owned and operated by the defendant. The plaintiff claimed that the negligence of the defendant caused her to trip and fall on an entrance ramp to a store and that she thereby sustained injuries. The defendant filed a special defense alleging contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. After a trial by jury, there was a general verdict for the defendant and judgment was rendered for the defendant, from which the plaintiff has appealed. The plaintiff's principal contention is that the court erred in giving the jury the "Chip Smith" charge1 twice *Page 780 within the first two hours and fifteen minutes of jury deliberation.
A review of the chronology of events on the day of deliberation is important to an evaluation of the plaintiff's claims. The court completed its basic charge to the jury at about 1:30 p.m., and at 2:30 p.m., after the luncheon recess, the jury began their deliberations. At 3:35 p.m. the court responded to a question from the jury by giving supplemental instructions on negligence and contributory negligence. The plaintiff objected to the supplemental charge on the ground that it was slanted in favor of the defendant. At 3:55 p.m. the jury submitted to the court a note which read: "The issue this jury cannot agree on is that of unreasonable negligence on the part of the defendant." At that point, the court read to the jury a modified version of the "Chip Smith" charge.2 The court then added the following: "Well, what I am telling you in essence is, I want you to reach a decision in this case. You have heard all of the evidence. The parties are here today. They want you to reach a decision. The *Page 781 plaintiff wants you to reach a decision for her, and the defendant wants you to reach a decision for him. I want you to reach a decision. You have the verdict forms. I want you to go back and consider in your deliberations some of the things I have mentioned, which comes from an old established charge that has been used, not just in Connecticut but throughout the United States. So, with that in mind I will send you back into the deliberation chambers."
At that time the plaintiff did not object to the additional remarks made by the court, but the plaintiff did ask the court to redefine negligence for the jury and did object to the use of the "Chip Smith" charge at that point in the proceedings. After hearing argument of counsel, the court decided to redefine negligence for the jury with an additional charge. The jury were brought back into the courtroom at 4:12 p.m. for that supplemental instruction. The defendant took an exception to that supplemental charge. The plaintiff, however, made no objection. At 4:35 p.m. the court received a note from the jury that they were deadlocked. The defendant requested that the court give the "Chip Smith" charge again and the plaintiff concurred in that request. Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant objected to the second reading of the "Chip Smith" charge. At 4:58 p.m. the jury returned a defendant's verdict.
The plaintiff contends that the two "Chip Smith" charges and the additional remarks by the court amounted to an invasion of the province of the jury and were coercive. The plaintiff agreed to the second reading of the "Chip Smith" charge after the jury reported a deadlock. The plaintiff did not then object and she cannot now complain that she was harmed by such an instruction.
A review of the basic charge as a whole and of all the supplemental charges is necessary to determine *Page 782
whether the initial use of the "Chip Smith" charge and the additional remarks of the court had a coercive effect on the jury. Hanken v. Buckley Bros., Inc.,
The court gave the jury the first "Chip Smith" charge in response to a note from the jury indicating that they could not agree on the issue of unreasonable negligence on the part of the defendant. It is apparent from the jury's note that they were confused about the legal standard which they were to apply to the facts in the case. Had the court gone no further than the "Chip Smith" charge, there would have been a serious question of whether the court had fulfilled its duty "to give full and adequate instructions to meet all phases of the situation which the question presented." Annes v. Connecticut Co.,
The plaintiff also contends that the court's additional remarks made after the first "Chip Smith" charge were coercive. The plaintiff argues that the power and prestige of the court was placed behind a speedy resolution of the case when the court said "I want you to reach a decision in this case. . . The parties are here today." Those words alone suggest that the judge invaded the province of the jury by ordering them to make a decision. "We are not unmindful that a judge occupies a role of inherent power and dignity that commands a deference from the jury impossible to appraise precisely and that ``[w]hat he tells the jury . . . has great weight with them.' LaChase v. Sanders,
In the present case, the judge's remarks to the jury appear to have been made to explain the import of the previously read "Chip Smith" charge in layman's terms. The judge went on to tell the jury "I want you to go back and consider in your deliberations some of the things I have mentioned, which comes from an old established charge. . . ." That was another attempt to explain the "Chip Smith" charge. Therefore, even if the statements in question were too direct, we do not think that those statements, in the context of the whole charge and the other instructions, deprived the plaintiff of her right to a unanimous verdict unhampered by coercive circumstances.
Finally, the plaintiff claims error in the court's refusal to charge as she requested on notice, giving instead a notice charge which was prejudicial to her. In this case the defendant had both denied allegations of his negligence and alleged that the plaintiff herself was contributory negligent. The defendant conceivably could have prevailed on either defense. Hardy v. Weitzman,
There is no error.
In this opinion PARSKEY and SPONZO, Js, concurred.
Allen v. United States , 17 S. Ct. 154 ( 1896 )
State v. Ralls , 167 Conn. 408 ( 1974 )
LaChase v. Sanders , 142 Conn. 122 ( 1955 )
State v. Bradley , 134 Conn. 102 ( 1947 )
Bottaro v. Schoenborn , 157 Conn. 194 ( 1968 )
Intelisano v. Greenwell , 155 Conn. 436 ( 1967 )
Allard v. City of Hartford , 151 Conn. 284 ( 1964 )
State v. Tropiano , 158 Conn. 412 ( 1969 )
Szlinsky v. Denhup , 156 Conn. 159 ( 1968 )
DePaola v. Seamour , 163 Conn. 246 ( 1972 )
Annes v. Connecticut Co. , 107 Conn. 126 ( 1927 )
State v. Schleifer , 102 Conn. 708 ( 1925 )
Penna v. Esposito , 154 Conn. 212 ( 1966 )
Gennallo v. Mazzacane , 144 Conn. 686 ( 1957 )
Hanken v. Buckley Bros., Inc. , 159 Conn. 438 ( 1970 )
Tough v. Ives , 162 Conn. 274 ( 1972 )