Andrews v. Dougherty

112 A. 700, 96 Conn. 40, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 21, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 112 A. 700 (Andrews v. Dougherty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Dougherty, 112 A. 700, 96 Conn. 40, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 47 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The assignments of error in the appeal which are pursued by the defendant in brief and argument are for the refusal to charge in accordance with defendant’s requests and in the charge as made in three particulars.

The plaintiff offered evidence to prove: that he sent two boys, each about fifteen years old and experienced and competent for such work, to drive a herd of twelve cattle along the main thoroughfare leading from Danbury to Newtown. Upon this highway is a steep grade known as Lake’s Hill, at the top of which the road turns sharply to the right and prevents the view of those ascending the hill for several hundred feet. As the boys were behind the cows and driving them up the hill, an automobile came from the opposite direction around the curve and, because the cows blocked the traveled way, it stopped on its right side of the highway before reaching the cows. The boys began driving the cows to their right side of the highway to enable the automobile to pass, and while they were so engaged and the automobile remained where it had stopped, the defendant’s servant, Signor, drove his car upon this highway and around the curve at a high rate of speed and without sounding his horn. When Signor discovered the highway was blocked he put on his brakes, but owing to the *43 high, speed at which he was traveling he was unable to control his car so as to avoid either colliding with the standing automobile on his right or the cows on his left, and to avert collision with the standing automobile he turned to his left and struck and injured three of the cows, and proceeded on from the point where he struck the cows some seventy-five paces before his car was stopped.

Signor could have stopped his car before reaching the cows had he been traveling at a reasonable rate of speed. He was familiar with the highway at this point. The boys used reasonable care in driving the cows. It was not necessary that one of the boys should have preceded the cows or given notice of their coming to approaching travelers.

Upon discovering the approach of the first automobile the boys used all reasonable efforts to seasonably turn the cows to the right, so as to give half of the traveled road and an equal opportunity to pass to an approaching automobile. In driving a herd of twelve cows on a public highway, individual members of the herd will deviate to the left of the highway in spite of reasonable care on the part of those driving the cows.

The defendant offered evidence to prove: that on approaching the curve Signor saw the other automobile pass out of sight around the curve and reduced his speed from twenty-two to eighteen or twenty miles an hour, sounded his horn, and had his car under control. As Signor turned the curve he saw the car standing on the right, and he at once turned to the left to avoid endangering the occupants of the car, and did all he could to avert a collision with the cows, but they were between the standing car and the fence upon his left, and although he did all that he reasonably could to avoid injuring the cows he could not avoid injuring some of them. Had the cows been *44 only on one side of the highway Signor could have passed them without danger, unless they ran across his path, and at the same speed he was going when he first saw them. Signor had never driven over that road before, but had ridden over it in an automobile two or three times.

The boys were not noticing for an approaching automobile; they were incompetent and inexperienced as to the rules of the road, and did not do anything to give an approaching traveler notice, as reasonable care required. The plaintiff had never instructed the boys as to their duty in a case like the one in question, nor instructed them to warn approaching travelers, and the boys did not think this necessary.

The contest centered around the conduct of the parties at about the time of the accident: whether or not the defendant’s servant, as he approached the curve, had his car under control or was operating it at an unreasonable speed, and whether he gave notice of his approach by sounding his horn; and whether or not the employees of plaintiff, the boys in charge of the cows, used reasonable care in driving the cows and in keeping them on their right side of the road, and whether one of them ought to have gone ahead of the cows to warn approaching automobilists.

The defendant complains of the refusal to instruct the jury as follows: “If the jury believe that the boy or boys in control of the cattle were not competent persons, or that a man or more than one man or some older person should have been in charge of so large a number of cattle upon such a thickly traveled or dangerous highway they have the right to assume that the plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care in turning so many cattle upon the highway without a competent person in charge or more than one person in charge of them, then the verdict should be for the *45 defendant' even if defendant also was guilty of some negligence.”

This makes the incompetency of the boys the test of the negligence of the plaintiff instead of the conduct of the boys at the time of the accident. The trial court instructed the jury with accuracy and clearness upon this point: “Whether they [the boys] were competent or incompetent, the plaintiff would not be liable for contributory negligence in the absence .of some negligent act or omission on their part. If there was such act or omission contributing to these injuries the plaintiff would be liable, however competent they might be. The plaintiff’s liability must rest on some negligent conduct on their part and not on their want of qualification alone.” Carlson v. Connecticut Co., 94 Conn. 131, 108 Atl. 531; Gannon v. Sisk, 95 Conn. 639, 112 Atl. 697.

The defendant also requested the court to charge as follows: “If the jury believe . . . that a man or more than one man or some older person should have been in charge of so large a number of cattle upon such a thickly traveled or dangerous highway they have the right to assume that the plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care in turning so many cattle upon the highway without . . . more than one person in charge of them, then the verdict should be for the defendant even if defendant also was guilty of some negligence.”

The court refused so to charge, and properly, since the request made the age or experience of the employee the test of negligence instead of his conduct or acts out of which'the negligence of the plaintiff is claimed to have arisen.

Another request to charge was that the question of the plaintiff’s negligence is to be determined, in every case, not by ascertaining whether it caused, but *46 whether it contributed to, the injury, and if it did in any degree the plaintiff cannot recover.

The court charged that if the jury found the boys were guilty of negligence contributing to the injury and the defendant was negligent, the verdict should be for the defendant. This was a compliance with the request of the defendant. It does not accord with our law, but the defendant is in no position to complain of this. Our rule is that if the plaintiff materially or essentially contributes to his injury he cannot recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 A. 700, 96 Conn. 40, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-dougherty-conn-1921.