Bernier v. Woodstock Agricultural Society

92 A. 160, 88 Conn. 558, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 10, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 92 A. 160 (Bernier v. Woodstock Agricultural Society) 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
Bernier v. Woodstock Agricultural Society, 92 A. 160, 88 Conn. 558, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 77 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Thayek, J.

The plaintiff upon the trial claimed that the evidence showed that while his intestate, Joseph G. Bernier, Jr., a boy twelve years and nine months of age, was witnessing a balloon ascension upon the defendant’s fair grounds, a rope attached to the balloon as it ascended became wound around the boy’s leg, carrying him up for the distance of three hundred feet into the air, whence he fell to the ground and was killed. He claimed also, as charged in the complaint, that this was caused by the defendant’s negligence in failing to furnish spectators, including the intestate, a safe place to view the ascension; in failing to keep its grounds in a safe condition; in failing to place sufficient barriers or *560 ropes to keep spectators at a safe distance; in allowing the person in charge of the ascension to request spectators to assist in the ascension; in allowing ropes attached to the balloon to lie under or near the spectators’ feet; in failing to adequately police the vicinity of the ascension; in permitting spectators, including the intestate, to approach so near the balloon that harm might come to them; in failing to cause a warning, sufficient to apprise them of their danger, to be given to the spectators; and in failing to use reasonable care in the selection of a suitable person to conduct the ascension.

That the boy was carried up by the balloon and fell and was killed was not in dispute. The defendant claimed that as the balloon was about to rise the boy seized the rope and wound it around his wrist, with the expressed purpose of going up a little way with the balloon; that his injury and death were thus due to his own negligence; that the defendant had used due care to provide a safe place for the ascension and to employ a capable and suitable person to conduct it; that the latter was an independent contractor engaged to make the ascension, using his own means and servants without interference by the defendant; that the ascension was n'ot intrinsically nor obviously dangerous to spectators; that the defendant was not guilty of any negligence, and was not liable for injuries resulting from the personal negligence of the independent contractor.

The appellant’s chief reasons of appeal relate to certain instructions given to the jury respecting the defendant’s liability for the negligent acts, if any, of the person who conducted the ascension, should they find him to be, as claimed by the defendant, an independent contractor. He also assigned as error the court’s findings of fact stated in the sixty-fifth paragraph of its finding, which reads as follows: “65. Upon the trial of the case in the Superior Court .for Windham County to *561 a jury, the defendant requested the court to direct the jury in making up its verdict to answer the following three questions, and the court, in accordance with said request, directed the jury in said trial to answer the following three questions in making up its verdict, to wit: ‘1. Was the negligent conduct of Joseph George Bernier, Jr., the direct and probable cause of his own death? 2. Was the person engaged by the defendant to furnish and who did furnish the balloon ascension at which Joseph George Bernier, Jr., was killed, an independent contractor in furnishing such ascension? 3. Did the performance of the contract for such balloon ascension, if done in a careful and proper manner, obviously expose the plaintiff’s decedent or other spectators to probable injury therefrom?’ Said questions were submitted to the jury as aforesaid, and were unanimously answered by the jury as follows: ‘1. Was the negligent conduct of Joseph George Bernier, Jr., the direct and probable cause of his death?’ Answer ‘Yes.’ ‘2. Was the person engaged by the defendant to furnish and who did furnish the balloon ascension at which Joseph George Bernier, Jr., was killed, an independent contractor in furnishing such ascension?’ Answer‘Yes.’ ‘3. Did the performance of the contract for such balloon ascension, if done in a careful and proper manner, obviously expose the plaintiff’s decedent or other spectators to probable injury therefrom?’ Answer ‘No.’”

The plaintiff asks us in his brief and argument to correct the finding by eliminating from it this paragraph. The paragraph does not purport to be a statement of facts found by the court from evidence given upon the trial, but purports to be a statement of what occurred at the trial. If this statement is not warranted by what in fact occurred, the remedy is by a proceeding under General Statutes, § 801, for a rectification of the appeal. *562 State v. Hunter, 73 Conn. 435, 445, 47 Atl. 665. It is not a case for a correction of the finding under § 795 of the statutes, which applies only to cases tried to the court and not to cases tried to the jury, and provides for a correction of the finding where facts are found not warranted by the evidence, or are refused to be found although admitted or proved by undisputed evidence. Under § 801 an issue of fact may be raised as to the correctness of a statement in a finding of what occurred upon the trial, and a way is provided for determining that issue of fact. The plaintiff apparently attempted to secure a correction of the finding under § 795 by filing an application therefor with accompanying affidavit of facts in the Superior Court. This was irregular, but the refusal of this application laid the foundation for a proceeding in this court under § 801, which has not been pursued.

The record before us does not show that the statements in paragraph sixty-five of the finding are not warranted by what occurred at the trial. On the contrary, it appears from the charge, which is before us in the record for appeal, that the three questions were submitted to the jury in the charge, and they were told to answer them in writing “yes” or “no,” and if they could not agree in answering them, to so report to the court. We understand from his argument that the plaintiff’s claim is that, although the jury answered the questions in writing as instructed to do, they were not asked in open court whether they were agreed in the answers, and that the written questions and answers were not signed by the jurors or their foreman, and were not filed and recorded as a part of the record, and that therefore the court was not justified in its finding. As the sole purpose of submitting the questions was, or should have been, to obtain special findings by the jury to explain or limit the general verdict (Freed *563 man v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 81 Conn. 601, 614, 71 Atl. 901), it would seem that the interrogations and answers should have been filed as a part of the verdict. As the question is not properly before us, we are not called upon to decide it, but it would clearly be the better practice to so record them.

As no cause appears for changing the finding, and as this shows that the jury found that the intestate’s injury and death were directly due to his own negligence, the plaintiff could not recover, although the defendant’s negligence contributed to the injury. The plaintiff was not injured, therefore, by the instructions and refusals to instruct of which he complains, as these relate solely to the question of the defendant’s negligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 A. 160, 88 Conn. 558, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernier-v-woodstock-agricultural-society-conn-1914.