Connolly v. Seitman

9 A.2d 866, 64 R.I. 29, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 22, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 866 (Connolly v. Seitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connolly v. Seitman, 9 A.2d 866, 64 R.I. 29, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 123 (R.I. 1939).

Opinion

*31 Capotosto, J.

This is an action of trespass to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the defendant in the operation of an automobile. Although the writ in the instant case is in trespass, the parties in their pleadings and proof treated the case as an action of trespass on the case for negligence.

The case was tried before a. jury in the superior court and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $500. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was heard and denied. The case is before us on the defendant’s exceptions to certain rulings during the trial, and to the denial of his motions for a directed verdict and for a new trial.

The plaintiff was struck by defendant’s automobile while on the westerly crosswalk at the intersection of Mathewson and Westminster streets in the city of Providence, shortly before 5 o’clock, p.m., on Saturday, December 4, 1937. Mathewson street runs approximately north and south, and Westminster street runs approximately east and west. Both are one-way streets, with vehicular traffic moving south on Mathewson street and west on Westminster street, the latter being about twenty-five feet wide from curb to curb. A traffic officer was on duty at this intersection at the time of the accident.

Only the plaintiff and the defendant testified as to how the accident happened. The plaintiff testified, in substance, that after the traffic officer had stopped westbound traffic on Westminster street and had given a signal for traffic to move on Mathewson street, she was one of a group of pedestrians who, walking on the westerly crosswalk of Westminster street, were crossing from the northwesterly to the southwesterly corner of the intersection; that because of her age, she became the last one of that group while crossing the intersection; that when she was a short distance from the southerly curb of Westminster street she saw the defendant’s automobile almost on top *32 of her; that she tried to reach the sidewalk but was struck on the left hip by the right fender of the automobile when she was not “more than two feet from the curb”, being thrown to the ground “right up ‘agin’ the curbstone, between the machine and curbstone.”

The defendant’s testimony in effect was that following a signal from the officer for westbound traffic to proceed on Westminster street, his automobile was the third or fourth one in line and some two or three feet behind another automobile as he approached the crosswalk in question at a speed of about five miles an hour, and that he did not see the plaintiff until after his automobile had struck her.

The traffic officer, who was called as a witness by the defendant, did not see the accident. The first time he noticed the plaintiff was when she was the center of an increasing group of people on the southwesterly corner of the intersection after the accident. The substantial part of his testimony is that, when he was questioning the plaintiff and the defendant at that time, the former told him that she was crossing “from the northwest corner to the southwest corner of Westminster street” when she was struck, while the latter said that “he didn’t see the lady until she was right in front of him.”

The defendant contends that the trial justice should have granted his motion for a directed verdict. Under our well-established rule, the evidence and the reasonable inferences therefrom are to be construed most favorably to the plaintiff on defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. The plaintiff’s evidence in this case fairly shows that, while walking across the intersection in question at a proper time and place, she had crossed almost the entire width of Westminster street when she was struck by the defendant’s automobile. The defendant’s only excuse is that he did not see her. In these circumstances, the de *33 fendant’s motion for a directed verdict was properly denied. Dwinell v. Oakley, 61 R. I. 88, 200 A. 445; Gilfoil v. Fishbein, 62 R. I. 277, 5 A. 2d. 232. His exception on this point is therefore overruled.

Contending that the trial justice erred in denying his motion for a new trial, the defendant, disregarding an injury to the plaintiff’s left hip, argues that the abrasions on the plaintiff’s right leg were physical facts which necessarily proved that at the time of the accident she was walking in the opposite direction from the one she stated in her testimony. His conclusion from this premise is that the plaintiff stepped off the curb at the southwesterly corner of the intersection and, taking one or two steps in the highway, walked into.the front fender of the defendant’s automobile.

We cannot follow the defendant in this contention. The abrasions on the plaintiff’s right leg are physical facts showing injury, but it does not follow that they of necessity prove how or where she was struck by the defendant’s automobile. All of the positive evidence is contrary to the above contention.

We find nothing in the transcript before us showing that the plaintiff’s testimony was not worthy of belief. In such a situation, it was peculiarly within the province of the jury and of the trial justice, who saw and heard the plaintiff testify, to determine the credibility of her testimony. Both accepted her version of the accident. We cannot say from our examination of the evidence that the trial justice was clearly wrong in approving the jury’s verdict and in denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial. The defendant’s exception on this point is overruled.

The defendant relies on his exception to the refusal of the trial justice to grant his request that six issues be submitted to the jury for special verdicts thereon, in accordance *34 with G. L. 1938, chap. 534, §2. The pertinent part of that section is as follows: “§2. In any case the court may, and upon request of either party shall, direct the jury to return a special verdict upon any issue submitted to the jury. Such issues shall be settled by the justice presiding at the trial, and either party may except to his rulings thereon. ...”

This statute was originally enacted as part of P. L. 1876, chap. 563, sec. 7, and has remained in force with no material change ever since. While its language is clear, it is apparent from our reported cases that difficulty sometimes arises in its application. In McQuillan v. McQuillan, 83 A. (R. I.) 401, the court held that the evident intention of the statute was to give either party, subject to regulation by the court, the right to submit to the jury such certain and specific questions, based upon the issues in the case, as such party may desire. It further held that if the special question was not based on an issue in the case, or was simply frivolous or unimportant, or involved some undisputed fact, or was so drawn that it would confuse the jury, it would become the duty of the court to require such changes in or wholly disallow the proposed question as the circumstances might require.

In Reid v. Rhode Island Co., 28 R. I. 321, at page 326, the court, after quoting certain language from McCormack v. Phillips, 34 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 866, 64 R.I. 29, 1939 R.I. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connolly-v-seitman-ri-1939.