Fitzgerald v. Savin

174 A. 177, 119 Conn. 63, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 27, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 174 A. 177 (Fitzgerald v. Savin) 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
Fitzgerald v. Savin, 174 A. 177, 119 Conn. 63, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 125 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

Haines, J.

There is no essential dispute as to the following facts: Main Street in the city of Hartford runs nearly north and south from an intersection formed by the entrance into it of Charter Oak Street from the east, and Buckingham Street from the west. About six o’clock in the afternoon of March 9th, 1932, the plaintiff was standing on the sidewalk at the northerly corner of Main and Buckingham Streets, and at the same time the defendants’ car was being driven northerly on the east side of Main Street by the defendant Anna N. Savin, who was accompanied by her husband, the defendant Abraham I. Savin. She was not a licensed driver but claimed to have been operating the car under instruction by her husband in its use.

After the defendants had entered and proceeded one-half or two-thirds of the distance through the intersection, their car suddenly swerved to the left from the northerly direction it had been taking, and proceeded in a curve westerly toward Buckingham Street, but failed to turn sufficiently to allow it to enter that *65 street and instead went over the curb at the northwest corner of the intersection and struck the plaintiff, with injurious results to him.

The plaintiff claimed the defendants were negligent in maintaining an unreasonable speed under the circumstances, in operating on the wrong side of the road, in failing to reduce the speed of the car or stopping it before striking the plaintiff, and in failing to keep the car under control. The defendants denied all negligence and contended that the turn to the left was made necessary by the sudden appearance of a car which was driven west in front of their own, making a collision imminent, and that in meeting the emergency thus created, the defendant driver was at most guilty of nothing more than an error of judgment. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $8000 damages, which the defendants moved the trial court to set aside as contrary to the law and the evidence and excessive, and they have assigned as error the denial of that motion, though the claim that the verdict was excessive is not now pursued by the defendants’ brief. There was a sharp conflict of testimony as to the presence in the intersection of a car which caused the defendants’ car to swerve as claimed by them, three eyewitnesses called by the plaintiff denying that any such car was in the intersection at the time. With this conflicting testimony before them, it was for the jury to determine the fact and it was manifestly open to them to decide that there was no such car or such emergency as claimed by the defendants. Even if the jury had found that the claimed emergency was a fact, there was an ample amount of further evidence from which they could have reasonably concluded that the defendant driver had met and passed it in safety, and that her subsequent conduct in driving at an unreduced speed for seventy feet or more and onto the *66 sidewalk was not that of a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances.

Further errors were assigned for failure of the trial court to add certain statements to the finding as to what the defendants offered evidence to prove and claimed to have proved. So far as they relate to claimed operative facts not already in the finding, with reference to what occurred before the turn to the left, we cannot find their omission to have been prejudicial to the defendants in their attack upon the charge, to test which is the principal purpose of the finding. These requests also contain matter calculated to show that the defendants claimed before the jury that there was a second emergency following the first, in that, after avoiding the collision with the other car, the defendant driver was met by a standing trolley car and other obstructions. This attempt to set up a second emergency to explain her conduct in driving the next seventy feet after the first emergency, is apparently now made for the first time. The finding in a jury case is designed to present the claims of the parties as to the facts proved, for the purpose of testing the correctness of the charge and the rulings of the court. It serves much the same purpose as a statement of the claims of the party upon the trial in a finding in a court case. It would be manifestly unfair to permit the insertion in a finding in a jury case of claims not actually made at the trial and then attack the charge upon the basis of those claims, which were not brought to the attention of the court before the charge was given. A trial court is justified in omitting to insert in the finding in a jury case, claims made upon the evidence offered, which were not presented to it at the trial and not involved in the issues appearing upon the face of the record. Where a party claims that a trial court has thus omitted to include in the finding his *67 claims of proof upon the evidence offered, he can place that evidence upon the record by causing it to be printed, but unless by request to charge or otherwise, it appears that a particular claim was made upon the trial, he may need to resort to proceedings to rectify the appeal in order to bring the matter before us. In this case the record sustains the plaintiff’s claim and the finding, that this contention was not made in the trial court by request to charge or otherwise; furthermore, we do not find any testimony to the effect that such an emergency in fact arose after the defendants’ car swung to the left.

Several errors are assigned in the failure of the court to charge and in the charge as made upon the respective rights and obligations of the drivers of the two cars claimed to have been faced with a collision. Under the issues as claimed the relevancy of this matter was not apparent. On the pleadings the complaint ascribed no negligence to the defendants prior to the time that their car turned to the left; the driver’s conduct prior to that time was not put in issue by the pleadings and the court could well have omitted all reference to it. A study of what the court did say upon the subject satisfies us that it could not have adversely affected the interests of the defendants under the issues, and the addition of the matter now claimed by the defendants would have been of no advantage to them. Moreover, it appears from the finding that traffic through the intersection was being regulated by traffic lights, and rights and duties of drivers depended largely upon the conditions which obtained with reference to these lights, and the charge as given was correct in this respect.

The plaintiff claimed that his personal injuries had lessened his capacity for work, and that he had lost certain profits in his business and had been put to *68 certain expense as a proximate result. Errors are assigned for failure to charge and in the charge as made upon this feature of the case. The defendants claim that the court should have charged that no recovery could be had for gross earnings or gross profits, but only for the loss of net earnings or net profits in the business. The court did charge at length and with great particularity upon the rule of damages recoverable and explained to the jury in detail that they should aim to give only actual compensation for losses which they found to have been the proximate and direct result of the plaintiff’s injuries. Careful study of what was said brings us to the conclusion that the charge was correct and adequate in this respect.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 177, 119 Conn. 63, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-savin-conn-1934.